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"Well, there's
no doubt about it," said Kid Curry. He looked up at his
partner, Hannibal Heyes, and shook his head solemnly. "They're
both dead," said Kid.
"Both of
them?" Heyes asked, raising his eyebrows. He sank down on the
hot, sun-baked rock where Kid was sitting, and wiped the sweat from
his forehead with his sleeve. "I told you not to be so hard on
them."
"Yep," said
Kid, with a sigh. "Dead as doornails." He wiped his brow,
too, and glanced up at the sun, dead overhead in a hazy, blue sky.
"Gosh, it's hot," he added.
Heyes
sniffed. "I can smell 'em already," he agreed.
Kid sighed again. He
was stretched out on the rocks that lined the dry stream bed, trying
to get as much of himself as he could under the shade of a
sparse-leaved willow, but his feet stuck out into the sun. He looked
down at his dusty, patched boots, raised his left foot and tugged
the boot off. He stuck his finger through a gaping hole in the
bottom, and shrugged. "Worn clear through," he said.
"And the other one's just as bad. Yep, this pair of boots is
dead, all right. Both of 'em done for."
"Well, I told
you to take it easy," Heyes said. He took a drink from his
canteen, then leaned back into the small patch of shade. "That
was quite a dance last night, but you didn't have to waltz around
with every female there."
"I'm a fair man,
Heyes," Kid said, yawning. They had been at the Picton church
sociable till past midnight, and he was still sleepy. "I
figured every girl deserved equal time. And if you hadn't dragged me
out of town so fast this morning, I'd have bought another pair of
boots by now."
Heyes shook his head.
"I told you, that sheriff was looking at us funny all night,
and I don't think he was admiring your style on the dance floor. You
can get a pair of boots in Okaton, we'll be there by sundown."
"You know, Heyes,
you're enough to take all the joy out of life," Kid said
severely. "You have to learn to relax and enjoy yourself now
and then. When a town we're passing through has that many pretty
girls, I, for one, am going to take the time to appreciate them."
"I'll relax when
there's no wall-eyed sheriff around, looking me up and down like
a..." Heyes' voice trailed off. A few small birds were
searching among the sun-bleached rocks for water, and their
twittering sounded loud in the silence.
Kid looked up from an
inspection of his boot sole. He took one look at his partner's face,
and his grin faded. "What?" he said in a low voice.
"I don't
know," said Heyes slowly. He was sitting up and studying the
deserted road that stretched behind them towards the town they had
left. He shaded his eyes against the noon glare, squinting into the
distance, then gave his partner a glance. They both got to their
feet and stood side by side, gazing at the faint puff of white dust
on the horizon.
"Storm
cloud," said Kid. He looked up at the clear blue sky uneasily.
Heyes nodded, but
didn't take his eyes off the distance. "Or a dust cloud,"
he said. "Wind kicked it up, maybe."
Kid glanced at the
scraggly willow, the gray leaves hanging motionless in the still,
heavy air. "I don't know," he said. He bent to pull his
boot on, then straightened and looked out at the dusty white cloud.
It seemed to be a little closer. "I don't know," he said
again. "Couldn't be a posse, could it?"

The sun was setting
as Heyes limped along the dusty track that led to the town. His head
was still spinning from the fall he'd taken, and his feet hurt from
the long walk. But he kept trudging. He had to keep going, no matter
what; there was no time to lose.
The town of Okaton
was just up ahead, dim in the evening shadows. Lamps were starting
to gleam in the windows as he approached. It looked like any other
small town, a cluster of shops and houses, and a saloon or two.
Heyes quietly walked up the shadowed side of the street, careful not
to draw any attention to himself. He was weary to the bone, and
looked longingly at the warm light from the hotel windows, but he
knew he didn't have time for that. He was too far behind.
Just as he'd feared,
there was an excited crowd around the sheriff's office. As he
watched, a dozen men emerged from the doorway, shouting and
brandishing rifles. Heyes ducked hastily into an alley, and
immediately tripped over something, crashing full length to the
ground. He got to his feet, cursing under his breath, and looked
around to see what he had fallen over. It was a man, propped up
against a wall, a big hat tipped over his face. "Sorry about
that," Heyes muttered, but there was no answer. A gentle snore
issued from under the hat.
Heyes peered across
the street from the shelter of the alley. The men had split up, some
heading for the saloon, others for the general store. Then he
noticed that three of the men were heading straight towards the
alley. Heyes considered running, but knew that was the one thing
that would most surely make them notice him. He flopped down next to
the sleeping figure, and pulled his own hat low over his eyes.
The three men strode
down the alley; Heyes heard their spurs jingling as they walked.
Then he heard the footsteps slow, and they stopped right in front of
him. Heyes peeked out from under his hat, and saw one of the men, a
dark-faced fellow with black hair, give the sleeping man next to him
a vicious kick. The man jerked his head up, but made no sound. Heyes
frowned, but said nothing. He couldn't afford to call attention to
himself.
"Come on,
Gates," said one of the men. "Leave Marvin alone for
once."
"Got to clean
the trash out of the alleyway," said Gates, and gave the seated
man another kick. "Drunk again," he said mockingly,
looking down and shaking his head.
"Oh, yeah?"
said Marvin, raising his hat. "Me, too."
Gates' two companions
roared with laughter, and continued down the alley. "Give it
up, Zeb," said one over his shoulder. "Come on, we've got
to get going."
Gates ignored them,
and gave the man another savage kick. "Hey!" said Heyes,
before he could stop himself. Gates ignored him and drew back his
foot again.
"Stop
that," said Heyes, scrambling to his feet.
"Mind your own
business, stranger," Gates said over his shoulder. "It's
only a drunken Indian." Gates hauled Marvin to his feet, and
drew back his fist. "I'll teach you to answer back to a white
man," he said.
Heyes grabbed Gates'
shoulder and spun him around. "Stop it, I said." Gates let
go of Marvin, who slumped to the ground. Heyes and the other man
stood staring at each other, hands hovering near the handles of
their revolvers.

Suddenly a shout came
down the alley. "Gates! Where are you! We got to get going! If
you want the job, come on right now!" A man stood at the end of
the alleyway, a large silver star on his vest. Heyes quickly turned
away, drawing back into the shadows.
Gates gave Heyes a
cold look. "I'll settle with you later," he said. He
turned on his heel and strode off down the alley.
"Get a move
on!" the sheriff called. "What the heck are you doing,
anyway?"
"Oh, just
cleaning up some trash," said Gates.
"Well,
never mind that now," said the sheriff. "We've got to get
after Curry!"

Marvin was awakened
from a dream of buffalo running by the harsh sound of someone
banging on the door. The thunder of buffalo hoofs pounding the earth
slowly faded into a persistent hammering, punctuated by shouts. He
blinked in the darkness, as the sun-lit prairie faded away.
It was indeed the
sound of someone knocking at the door of his shack, and this was
strange. The Okaton townsfolk never came to his door to seek him
out. They were more likely to turn their heads away as he shuffled
down the street, or look through him as if he were a ghost.
Occasionally, a boy would chuck a rock at him.
He rolled over and
closed his eyes again, and sought the dark shapes of the buffalo
running through golden grass. But there it was again, that strange
knocking. He blinked away the last shreds of the dream and sat up.
"Stop that!" he shouted.
"Open up!"
called an unfamiliar voice--a man's voice, rough and angry.
"Go away,"
he replied, holding his aching head.
"You
Marvin?" the voice inquired, muffled through the rickety door.
"The Indian? The tracker?"
"Nope," he
called back. "Wrong house."
"This is the
only house for half a mile in any direction," the voice
shouted. "Let me in or I'll kick the door down!"
There seemed no
profit in arguing further, and the door, flimsy as it was, had taken
a while to build. Marvin heaved a sigh and rolled out of bed,
stumbling over the empty whiskey bottle on the floor. He swung the
door open just as the stranger aimed a tremendous kick at it, and
was barely in time to jump out of the way. The man almost fell over
from the force of the swing, then caught himself on the doorframe.
He put a determined smile on his face, and held out his hand. Marvin
ignored both.
"I'm looking for
a tracker," said the man. He was a young fellow, with dark hair
and a pleasant face. Marvin peered through the darkness and
recognized him as the stranger he had seen in the alleyway.
The man took off his
black hat and smiled, and then looked over his shoulder as though
fearing eavesdroppers, although as he had said the house was
solitary on the barren desert landscape. He leaned forward
confidentially, and lowered his voice. "I'm on the trail of a
dangerous outlaw. Word is he's headed into the badlands, and I need
a man who knows the country. I'll make it worth your while."
"Yeah?"
Marvin said with a flicker of interest. He'd spent his last nickel a
week ago, and ranch work was hard to get in the winter. "Who is
it?"
"Kid
Curry."
Marvin started to
swing the door shut, but the stranger jammed his boot in the door.
"Big game," said Marvin, frowning. "Hard to catch.
Dangerous."
"Like I said,
I'll make it worth your while." The man's dark eyes scanned
him, peering through the dim moonlight.
Marvin shook his
head. It sounded like too much trouble. "Not interested,"
he said. "Anyway, you want Zeb Gates, he's the best tracker in
these parts."
"That's what I
hear, but he's been hired already."
"By who?"
asked Marvin, surprised.
"The posse, from
Picton. They've been after Curry all day, but he got ahead of them.
They think he headed off into the desert."
"Yeah, well, you
need Gates," said Marvin. "He knows the badlands."
"They hired him,
I tell you. They're getting ready to head out after Curry. We've got
to get moving right away."
"So you're a
bounty hunter?" said Marvin, looking him up and down curiously.
The stranger looked grim, his face unshaven and dirty, his clothes
dusty from long riding.
"Yep," said
the man. "And I'm going to get to him first. We leave right
now, I'll pay you double...triple... what the posse's paying."
"How much?"
Marvin inquired. He rubbed his face, trying to wake up.
"I got twenty
dollars now..." the man began. He pulled out a handful of
silver dollars and held them under Marvin's nose. Marvin looked at
his warm and comfortable bed, then back at the coins and started to
shake his head. Then he looked at the man's face, and was surprised
to see desperation...and fear? "And we'll split the bounty if
we catch him," said the stranger urgently. "Five thousand
dollars."
Marvin raised his
eyebrows. "He's worth that much to you?"
"Oh, yes,"
the man said quietly. "Worth all that. Worth more."

Heyes paced
impatiently back and forth on the ridge just outside the town of
Okaton. His horse stood unmoving on the shadeless rocks, head
drooping. Already the heat was beginning to make itself felt, though
the morning sun was still touching the horizon. Ahead of him a broad
expanse of desert stretched flat and white, with tall, jagged hills
in the distance. Heyes looked back over his shoulder towards the
nearby houses of the dusty little town, and sighed with relief when
he saw a figure riding slowly towards him. "Finally!" he
said out loud, and mounted his horse.
The rider came
towards him at a slow plod, and Heyes nudged his horse in the ribs
and jogged over to meet him. Marvin was riding a skinny rat-tailed
mare, whose saddle was festooned with canteens; Heyes counted at
least half-a-dozen. The tracker nodded at him sleepily, as though
he'd just woken up.
"Where have you
been?" Heyes demanded. "The posse headed out an hour ago,
they're out of sight already."
"I told you, no
sense rushing off into the badlands with no food or water. Might as
well shoot ourselves and be done with it."
Heyes sighed
impatiently as he turned his horse alongside the other, and they
rode towards the open desert in silence. He glanced at the tracker
as they rode side by side. Last night he had assumed the Indian was
an old man, from his bent back and lined face. But in the morning
sun, his face was worn, but not ancient--he seemed not much older
than Heyes himself. His skin was the color of saddle leather, and
his long black hair was pulled back in a pigtail, which suited Heyes'
notion of what an Indian should look like. But he wore regular
clothes, a ragged shirt and vest, and patched trousers, topped off
with a high-crowned hat.
Marvin glanced idly
at Heyes' horse, and raised his eyebrows slightly. "That's Ben
Tuller's horse," he said. "Been for sale for a
while."
"Yeah, I bought
it this morning," said Heyes. "My horse put his foot in a
prairie dog hole yesterday, and I had to shoot him."
"While you were
chasing Curry?" Marvin asked.
"That's right.
He was moving fast, but I'd almost caught up."
Marvin glanced at
Heyes again. "That's a nasty bruise you got there," he
remarked. "Must have come down pretty hard."
Heyes felt the side
of his face gingerly, and grimaced. "Yeah," he said.
"Only
prairie-dog town around here's about five miles outside town,"
Marvin observed. "Aren't many left, ranchers shoot 'em all. You
walk the rest of the way?"
"Mm," said
Heyes, anxious to change the subject. "So shouldn't you be
looking at the ground for signs or something?"
"Oh, you can
find signs in all sorts of places," said Marvin. He drew rein,
and they both stopped and looked out over the barren land in front
of them. Ahead of them the dry land stretched bare and sun-baked,
the dirt cracked in spider-web patterns. Only on the distant ridges
were there a few hints of green. The tracker reached down and
checked to be sure each of his six canteens was securely attached to
the saddle. "Not much out there," he said. "We're at
least two day's ride from water. Got enough food?"
Heyes nodded
impatiently. "One's saddlebag's full of hard tack, the other
one's full of beans."
"Yeah, but have
you got any food?" said Marvin.
Heyes laughed
reluctantly. "I'll buy you a steak when we catch up with the
Kid," he promised.
"With the reward
money?" said Marvin, and showed white teeth in a broad smile.
"That'll buy a lot of steaks."
Heyes frowned.
"Let's go," he said.
"Where do we
start?" asked Marvin, looking around idly. Heyes ground his
teeth and wondered if he should demand his twenty dollars back.
"You're supposed to tell me!" he said. "Kid Curry was
seen riding out this way yesterday, but then it got dark, who knows
which way he headed? You've got to pick up his tracks."
Marvin pursed his
lips and looked around, then sighed and got off his horse. He
strolled along apparently aimlessly, glancing down at the dusty,
sun-baked ground from time to time. Heyes dismounted too, and strode
over to a broad trail that was clearly recent, leading off into the
desert. "This way," he called.
Marvin ambled over
and surveyed the wide swath of hoofmarks and horse droppings, and
nodded gravely. "My, you're quite a tracker yourself," he
said. "What do you need me for?"
"Well, the posse
went this way," Heyes pointed out.
"Bunch of hound
dogs chasing their tails," said Marvin. "That raccoon's up
a different tree."
"Think so?"
Heyes asked.
Marvin nodded.
"Curry's too smart to start off through a draw like this, where
there's nothing but soft dirt. No, he left a few tracks here on
purpose, maybe, but then he'd look for a harder surface." He
continued his rambling walk while Heyes tapped his foot, eager to
get started. Finally Marvin squatted down on his heels, studying the
ground, and Heyes hurried over. "Found something?" he
demanded.
Marvin pointed to a
solitary footprint in a tiny pocket of sand on the surface of the
rock. "Well, someone went off by himself here, about twelve
hours ago," he said. "Could have been Curry." Heyes
looked at the boot print and his eyes widened. There was the round
mark of a hole in the middle of the sole.
"That's
it," he said positively. "That's him."
"You sure?"
asked Marvin. "How do you know?"
Heyes shrugged
carelessly. "Just a hunch."
Marvin gazed at him
for a minute, and nodded slowly. "Well," he said, looking
back down at the rocks. "Could be him--tall man, five feet
eleven inches, one hundred'n sixty five pounds."
Heyes snorted.
"You can't tell all that from a couple of scuffs in the
dirt!" he said. "You don't fool me, you just read his
description on the wanted poster."
"Sure I
can," said Marvin. "And he's got sixty-seven cents in
change in his pocket, too." He stood and looked out at the
sun-bleached, dry soil, as hard as cement. "Bad lands," he
said softly, as though talking to himself. "Mako sica."
Heyes tapped an
impatient foot. "That what the Indians call it?" he asked,
and Marvin nodded.
"Mako sica,"
Heyes repeated, not liking the sound of the words. "What's it
mean?"
"Bad
lands," Marvin explained. "'Course, Indians don't go there
much." He looked up at the distant cliffs and spires of gray
stone. "A man would have to be...well, he'd have to be one of
two things to go off into the badlands. He'd have to be pretty
desperate." He glanced at Heyes, who looked away hastily.
"Yeah?"
Heyes said. "Or what else?"
"Lost,"
said Marvin, gazing at the barren hills. "He'd have to be
lost."

They mounted and set
off at a walk that seemed agonizingly slow to Heyes. Marvin led the
way, bending low over the mare's neck from time to time. Heyes could
see no sign of footprints or hoofmarks, but Marvin seemed to be
following a clear road. The invisible trail led across the flat
plain, and began to meander through hump-backed hills and ridges.
After an hour of slow
plodding, they came to a dry streambed, a narrow ravine where water
had long ago flowed over tumbled gray rocks. Marvin frowned, and
swung off his horse. He bent and studied the ground for a moment.
"Ah, good," he said, nodding.
"What?
What?" said Heyes eagerly.
"When the posse
was chasing Curry, think they got close enough to get some shots
off?" Marvin asked.
"Yeah,
why?" asked Heyes uneasily. He remembered his last, half-dazed
sight of Kid riding desperately, bent low over his horse; Kid
leading the posse away from him, while the pursuers blazed away,
close behind.
"Well, they got
him," said Marvin. "That's good, it'll make our job
easier."
"How do you
know?" Heyes demanded, feeling a cold weight on his chest.
"I don't see any blood or anything."
"Well, he got
off here to see if he could fill his canteen, and he's favoring his
right leg. He almost fell when he got off his horse, leg must have
buckled underneath him." Marvin ran his finger over a scrape in
the dirt, then stood and traced the marks with his eye. "Went
over this way to look for water, limping pretty good, looking over
his shoulder every few steps."
"How on earth do
you know he was looking over his shoulder?"
"See that left
footmark? Deeper pressure on the outside of the foot as he turns his
head to the right--he's right-handed, yes?"
"Yeah,"
Heyes admitted.
"Short, uneven
steps, looking over his shoulder every few feet." Marvin looked
at the watercourse, where even Heyes could see that rocks had been
moved and pushed about. "He was looking for a seep under a
rock. Looking pretty hard, too. Nothing but sand under here, though,
this stream's been dry a long time." Marvin went back to the
starting point. "Took him three tries to get back up on his
horse." He pointed to three almost invisible scratches in the
dirt.
Heyes rubbed a hand
over his eyes, and tried to look happy. "Well, so far, so
good," he said, in a hearty voice. "What else can you
tell?"
Marvin looked up.
"Well, it's good news for us all around," he said
cheerfully. "He's hurt, he's running out of water, and pretty
soon he's going to start doing stupid things."
"I thought you
said Kid Curry was so smart," Heyes said. "What makes you
say he'll start doing stupid things?"
Marvin shrugged.
"He's getting scared."

The tracker strolled
along the streambed, then began to circle in his usual aimless way,
glancing up at the sky as often as he did at the ground. Heyes
waited, drumming his fingers on his saddle horn. Finally he got off
the horse and began to scout around for himself. He approached the
spot where Marvin was ambling. "Get out of here," Marvin
said briefly. "Leave your tracks someplace else."
Heyes bristled.
"You may not believe this, but I was the champeen tracker of
southern Utah."
"Mm,"
Marvin grunted. Heyes wandered off, staring down at the hard ground
intently. Suddenly he spotted a distinct track, two curved lines
facing each other a couple of inches apart: the print of a
boot-heel. "Here!" he called. Marvin ignored him and Heyes
repeated: "Over here, I picked up his track."
Marvin came over and
glanced at the marks. "Hmm," he said, nodding. "Well,
you're certainly on to something."
"It's a track,
right?"
"Well, yes,
but..."
"But nothing,
who else could it be?" Heyes spotted a similar mark in the
dirt, about two feet away. "Come on. He's heading in this
direction." Marvin shrugged and followed obediently as Heyes
scrambled up a ridge, following the tracks. "He went this way,
right?" Heyes demanded, and Marvin bent and looked closer.
"Yes,
this way, but actually I'd say it's a female."
"What!"
Marvin nodded
gravely. "And a young one at that...five, six months."
"That's
impossible," said Heyes, staring at him.
"Oh, no, there's
a few fawns around here," Marvin said. "Hoofprints that
size, with that narrow straddle, got to be a doe." Heyes opened
his mouth to argue, but Marvin pointed to a neat pile of oval, brown
pellets that were unmistakably the droppings of mule deer.
They clambered back
down the ridge, and Heyes stood patiently by his horse while Marvin
resumed his circling. Finally he swung himself on his mare, and they
headed off towards the cliffs that rose high over the flat plain.
The steep ledges
looked unclimbable from a distance, but as they drew closer, Heyes
could see faint paths running up along the canyon walls. They came
to a spot halfway up a ridge, where the sandy dirt turned to solid
rock underfoot. Marvin got off his horse and scouted around again,
but this time it seemed to take forever; he squatted down here and
there, then knelt, then lay flat on the ground for a long time, so
that Heyes, fuming and fidgeting in the saddle, wondered if he'd
gone to sleep.
Finally Marvin got to
his feet, and gave his usual shrug. "Well, couple of ways he
could have gone," he said, rubbing his chin. "Too rocky
here to be sure. We'll have to try both ways and see."
"That'll take
time, though," said Heyes anxiously
"Yeah, if we
guess wrong." Marvin's dark eyes looked up at him. "Well,
you're the champeen tracker, what do you think?" He pointed
down the ridge. "If we're lucky, he went that way, downhill.
Good chance to find water, but there's no cover--good chance to get
caught." Marvin looked up at the sun-bleached crags and ridges
of rock above them. "If he was a stubborn cuss, though, he'd go
to high ground--no water, but he'll be a lot harder to find. What do
you think?"
Heyes looked up at
the ridge. The black silhouette of a vulture drifted by the sunlit
cliffs, and he watched it in silence for a moment, rubbing his chin
and pretending to consider, not wanting to let on what an easy
question it was. "High ground, I guess," he said after a
while. He looked back up to where the vulture still soared, tilting
lazily in the sun. "High ground," he said again.

They followed a high,
narrow path along the canyon rim. Marvin rode ahead, and Heyes could
see the sparse, black pigtail bobbing between his shoulders. From
time to time Heyes heard a low, droning noise, and he glanced
around, wondering what it might be. It sounded like the droning of
bees in a hive, but he certainly couldn't see any sign of insects in
the hot glare. "Too hot for flies, even," he murmured,
rubbing the sweat off his face with his sleeve. The droning noise
continued, though, till he began to wonder if it came from the rocks
themselves. Finally he realized that the sound was Marvin, singing:
a lazy, low-pitched chant that went on and on, blending with the
plod of the horses.
After a long while
the droning stopped, and Marvin drew rein and turned in the saddle.
"Good guess," he said, with an odd glance at Heyes.
"You must know how Curry thinks."
"Sure,"
said Heyes warily. "It's the sign of a good bounty hunter,
gotta know the quarry."
Marvin pointed to the
ground. "Well, he came this way, all right."
"I don't see
anything." Heyes fanned himself with his hat as he glanced
down. The rock surface had given way to bare, sandy soil, but there
was no sign of footprints or hoofmarks.
"Exactly,"
said Marvin. "He swept this stretch to hide his tracks. Did a
pretty good job, too. Used a willow branch. See the marks of the
long, thin leaves, and the twig scratches?"
Heyes got off his
horse and stared at the ground, then got to his knees. He bent over
till he could smell the dusty, dry scent of the earth, and by nearly
putting his nose in the dirt he could see faint parallel lines, back
and forth across the path.
He climbed back on
his horse, and they plodded on. Marvin rode with his head bobbing
and eyes almost shut, and Heyes would have thought he was asleep,
except that the droning song had broken out again. It had a
contented sound, almost like the purr of a big cat, and Heyes was
beginning to suspect that it was a sign they were on the right
trail.
Heyes began to scan
the ground intently. Kid's branch had swept the dust into a smooth
blank page, and the marks of everything that had passed since were
plainly recorded. He could see the tiny tracks of a lizard, like
dainty stitching on the sand, and the dots and dashes of jackrabbit
tracks, the big hind feet leaving long lines next to the round
forepaw tracks. Even the passing of a beetle had left a series of
prints, a long row of dots like pinpricks in the dirt.
He spotted a
footprint, with the familiar hole in the center of the boot sole,
and looked up excitedly. "Here's where he stopped erasing the
tracks," he called to Marvin. The tracker nodded, and pointed
to a broken-off branch with wilted leaves, lying on the ground a few
feet off the trail. It was a willow branch. Heyes eagerly followed
the stumbling footprints, where Kid had limped and dragged his feet
while leading the horse towards a low rock outcropping. He saw the
faint scrape on the rock where Kid had used it as a stepping stool
to pull himself up into the saddle. The hoofmarks of Kid's horse led
up the hill, the prints uneven and close together; the tired horse
had traveled at a slow walk as the ground began to slope steeply
upwards.
Marvin glanced at a
hoofprint. "Six hours old," said Marvin. "The edge is
just starting to crumble. We're gaining on him."
They rested for a few
minutes under the shade of a rocky overhang, and took a drink from
their canteens. Marvin gave a satisfied nod. "Well, so far
we've got Curry all to ourselves, no sign of that posse." He
sniffed. "Zeb Gates thinks he knows everything, but he couldn't
track a herd of cows. Claims his grandmother was Pawnee, but if you
ask me, he's pure white."
"How about
you?" Heyes asked, glancing curiously at his companion.
"You a real Indian?"
"My mother was
Lakota," Marvin said. He took a long swallow from the canteen.
"That an
Indian?" Heyes asked. He took a sip from his canteen; the water
was warm and gritty, but it tasted like nectar.
Marvin smiled.
"Kind of," he said, shrugging.
"Don't know much
about Indians," said Heyes. "There weren't any around
where I grew up. We just heard stories about them when we were
kids."
"Yeah?"
Marvin inquired. "What kinds of stories?"
Heyes shrugged.
"Oh, you know, all kinds of stories about massacres and
scalpings and such."
Marvin took another
drink, then screwed the canteen top on tightly. He said nothing, and
Heyes went on, "I remember there used to be big round scrapes
on the prairie, and people said that they were old buffalo wallows.
People said buffalo used to graze on the prairies, and the Indians
used to hunt them. But the buffalo are all gone, too."
"Never saw a
buffalo?" Marvin asked him.
Heyes shook his head.
"Nope. Nothing but cows where I grew up. You ever see any
buffalo?"
"Some,"
said Marvin. He smiled. "Well, let's get back to work," he
said.

They followed the
trail for a long time, as Marvin hummed his endless song, and the
shadows moved and lengthened. The sun floated low in the hazy sky,
and birds flew overhead, heading for the sparse clusters of stunted
trees on the ridge-tops and in the valleys. "Only an hour of
tracking light left, when the birds start to roost," said
Marvin, glancing at the sun. Heyes heard the sleepy twitter as birds
fluttered in a clump of scrub oaks nearby. "Well, let's hurry,
then," he said.
"I am
hurrying," said Marvin, and continued on at what seemed to
Heyes a snail's pace. Heyes fidgeted, looking over his shoulder
every few minutes; he kicked his horse to a trot, then pulled him
back to a walk. Still Marvin plodded on, his droning song blending
with the wind that moaned around the tall rock outcrops. They went
on, till the shadows began to blur the sharp outlines of the cliffs,
and the sky grew pale gray. The sun sank towards the clouded
horizon.
Heyes noticed Marvin
looking up and around, tilting his head as though listening.
"We've got company," said the tracker in a low voice.
Heyes strained his
ears to listen, but the darkening landscape was silent. "I
don't hear a thing," he whispered.
Marvin nodded,
frowning. "No birds," he said. "They stop calling and
lie low when a predator comes by."
Heyes glanced back
over his shoulder, but saw nothing but bare rock and a few stunted
cedar trees. He dismounted and lay on his stomach to look over the
edge of the steep path. He caught a movement in the canyon below,
and felt a sudden jolt of fear. In the shadows he could make out a
group of riders moving along the canyon floor. "It's
them," he said.
Marvin joined him and
peered over the edge. "It's getting too dark to track," he
said quietly. "They'll have to camp where they are if they
don't want to lose the trail. So will we, for that matter," he
added.
Heyes watched,
peering through the shadows as the group slowed and came to a halt
in a ring of low, scrubby trees. There were ten or more men, each
with a rifle in a saddle holster. "You say their tracker's not
much good, eh?" Heyes said thoughtfully.
Marvin snorted.
"His grandmother may have been a Pawnee, but he can't tell a
rabbit track from a prairie dog."
"So you think if
they saw the tracks of a lone horse, they'd figure it was the
Kid?" Heyes went on.
Marvin shrugged
contemptuously. "Gates can't tell one horse's trail from
another," he said.
"Can you?"
asked Heyes.
"Sure,"
said Marvin, rolling over on his back and closing his eyes.
"Horse-shoes, nail prints, stride...all different."
"How'd you learn
all this stuff, anyway?" Heyes asked curiously.
"My uncle, my
mother's brother," said Marvin, pulling the big hat over his
eyes. "He was a tracker."
Heyes nodded, still
looking down at the posse below. "What'd he track, buffalo and
such?" he asked.
Marvin snorted.
"Actually it isn't too hard to track a herd of buffalo,"
he said. "A thousand buffalo leave a bit of a trail. Track a
mouse, now, that's hard. Or a lizard." He smiled reminiscently.
"He could track a bird in the air."
Heyes laughed.
"Sure," he said, and got to his feet. "Well, you wait
here, I'll be right back."
"You're
crazy," said Marvin, lifting the hat brim and staring up at
him. "They catch you leaving a false trail, they're liable to
shoot first and ask questions later."
"Hey, they'll
never catch on," said Heyes, and smiled at him. "They
haven't got a real Indian tracker."

Marvin watched as his
companion cantered off down the narrow ridge at a pace too fast for
safety. He shook his head, then led his horse a little further up
the steep slope, to where scattered boulders made a semi-circle that
gave the illusion of shelter. He unsaddled the mare and tethered her
to a low bush, then pulled a bottle from his saddlebag, and sat down
on the ground. He took a small sip, then another. He looked up at
the first stars, and watched them brighten into the familiar
patterns.
He sang softly to
himself, the song of the tracker, rocking back and forth and
chanting as he watched the darkness thicken. He sipped at the bottle
as the black sky behind the cliffs began to glow gray, then silver,
till finally a lop-sided moon rose slowly. The sun-warmed earth grew
cold, and he tilted the bottle and drained it, then wrapped himself
in a blanket, and lay down. He closed his eyes and sank into a dream
of buffalo running through golden grass.

When Heyes got back,
the moon was high, casting a bright colorless light that showed the
outlines of the rocks and gnarled trees. He could see Marvin, rolled
up in his blanket, and heard a loud snore, and he dismounted and
went over to the huddled figure, shaking him by the shoulder.
"Hey, wake
up," Heyes whispered. "We should find a more sheltered
place to sleep." There was no reply. "Come on, let's get
moving," said Heyes, shaking him again, but the tracker just
grunted and didn't stir. Heyes bent over him, frowning, then saw the
glint of moonlight on glass. He picked up the empty bottle, and
sniffed it, then shook his head angrily and heaved it into the
bushes.
He glanced around the
moonlit rocks, and decided that it would be safe to rest here for an
hour. After taking what care he could of the horses and gnawing on a
rock-hard biscuit, he unrolled his blanket and spread it on the most
comfortable spot he could find on the rocky ground. He sank down on
it, and lay looking up at the moon. He yawned, and rubbed his tired
eyes, then sat up and looked at the low rocks uneasily. "Should
find a better spot," he muttered.
But he hadn't
realized till he lay down just how tired he was. He'd been riding or
walking all day yesterday, and been up all night, then the long
trail had filled the day from sunrise to midnight. He yawned again
and lay back down, closing his heavy eyelids. "Just for a
minute," he murmured. "I'll get up in a minute..."

Marvin was deep in
his usual dream, the refuge he found every night. The buffalo were
nosing through green grass that sparkled with sunflowers and
fireweed. The long-legged calves, their fur as bright as copper
pennies, frolicked under the watchful eyes of their mothers; on a
distant ridge a great bull buffalo stood to guard the herd. Then a
gunshot exploded, louder than any Marvin had ever heard, and the
bull fell, dead.
Marvin sat up, heart
pounding, to find that the shot had been no dream. His companion,
the young bounty-hunter, was scrambling to his feet, blinking and
rubbing his eyes. The moon had set and it was the gray hour before
dawn, but there was no birdsong. All around them was a ring of armed
men on horseback.

Heyes stared up at
the man who held the smoking rifle, and wondered desperately what
kind of bluff might be most likely to work. He opened his mouth to
start talking, but his mind was still fogged with sleep, and he
couldn't think of a thing to say.
The stranger with the
rifle wore a large star on his chest, and didn't seem interested in
conversation. "Hands up," he ordered. "Zeb, get their
guns." Gates dismounted, giving Heyes an unpleasant smile. He
went behind them, and Heyes felt the tug at his side as the gun was
yanked from his holster, then the man picked up Marvin's rifle where
it lay on the ground near their saddles.
"Who are
you?" demanded the sheriff.
"Joshua Smith's
the name," said Heyes, trying to look confident and relaxed.
"I'm a bounty hunter."
"Ah, a bounty
hunter," said the sheriff, raising his brows. He was a big,
wide-shouldered man, clean-shaven, with pale blue eyes that looked
Heyes over keenly. "And you're after Curry, too," he said
in a tone of mild curiosity.
"That's
right," Heyes said, with a friendly smile, as one colleague to
another. "Been chasing him for weeks. He's worth a lot of
money."
"That's
true," said the sheriff, nodding understandingly. He took his
hat off, showing white hair that made him look grandfatherly.
"And you thought you'd try tracking him."
"Hired me a
tracker," Heyes agreed, encouraged that the sheriff seemed to
be believing his story. He gestured to where Marvin still sat
wrapped in his blanket, his big hat pulled low over his eyes.
"This is him, Marvin..." he hesitated. "Marvin. He's
a Lakota," he added.
The sheriff didn't
look in Marvin's direction, but pointed to where their horses stood
tethered. "We followed the trail of a lone horse here. That
you?"
"Yeah,"
said Heyes, and smiled pleasantly. "I was scouting around.
Sorry, didn't mean to confuse you." He looked at Gates and
shook his head regretfully. "Why, I figured you could certainly
tell my horse from Curry's. I mean, horseshoes, nail prints,
stride...they're all so different. Having a little trouble with your
eyes, maybe?"
"You were trying
to leave a false trail," said Gates angrily. "You went
around in circles for an hour..."
"Shut up,"
the sheriff interrupted. He gave Heyes a thoughtful smile. "So
you're on Curry's trail and you want to try for the reward, you and
your friend here."
"Sure,"
said Heyes. "We got every right, same as you. It's a free
country."
"Sure," the
sheriff said, nodding affably. "For white men it, it is."
The sheriff swung
himself off his horse and walked towards them, holding his rifle.
"You got no business here, bounty hunter," he said, his
voice like ice. "And take off your hat when a white man's
talking to you, redskin." He thrust the rifle forward and
flipped Marvin's hat off his head. "That's a white man's hat,
where'd you steal that? I thought Indians wore feathers."
Marvin didn't budge, just stayed hunched on the ground as though he
was carved out of rock.
"Stop
that," Heyes said furiously. "Leave him alone."
"Shut up,"
said the sheriff, swinging the rifle towards him. "We got on
Curry's trail long before you did, and we aren't sharing the reward
with no Indians." He looked around and pointed at two of the
posse. "Saddle up their horses, you two. Joe, Sam, you can each
lead one."
The men of the posse
looked at each other uneasily. Heyes noticed how uncertain they
seemed; they were shop-keepers and farmers, not lawmen. The two men
obeyed the sheriff and dismounted, walking towards the horses, while
the others watched, a few of them muttering to their neighbors.
Heyes looked at
Marvin, but he was still sitting silent, looking at the ground.
"Come on, now," Heyes said, trying for a reasonable tone.
"You can't take our horses. All our food and water's in those
saddlebags."
"Tough
luck," said the sheriff. "Get a move on, Sam, the sun'll
be up soon."
"You can't do
that," said Heyes, his voice rising a notch. He looked around
at the ring of men, and one after the other, they looked away; not
one met his eyes. He thought how ordinary they looked, like any
townsfolk one might see behind a shop counter or driving a wagon. He
watched the two men heave the heavy saddles up on the horses' backs,
remembering Marvin saying that without water in the badlands, they
might as well shoot themselves. "You can't do this," he
said again, in a steady voice. "It's murder."
"It's only
murder if you kill a white man," said the sheriff.
"He's got a
point, sheriff," said one of the men, rubbing his chin
uneasily. "He's not an Indian."
The sheriff mounted
his horse, then smiled, looking down at Heyes with cold eyes.
"If you lie down with dogs," he said, "you get
fleas."

Heyes watched them
ride off down the ridge, the last two men leading the stolen horses.
He rubbed his hands over his face, his mind still blurred with
fatigue, then turned and saw the tracker watching him silently.
Marvin stood up, then bent and picked up the big hat, dusted it off,
and put it back on, pulling it low so that the wide brim hid his
eyes.
"Well,"
Marvin said. He stretched as though just getting out of a
comfortable bed. "Guess we better get going. If we head down
the draw, and get down the ridge into the next canyon, we just might
get to water before nightfall. There's a spring down there, or used
to be, if it hasn't gone dry." He looked at the eastern
horizon, where a bright spark of sunlight was just edging over the
rocks. "I think we've got a good chance."
"Lots of gullies
and dead-end box canyons back there, they all look alike,"
Heyes said. "You won't get lost on the way back, will
you?"
Marvin snorted.
"Good trackers never get lost," he said. "They just
back-track back to where they came from."
Heyes nodded.
"Well, that sounds reasonable." He looked down the ridge,
at the downward path that led back to the town, and water, and a
comfortable bed, and safety. Then he gazed up at the gravelly slope
ahead of them. The tall cliffs at the top of the ridge barred the
way like a prison wall. He drew a deep breath, and held out his
hand. "I guess this is where we say goodbye."
Marvin didn't take
his hand, just looked at him with eyebrows raised high. "You're
still going after Curry?" he asked.
Heyes nodded. "I
want to thank you for your help," he said, still holding out
his hand.
Marvin stared at him
for a long minute, then shrugged. "Okay," he said, and
turned away. He rolled up his blanket and threw it over his
shoulder, looking around at the bare ground where their horses and
saddles had been. "Well, I guess I'm all packed," he said.
"Nothing like traveling light. Let's go." When Heyes just
stared at him, he said "We should get a move on, it'll be
getting hot soon."
"What d'you
mean, 'we'?" demanded Heyes. "You're coming, too?"
Marvin nodded
solemnly. "I admire a man who's as dedicated to his work as you
are," he said.
Heyes gave him a
sidelong glance. "Well, ten thousand dollars is a lot of
money," he said defensively.
"It is,"
Marvin agreed. "Let's get after it. After all, we know where
Kid Curry is." He pointed to the faint line of hoofprints they
had been following the night before. "He's right at the end of
this trail."

Heat rose off the
rocks in rippling waves, making the distant cliff faces dance; the
walls of rock seemed to shift and move, first seeming closer, then
farther away. The two men moved slowly upwards through the narrowing
valley. Heyes walked bent over, scanning the ground for tracks. But
the earth underfoot was rocky once more, and the line of hoofprints
soon faded away.
Every time Heyes
glanced hopefully at Marvin, he noticed that the tracker was
strolling along looking upwards, not down. As the morning drew on,
Marvin spent more time gazing up at the sky than down at the ground.
"What the heck are you doing?" Heyes finally asked.
"You expect to find Kid Curry up in the clouds?"
"Like I said,
you can find signs in all sorts of places," Marvin replied
absently, and continued to gaze upwards. Heyes squinted up at the
blank sky, washed white by the noonday glare. He saw nothing but the
small, black shape of a vulture gliding in an effortless curve high
overhead. As he watched, the bird tilted its wide wings and spiraled
a little lower, veering off to the right. Marvin nodded slightly,
and headed in the same direction. Another vulture appeared in the
distance, and also began a casual circle downwards, towards a narrow
ravine. Heyes felt a cold chill run down his back in spite of the
heat.
The ground grew
steeper as they headed towards the ravine. Marvin bent down, and
Heyes, craning over his shoulder, spotted the familiar holed
bootprint once more. "He got off here," said Marvin.
"Has to lead the horse now." He shook his head, wiping
the sweat from his face. "This is a dead end," he said,
frowning. "At least on horseback. A man could maybe climb up
over those cliffs and get down to water on the other side, but a
horse would have to grow wings to get over there."
"Maybe Kid's
going to try climbing," Heyes suggested.
"Not with that
leg," said Marvin. He pointed to a set of scuff-marks and two
clear hand-prints. Heyes stared at them for a moment before he
realized Kid must have fallen and then pushed himself back up.
A little further
ahead, the ravine divided into a dozen little canyons and gullies.
Heyes scanned the rocky walls on either side, dotted with twisted
cedar roots clawed into the steep rock. "He could have gone up
any one of these gullies," Heyes said, kicking with his heel at
the hard surface underfoot that revealed no trace of prints.
"It'll take hours to check 'em all."
The tracker got to
his knees, and then lay face down. He had loosened his pigtail, and
his black hair flowed over the rock. Heyes stared down at the
motionless figure for a while, then paced and muttered, while Marvin
lay on the ground. Heyes gritted his teeth, trying to keep from
pestering the tracker with questions, till he couldn't stand it any
longer. "What are you looking for, exactly?" he asked.
"There's no chance of footprints here. What can you possibly
hope to see?"
"Anything...anything
out of place. A broken pine needle. A pebble kicked on its side.
Anything." Marvin inched across the baking rock on fingertips
and toetips, reminding Heyes of a rattlesnake's boneless glide.
Finally, the tracker
stood up and rubbed his back. "Honestly, I'm getting too old
for this," he said. Heyes said nothing, just raised his
eyebrows and waited as patiently as he could while Marvin drummed
his fingers on his belt. Finally, the tracker tilted his head towards
the mouth of a narrow gully. "Let's give this one a try,"
he said.
They scrambled up the
steep incline, following a line of cracked and broken rocks that
were the remains of a long-dried watercourse. Sure enough, only a
little way further on, Marvin's humming broke out again, and Heyes
gave a tired grin as he saw prints in a drift of sand. Marvin
grinned, too. "See the sharp edge on that heel-mark? Not two
hours old."
"Should I try
shouting?" Heyes suggested. "He might be close enough to
hear me..." He broke off as he saw Marvin give him another odd
look.
The sun simmered on
the back of Heyes' neck as he walked with head low, scanning the
trail. He bent lower, trying to puzzle out the meaning of every
smudge in the sand; he plodded along, back aching, as sweat fell
from his face into the dust. Marvin, just ahead of him, was bent
double, moving along noiselessly, using his hands as well as his
feet, nose almost touching the earth.
A shadow passed over
the ground, and Heyes looked up; it was the vulture again, sailing
in lazy circles, his shadow falling far below him. Heyes rubbed the
sweat out of his eyes, then frowned, as he spotted a glimpse of blue
up ahead, among a scattered pile of rocks. He peered through the
sun-glare, realizing that it was something out of place; then he
caught his breath and began to run, towards where an arm in a blue
sleeve was sticking out behind a rock, lying flat on the ground.

Kid had fallen in his
tracks, and lay face down, unmoving in the sun. His horse stood with
drooping head in a tiny patch of shade nearby. There was a
bloodstained bandana wrapped around Kid's right leg, and dried
blood was streaked down the side of his trousers. Heyes knelt beside
Kid and turned him over with shaking hands.
Kid groaned, and his
eyes opened slowly. "Heyes, that you?" he muttered,
blinking.
"Yeah, it's
me," Heyes said. "Take it easy." He suddenly realized
what he'd said, and glanced warily up at Marvin, who met his glance
and gave his usual shrug. Heyes had a feeling that the tracker
wasn't too surprised. He looked back down at his partner.
"Where'd you
come from?" Kid asked, frowning up at him dazedly. "You
okay?"
Heyes smiled.
"I'm fine."
"That's
good," Kid murmured, with the ghost of a smile. "When I
saw your horse go down I was afraid you'd broken your neck, but I
couldn't wait around to see." He coughed, then went on in a
faint voice. "I thought I hid my trail pretty well. How'd you
find me?"
"Hired a
tracker," Heyes replied. He moved so that his shadow shielded
Kid's face from the sun.
"He must have
been good," said Kid, and grimaced as he moved, trying to sit
up.
"Indian
tracker," said Heyes, with a glance at Marvin. The tracker
didn't seem to have heard; he was staring off at a cluster of low
shrubs around the rocks of the dried stream bed. "How bad's
your leg?" asked Heyes, as he bent to inspect the wound.
"It's not too
bad, but it stiffened up a lot--really slowed me down," said
Kid. He rubbed a hand over his face. "Got any water?" he
asked.
Heyes shook his head.
"No, Kid, I'm afraid not," he said softly.
Kid stared at him.
"But..." he began; then he met Heyes' eyes. They looked at
each other wordlessly for a long moment, then Kid nodded.
"Okay," he said, and closed his eyes.
Heyes looked down at
his partner's sunburned face and dry, cracked lips. He swallowed,
feeling the burning dryness in his own throat, and tried to think
what they should do next. Then he realized that he and Kid were
alone in the little valley; the tracker had disappeared.

The streambed was
dry, years dry; only sun-bleached sand lay between the rocks. But
there was a rustling of wings in the spiky bushes, and Marvin
crouched silently behind the skeleton of a cedar tree and watched a
small gray bird on a branch just above him. The tiny creature leaned
forward, glanced around warily with bright black eyes, then
fluttered down behind a pile of rocks. In a moment, it rose again,
and returned to its perch.
Another bird, with a
pale yellow breast, sat on a log nearby. It flew downwards in the
same direction as the first bird, was hidden for a minute, then
fluttered back. Another bird dipped down to the same spot, then
quickly rose. Marvin watched them intently, his eyes following their
every movement. He had been squatting as unmoving as the rocks, but
now he gave a sharp nod; the birds saw the movement and took instant
flight.
He walked silently
towards the spot that the birds had been visiting. He bent and
studied the tiny tracks, each toe and claw-mark clearly etched on
the ground. He bent and touched the sand; it was cool and damp. He
crouched lower still, and peered under a rock. There, held in a
sandstone basin as carefully as in cupped hands, was a clear spring
of water.
Marvin drank, lying
on the ground, just able to fit his head under the rock. Then he
filled his hat with water, and carried it before him, upside down.
Heyes had dragged Kid into the meager shade of a brown-needled
juniper, and was bent over his partner; he had taken off the heavy
gunbelt, and was trying to loosen the tightly-knotted bandana that
covered his wound. Marvin walked silently, and Heyes didn't look up
till the tracker kneeled down beside him, and held out his hat.
"Here," he said, and Heyes looked down at his own
reflection in the hatful of sparkling water.

Evening was coming;
the sun was touching the cliff tops, and there was a peaceful
twitter of birds at the water hole. Kid lay reclining comfortably on
the ground, his back against a log, as Heyes finished cleaning the
wound on his thigh.
"Ow!" Kid
said, and moved his leg impatiently. "Honestly, you're terrible
at this."
"Well, you'll
just have to get shot more so I can practice," Heyes said. He
dabbed at the gash with a wadded-up bandana, frowning. "Still
bleeding a bit. That hurt?"
"Not till you
started poking it," Kid retorted, jerking his leg away.
"No doctor can
cure a patient if he can't catch him," said Heyes severely.
"Hold still."
"I am
holding still," said Kid. He turned his head towards Marvin,
who was lying on the ground, his hat over his eyes. "How about
you?" he asked. "Indians know about medicinal plants and
stuff, don't they? Don't you have any old medicine man remedies for
this sort of thing?"
Marvin raised the hat
brim an inch and glanced over. "Whiskey," he said, and
closed his eyes again.
"Good
idea," said Kid.
"Yeah,"
Heyes agreed, giving Marvin a glance. "Too bad we don't have
any." He shook his head worriedly, looking down at the wide
gash. "We could use some to pour on this, clean it out."
"Nah, that hurts
like hell," Marvin objected. "I meant to drink."
"Me, too,"
said Kid.
Marvin heaved himself
to his feet and ambled over to where Kid lay. "Hmm," he
said, shaking his head doubtfully, looking down at the wound.
"I don't know. Maybe we should try an old Indian remedy."
"Like
what?" Kid asked uneasily.
"Well, all the
medicine men I know would just heat up a knife blade till it's good
and red hot and hold it on the leg for a while."
"You think
so?" said Heyes, nodding approvingly. "Might not be a bad
idea, just to be on the safe side. I don't mind giving it a
try."
"No,
thanks," said Kid ungratefully. "Leave me alone!"
Marvin grinned
broadly. "Looks okay to me," he said, and stood watching
as Heyes fashioned a bandage from bandanas and bits of shirt.
Kid Curry looked up
at Marvin. "I thought Indians never smiled," Kid said,
shaking his head. "You know, you are one strange Indian."
Marvin shrugged.
"Been a long time since I been an Indian," he said.
"Long time. Don't think I could backtrack that far."
"I thought good
trackers never got lost," Heyes said. "Ever think about
going back to it?"
"Back to
what?" asked Marvin, stretching out again on the warm rock and
closing his eyes.
"I don't
know," said Heyes. "Back to whatever it is that Indians
do. Living in a teepee, chasing buffalo, stuff like that."
There was a silence, as Heyes finished knotting the bandage. Marvin
was apparently asleep. "Well, ever think about it?" Heyes
persisted.
Marvin shrugged.
"Nah," he said. "Never."
Heyes sat back on his
heels, and watched the fresh bandage suspiciously, but the bleeding
seemed to have stopped. "That's looking better," he said,
and glanced over at Marvin. "He won't be able to walk for a day
or two, but I think pretty soon..."
He broke off, seeing
the tracker lift his head sharply, then scramble to his feet. He
stood frozen, head tilted, listening. "What..." Kid began,
but Marvin made a quick gesture and he stopped.
Heyes stood up and
listened, too. The ravine was silent, the rocks glowing with honey
color in the slanting afternoon sunlight. He closed his eyes,
concentrating, listening, but heard no sound at all, except his own
heart pounding in his ears. The birds had stopped their songs. All
three men held their breath, listening to the silence that filled
the air with a terrible warning.
Heyes opened his eyes
to look desperately around the little valley, at the low rocks of
the stream, too small to hide behind, and the steep, unclimbable
ridges that surrounded them on three sides. They were trapped in a
dead end, sure enough. Then he realized that Marvin had vanished
again. "Now where'd he go?" Heyes exclaimed.
"Never mind
him," said Kid, raising himself on his elbow. "Where's my
gunbelt?"
Heyes bent and
snatched up the wide leather belt that he had taken off when he was
working on Kid's leg. But the gunbelt felt oddly light, and he
looked at the holster. Empty. "It's gone," he said grimly.
He heard a faint sound of hoofs approaching, many horses coming at a
run.
"What?" Kid
demanded. "What do you mean it's gone?" He sat up and
groped wildly around in the rocks and gravel, scanning the ground,
but the gun was nowhere to be seen. "That blasted Indian took
it!" Kid said. "If I get my hands on him..." The
noise of hoofs grew louder, echoing off the rock walls, and Kid
tried awkwardly to get to his feet. "Come on," he said.
"Get going, don't wait for me." Heyes ignored this and
grabbed Kid's jacket, trying to help him up, but they had run out of
time. The first riders came into view, and the two of them could
only wait as the posse thundered up the slope.
"Let me
go," Kid snapped, as Heyes took a tight hold on the collar of
his jacket.
"No," Heyes
said urgently. "Hold still. One last thing to try."
Heyes kept his grip
on Kid's shoulder as the riders surrounded them, then promptly
stepped forward and grinned up at the sheriff. "Where you guys
been?" he inquired. "Your tracker must be having that
trouble with his eyes again."
The sheriff regarded
him, unsmiling. "Well, well," he said. "You again. So
you got Kid Curry, eh?" He glanced around. "You track him
down all by yourself? Where's your tame redskin?"
Heyes made no answer.
"Ran out on you when things got tough, eh?" inquired the
sheriff. "Well, that's just like an Indian." He looked
down at Kid, who was crouched on the ground. "So this is the
famous Kid Curry, I suppose. Get him on his horse, boys, and tie him
good so he doesn't go anywhere."
Heyes stood in front
of Kid as three of the riders dismounted and approached them. They
pushed past Heyes, and jerked Kid roughly to his feet; two held him
up while the third man bound his hands in front of him with a
leather thong. Then they shoved him towards the horse, and he fell,
sprawling.
Heyes took a step
forward, his fists clenched, then checked himself, and looked up to
see the sheriff's eyes on him. "He's my prisoner," said
Heyes. "My property. This is stealing."
The sheriff snorted.
"What are you going to do, turn us in? We found Kid Curry the
same time as you did. I got ten witnesses to prove it. You want to
argue with them?" Heyes looked at the ring of rifles aimed at
him, and watched silently as the three men hauled Kid up off the
ground, then dragged him over to his horse and heaved him onto it.
Heyes took another step towards his partner, but Kid caught his eye
and gave a tiny shake of the head.
The sheriff pointed
his rifle at Heyes. "Take my advice, and don't let us see you
again, stranger. You've about wore out your welcome. Next time we
won't be so forgiving." He turned away, and the posse followed
him down the narrow canyon. Heyes could just glimpse Kid's head,
surrounded by the gang of armed men, as they disappeared around a
bend.
"Well, I guess
that's that," said a voice at Heyes' elbow, and he almost
jumped out of his skin. Marvin stood just behind him.
"Don't do
that!" Heyes said. Then he noticed the gun thrust into Marvin's
belt. "Give it to me," he ordered, reaching out his hand.
Marvin took a step
backwards. "It's not yours," he pointed out.
"It's not yours
either," Heyes retorted.
"It is
now," said Marvin calmly. "I found it lying on the
ground."
"That's
stealing," Heyes said angrily.
Marvin grinned, but
his dark eyes had no smile in them. "That's what Indians do,
don't you know that?"
Heyes considered
making a grab for the gun, but Marvin warily backed up another step.
There was no time to debate the issue, the sound of hoofbeats was
fading quickly. Heyes turned away and set off down the slope, but
felt a hand on his shoulder. "I don't believe it! You're not
still going after him, are you?" Marvin demanded. "You're
the craziest white man I ever met."
Heyes shook him off
and walked away, but hadn't gone ten steps before he became aware
that the tracker was still behind him. "You coming along?"
Heyes asked over his shoulder. Marvin nodded. "Why?" Heyes
asked, astonished.
Marvin tilted his
head, considering. "Don't know, exactly," he admitted.
"Been a long time since I been on a hunt." He shrugged.
"Besides, I got to stick with you. Got to collect my
money."
"Money?"
said Heyes absently, wondering exactly how far ahead the posse was.
"Why, yes,"
said Marvin solemnly. "The five thousand dollars you promised
me."
"What?"
Heyes demanded. "I never...oh, yeah. Well, sorry about that. I
was desperate." He looked over his shoulder. "Where do you
think I'm gonna get that kind of money?"
"Well, maybe you
could rob a bank or something," Marvin suggested. Heyes opened
his mouth to protest and Marvin laughed. "Just kidding. I don't
want any more money."
"Well, I
could..."
"Forget
it," said the tracker. "You've paid me enough."
Heyes stared at him,
then gave it up, and they continued at a brisk trot down the valley.
The ground was covered with hoofprints and manure, the dust churned
up by the passing of so many horses. "At least it's easier to
track him now," said Marvin. "Even a white man can't miss
this trail."
Heyes nodded.
"Like a herd of buffalo."
Marvin turned his
head and Heyes saw his dark eyes gleam. "You know how you hunt
buffalo?" Marvin asked. "You follow them real quiet, and
get as close as you can, right up behind them..."
"Yeah?"
Heyes said.
"Then you
stampede them."

They made their way
quickly down the steep ridge. Heyes forced himself to hurry, but he
couldn't remember ever feeling more exhausted. He looked down at his
dust-caked boots and compelled them to keep moving, one after the
other, but even though the heat had lessened as the sun sank, it
became harder and harder to drag himself along. He kept on doggedly,
hearing Marvin's quiet footsteps just behind him.
The slope began to
level out as it wound down through the canyon. "They'll be able
to speed up once we get to the flat," Heyes said, with a
feeling of despair. "We'll have a hard time keeping up."
There was no answer, and he looked over his shoulder to find that
Marvin had once more disappeared.
Heyes had no time to
wonder where he'd vanished to. It was impossible to lose the trail
of a dozen men on horseback, and he kept grimly on, but the slope
was lessening, and he could see from the tracks that the horses were
lengthening their stride. The setting sun glared in his face, and he
stumbled, putting up a hand to shield his eyes, paying no attention
to anything but the effort of keeping his feet moving down the
winding ridge.
He rounded a bend in
the rocky wall, and suddenly heard the unmistakable sound of a gun
being cocked. He lifted his head and saw two men with rifles pointed
straight at his chest, and he stopped in his tracks.
"You were right,
Zeb," said the sheriff, shaking his head. "There was
someone following us back there. I just wouldn't have believed that
even a bounty hunter could be so stupid." Heyes could see the
rest of the posse waiting a little way ahead. Kid was slumped in the
saddle, his head bent; the fresh bandage on his leg was stained with
blood.
"Well, now, look
here, sheriff," Heyes said, trying a last bluff. "I need
that reward money awful bad. Maybe you could cut me in? After all, I
led you to Curry."
Both men laughed, and
Gates looked at Heyes intently, studying his face. "There's
other outlaws with a price on their heads," he said slowly.
"What's the reason that this one's so special?"
"Why, there's
ten thousand reasons..." Heyes began, but Gates cut him off.
"I think we should just get rid of you, bounty hunter." He
raised his rifle again.
"You can't just
kill me in cold blood," Heyes said, feeling an unpleasant chill
down his spine. "I'm a lawman, you know."
"Oh, that don't
worry me too much," said the sheriff. "We'll just say you
were trying to help the prisoner escape."
"Or better yet,
we'll bring the body back to town, and have a look at a few wanted
posters," said Gates. "Somehow I got a feeling we're going
to find we're twice as wealthy as we thought." He smiled as he
aimed the rifle. "Won't no-one care if we kill an outlaw. Why,
it's just like killing an Indian." He squinted along the
barrel, and Heyes saw the cold dark eye staring at him.
The sudden crack of a
gunshot echoed off the rocks. Heyes saw Gates drop the rifle and
bend over, cursing, his hand clawing at a wound in his shoulder.
Heyes looked up to the ridge-top, and saw Marvin, gun in hand, leap
to his feet and speed off along the ridge.
The sheriff swung his
rifle to his shoulder and drew a careful bead on the running figure.
Heyes saw the movement, and dived forward, crashing into the man and
sending the shot flying harmlessly into the air. Marvin turned and
fired again, this time at the posse, and a rider crashed to the
ground, while the horses reared and bucked. The men bunched,
shouting curses and questions and contradictory orders, peering
fearfully up at the ridge, and getting in each others' way.
Heyes decided the
opportunity was too good to waste. He ran over to Kid's horse, and
swung himself up behind his partner, drove his heels into the
horse's sides, and shouted "Hang on!" as the horse sped
off. Kid grasped the pommel with his bound hands and managed to hold
on while they raced along, as two more shots echoed from the ridge
above them.
But they hadn't gone
far when Kid reeled in the saddle, his face chalk-white. Heyes
hastily guided the horse into a shallow gully so that they were
hidden from the posse's sight, then reined up and jumped off the
horse. He was just in time to catch Kid as he slid out of the
saddle, the bandage drenched with blood.
Heyes pulled a small
knife out of his pocket and ripped it though the thongs that tied
Kid's hands, then glanced hurriedly around the tiny valley,
steep-walled and bare. "Go on, Heyes," Kid said, through
clenched teeth. "There's nowhere to hide here! Run for
it!"
"Shut up,"
Heyes snapped. There was a silence that was gradually filled with a
pounding of hooves; they could hear the sound coming closer, closer.
Then two more shots
cracked out. "He's up there!" shouted a voice. "I can
see him! It's that redskin!" The shouts and voices were close
by, and Heyes and Kid crouched down behind a boulder, holding their
breath. The sheriff rode into sight. "Get him!" he
ordered, and pointed to the ridge top. Heyes looked up, and saw a
figure silhouetted against the red sky, running in full view, long
hair streaming behind him; the wind carried the faint sound of a
high-pitched chant.
"There he goes,
boys! Get him!" another voice shouted. The figure turned and
fired twice, the bullets bouncing harmlessly off the rocks.
"That's six
shots," Kid said grimly. "That's all he's got." The
pursuers thundered by their hiding place, intent on the figure on
the ridgetop. Marvin stood for a moment in full view, then ran down
the far side of the ridge. The posse raced out of sight around a
bend, and their shouts grew fainter. Distantly, Heyes could still
hear the triumphant chanting of the tracker's song, mingled with the
rumble of hoofs, and then rifle shots cracked.
Kid let out the
breath he had been holding, and turned his head to stare at Heyes.
"Crazy Indian! Why'd he do that?" Heyes shook his head
wordlessly, gazing up at the ridge where the tracker had vanished.
The noise was fading as the posse moved further away down the
valley, and the drumming of the hoofs blended with the song of the
tracker, fading into the distance.


A full moon sailed in
the cold desert sky, and lit up the small shack on the edge of the
sleeping town. The cracked window panes were dark, and the cabin was
silent; it seemed as though no one had ever lived there. Heyes
knocked on the door, banging with his fist.
"Shut up!"
Kid hissed. "If anyone hears us we'll be back where we started,
with a posse breathing down our necks. Pick the lock, for crying out
loud."
"Well, it's
Marvin's home, I don't want to just barge in," Heyes muttered,
but he took a thin piece of wire out of his pocket and the door
swung open in seconds. They peered inside. The dark interior of the
shack was bare and empty; there was a low bed and a plain wooden
table with one chair. Piles of empty glass bottles filled every
corner. "No one home," said Heyes, and sighed.
Kid put a hand on his
shoulder. "Maybe he got away," he said. "Could
be."
Heyes didn't reply,
just began to look around the cabin. "Well, he's not under the
bed," Kid said. "Let's go see if he's in jail."
Heyes snorted.
"Jail," he said. "Not much chance of that. No, if
they caught up with him, he's dead." He shook his head. "I
feel like I owe him..." His voice trailed off.
"Money, you
mean?" Kid asked. "How much did you promise to pay him for
tracking me?"
"Oh, not
much," said Heyes.
"How much?"
Kid persisted.
"Five thousand
dollars," said Heyes.
"Five
thousand..." Kid gasped. "What, are you crazy?"
"Sorry,"
said Heyes. "Lost my head." He began to look around the
cabin. "No, Marvin said he didn't want money. I just want to be
sure he's all right."
He wandered around
the cabin, squinting in the darkness and peering into every corner.
"What's that?" he exclaimed suddenly, and he bent to pick
up something that was perched on top of a pile of bottles.
"Looks like his
hat," said Kid, as Heyes held the high-crowned hat up
triumphantly.
"It is!"
Heyes said, grinning. "Looks like they missed him." He
stuck a finger through a neat bullet-hole in the crown.
"Wonder why he
left it behind," said Kid.
Heyes pursed his
lips, considering. "It's a white man's hat," he said.
"Maybe he doesn't want it anymore." He saw a glint of
metal on the bottle pile as well, and picked up a Colt revolver.
"My gun!"
Kid exclaimed. He pounced on the weapon, and examined it anxiously.
"Yep, it's mine, all in one piece." He spun it back into
his empty holster with a satisfied flourish.
"Wonder if he
knew we'd come back here," Heyes said thoughtfully. Kid leaned
against the table, putting his weight on his good leg; both men were
filthy and bedraggled, but Kid looked pale and drawn. "You sure
you're okay?" said Heyes, looking him over.
"Will you stop
asking me that?" said Kid. "I'm fine."
"Yeah, you look
it," said Heyes. "Come on, let's go. I want to find a town
that has a doctor that won't ask any questions."
"Oh, I'm
fine," said Kid impatiently. "The only doctor I need is a
blonde who can pour a whiskey, serve a steak and knows how to fill a
tub with bubble bath."
Heyes smiled.
"Well, anyway," he said. "We better get out of here.
I sure never want to see that posse again."
They closed the door
and stood looking off at the distant ridges and cliffs, across the
desert silvered by moon-light. "Where do you think he is?"
Kid asked.
"I don't
know," Heyes said softly. A coyote's lonely howl sounded
faintly in the distance. "He said a man would have to be one of
two things to head off into the badlands--he'd have to be desperate,
or he'd have to be lost."
"I don't get
it," said Kid. "You think he's lost?"
Heyes shook his head.
"Maybe not anymore," he said.

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