Riders of the Silences by Max Brand (top 20 books to read .txt) 📕
"And if I done wrong then, I've got my share of hell-fire for it. Here I lie, with my boys, Bill and Bert, sitting around in the corner of the room waiting for me to go out. They ain't men, Pierre. They're wolves in the skins of men. They're the right sons of their mother. When I go out they'll grab the coin I've saved up, and leave me to lie here and rot, maybe.
"Lad, it's a fearful thing to die without having no one around that cares, and to know that even after I've gone out I'm going to lie here and have my dead eyes looking up at the ceiling. So I'm writing to you, Pierre, part to tell you what you ought to know; part because I got a sort of crazy idea that maybe you could get down here to me before I go out.
"You don't owe me nothing but hard words, Pierre; but if you don't try to come to me, the ghost of your mother will follow you all your life, lad, and you'll be seeing her blue eyes and the red-gold of her hair in the dark of the night as I see it now. Me, I
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“Like two men! D’you understand how a woman could be the bunky of a
man an’ yet be no more to him than—than a man would be. You don’t?
Neither do I, but that’s what I’ve been to Pierre le Rouge.
What’s that?”
She lifted her head and stood poised as if for flight. Once more the
vague sound blew up to them upon the wind. Mary ran to her and grasped
both of her hands in her own. “If it’s true—”
But Jack snatched her hands away and looked on the other with a mighty
hatred and a mightier contempt.
“True? Why, it damn near finished Pierre with me to think he’d take up
with—a thing like you. But it’s true. If somebody else had told me
I’d of laughed at ‘em. But it’s true. Tell me: what’ll you do
with him?”
“Take him back—if I can reach him—take him back to the East.”
“Yes—maybe he’d be happy there. But when the spring comes to the
city, Mary, wait till the wind blows in the night and the rain comes
tappin’ on the roof. Then hold him if you can. D’ye hear? Hold him
if you can!”
“If he cares it will not be hard. Tell me again, if—”
“Shut up. What’s that again?”
The sound was closer now and unmistakably something other than the
moan of the wind.
Jacqueline turned in great excitement to Mary:
“Did McGurk hear that sound down the gorge?”
“Yes. I think so. And then he—”
“My God!”
“What is it?”
“Pierre, and he’s calling for—d’you hear?”
Clear and loud, though from a great distance, the wind carried up the
sound and the echo preserved it: “McGurk!”
“McGurk!” repeated Mary.
“Yes! And you brought him up here with you, and brought his death to
Pierre. What’ll you do to save him now? Pierre!”
She turned and fled out among the trees, and after her ran Mary,
calling, like the other: “Pierre!”
After that call first reached him, clear to his ears though vague as a
murmur at the ear of Mary, McGurk swung to the saddle of his white
horse, and galloped down the gorge like a veritable angel of death.
The end was very near, he felt, yet the chances were at least ten to
one that he would miss Pierre in the throat of the gorge, for among
the great boulders, tall as houses, which littered it, a thousand men
might have passed and repassed and never seen each other. Only the
calling of Pierre could guide him surely.
The calling had ceased for some moments, and he began to fear that he
had overrun his mark and missed Pierre in the heart of the pass, when,
as he rounded a mighty boulder, the shout ran ringing in his very
ears: “McGurk!” and a horseman swung into view.
“Here!” he called in answer, and stood with his right hand lifted,
bringing his horse to a sharp halt, like some ancient cavalier
stopping in the middle of the battle to exchange greetings with a
friendly foe.
The other rider whirled alongside, his sombrero’s brim flaring back
from his forehead, so that McGurk caught the glare of the eyes beneath
the shadow.
“So for the third time, my friend—” said McGurk.
“Which is the fatal one,” answered Pierre. “How will you die, McGurk?
On foot or on horseback?”
“On the ground, Pierre, for my horse might stir and make my work
messy. I love a neat job, you know.” “Good.”
They swung from the saddles and stood facing each other.
“Begin!” commanded McGurk. “I’ve no time to waste.”
“I’ve very little time to look at the living McGurk. Let me look my
fill before the end.”
“Then look, and be done. I’ve a lady coming to meet me.”
The other grew marvelously calm.
“She is with you, McGurk?”
“My dear Pierre, I’ve been with her ever since she started up the Old
Crow.”
“It will be easier to forget her. Are you ready?”
“So soon? Come, man, there’s much for us to say. Many old times to
chat over.”
“I only wonder,” said Pierre, “how one death can pay back what you’ve
done. Think of it! I’ve actually run away from you and hidden myself
among the hills. I’ve feared you, McGurk!”
He said it with a deep astonishment, as a grown man will speak of the
way he feared darkness when he was a child. McGurk moistened his white
lips. The white horse pawed the rocks as though impatient to be gone.
“Listen,” said Pierre, “your horse grows restive. Suppose we stand
here—it’s a convenient distance apart—and wait with our arms folded
for the next time the white horse paws the rocks, because when I kill
you, McGurk, I want you to die knowing that another man was faster on
the draw and straighter with his bullets than you are. D’you see?”
He could not have spoken with a more formal politeness if he had been
asking the other to pass first through the door of a dining-room. The
wonder of McGurk grew and the sweat on his forehead seemed to be
spreading a chill through his entire body. He said: “I see. You
trust all to the cross, eh, Pierre? The little cross under your neck?”
“It’s gone,” said Pierre le Rouge. “Why should I use it against a
night rider, McGurk? Are you ready?”
And McGurk, not trusting his voice for some strange reason, nodded.
The two folded their arms.
But the white horse which had been pawing the stones only a moment
before was now unusually quiet. The very postures of the men seemed to
turn him to stone, a beautiful, marble statue with the moonlight
glistening on the muscles of his perfect shoulders.
At length he stirred. At once a quiver jerked through the tense bodies
of the waiting men, but the white horse had merely stiffened and
raised his head high. Now, with arched neck and flaunting tail he
neighed loudly, as if he asked a question. How could he know, dumb
brute, that what he asked only death could answer?
And as they waited an itching came at the palm of McGurk’s hand. It
was not much, just a tingle of the blood. To ease it, he closed his
fingers and found that his hand was moist with cold perspiration.
He began to wonder if his fingers would be slippery on the butt of the
gun. Then he tried covertly to dry them against his shirt. But he
ceased this again, knowing that he must be of hair-trigger alertness
to watch for the stamp of the white horse.
It occurred to him, also, that he was standing on a loose stone which
might wobble when he pulled his gun, and he cursed himself silently
for his hasty folly. Pierre, doubtless, had noticed that stone, and
therefore he had made the suggestion that they stand where they were.
Otherwise, how could there be that singular calm in the steady eyes
which looked across at him?
Also, how explain the hunger of that stare? Was not he McGurk, and was
not this man whom he had already once shot down? God, what a fool he
had been not to linger an instant longer in that saloon in the old
days and place the final shot in the prostrate body! In all his life
he had made only one such mistake, and now that folly was pursuing
him. And now—
The foot of the white horse lifted—struck the rock. The sound of its
fall was lost in the explosion of two guns, and a ring of metal on
metal. The revolver snapped from the hand of McGurk, whirled in a
flashing circle, and clanged on the rocks at his feet. The bullet of
Pierre had struck the barrel and knocked it cleanly from his hand.
It was luck, only luck, that placed that shot, and his own bullet,
which had started first, had traveled wild, for there stood Pierre le
Rouge, smiling faintly, alert, calm. For the first time in his life
McGurk had missed. He set his teeth and waited for death.
But that steady voice of Pierre said: “To shoot you would be a
pleasure, but there wouldn’t be any lasting satisfaction in it. So
there lies your gun at your feet. Well, here lies mine.”
He dropped his own weapon to a position corresponding with that of
McGurk’s.
“We were both very wild that time. We must do better now. We’ll stoop
for our guns, McGurk. The signal? No, we won’t wait for the horse to
stamp. The signal will be when you stoop for your gun. You shall have
every advantage, you see? Start for that gun, McGurk, when you’re
ready for the end.”
The hand of McGurk stretched out and his arm stiffened but it seemed
as though all the muscles of his back had grown stiff. He could not
bend. It was strange. It was both ludicrous and incomprehensible.
Perhaps he had grown stiff with cold in that position.
But he heard the voice of Pierre explaining gently: “You can’t move,
my friend. I understand. It’s fear that stiffened your back.
It’s fear that sends the chill up and down your blood. It’s fear that
makes you think back to your murders, one by one. McGurk, you’re done
for. You’re through. You’re ready for the discard. I’m not going to
kill you. I’ve thought of a finer hell than death, and that is to live
as you shall live. I’ve beaten you, McGurk, beaten you fairly on the
draw, and I’ve broken your heart by doing it. The next time you face a
man you’ll begin to think—you’ll begin to remember how one other man
beat you at the draw. And that wonder, McGurk, will make your hand
freeze to your side, as you’ve made the hands of other men before me
freeze. D’you understand?”
The lips of McGurk parted. The whisper of his dry panting reached
Pierre, and the devil in him smiled.
“In six weeks, McGurk, you’ll be finished. Now get out!”
And pace by pace McGurk drew back, with his face still toward Pierre.
The latter cried: “Wait. Are you going to leave your gun?”
Only the steady retreat continued.
“And go unarmed through the mountains? What will men say when they see
McGurk with an empty holster?”
But the outlaw had passed out of view beyond the corner of one of the
monster boulders. After him went the white horse, slowly, picking his
steps, as if he were treading on dangerous and unknown ground and
would not trust his leader. Pierre was left to the loneliness of
the gorge.
The moonlight only served to make more visible its rocky nakedness,
and like that nakedness was the life of Pierre under his hopeless
inward eye. Over him loomed from either side the gleaming pinnacles of
the Twin Bears, and he remembered many a time when he had looked up
toward them from the crests of lesser mountains—looked up toward them
as a man looks to a great and unattainable ideal. Here he was come
to the crest of all the ranges; here he was come to the height and
limit of his life, and what had he attained? Only a cruel, cold
isolation. It had been a steep ascent; the declivity of the farther
side led him down to a steep and certain ruin and the dark night
below. But he stiffened suddenly and threw his head high as if he
faced his fate;
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