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Stryker's Revenge Page 7
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Stryker shook his head. “His immediate concern is to find water, and that’s not easy to do in the Chiricahuas. If he’d bumped into Apaches, trust me, he’d be back here by now, hell-for-leather.”
“Major Hanson told me you had quite a battle with the Indians yourself, sir.”
Stryker smiled. “I bushwhacked a bunch of drunken Apaches in a box canyon.” He shrugged. “Still, you kill them any way you can, don’t you?”
Birchwood nodded. “I believe that’s the way of it, sir.”
“That’s the way of it, Lieutenant.” Then, as though talking to himself, he said, “Yup, that’s the way of it, all right.”
Fifteen minutes later, Joe Hogg rode out of the blazing day, his Henry across the saddle horn. The scout rode tall and tense in the saddle, looking around him, not liking what the land was telling him.
Stryker halted the column and waited.
Hogg kneed his mustang close to Stryker, then took off his hat and wiped sweat from the band. “Hot,” he said.
The lieutenant waited. Beside him, Birchwood’s gray tossed its head, champing at the bit. One of the infantrymen hawked and spit dust.
Finally he said, “What’s up ahead, Joe?” “Apache sign, Lieutenant, a heap of it. And a dead white man.”
Stryker stood in the stirrups, easing himself in the saddle. The dead man could wait. “Where are the savages headed?”
“I’d say right now they’re in the Chiricahuas due east of the Sulphur Hills, trying to discover where the white man was headed. The man wouldn’t have been riding alone if he didn’t have a place to go and a mighty important reason for getting there. The Apaches must figure there’s a ranch or a farm around there someplace.”
“But eventually they’ll turn south, huh?”
“I can’t say that, Lieutenant. Geronimo is trying to make a name for himself as a war chief, and old Nana will go along with whatever he says.” Hogg looked beyond Stryker, his gaze shifting to their back trail. “They could head north.”
The implication of that hit Stryker immediately. “You mean attack Fort Bowie?”
The scout shook his head. “No, Geronimo is not strong enough to tackle a post of that size. But by this time he’s sure been told that there’s only a single infantry company guarding Fort Merit.”
“How many warriors does this Geronimo savage have?”
“Hard to say, but he might have fifty or more, and, judging by the tracks I saw earlier, more young men are joining him.” Hogg shrugged. “He’s got enough, especially if Yanisin’s band throws in with him.”
“Colonel Devore told me the Apaches would head for Mexico.”
“Colonel Devore ain’t here, Lieutenant.”
For a few moments Stryker sat his saddle, thinking it through. Finally he looked at Hogg, his mind made up. “Joe, I want to see those tracks for myself. Lieutenant Birchwood, bring up the column at your best speed.”
The young lieutenant saluted, and Stryker turned to his scout again. “Let’s go.” He set spurs to his horse and headed south, into the glowering heat of the dancing day.
The dead man lay where he’d fallen. He was on his back, his eyes burning out in the sun. He’d been struck by a volley of shots and was probably dead when he hit the ground.
“What do you make of him, Joe?” Stryker asked.
“Looks like a sodbuster to me, but he hasn’t done none o’ that lately. Look at his hands, they ain’t guided a plow in some time.” He glanced at Stryker. “It’s getting hard to tell now the sun’s got to him, Lieutenant, but when I first saw him, when he was fresher, he had the look of a drinker.”
Stryker looked around him. “Unshod ponies. How many would you say?”
“Six, maybe seven. They either broke off from Geronimo’s main bunch or they were riding to join him when they stumbled on this man.”
“What the hell was he doing out here by himself?”
“Like I said, he was goin’ someplace.”
“Someplace . . . in this damned, godforsaken wilderness?”
Hogg pointed. “The pony tracks head that way, toward the hogback yonder. My guess is the sodbuster’s farm is back there.” Stryker said nothing, and the scout prompted. “And maybe his woman and his kids.”
“We’ll wait for the company to come up,” the lieutenant said.
Suddenly the crash of a rifle shot echoed through the foothills, and then another.
“Might be too late by then,” Hogg said quietly.
Stryker shook his head. “Damn you, Joe. You do love to pick at a man’s conscience.” He turned and looked behind him. But Birchwood and his infantry were not yet in sight.
“Oh, hell.” He drew his revolver. “Let’s rescue the farmer’s wife, even if it kills us, which it surely might.”
A narrow game trail led between a series of low hills covered with mesquite and juniper. There was no relief from the pitiless sun that hammered at both men and their horses. Stryker smelled the rankness of his own sweat rise from the dark arcs under the arms of his faded blue shirt. The light was a hard glare that hurt the eyes and turned the sand into a lake of molten steel. The heat was a malevolent, living entity and in all the vast land only the slopes of the mountains, green with pines, looked cool.
“You’re doing the right thing, Lieutenant,” Hogg said, turning in the saddle.
“Joe, you can write that on my gravestone: He Done the Right Thing.”
More shots, coming from beyond the hogback. The scout read them. “Five, six Apaches firing, but only one answering shot. From a Sharps .50, I’d say.”
“The farmer’s wife is fighting back.”
“Seems like.”
Stryker studied the land ahead of him. Nothing moved but a lone buzzard quartering the sky. There was no breeze here in the foothills and the air hung still, as thick and hard to breathe as warm cotton.
The game trail petered out as the hills gave way to a wide meadow, cratered with hollows. The ground was thick with cactus, mostly cholla and prickly pear, here and there vivid swathes of desert bluebells and marigolds.
The riders crossed the meadow, then hit the slope of the hogback at a canter, dislodging loose gravel that clattered behind them. Before they reached the ridge they dismounted. Stryker retrieved his field glasses from his saddlebags, and with Hogg at a crouching run beside him, covered the rest of the distance on foot.
Lying on his belly, he scanned the basin below.
The slope of the hogback dropped gradually into an open area of grass and broken land that looked as though it had once been plowed. There was a small cabin overhung by a huge cottonwood, a pole corral and sizeable barn. Among the outbuildings were a smokehouse, an open-fronted shed for a blacksmith’s forge and a smaller cabin that seemed to serve no ascertainable purpose.
The place had once been a fine-looking farm, but now looked shabby and rundown, held together by baling wire and twine.
Hogg’s elbow dug into Stryker’s ribs. He held up two fingers, then pointed to a jumble of boulders about thirty yards from the cabin that looked like they’d been cleared from a field. Now the scout held up one finger and pointed to the pole corral.
Stryker scanned both areas with his glasses, but saw nothing.
Then an Apache moved. The warrior at the corral stepped from behind a fencepost and fired at the cabin. There was no answering shot.
Stryker indicated to Hogg that they should back away from the crest of the hill. Once he could stand on his feet again, he asked, “You saw three Apaches. Where are the others?”
Hogg shook his head. “Dunno. But I reckon there’s two or three more. When an Apache don’t want to be seen, you don’t see him.”
Stryker nodded. “Joe, position yourself at the top of the hill again and when the Apaches show, drop them with your Henry.”
“Where are you going to be, Lieutenant.”
“I’ll mount up and head directly for the cabin.
The savages are tightening the noose, and whoever is insid
e there could be hurt and needs help.”
“Sounds like a mighty good way to cut a promising army career short,” Hogg said, without a trace of humor.
The lieutenant smiled. “Then be sure to tell Colonel Devore about Stryker’s gallant ride.”
“I will, but he’ll be sorely disappointed in you, Lieutenant. He had his heart set on making you a captain.”
Stryker waited until Hogg was in position, then swung into the saddle. He wiped the fear sweat from his gun hand on his breeches, then fisted the Colt again.
He saw Hogg glance back at him, swallowed hard, and kicked the bay into motion. The big horse crested the hill at a gallop and plunged down the other side, the bit in its teeth, mane flying.
Now there was no turning back.
Chapter 11
Stryker saw a startled Apache rise up from the pile of boulders. He snapped off a shot. Missed. The Indian fired and Stryker felt the bullet burn across his canvas suspender where it crossed his shoulder. A rifle crashed from the rise and the Apache looked even more startled as a blood red rose appeared on the chest of his white shirt. He went down hard.
The cabin was closer now.
Bullets from all sides of the basin stung the air around Stryker. He thumbed off a fast shot at the Apache by the corral post. Another miss. Behind him Hogg was firing steadily but didn’t seem to be scoring hits either.
The Apache stepped away from the corral and threw his Winchester to his shoulder. He and Stryker fired at the same time. The Indian’s bullet crashed into the bay and Stryker cartwheeled from the saddle, landing hard on his back in a cloud of dust.
A man who is thrown by a galloping horse doesn’t get up in a hurry. Stryker lay stunned as bullets kicked up startled exclamation points of sand around him. Finally he raised himself into a sitting position. Feet pounded to his right, coming fast. The Apache, grimacing in rage, had grabbed his rifle and was readying himself to swing a killing blow at the white officer’s head.
A shot.
The Apache went down, screaming, half of his skull blown away. Stryker turned his reeling head and saw a woman standing at the cabin door, a smoking Sharps still to her shoulder. Gun in hand, he struggled to his feet and staggered toward the sanctuary of the open door. It seemed like it was an eternity away.
He almost made it.
Just as the woman stepped inside, pushing open the door for him, a bullet thudded into Stryker’s right side, just above his cartridge belt. He felt like he’d been hit by a sledgehammer and slammed hard against the door jamb. Another bullet thudded into the rough pine of the door, driving splinters into his face.
Then he was through, stumbling into the darkness of the cabin on rubber legs.
A few splintered impressions quickly hurled themselves at Stryker. A woman slamming the wooden bolt shut behind him . . . a wide-eyed child cowering in a corner . . . empty shell casings scattered around the dirt floor . . . the woman’s frightened face, showing him the Sharps, telling him she’d used her last bullet, the one she’d been saving for her daughter . . . blood, his own blood, dripping down his legs . . .
A heavy body threw itself against the door. Stryker raised his Colt and fired twice through the timber. He heard a yelp of pain. Then the roar of volleyed rifle fire slammed across the basin. More shots, this time a ragged salvo, soldiers firing at will.
A few minutes passed, then, “Lieutenant Stryker!” It was Joe Hogg’s voice, calling from outside. Stryker opened the door and stepped into daylight. Hogg was standing in front of the cabin, the Henry cradled in his arms. Behind him Birchwood’s soldiers were checking the bodies of the dead Apaches.
“We killed two of them,” the scout said. “And you winged another. The rest skedaddled when the troops arrived.”
Stryker nodded, but said nothing.
Birchwood led his horse to the cabin. “Heard the firing, sir,” he said. “Figured it had to be you.”
“You did well, Lieutenant,” Stryker said. He felt very weak and had trouble standing on his feet without swaying. He grimaced back a wave of pain. “I’ll mention . . . mention that in my report.”
Suddenly he was aware of the woman standing beside him. She glared at Hogg and Birchwood. “Can’t you two see that this man is hurt?” she snapped. “Help me get him inside.”
Hogg was shocked. “Did you take a bullet, Lieutenant?”
The woman answered for Stryker. “Yes, he took a bullet. Now are you going to help or not?”
Birchwood and the scout sprang to help. Stryker was a big man, and they half dragged, half carried him inside.
“Lay him down on the bed, over there,” the woman said.
A brass bed was pushed against the far wall of the cabin, its patchwork quilt adding the only splash of color to the drab room.
“I’m fine,” Stryker protested as he was pushed on his back and the woman lifted his dusty, booted feet onto the bed, ignoring the damage it might cause to her quilt. “I will proceed to the Apache village on Big Bend Creek as I was ordered.”
Hogg clucked his tongue, his face troubled, looking at the spreading scarlet stain on Stryker’s side. “Lieutenant, you ain’t going anywhere for a spell. If you ain’t gut-shot, then you’ve come mighty close.”
The woman pushed the scout aside and began to unbutton Stryker’s shirt. She slipped the suspenders off his shoulders and gently pulled the shirt over his head.
Stryker struggled to a sitting position and looked at the wound. It was ugly and red, raw meat around the edges of the bullet hole.
“How bad is it?” Stryker asked, seeking some reassurance that the injury wasn’t as bad as he feared.
The woman met his eyes but said nothing.
Hogg was not so reticent. “It’s bad, Lieutenant. As bad as I’ve seen, ’cept on a dead man.”
“The bullet is still inside him,” the woman said. “It’s got to come out.”
“Not if it’s in his gut,” Hogg said.
“Or close to the spine,” Birchwood added.
Stryker let out a roar of exasperation. “Damn it, I’m still here, you know! And I can hear every word.” He looked at Hogg. “Joe, see if you can find the damned bullet.”
“Leave it, I’ll examine him,” the woman said, pushing Hogg aside again.
Stryker noticed two things about his nurse. The first was the gentleness of her hands, the second, much more obvious, was the livid white scar that cut across her tanned cheek from her left ear to the corner of her mouth. The cut that caused it had been deep, meant to inflict the maximum damage.
Stryker looked at the scar and wondered. Who had done that to her?
An Apache maybe, but that seemed unlikely. A jealous lover? The woman was homely, made plainer by hard work and the hot desert sun, not the sort likely to attract such men. Her husband, if she had one?
Stryker had no answers and he did not speculate any further as she rolled him over on his belly.
After some gentle probing, the woman turned to Hogg. “The bullet is there,” she said, pointing to a spot just under the ribs on Stryker’s left side. “I can feel it.”
“Let me take a look-see,” the scout said.
Hogg’s hands were no less gentle than the woman’s. “I feel it,” he said finally. “It has to be cut out of there.”
“Can you do it?” the woman asked.
“I can do it,” the scout said. “It’s a mite deeper than I’d like, but I can do it. I’ve cut worse out of folks and critters alike, an’ most of them lived.”
Stryker felt panic rise in him. “Joe, can’t the bullet sit there? Just bind me up real good and let it stay until we get back to Fort Merit.”
Hogg nodded. “It can stay, Lieutenant, but then it will spread its poison and kill you quicker’n scat. You’ll never reach Fort Merit.”
Stryker let his head thud onto the pillow. “Then cut away, and be damned to you, Joe Hogg.”
“Ma’am, I do not mean to imply in any way that ardent spirits hold any attraction for
you,” Hogg said, “but do you have whiskey in the house?”
The woman smiled. She looked strained, exhausted, the horrors of the Apache attack finally catching up with her. “We always have whiskey in this house,” she said. “I’ll bring the jug.”
Hogg accepted the jug, pulled the cork and drank deeply. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and offered it to Birchwood, who declined.
After he’d helped Stryker into a sitting poison, he said, “Drink as much as you can, Lieutenant. That there busthead will dull the pain if it don’t kill you first.”
Stryker was irritated, piqued. “Seems to me the one with the bullet in him should have drank first.”
Hogg shook his head. “No, first the surgeon, and then the second lieutenant, and then the patient. That’s how it’s done in medical circles.” He smiled at Stryker like a benign uncle. “Now drink up—there’s a good officer.”
Stryker did as he was told; then Hogg said, “More.”
“Damn it, Joe, this stuff is awful.”
“So is havin’ a bullet cut out of your back, Lieutenant. More.”
For the next few minutes Stryker drank deeper and longer. When he lowered the jug, his head spun and the people in the room suddenly began to shift shape, as though they were walking out of a heat shimmer.
“Damn, but that’s good whiskey,” Stryker said, holding the jug at arm’s length. His uncertain gaze fell on the woman, who had just lit a lantern and brought it closer to the bed. “Will you join me, ma’am?” He looked at Hogg. “What was it you called this, Joe?”
“Busthead.”
Stryker nodded. “Damn right. That’s what you called it. Will you join me, ma’am, and partake of some gen . . . geninin . . . genurine Arizona Territory busthead?”
“I’d love to, Lieutenant.”
After he handed her the jug, the woman took a swig. “Thank you,” she said. “I needed that.”
“A pleasure, ma’am, a great pleasure.” Stryker’s broken face took on a surprised look. “I don’t know your name, ma’am.”
“It’s Mary. My last name is McCabe.”
“And mine is Steve. My last name is Stryker. I come from a long . . . oh, a long, long line of Strykers.” He tried to focus on the woman. “Wait, I used to know a song about a woman called Mary. We sang it at the Point sometimes.” He held up a hand in horror. “Oh, but I can’t sing that, ma’am. Not in this polite company. See, it’s about Dirty Mary who worked in a dairy and . . .”