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Authors: Louis L'amour

BOOK: to Tame a Land (1955)
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We got down and tied our horses and went inside.

Mustang went through the door first with me right behind him, my head down.

There were four people in the restaurant: the woma n who ran it, old Mason, who sat at a table alone, and tw o cow hands in from the forks of the creek.

Four people besides Burdette. He was sitting behin d a table facing the door.

When we got three steps inside the door Mustang sides tepped and I was looking into those mean, slate-gra y eyes of Ollie Burdette's.

He was surprised. That was plain. And he never go t a chance to get over it. I walked right up to his tabl e because he didn't like it close up. I walked right up, an d I had only two steps to make to get there, and then I s poke up, loud and clear.

"Burdette, you murdered Hetrick. That old man neve r packed a gun in his life. And you told it around that yo u had run me out of town. That's why you killed him, because he knew you were a liar. He saw you take water tha t time."

He hadn't no time to get his mouth open. Me, I jus t kept shoving it at him, and when he started to drop hi s hand, I slammed against the table and smashed him bac k against the wall. And then I slapped him twice across th e mouth, once with each hand.

Suddenly I was mad. I was mad clean through, bu t not killing mad. I just wanted to destroy everything h e was or thought he was.

It had been a complete surprise, shocking to Olli e Burdette, and my lunge against the table had pinne d his gun holster.

But suddenly I jerked the table away and steppe d in. He grabbed for his gun, but I hit him. He staggere d and I swung a boot from the floor and kicked his gu n loose. It fell, and as he grabbed for it, I hit him in th e face.

He put his hands up and rushed at me, but he wa s a man who had trusted to guns. Big as he was and h e was heavier than me he was no fighter. I hit him i n the belly, then on the side of the face. That last blow cu t deep and knocked him around, smashing his head agains t the edge of the table.

He got no chance at all from me. No more than h e had given some of the men he killed. I grabbed him b y the collar and back-walked him to the door, slappin g him across the face at every step. Then I shoved him ou t of the door and into the street.

He fell in the dust, and fell hard. Then he lunge d to his feet, but he didn't know which way to turn. He wa s caught without a gun, and without a gun he was nothing. He started to backup, and I went after him.

Walkin& him back across the street, I slapped him. H
e tried to fight back, striking at me, trying to knock m y hands down. A time or two he hit me, but he had bee n sitting around taking it easy while I had been riding , working, roughing it.

In front of the saloon, with fifty men looking on, I k nocked him down. He got up and rushed me, and I hi t him in the mouth, smashing his lips into his teeth. H
e backed up, bloody and beaten. I walked up to him an d throwing one from the hip, knocked him down again.

Then I picked him up and tossed him bodily into th e water trough. Then I fished him out and stood him u p against it.

"You murdered Hetrick. You might as well have murdered his wife. You bragged around that you run m e out. You're just a two-bit bad man in a four-bit town."

He couldn't talk. His wind was gone and his mout h was all blood and torn lips.

"You got a horse?" I looked around at Old Man Mason, who had followed us. "Where's his horse?"

"I'll get it." The voice was familiar, and I looke d around. It was Kipp.

Burdette stood there, soaked to the hide and shivering.

He shook his head like a wounded bear. It had all happened so fast that he hadn't no time to get set for it. Righ t then I don't think he had realized yet what was happening to him. Too long he had lorded it around, doing i t all on the strength of his gun. And now he had no gun.

When Kipp came up with the horse, I told Burdett e to get into the saddle. "Now ride. And don't stop ridin g until the week is gone."

"I got property," he protested, able to talk at last "I g ot stuff at the house."

"You lose it," I said, "like Hetrick lost his ranch."

He stared at me, and those poison-mean eyes wer e shocked and dull. "Don't I get a gun? Without a gun m y life ain't worth a plugged nickel."

"No more than the lives of some of those you killed.

You get no gun."

He never said anything more. He just walked his hors e off down the street and out of town. Somebody gave a halfhearted cheer, but not much of one. Trouble was , they were shocked, too.

"Kipp," I said, "Where'd Liza go?"

"Don't know, Rye. She wouldn't take any help. Afte r her ma died she aimed to take care of herself. She didn'
t get much out of the ranch. After Hetrick was killed, th e horse thieves stole them blind. All I know is, she bough t a ticket for Alta. She would have had about forty dollar s left when she got there."

Mustang and me, we mounted up and rode out o f town that night. There was nothing at the Crossing fo r me now, and Mustang, he just seemed to want to sta y along with me. And no man had a better friend.

We never talked any about being partners. We neve r said much of anything to each other. We just rode together and shared together, and that was the way of it.

Alta was a boom mining town, half across the state o f Utah. It wasn't a Mormon town, being populated mostl y by gentile miners from Nevada or Colorado. Many ha d been working on the Comstock Lode and some had com e down from Alder Gulch, Montana.

I'd been hearing about Alta. It was a sure-enoug h mean town, where they killed 'men every night and mostl y every day. The mines were rich and the town was booming. It was wide open and ararin'.

Never before had I had much of any place to go, o r any purpose in life. Now I had one. I was going to fin d Liza. I was going to make sure she was doing all right.

It wasn't right for a girl of seventeen to be traipsin g around rough country on her own. No telling what ha d happened to her.

Right then I thought some mighty fierce thoughts, an d I angered up some, just thinking things that might hav e happened to her.

It was snowing when we rode into town and stable d our horses. The first thing to do was to find a place t o sleep, but I left that to Mustang and started for a saloon.

The saloon was the club, the meeting place, the clearing house for information. In a mining camp or a co w town the same rule held true, and often enough th e company would include many who drink little or nothin g at all.

The snow was falling fast, and except in the street , churned into mud by the passing of men, horses, an d heavy wagons, the ground rapidly grew white. Huge or e wagons dragged by, their shouting drivers bundled u p against the cold, their huge horses or oxen leaning int o the harness as they strained against great loads.

A music box was going up the street, and in the feebl e light of a lantern behind a saloon a man was splittin g wood.

When I pushed open the door of the Bucket of Bloo d I was met by a wave of hot air, thick with tobacco smok e and the sour odor of bad whisky. At least a hundred me n crowded the small room, standing three deep at the bar.

Bearded men loafed along the walls, leaning or squattin g and watching for a favorable moment to grab a chair.

This was a familiar scene, and I had known it before , in other towns. There were even familiar faces, me n whose names I didn't know, but whom I had seen in Denver, Santa Fe, or Mason Crossing. There was even on e I knew from New Orleans.

Moving through the crowd, I was lucky enough to ge t close to the bar. Beside me two men talked Norwegian , and down the bar I heard a man order in German, an d the bartender replied in the same language. This was th e West, a melting pot, a conglomeration. These were har d tough, reckless men from all over the world, following th e lure of a wild new country and quick riches in the mines.

No telling what had happened to Liza here. Maybe sh e had seen the place and what it was like and had gon e on. Certainly this town was no place for a pretty gir l alone.

Two hours later I was no closer to finding her. True , I wasn't asking questions. I was listening, drifting fro m place to place, keeping my eyes open. The stage statio n was closed, so I couldn't check there.

Snow kept falling. The Gold Miner's Daughter wa s jammed when Mustang found me there.

"Got a place," he said, "and it wasn't easy. This tow n is crowded."

We drifted around the tables. We had a drink, and I p layed a little roulette and lost fifteen dollars, then wo n five of it back.

Turning toward the door, I saw a man stop and tak e another look at me, then walk on. He knew me fro m somewhere.

All of a sudden, somebody swore, men jammed back ou t of the way, and a gun blasted.

It was that quick, and all over. A man in diggin g clothes was backing up slowly, both hands holding hi s stomach. He sat down and rolled over, moaning softly.

The gambler with the gun in his hand walked aroun d the table and stood over him. Coolly he lifted his pisto l for another shot.

Me, I don't know why I did it, but I stepped from th e crowd.

"He's dying. Leave him alone."

The gambler was in his shirt sleeves and vest. He wa s a tall, pale man with a mustache. His eyes held suc h cruelty as I've never seen before. He looked coolly at me.

"You're making it your business?"

He held a derringer in his hand. It was one of thos e short guns with two barrels, each holding a .44 cartridge.

"I am."

He looked at me. His gun was in his hand, half lifted.

Mine was in my holster. Yet he had one shot left, an d if he did not kill me with that shot, he was a dead man.

He shrugged. "He'll die, anyway. No use to shoo t again."

The man on the floor coughed heavily and stared at th e gambler. "Cheat . . . You cheat . . ." and then he sagge d back on the floor and died.

He wore a gun, all right, but it was buttoned unde r his coat. He'd had no chance at all.

"He lies," the gambler said contemptuously. "He jus t couldn't take losing."

"He sure didn't have that gun where he could use it,"

I said.

The gambler was turning away, but now he swun g around to face me, his face livid. "You keep your mout h shut!" he shouted. "I've taken all I'm going to."

"If I was the law in this town," I said, "you'd be o n the first stage out. And you'd never show your face i n town again. This was murder. He had no chance, non e at all."

The derringer started to lift, coming up slowly. An d just when I was going to take my chance and draw, I h eard Mustang's voice.

"His gun ain't drawed, mister . . . but mine is!"

And it was. The gambler didn't like that big six lookin g at him. He shrugged and turned sharply away.

"You push your luck, stranger," a miner said quietly.

"That's Key Novak. He's killed three men in the past tw o months."

With Mustang at my side I turned away and walke d out, leaving the Gold Miner's Daughter and starting u p the street. We had taken only a few steps when a doo r closed behind us and we heard footsteps on the walk.

Flattening into a doorway with my gun in my hand , I watched three men coining down the walk. Mustang wa s standing on the other side, half behind a water troug h and an awning post. A frozen water barrel offered adde d protection.

The men drew abreast and in the light from a nearb y window I recognized the man who had appeared to recognize me in the saloon. They stopped, and this ma n spoke. "Tyler, you don't know me, but I used to see yo u around Kansas City. Heard about you from Billy Dixon."

"So?"

"I heard you were the man who killed Rice Wheeler?

And Leet Bowers?"

"That's right."

"Tyler, we want a marshal in this town. One who wil l clean out the crooked gamblers and the thugs. We ha d two knife killings last night. We don't know who di d them. We had a miner killed last week. The crooks ar e running the town. We'll give you two hundred and fift y a month to clean up for us."

This was a surprise. I'd never fancied myself as th e law before. On the other hand, there would be no bette r way to look the town over for Liza.

"All right," I said, "but I want Mustang as deputy."

"As you like." He hesitated. "My name is Murdock.

I own the general store. This is Eph Graham, agent fo r Wells Fargo. Newton here has the hardware store and th e mining supplies. We're the town council."

"All right."

"One thing . . . the present marshal is John Lang. He'
s the Texas gunman. He has to be fired."

My eyes went over the three of them. A wagon wa s passing in the street and the clop-clop of the heavy hoof s in the stiffening mud was loud. "I fire him?" I asked.

Newton looked uneasy, and Murdock shifted his feet , but Graham nodded.

"He's dangerous . . . and we think he's with the crooks.'

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