Читать книгу The Drop Edge of Yonder - Rudolph Wurlitzer - Страница 12

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Zebulon didn’t see the stars shooting across the sky like silver bursts of rifle fire, or the goat feeding on garbage next to him, or the Mexican kid sitting on the lip of the arroyo waiting to steal his boots.

“Quién es?

He turned over on his back, his head pounding as if it was locked inside a giant church bell.

“Quién es?” the kid asked again.

Who was he anyway? And where was he? And where was he going? He sat up, wiping the dried blood from his eyes. A man lay next to him, surrounded by smashed bottles and scraps of rotting meat. There was a hole in the man’s forehead and his matted yellow hair fell in bloody strands over his face. Zebulon looked closer. There was something familiar about the man’s fringed buckskins and torn moccasins, and the fact that he was clutching the queen of hearts in one hand. Zebulon watched a fly crawl across the man’s cheek. It was a long journey, the way the fly was crawling, then stopping, then crawling on. From life to death, he thought, and back again. And how was he doing on this journey? Was he dead or alive, or was he trapped between the worlds like a blind man? When he shut his eyes and opened them again, the man was no longer there.

He remembered a full house and a queen of hearts, a shot followed by more shots, then staggering out of the cantina and falling headfirst into the arroyo. He took a deep breath. He wasn’t dead. Not that it would be so bad to be dead, the way things had been going.

The goat’s chewing made him think of his pa. Or maybe it was the smell of stale urine. If the old bastard was still alive, he and Ma would be getting their winter pelts ready to sell. He ought to ride up and help them. Anything to be shut of this town of aging outlaws and second-rate card cheats—one of whom had tried to kill him. Or was that another time in another town?

“Quién es?” the kid was asking.

On the road to nowhere. On the drift ever since he had left his family in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains five years ago. The goat stepped closer, staring down at him with dull insolence, as if to remind him that his string had run out. “Not hardly,” he muttered. Not yet. Just to make sure, he raised the Colt and fired a bullet through the goat’s eye. One way or the other, he was back. The stinking garbage and the dead goat and the way the Colt felt in his hand convinced him of that, enough anyway, to stumble past the Mexican kid who was sliding back on his haunches as if he had seen a ghost.

~ ~ ~

He staggered down the deserted street toward the cantina. Above the moaning wind, he heard the faint chords of a piano.

The stagecoach was gone. His horse wasn’t where he had hitched it and he mounted the first one he came to. Before he could ride down the street, the bandy-legged man staggered out of the swinging doors to take a leak, an act that was causing him trouble with one arm wrapped in a sling.

Shaken, he looked up at Zebulon. “I swear you’re dead, only you’re on my horse. Listen. It was a long night, and I didn’t see what went down. But it weren’t me that smoked you. I tried. Sure. But I got nicked before I called you out. It might have been that whore, the one that dealt the straight flush. She and that ferriner that owns her. Take my word, they’re some devilish act, them two. Slicker’n three-headed snakes. When she won that last hand, all hell broke loose. What I recall anyways. Like I said, I wasn’t in the best of shape.”

The man’s confused, cloudy eyes reminded Zebulon of the goat.

“I’ll take your horse,” Zebulon said, “for settlement. And maybe I’ll blow off your trigger finger for tryin’ to take me out.”

The bandy-legged man looked back at the saloon where the two whores were laughing at him through a broken window. There was no help from either of them.

His hand shook as he raised his pistol. “No one takes a horse from me, or even thinks about it. And I never jacked it. It was that ferriner or one of them vaqueros or ranch hands at the billiard table. Or that breed. Hatchet Jack. Ask him. He’s in there now. I can take a loss. Hell, that’s my middle name. Lost and never found. If you don’t believe me, we might as well slap to it here and now.”

“It’s your call,” Zebulon said. “But if you dry-shoot me, do it with your whizzle in your pants.”

He dismounted and pushed past him into the cantina, not giving a damn one way or the other.

“No sense to it,” the bandy-legged man said to the two whores. “The man come back from the dead. What do you want me to do, send him straight to hell again?”

Inside the cantina the only signs of a shoot-out were dark stains on the floor, a few smashed chairs, and a blown-out window.

Hatchet Jack was sitting at the bar, a bandage wrapped around his head.

Zebulon shoved Hatchet Jack’s money toward the bartender, motioning for a bottle of Taos White Lightning.

“No hat size to this town,” Hatchet Jack said. “Only thing left is to get shut of it.”

“Who shot me?” Zebulon asked.

“You don’t recall?” Hatchet Jack rolled a shot glass between his palms. “When I went over to the bar I heard someone, I don’t recall who, sayin’ the woman was dealin’ off the bottom—snakin’ a queen of hearts straight flush to your full house. Or maybe it was the other way around. A bunch come in the door and I was too pissed and likkered to notice. Next thing, I’m cold-cocked. When I come to, you was gone and I went upstairs and slept it off. I don’t recall the rest. Who gives a damn. We’re still on the dance floor, ain’t we? More than some.”

“You see anything?” Zebulon asked the bartender, a squat man with a bushy mustache and wide red suspenders.

“Not a thing,” he replied. “I was out back haulin’ likker stock. When I come in, it was all over and everyone had cleared out. I don’t remember. Hell, that was two nights ago.”

“Anything can happen in two nights,” Hatchet Jack said. “Or one, for that matter. Or none.”

“You been here two nights?” Zebulon asked.

Hatchet Jack poured himself another shot. “Like I said, I was upstairs. Now everyone’s zippered up or rode off. You might have noticed I ain’t in the best of shape myself. If someone don’t try to plug you, he might settle for me. And that ain’t why I rode down here. How about it? You want to ride up to see your ma and pa? It ain’t like you got anything better to do.”

“Tell me one last thing,” Zebulon asked. “Did you throw your loop over that bay horse in Galisteo?”

“Hell no,” Hatchet Jack replied. “I snagged a zebra dun. The bay wasn’t worth a bag of rocks.”

When they pushed through the swinging doors, the bandylegged man was sitting on a bench. He didn’t look up when Hatchet Jack rode down the street, followed by Zebulon riding the bandy-legged man’s horse.

The Drop Edge of Yonder

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