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Trouble at Rindos Station.
Original t.i.tle: Rindo's Station Argosy, Argosy, October 1953 October 1953
Chapter One.
THERE WAS A TIME when Bonito might have fired at the rider far below on the road, and for no other reason than to test his carbine, since the rider was a white man. He had done this many times before-sometimes for a shirt, or a fresh horse, usually for ammunition, though a reason was not necessary. But now there was something on the Mescalero's mind. He held his fire and urged his pony down the pinon slope.
From high up he had recognized Ross Corsen-the lank figure slouched in the McClellan saddle, head down against the glare, hat low over his eyes. And now, as the Mescalero closed in, Corsen looked up, though he had seen him long before, when Bonito was still high up the slope.
"Sik-isn," Bonito said. The word was a hiss between his lips. Strands of hair hung from the shadow of a high-crowned hat, thick, glistening hair accentuating the yellowish cast of his skin and the pock scars that roughened heavy-boned features. A frayed, sweat-stained shirt covered his chest, but his legs were naked, for he wore only a breechclout, and the curled toes of his moccasins hung beneath the pony's belly, ridiculously close to the ground. A carbine was across his lap.
Ross Corsen smiled at the Apache's greeting and studied the broad, ugly face. "Now you call me brother, brother," he said in Spanish. "You must want something." He had not seen the Mescalero in almost a year, not since the four-day chase down to the border, and a glimpse of Bonito far off, not running any longer because he was safely in Mexico. Bonito had killed two Coyotero policemen during a tulapai drunk. That had started it. On the run for the border, he killed two more men, plus four horses that didn't belong to him. Now he was back and Corsen studied him, wondering why.
The Apache spoke a slow, guttural Spanish and said, as if in the middle of his thoughts, "We have suffered unfairly from your hand; all of us have"-he used the Apache word tinneh, tinneh, which meant all of the people and in its meaning described the blood tie which bound them together-"and from the other man, the one who directs you. You think only of yourselves." which meant all of the people and in its meaning described the blood tie which bound them together-"and from the other man, the one who directs you. You think only of yourselves."
"And when did you begin thinking of others?" Corsen said.
"Those are my people at Pinaleno," Bonito answered him.
Corsen shrugged. "I won't argue with you. What you do now is no concern of mine. I can't do a thing to you or for you, but maybe suggest you go home and get drunk, which is what you'll probably do anyway."
"And where is our home, Cor-sen?"
"You know as well as I do."
"At San Carlos, where there is little to eat?"
Corsen nodded to the Maynard carbine across the Apache's lap. "Maybe in Mexico. You can't have one of those at San Carlos."
"Yes, in Sonora and Chihuahua where it is a business of profit to take the hair of the Apache, the government paying for our scalps."
Corsen shook his head. "Look, I no longer am in charge of the Pinaleno Reservation. The government man has discharged me." He thought for words that would explain it clearly to the Apache. "He is the one, Mr. Sellers, who has taken your guns and decided that you live on government beef."
"Some of the government beef," Bonito corrected. "He sells most of it to others for his own profit."
"That is not true of all reservations. You know I treated your people fairly."
"But you are no longer there and soon it will be true of all reservations."
The words were familiar to Corsen. No, not so much the words as the idea: he had argued this very thing with Sellers three days before, straining his patience to explain to the Bureau of Indian Affairs supervisor exactly what an Apache is. What kind of thinking animal he is. How much abuse he will take before all the peace talks in the world will not stop him. And he had lost the argument because, even if reason was not on Sellers's side, authority was. He threw it in Sellers's face, accusing him of selling government rations for his own profit, and Sellers laughed, daring him to prove it-then fired him. He would have quit. You can't go on working for a man like that. He decided that he didn't care anyway.
For that matter it was strange that he should. Ross Corsen knew Apaches because he had fought them. He had been in charge of the Coyotero trackers at Fort Thomas for four years. And after that, for three years-until the day before yesterday-he had been in charge of the Mescalero Subagency at Pinaleno, thirty miles south of Thomas.
He didn't care. The h.e.l.l with it. That's what he told himself. Still he kept wondering what had brought Bonito back. He thought: Leave him alone. If he came back to help his people, let him work it out his own Apache way. You tried. But instead he asked carefully, "Why would a warrior of Bonito's stature return now to a reservation? They haven't forgotten what you did. If you're caught, they'll hang you."
"Then I would die-which the people are doing now on the reservation, under Bil-Clin who calls himself their chief." Bonito's eyes half closed and he went on. "Let me tell you a story, Cor-sen, which happened long ago. There was a young man of the Mescalero, who was a great hunter and slayer of his enemies. From raids to Mexico he would return to his rancheria with countless ponies and often with women who would then do his bidding. And many of these he gave to his chief out of honor.
"One day he returned from war gravely wounded and his hands empty, but he noticed that still this chief, who was the son of a chief and he the son of one before him, received more spoils than anyone, yet without endangering himself by being present on the raid. Now this grieved the warrior. He would not offend his chief, but he was beginning to think this unjust.
"On a day after his wound had healed, he was walking in a deep canyon with this in his thoughts and as it grew unbearable he cried out to U-sen why should this be, and immediately a spirit appeared before him. Now, this spirit questioned the warrior, asking him how a man became chief, and the warrior answered that it was blood handed from father to son. And the spirit asked him where in the natural order was this found? Did one lobo wolf lead the pack because of his blood? The warrior thought deeply of this and gradually he realized that chieftainship of blood was not just. It was the place of the bravest warrior to lead-not for his own sake, but for the good of all.
"You know what he did, Cor-sen?" Bonito paused then. "He returned to the rancheria and challenged his chief and fought him to the death with his knife. Two others opposed him, and he killed these also. With this the people realized that it was as it should be and the warrior was acclaimed chief of Mescaleros.
"That was the first time, Cor-sen, but it has happened many times since. When one is no longer deserving to be chief, then another opposes him. Sometimes the opposed chief steps aside; often it is settled with a knife."
Corsen was silent. Then he said, "At Pinaleno Bil-Clin is still a strong chief. And he is wise enough not to lead his people in a war he cannot win."
Bonito's heavy face creased into a grim smile. "Is he strong ...and wise?" Then he said, his tone changing, "Do you go away from here?"
"Perhaps." Corsen looked at the Apache curiously.
"It would be wise," Bonito said, "if you went far from here." He turned his pony then and loped off.
ROSS CORSEN followed the road to Rindo's and the Mescalero's parting words hung in his mind like a threat, and for a while the words made him angry. The running of their tribe was no concern of his. Not now. But it implied more than just Bonito opposing Bil-Clin. There was something else. Bonito was a renegade. He was vicious even in the eyes of his own people. Not the type to be followed as a leader unless the people were desperate. Unless he came just at the right time. And it occurred to Corsen: like now, with a man they don't know taking over the agency . . . and with unrest on every reservation in Arizona, I'd like to stay, just to handle Bonito. . . . But again, the h.e.l.l with it. Working under Sellers wasn't worth it.
He planned to go up to Whipple Barracks and talk to someone about a guide contract. He would leave his horse at Rindo's and catch the stage there, and while he was waiting he'd have a while to be with Katie.
Chapter Two.
THE HATCH & HODGES' Central Mail section had headquarters at Fort McDowell. From there, one route angled northwest to Prescott. The Central Mail swung in an arc southeast. From McDowell the route skirted the Superst.i.tions to Apache Junction, then continued on, changing teams at Florence, White Tanks, Gila Ford, and Rindo's. Thomas was the last stop, the southern terminal.
Rindo's Station had been constructed with the Apaches in mind. An oblong, thick-walled adobe building had an open stable shed at one end. The corral, holding the spare stage teams, connected behind the stable. And circling the station, out fifty-odd yards, was an adobe wall. It was thick, chest high. At the east end of the yard a stand of aspen had been hacked down and only the trunks remained. Beyond the wall the country was flat on three sides-alkali dust and heat waves shimmering over stubbles of desert growth-but to the east the ground rose gradually, barren, pale yellow climbing into deep green where pinon sprouted from the hillside.
Corsen had skirted the base of the hill and now he was in sight of Rindo's. He nudged his mount to a trot.
Someone was in the doorway. Another figure came from the dark line of the shed and moved to the gate which was in the north side of the wall. He could make out the man in the doorway now-Billy Teach-out, the station agent. And as the gate swung open there was the Mexican, Delgado, in white peon clothes.
"Hiiiii, man!"
"Senor Delgado, keeper of the horses!"
Corsen reached down and slapped the old Mexican's thin shoulder, then dismounted.
"G.o.d of my life, it has been months!"
"Three or four weeks."
"It seems months."
Corsen grinned at the old man, at the tired eyes that were now stretched open showing thin lines of veins, smiling at the sight of a friend.
Billy Teachout moved a few steps into the yard, thumbs hooked behind his suspender straps. "Ross, get in here out of the sun!"
"Let the keeper of the horses take yours," Delgado said, still smiling. "We will talk together after."
Corsen followed the station agent's broad back into the house and opened his eyes wide to the interior dimness. It was dark after the sun glare. He pushed his hat brim from his eyes and stood looking at the familiar whitewashed walls, the oblong pine table, and Douglas chairs at one end of the room, the squat stove in the middle, and the red-painted pine bar at the other end. Billy Teachout edged his large frame sideways, with an effort, through the narrow bar opening.
"You wouldn't have beer," Corsen said.
"It's about six months to Christmas," Billy answered, and leaned his forearms onto the bar. He was in no hurry. Time meant little, and it showed in his loose, heavy build, in his round, clean-shaven face that he most always kept out of the sun's reach unless it was stage time. He had worked in the Prescott office until Al Rindo's death two years before, then had been transferred here. Al Rindo had died of a heart attack, but Billy Teachout said it was sunstroke and he'd be d.a.m.ned if he'd let it happen to him. He had Katie to think of, his sister's girl who had come to live with him after her folks pa.s.sed on.
It wasn't a bad life. Five stages a week for him and Katie; Delgado and his wife to take care of. Change horses; keep them curried; feed the pa.s.sengers. Nothing to it-as long as the Apaches minded.
"You can have yellow mescal or bar whiskey," Billy said.
"One's as bad as the other." Corsen put his elbows on the bar. "Whiskey."
"Kill any bugs you got."
Corsen took a drink and then rolled a cigarette. "Where's Katie?"
"Prettyin'. She saw you two miles away. After Delgado all week, you don't look so bad."
CORSEN GRINNED, relaxing the hard line of his jaw. A young face, leathery and immobile until a smile would soften the eyes that were used to sun glare, and ease the set face that talked eye to eye with the Apache and showed nothing. Corsen knew his business. He knew the Apache-his language, often even his thoughts-and the Apache respected him for it. Corsen, the Indian agent. He could make natural-born raiders at least half satisfied with a barren government land tract. The Corsens were few and far between, even in Arizona.
"Billy, I just saw Bonito."
"G.o.d-he's returned to the reservation?"
"I don't know-or much care. I'm leaving."
"What?"
"Sellers fired me day before yesterday. He's got somebody else for the job."
"Got somebody else! Those are Mescaleros!"
"I'm through arguing with him. Sellers is reservation supervisor. He can run things how he likes and hire who he likes. I should have quit long ago."
"Who's taking your place?"
"A man named Verbiest."
"Somebody looking for some extra change."
"He might be all right."
Billy Teachout shook his head wearily. To him it was another example of cheap politics, knowing the right people. Agency posts were being handed out to men who cared nothing for the Indians. There was profit to be made by short-rationing their charges and selling the government beef and grain to homesteaders, or back to the Army. Even that had been done.
"Sellers has been trying to get rid of you for a long time. Finally he made it," Billy Teachout said. He shook his head again. "Your Mescaleros aren't going to take kindly to this."
"Verbiest might know what he's doing," Corsen said. Then, "But if he doesn't, you better keep your windows shut till he hangs a few of them and they calm down again."
"Where you going? I might just close up and go with you."
"What about the stage line?"
"The h.e.l.l with it. I'm getting too old for this kind of thing."
Corsen smiled. "I'm going up to Whipple to see about a guide contract."
"So if you can't nurse them, you fight them."
"Either one's a living."
"Ross-"
He turned to see Katie standing in the doorway that led to the kitchen. His gaze rested on her face-tanned, freckled, clear-eyed, a face that smiled often, but now held on his earnestly.
"Ross, I heard what you were telling Billy."
"I can't work for that man anymore."
"Can't you find something else around here?"
"There isn't anything."
"Fort Thomas. Why can't you guide out of there?"
Corsen shrugged. "There's a chance, but I'd still have to go through the department commander's office at Whipple."
"Ross . . ." Her voice was a whisper.
It showed on her face that was not eager now and seemed even pale beneath the sun coloring. The face of a girl, sensitive nose and mouth, but in her clear, blue, serious eyes the awareness of a woman.
Katie was nineteen. She had known Ross Corsen for almost three years, meeting him the day after she had arrived to live with her uncle. And she expected to marry him, even though he never mentioned it. She knew how he felt. Ross didn't have to say a word. It was in the way he looked at her, in the way he had kissed her for the first time only a few weeks ago-a small, soft, lingering, inexperienced kiss. She loved Corsen; very simply she loved him, because he was a man, respected as a man, and because he was a boy at the same time. Perhaps just as she was girl and woman in one.
"Are you coming back?"
"Of course I am."
"What if you're stationed somewhere far away?"
"I'll come and get you," he answered.
Billy Teachout looked at them, from one to the other. "Maybe I've been inside too much." To the girl he said, "Has he behaved himself?"
"Billy," Corsen said, "I was going to ask you. This is all of a sudden-" Then, to Katie, "I'm taking the stage." He smiled faintly. "If I leave my horse here, I've got to come back."