Chapter 28

The Apaches moved through the darkness like silent ghosts.

Clayton joined them on the ridge and looked down at the spur. A single wagon was drawn up close to the tracks, two cowboys riding herd on its Mexican drivers. The train was off somewhere in the distance, but close enough that Clayton heard the chuff-chuff-chuff of the locomotive.

Beside him the Apaches were tense, ready. Now he could only act as a bystander and wait for them to make their move.

A couple of minutes ticked past. The Apaches lay still in the grass, watching. Waiting.

But for what?

Then it dawned on Clayton. They wouldn’t make a move until the engine arrived. If there were Apache bodies in the wagon, then God help the train crew.

After what seemed an endless wait, the train arrived. It was a locomotive with a single boxcar—a refrigerator car. The engine vented steam, for a moment obscuring the wagon and the two riders.

The Apaches moved. They crouched low and ran down the slope, Clayton with them. As the steam cleared, the cowboys saw the Indians. And made the last mistake they’d ever make.

Both men went for their holstered guns, and the Apaches fired.

One man was hit in the head and his hat flew off, revealing his complete baldness. He toppled out of the saddle as his companion, hit hard, swung his horse around and tried to make a dash for the trees.

The young Apache drew a bead and shot him, shot him again, and the man fell.

The two Mexicans were wide-eyed with terror. One of them screamed, “Por favor, no mas mate!”

The Apaches ignored his plea for mercy and yelled at the engineer and fireman to climb down from the cab.

Their hands in the air, the railroaders stood by the engine. Clayton saw that their fear was just as great as that of the Mexicans. Angry Apaches were not to be taken lightly. And they were about to get angrier.

There were two boxes in the wagon. The Apaches opened them and Clayton heard their roars of outrage and sorrow. Knowing what he was about to see, he stepped to the wagon.

A young woman’s body occupied each box. Neither showed signs of violence, and Clayton wondered at that until he caught the smell of rotgut whiskey. Then he knew how the women had been killed. Their abductors had gotten the girls drunk and smothered both of them.

“Lipan,” the old Apache said, “coming up from the south.”

“Where are their men?” Clayton asked. “Why didn’t they protect them?”

“Many Apache no longer fight. The Lipan know their days in the sun are over. White men get father, maybe brother, drunk, then take girls.”

Suddenly angry, Clayton limped to the bodies of the dead men. Behind him he heard shots. He turned and saw the Mexicans sprawled facedown in the dirt.

Grabbing hold of the back of the bald man’s collar, he dragged him to the engineer and his fireman. “Who is he?” he said. “Who does he work for?”

The engineer, a burly man with iron gray hair and a bristling mustache, shook his head. He looked terrified.

“Honest, mister, I don’t know. We were told to bring the refrigerator car here and pick up a couple of boxes.” His eyes pleaded with Clayton. “That’s how it come up, and it’s all I know.”

If the engineer did know more, he never got a chance to reveal it. The Apaches jumped on him and the fireman and began to kill them more slowly than the others, with knives, not guns.

Clayton thought the men would never stop screaming. But they did, eventually . . . an eventually that took two shrieking, screaming, scarlet-splashed hours.

The Apaches had no way of destroying the engine or the boxcar, and contented themselves with shooting holes in both.

Clayton was under no illusions. He’d heard that Apaches were notoriously notional, but, judging by the way the cards were falling, his turn was next. In the end they surprised him.

The young Indian brought him his horse, and then they left without a word, taking the wagon with them. One moment the spur had been crowded with Apaches; the next they were gone, as silently and ghostly as they’d come.

The Indians had picked up the dead men’s rifles, but Clayton scouted around and found the bald man’s Colt. He reloaded, shoved the gun in his holster, then filled his cartridge belt. He left the buckskin near the converted boxcar and stepped inside.

The whiskey bottle was empty, which was a disappointment. After witnessing what had happened to the railroad men, he could’ve used a drink.

Clayton used wood and kindling he found beside the stove and filled the pot with water from the pump outside. He put coffee on to boil, then sat at the table.

A quick inspection of his thigh told him the wound was not infected, and it showed some healing. It still pained him, though, stiffening his entire leg.

Later he poured himself coffee and built a cigarette, inhaling deeply. The sight of the two railroaders haunted him. How could men get cut up like that, their guts coiling from their bellies, and still live? And their eyes . . .

Clayton heard the chime of a bit as someone drew rein outside. Then, “Cage, you still alive?”

Nook Kelly’s voice.

“Just about.”

“What the hell happened here?”

“A lot.”

Clayton drank some coffee and dragged on his cigarette.

“Step inside and I’ll tell you about it,” he said.

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