Lando (1962)

Read Lando (1962) for Free Online Page A

Book: Read Lando (1962) for Free Online
Authors: Louis - Sackett's 08 L'amour
uncles," the Tinker explained, "and they're all laid out to kill him."
    "No worse fights than kinfolk's." The old man finished his coffee and stood up.
    "Notional man, more'self. Take to folks or I don't. You boys take care of yourselves."
    The Tinker glanced over at me. "You wearing that gun?"
    Pulling my coat back, I showed it to him, shoved down inside my pants behind my belt.
    "I ain't much on the shoot," I said, "but come trouble I'll have at it."
    San Augustine was further south in Texas than I'd any notion of coming, but the Tinker insisted on it. "The biggest cow ranches are south," he said, "down along the Gulf coast, and some of them are fixing to trail cattle west to fresh grass, or north to the Kansas towns."
    Now we'd come south and here the Kurbishaws were, almost as if they known where we were coming.
    "No use asking for it," I said, "we'd better dust off down the pike."
    "Didn't figure you would run from trouble," the old man said. "Best way is to hunt it down and have it out."
    "They're still my uncles, and I never set eye on them. If they're fixing for trouble they'll have to bring it on themselves."
    The old man bit off a chew of tobacco, regarded the plug from which he had bitten, and said, "you ain't goin' to dodge it. Those fellers want you bad. They offered a hundred dollars cash money for you. And they want you dead."
    That was more actual money than a man might see in a year's time, and enough to set half the no-gds in Texas on my trail. Those Kurbishaws were sure lacking in family feeling. Well, if they wanted me they'd have to burn the stump and sift the ashes before they found me.
    San Augustine was a pleasant place, but I wasn't about to get rich there. The mare was far along, but it would be a few weeks before she dropped her colt.
    The Tinker started putting that pistol together and I went to rolling up my bed, such as it was. The Tinker said to the old man, "Isn't far to the Gulf, is it?"
    "South, down the river."
    The Tinker put the pistol away and started putting gear in the cart while I went for the mare.
    It was just as I was starting back that I heard him say, "This is the sort of place a man could retire ... say a seafaring man."
    The old man spat, squinting his eyes at the Tinker. "You thinkin' or askin'?"
    "Why"--the Tinker smiled at him--
    "when it comes to that, I'm asking."
    The old man indicated a road with a gesture of his head. "That road ... maybe thirteen, fourteen mile. The Deckrow place."
    We taken out with our fat little mare, and the cart painted with signs to advise that we sharpened knives, saws, and whatever.
    We walked alongside, the Tinker with his gold earrings, black hat, and black homespun clothes, and me with a black hat, red shirt, buckskin coat, and black pants tucked into boots. Him with his knives and me with my pistol. We made us a sight to see.
    Ten miles lay behind us when we came up to this girl on horseback, or rather, she came up to us. She was fourteen, I'd say, and pert. Her auburn hair hung around her shoulders and she had freckles scattered over her nose and cheekbones. She was a pretty youngster, but like I say, pert.
    She looked at the Tinker and then at the sign on the wagon, and last she looked to me, her eyes taking their time with me and seeming to find nothing of much account.
    "We have a clock that needs fixing," she said.
    "I am Marsha Deckrow."
    The way she said it, you expected no less than a flourish of trumpets or a roll of drums, but until the old man mentioned them that morning I'd never heard tell of any Deckrows and wouldn't have paid it much mind if I had. But when we came to the house I figured that if means gave importance to a man, this one must cut some figure.
    That was the biggest house I ever did see, setting back from the road with great old oaks and elms all about, and a plot of grass out front that must have been five or six acres. There was a winding drive up to the door, and there were orchards and fields, and stock

Similar Books

Quantico

Greg Bear

Wind in the Wires

Joy Dettman

Calling Me Home

Louise Bay

Across The Divide

Stacey Marie Brown

The Alien Artifact 8

V Bertolaccini