Trail Of the Apache and Other Stories (1951)

Trail Of the Apache and Other Stories (1951) Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: Trail Of the Apache and Other Stories (1951) Read Online Free PDF
Author: Elmore Leonard
studied the scene stoically; but beneath their impassive eyes, almost any kind of emotion could be present. He tried to show the same calm. A cavalry officer should be used to the sight of death. But this was a form of death de Both had not counted on.
    He wheeled abruptly and left the room.
    The next step was the pines. Travisin ordered the horses put in the corral. In case of a fight, they would be better off afoot; though he was sure that Pillo was hours away by now. They threaded through the nearer, sparsely growing pines that gradually grew taller and heavier as they advanced up the almost unnoticeable grade. Soon the pines entwined with junipers and thick clumps of brush so that they could see no more than fifty feet ahead into the dimness. They were far enough into the thicket so that they could no longer see the wisp of smoke, but now a strange odor took its place. The Coyotero scouts sniffed the air and looked at Travisin.
    Fry said, i'll send some of 'em ahead, and without waiting for a reply called an order to Ningun in the Apache tongue. As five of the scouts Trail of the Apache went on ahead, he said, Let 'em do a little work for their pay, and propped his carbine against a pine. He eased his back against the same tree and looked at Travisin.
    You know, that's a funny thing back there at the cabin, Fry said, pointing his thumb over his shoulder. That's only the second time in my life that I e ver knew of a 'Pache scalpin' anybody.
    I was thinking about that myself, Travisin answered. Then I remembered hearing once that Pillo was one of the few Apaches with Quana Parker at Adobe Walls six years ago. Don't know how Apaches got tied up with Commanches, but some Commanche dog soldier might have taught him the trick.
    Well, Fry ren1/4eected, picking up his carbine, that's about the only trick a 'Pache might be taught.
    Ningun appeared brien1/4ey through the trees ahead and waved his arm. They walked out to where he stood. Fry and Travisin listened to Ningun speak and then looked past his drooping shoulders to where he pointed. The nauseating odor was almost unbearable here. De Both tried to hold his breath as he followed the others into a small clearing. In front of him, Travisin and the scout moved apart as they reached the open ground and de Both was struck with a scene he was to remember to his dying day. He stared wide-eyed, swallowing repeatedly, until he could no longer control the saliva rising in his throat, and he turned off the path to be sick.
    Fry scraped a boot along the crumbly earth and kicked sand onto the smoldering fire. The smoke rose heavy and thick for a few seconds, obscuring the grotesque form that hung motionless over the center of the small fire; and then it died out completely, revealing the half-burned body of Solomon suspended head-down from the arc of three thin juniper poles that had been stuck into the ground a few feet apart and lashed together at the tops. The old man's head hung only three feet above the smothered ashes of the fire. His head and upper portion of his body were burned beyond recognition, the black rawness creeping from this portion of his body upward to where his hands were tied tightly to his thighs; there the blackness changed to livid red blisters. All of his clothing had been burned away, but his boots still clung to his legs, squeezed to his ankles where the rawhide thongs wound about them and reached above to the arch of junipers. He was dead. But death had come slowly.
    The poor old man. The words were simple, but Travisin's voice cracked just faintly to tell more. The poor, poor old man.
    Fry looked around the clearing slowly, thinking, and then he said, Bet he screamed for a bullet. Bet he screamed until his throat burst, and all the time Trail of the Apache they'd just be dancin' around jabbin' him with their knives and laughin'. Fry stopped and looked at the captain.
    Travisin stared at old Solomon without blinking, his jaw muscles tightening and relaxing, his
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