Nevada (1995) (3 page)

Read Nevada (1995) Online

Authors: Zane Grey

BOOK: Nevada (1995)
9.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Chapter
two.

It was a cold, bleak November day when Nevada rode into Lineville.

Dust and leaves whipped up with the wind. Columns of blue woo
d
smoke curled from the shacks and huts and houses of the stragglin
g
hamlet. Part of these habitations, those on one side of the road
,
lay in California, and those on the other belonged to Nevada. Man
y
a bullet had been fired from one state to kill a man in the other.

Lineville had been a mining town of some pretensions during th
e
early days of the gold rush. Deserted and weathered shacks wer
e
mute reminders of more populous times. High on the bleak dra
b
foothill stood the ruins of an ore mill, with long chute and ruste
d
pipes running down to the stream. Black holes in the cliff
s
opposite attested to bygone activity of prospectors. Gold wa
s
still to be mined in the rugged hills, though only in scan
t
quantity. Prospectors arrived in Lineville, wandered around for
a
season, then left on their endless search, while other prospector
s
came. When Nevada had last been there it was possible to find
a
few honest men and women, but the percentage in the three hundre
d
population was small.

Nevada halted before a gray cabin set well back in a large plot o
f
ground just inside the limits of the town. The place had no
t
changed. A brown sway-back horse, with the wind ruffling his dee
p
fuzzy coat, huddled in the lee of an old squat barn. Nevada kne
w
the horse. Corrals and sheds stood farther back at the foot of th
e
rocky slope. Briers and brush surrounded a garden where some lat
e
greens showed bright against the red dug-up soil. Nevad
a
remembered the rudely painted sign that had been nailed slantwis
e
on the gate-post Lodgings.

Dismounting, Nevada left his horses and entered, to go round to th
e
back of the cabin. A wide low porch had been stacked to the roo
f
with cut stove wood, handy to the door. Nevada hesitated a moment
,
then knocked. He heard a bustling inside, brisk footsteps, afte
r
which the door was opened by a buxom matron, with ruddy face, bi
g
frank eyes, and hair beginning to turn gray.

"Howdy, Mrs. Wood!" he greeted her.

The woman stared, then burst out: "Well, for goodness' sake, if i
t
ain't Jim Lacy!"

"I reckon. Are you goin' to ask me in? I'm aboot froze."

"Jim, you know you never had to ask to come in my house," sh
e
replied, and drew him into a cozy little kitchen where a hot stov
e
and the pleasant odor of baking bread appealed powerfully t
o
Nevada.

"Thanks. I'm glad to hear that. Shore seems like home to me.

I've been layin' out in the cold an' starvin' for a long time."

"Son, you look it," she returned, nodding her head disapprovingl
y
at him. "Never saw you like this. Jim, you used to be a handsom
e
lad. How lanky you are! An' you're as bushy-haired as
a
miner. . . . What've you been up to?"

"Wal, Mrs. Wood," he drawled, coolly, "shore you've heard aboot m
e
lately?" And his gaze studied her face. Much might depend upo
n
her reply, but she gave no sign.

"Nary a word, Jim. Not lately or ever since you left."

"No? Wal, I am surprised, an' glad, too," replied Nevada, smilin
g
his relief. "Reckon you couldn't give me a job? Helpin' around
,
like I used to, for my board."

"Jim, I jest could, an' I will," she declared. "You won't have t
o
sleep in the barn, either."

"Now, I'm dog-gone lucky, Mrs. Wood," replied Nevada, gratefully.

"Humph! I don't know about that, Jim. Comin' back to Linevill
e
can't be lucky. . . . Ah, boy, I'd hoped if you was alive you'
d
turned over a new leaf."

"It was good of you to think of me kind like that," he said, movin
g
away from the warm stove. "I'll go out an' look after my pack an'
h
orses."

"Fetch your pack right in. An' I'll not forget you're starved."

Nevada went out thoughtfully, and slowly led his horses out to th
e
barn. There, while he unpacked, his mind dwelt on the singula
r
effect that Mrs. Wood's words had upon him. Perhaps speech fro
m
anyone in Lineville would have affected him similarly. He had bee
n
brought back by word of mouth to actualities. This kindly woma
n
had hoped he would never return. He took so long about caring fo
r
his horses and unpacking part of his outfit that presently Mrs.

Wood called him. Then shouldering his bed-roll and carrying
a
small pack, he returned to the kitchen. She had a hot mea
l
prepared. Nevada indeed showed his need of good and wholesom
e
food.

"You poor boy!" she said once, sadly and curiously. But she di
d
not ask any questions.

Nevada ate until he was ashamed of himself. "Shore I know what t
o
call myself. But it tasted so good."

"Ahuh. Well, Jim, you take some hot water an' shave your wooll
y
face," she returned. "You can have the end room, right off th
e
hall. There's a stove an' a box of wood."

Nevada carried his pack into the room designated, then returned fo
r
the hot water, soap, and towel. Perhaps it was the dim and scarre
d
mirror that gave his face such an unsightly appearance. He was t
o
find out presently that shaving and clean clothes and a vastl
y
improved appearance meant nothing to him, because Hettie had gon
e
out of his life forever. What did he care how he looked? Yet h
e
remembered with a twinge that she would care. When an hour late
r
he strode into the kitchen to confront Mrs. Wood, she studied hi
m
with eyes as speculative as kind.

"Jim, I notice your gun has the same old swing, low down. No
w
that's queer, ain't it?" she said, ironically.

"Wal, it shore feels queer," he responded. "For, honest, Mrs.

Wood, I haven't packed it at all for a long time."

"An' you haven't been lookin' at red liquor, either?" she went on.

"Reckon not."

"An' you haven't been lookin' at women, either?"

"Gosh, no. I always was scared of them," he laughed, easily. Bu
t
he could not deceive her.

"Boy, somethin' has happened to you," she declared, seriously.

"You're older. Your eyes aren't like daggers any more. They'v
e
got shadows. . . . Jim, I once saw Billy the Kid in New Mexico.

You used to look like him, not in face or body or walk, but jest i
n
some way, some LOOK I can't describe. But now it's gone."

"Ahuh. Wal, I don't know whether or not you're complimentin' me,"
d
rawled Nevada. "Billy the Kid was a pretty wild hombre, wasn'
t
he?"

"Humph! You'd have thought so if you'd gone through that Lincol
n
County cattle war with me an' my husband. They killed thre
e
hundred men, and my Jack was one of them."

"Lincoln County war?" mused Nevada. "Shore I've heard of that
,
too. An' how many of the three hundred did Billy the Kid kill?"

"Lord only knows," she returned, fervently. "Billy had twenty-on
e
men to his gun before the war, an' that wasn't countin' Greasers o
r
Injuns. They said he was death on them. . . . Yes, Jim, you ha
d
the look of Billy, an' if you'd kept on you'd been another lik
e
him. But somethin' has happened to you. I ain't inquisitive, bu
t
have you lost your nerve? Gunmen do that sometimes, you know."

"Shore, that's it, Mrs. Wood. I've no more nerve than a chicken,"
d
rawled Nevada, with all his old easy coolness. It was good fo
r
him to hear her voice and to exercise his own.

"Shoo! An' I'll bet that's all you tell me about yourself," sh
e
said. "Jim Lacy, you left here a boy an' you've come back a man.

Wonder what Lize Teller will think of you now. She was moony abou
t
you, the hussy!"

"Lize Teller," echoed Nevada, ponderingly. "Shore I remember now.

Is she heah?"

"She about bosses Lineville, Jim. She doesn't live with my humbl
e
self any more, but hangs out at the Gold Mine."

Nevada found a seat on a low bench between the stove and th
e
corner, a place that had been a favorite with him and into which h
e
dropped instinctively, and settled himself for a talk. This woma
n
held an unique position in the little border hamlet, in that sh
e
possessed the confidence of gamblers, miners, rustlers, everybody.

She was a good soul, always ready to help anyone in sickness o
r
trouble. Whatever her life had been in the past--and Nevad
a
guessed it had been one with her outlaw husband--she was an hones
t
and hard-working woman now. In the wild days of his forme
r
association with Lineville he had not appreciated her. Sh
e
probably had some other idler or fugitive like himself doing th
e
very odd jobs about the place that he had applied for. Nevad
a
remembered that her kindliness for him had been sort of motherly
,
no doubt owing to the fact that he had been the youngest of th
e
notorious characters of Lineville.

"Lize married yet?" began Nevada, casually.

"No indeed, an' she never will be now," replied Mrs. Wood
,
forcibly. "She had her chance, a decent cattleman named Holder
,
from Eureka. Reckon he knew he was buyin' stolen cattle. But fo
r
all that he was a mighty fine sort for Lineville. Much too goo
d
for that black-eyed wench. She was taken with him, too. Her on
e
chance to get away from Lineville! Then Cash Burridge rode in on
e
day--after a long absence. 'Most as long as yours. Cash had bee
n
in somethin' big, south somewhere. An' he came back to lie low an'
g
amble. He had plenty of money, as usual. Lost it, as usual Liz
e
was clerk at the Gold Mine. She got thick with Cash. He an'

Holder had a mixup over the girl, an' that settled her. Maybe I
d
idn't give her a piece of my mind. But I might as well hav
e
shouted to the hills. She went from bad to worse. You'll see."

"Cash Burridge back," rejoined Nevada, somberly, and he dropped hi
s
head. That name had power to make him want to hide the sudden fir
e
in his eyes. "Reckon I'd plumb forgot Cash."

"Ha! Ha! Yes, you did, Jim Lacy," replied the woman, knowingly.

"No one would ever forget Cash, much less you. . . . Dear me, I
h
ope you an' he don't meet again."

"Wal, of course we'll meet," said Nevada. "I cain't hang roun
d
your kitchen all the while, much as I like it."

"Jim, I didn't mean meet him on the street, or in the store, o
r
anywhere. You know what I meant."

Other books

Fight by P.A. Jones
Zombie Rules by Achord, David
Third Half by P. R. Garlick
Autumn of the Gun by Compton, Ralph
The Flock by James Robert Smith
Craphound by Cory Doctorow
The House of Silence by Blanca Busquets
La ciudad y la ciudad by China MiƩville
Every Night I Dream of Hell by Mackay, Malcolm