A Noose for the Desperado
Clifton Adams
Copyright 1951 by Clifton Adams
Chapter One
I SCOUTED THE TOWN for two full days before going into it. There hadn't been any sign of cavalry, and I figured the law wouldn't be much because nobody cared what happened to a few Mexicans. There it stood near the foothills of the Huachucas, a few shabby adobe huts and one or two frame buildings broiling in the Arizona sun. But to me it looked like Abilene, Dodge, and Ellsworth all rolled into one.
It had been a long trail from Texas, and my horse was sore-footed and needed rest and a bellyful of grain. I was beginning to grow a fuzzy beard around my chin and upper lip, and I had a second hide of trail dust that was beginning to crawl with the hundred different kinds of lice that you pick up in the desert. I was ready to take my chances on somebody recognizing me, just so I could get a bath and a shave and maybe a change of clothes.
So that was how I came to ride into this little place of Ocotillo, on that big black horse that used to belong to my pal Pappy Garret. I had Pappy's rifle in the saddle boot and Pappy's guns tied down on my thighs. But that was all right. Pappy didn't have any use for them. The last time I saw him had been on a lonely hilltop in Texas. He had died the way most men like that die sooner or later, I guess, with a lawman's bullet in his guts.
It was around sundown when we hit this place of Ocotillo, and it turned out that it was on the fiesta of San Juan's Day. I didn't know that at the time, but it was clear that they were having a celebration of some kind. The men were all in various stages of drunkenness, some of them singing and pounding on heavy guitars. Some of the young bucks were dancing with their girls in the dusty street or in the cantinas. A fat old priest was grinning at everybody, and the kids were crying and shouting and singing and rattling brightly painted gourds. It was fiesta, all right. It was like riding out of death into life.
I pulled my horse up at a watering trough and let him drink while the commotion went on all around us. Three girls in bright dresses danced around us, giggling. The big black lifted his nose out of the trough and spewed water all over them and they ran down the street screaming and laughing. Everybody seemed to be having a hell of a time.
Another girl came up and slapped the black's neck, looking at me.
“Hello, gringo!” she said.
“Hello, yourself.”
“You come to fiesta, eh?” she said. Then she laughed and slapped the black again.
“Is that what it is, fiesta?”
“Sure, it's fiesta. San Juan's Day.” She laughed again. “Where you come from, gringo? Long way, maybe. You plenty dirty.”
“Maybe,” I said. “Can I find anybody sober enough to give me a shave and fix a bath?”
“Sure, gringo,” she grinned. “You come with me.”
I had been looking around, not paying much attention to the girl. But now I looked at her. She was young, about eighteen or nineteen, but she wasn't any kid. Her dark eyes were full of hell, and when she flashed her white teeth in a grin you got the idea that she would like to sink them into your throat. She wore the usual loud skirt and fancy blouse with a lot of needlework on it that Mexicans like to deck themselves out in on their holidays.
“Look!” she yelled. Then she started jumping up and down and laughing like a kid.
Somebody had turned an old mossy-horn loose in the street and everybody was scattering and screaming as if a stampede was bearing down on them. The old range cow shook its head, bewildered; then some kids came up and began prodding it down the street. The yelling and screaming kept up until the cow disappeared down at the other end. That seemed to be a signal for everybody to have another drink, so all the menfolks started crowding into the cantinas.
“Does that end the fiesta?” I asked.
“Just beginning,” she said. “At night they go to church and burn candles and pray to San Juan that their souls may be saved.” She laughed again. “Then they drink some more. Tomorrow they go back to the fields and work until next San Juan's Day.”
“How about that bath and shave?” I said.
“Sure, gringo. Come with me.”
I left my horse at the hitching rack, but I took the rifle out of the saddle boot. The girl led me between two adobe huts, then through a gate in a high adobe wall. The wall completely surrounded a little plot at the back of the hut. A dog slept and some chickens scratched under a blackjack tree.
“This is a hell of a place for a barbershop,” I said.
“No barber,” the girl grinned. “I shave.” She cut the air with her hand, as if slicing someone's throat with a razor.
“No, thanks,” I said.
She laughed. “No worry, gringo. I fix.”
She took my arm and led me into the house. The thick adobe walls made the room cool, and there was a pleasant smell of wine and garlic. It was like walking into another world. There was nothing there to remind me of the fiesta, or of the lonesome desert, or Pappy Garret. In this house I could even forget myself. I felt a little ridiculous wearing two pistols and carrying a rifle.
“Whose house is this?” I said.
She stabbed herself with a finger. “My house.” Then she yelled,“Papacito!” When she got no answer, she shrugged. “Come with me.”
The house had only two rooms. The first room had a fireplace and a charcoal brazier for cooking and a plank table and three leather-bottom chairs. In one corner there were some blankets rolled up, and I figured that was where Papacito slept when he was home. The other room had a mound of clay shaped up against one wall with some blankets on it, and that was the bed. A rough plank wardrobe and another leather-bottom chair completed the furniture.
“Wait here,” the girl said.
She went out and I heard her shaking up the coals in the fireplace, and pretty soon she came back lugging a big wooden tub. “For bath,” she said. On the next trip she brought a razor and a small piece of yellow lye soap. “For shave.”
I grinned. “I can't complain about the service.”
“You wait,” she said.
I was too tired to try to understand why she was going to so much trouble. Maybe that's the way Mexicans were. Maybe they liked to wait on the gringos. I was beginning to feel easy and comfortable for the first time since I had left Texas. I pulled off my boots, sat in the chair, and put my feet on the clay bed. I was beginning to like Arizona just fine.
“Say,” I called, “have you got anything to drink?”
She came in with a crock jug and handed it to me. “Wine,” she said.
I swigged from the neck and the stuff was sweet and warm as it hit my stomach. “Thanks,” I said. Then I had another go at the jug, and that was enough. I never took more than two drinks of anything.
That was partly Pappy Garret's teaching, but mostly it came from seeing foothills filled with gunmen who could shoot like forked lightning when they were sober, but when they forgot to set the bottle down they were just another notch in some ambitious punk's gun butt.