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Luis urged his burro to the side of the trail and gave Edge an exaggerated bow to usher him by.

“Luis,” Edge said softly, without moving forward.

Luis looked up, the tone in which his name had been spoken raising fear to his face. “Señor?”

“It is customary for me to kill men who do not do what I ask,” Edge said.

“But my money? My ten thousand, American.” His voice was plaintive.

“Your life is not worth more?” Edge asked easily.

The old man seemed on the verge of arguing the point, but then he sighed. “Truly, you have no honor, señor.”

Edge grinned. “Truly I have not,” he agreed and heeled his horse forward after Luis had mounted and started up the narrow trail.

The going got steeper as they rose higher, the unprotected edge of the trail presenting a terrifying prospect of an unhampered drop to a crushing death should burro or horse put a foot wrong.

“Señor?” Luis called from ahead.

Edge grunted a response.

“What if El Matador has a guard posted?”

“You are in front,” Edge told him laconically. “The guard will kill you first.”

He heard the old man swallow hard, and there was no further talk from him. At the top the trail broadened a little, just before it reached up for the final stretch to the lip of the plateau. Edge dismounted and unbooted the Henry.  Luis remained seated on the burro, trying to control the trembling which shook his body as he watched the American creep forward, peer around a clump of brush that grew thick and thorny at the top of the trail. Once he glanced over his shoulder, contemplated making a run for it.  But he knew he would be either shot or fall off the edge before he could make more than a few yards on the slow beast between his legs. He spat.       

Edge looked at Hoyos, his face showing no sign of how he felt about the prospect before him.  It stood back from the lip of the plateau, some five hundred yards, concealed from below. And, as Luis had said, the mountains towered behind it, making it impossible to approach from the south. The terrain to the east and west was hidden in darkness, but Edge thought it possible that sheer rock faces fell away to form other natural defenses for the town.  But the pioneer citizens of Hoyos had not been content to leave their protection from attack entirely to the good fortune of nature. All Edge could see of the town was a twenty-feet-high wall of adobe, gleaming white in the pale moonlight, with a yawning gap of darkness which was an open gateway. Through and. beyond he could see nothing, and there was a silence hulking over the walled town, almost tangible in its completeness.

Edge drew back and turned to Luis. “Get off,” he demanded.

The old Mexican did as he was bid and when Edge snapped his fingers, led the burro forward. The tall man took the rope reins and urged the beast to the top of the trail. Then he walked behind the animal and jabbed the rifle muzzle hard into its rump.  The burro snorted with injured rage, kicked out viciously with its hind legs and bolted across the open ground towards Hoyos.  Crouching behind the brush, Edge peered towards the gateway and then flicked his eyes along the flat top of the walls on either side. The only sign and sound of life in the whole vista was the angry burro, which bolted through the gateway and was suddenly lost from sight.  Soon, too, the sound of its hoofs disappeared.

“There is nobody in Hoyos,” Luis said in a hoarse whisper as he squatted beside Edge. 

“You wanna bet?” Edge asked without breaking his concentrated examination of the town.

“Señor?”

“Maybe they all got tired and went to sleep,” Edge said absently.

“No, señor,” Luis said in all seriousness. “Hoyos never sleeps. It has cantinas with much tequila, many girls.  When the bandits ride in there is a fiesta. Much noise ... Drinking, women, some fights. Knives and guns.  Sometimes there is killing. If some sleep, there are always others who are awake.”

“How long since you been here?” Edge asked.

“Many years,” Luis said with a shrug.  

“Maybe the reformers have moved in.”

“Maybe,” Luis allowed without conviction,

“Let’s try again,” Edge muttered. “On your feet, amigo.”

“Señor?”

“Nobody’s going to waste a bullet on a burro. A man, that’s different.”

“You would not make me do it,” Luis said, beginning to tremble again.

Edge Sighed. “Put it this way, amigo. You take a slow walk over to the gate and there’s a chance you won’t be killed. Keep squatting here and there ain’t any doubt of it.”

There was a rustle of movement and Edge was holding the knife, its point pressed against the old man’s grizzled throat.

“I do not like you, señor,” Luis said.

“When I run for mayor, I won’t count on your vote,” Edge told him. “Move it, amigo.”

Luis, every muscle in his body trembling as from a great cold, got shakily to his feet, hesitated and then stepped from the cover of the brush, began to drag his feet towards the gate. Edge watched him for a few moments, then flicked his attention to the town.

“I am unarmed!” the old man suddenly shouted, and thrust his arms out on each side of him. “See.  My burro he bolted from me and now I come to claim him. Do not shoot an unarmed man, amigos.”

Edge’s lips tightened in a snarl. If the people of Hoyos were asleep the progress of a runaway burro would cause them no alarm.  But the whining pleas of the old man were a different matter.  However, the impassive walls of Hoyos with the chasm of blackness at their center offered no response to the shouting, beyond acting as a sounding board to throw back the frightened wails.

“Hold it there, amigo,” Edge called suddenly when the old man was within twenty yards of the gateway.

Luis halted abruptly, body still trembling, teeth chattering against each other as he strained his eyes to peer into the darkness above.  Behind him he heard Edge cluck to his horse, then the sounds of footfalls and hoof treads as man and animal approached him.

“Maybe El Matador got randy again,” Edge whispered to Luis. “Reckon you been asking the dead not to kill you?”

“I can feel a thousand eyes watching me, señor,” the old man said throatily.

“They all belong to your guilty conscience,” Edge told him and jabbed him in the back with the rifle muzzle.

The two men went forward, reached the dark opening and entered. After the moonlight which had bathed the plateau outside the walls, it was like entering a dark cave on a sunlit day. Luis heard Edge halt behind him, to take time to adjust his eyes, and he did likewise.

“Señor?”

Edge grunted.

“I cannot see any bodies.”

“Don’t feel bad about it,” came the reply, punctuated by the crack of a rifle shot. The bullet kicked dust a few inches in front of Luis’ boots, but he yelled as if it had pierced his flesh. Edge tightened his grip on the Henry as his eyes flicked over the dark shapes of buildings.  He had seen the flash of the shot, knew the exact point from where it had been fired. But the sharpshooter was obviously not alone. Equally obviously, he could have shot to kill had he wanted to.

“There are just the two of you?” a voice said from another direction, cutting across the sniveling of the old man.

“How many you expecting?” Edge called back.

“We have a bullet for every bandit in the area,” the disembodied voice answered flatly, and then became part of a whole as a match flared and a face leapt out of the darkness.

It was a young, handsome face with dark eyes and full lips, finely chiseled and high cheekbones. In the flame as it touched the end of a long, thin cigar, it was a face topped by a cap with a shiny peak.  Below, on the edge of the area of flickering light, could be seen the uniformed collar and shoulders bearing the insignia of a captain in the Mexican Federal army. It was a face with an insolent smile that almost invited Edge to loose off a shot at it.  But then other lights flared, and were touched to torches, blazing into life all around the wide plaza that was spread just inside the town gate.  Each torch was held high by a Mexican soldier and each of these soldiers was joined by another who aimed a rifle. Edge allowed his Henry to clatter to the ground as his eyes completed a hundred and eighty degree turn and estimated a detachment of about fifty men.