“It ain’t that, it’s just that—“

“All right then, it’s settled. I’ll get you some blankets.” Looked to me like I wasn’t going to see Californy for some time yet. That old lady just wasn’t easy to talk to. She had her own mind and it was well made up ahead of time. Anyway, I was kind of curious to see what that outfit out front looked like.

“If I’m going to stay,” I said, “I’ll keep watch. You two go yonder and sleep.” When they had gone I got me a mattress off a bed in one of the rooms and laid it out on the floor, then I fetched blankets and settled in for the night.  Outside the rain beat down on the roof and walls of the old house, and the lightning flashed and flared, giving a man a good view of what was happening at the gate and beyond. And that was just nothing.  The lamp was in the kitchen and I left it there, wanting no light behind me when I looked out. After watching for a while, I decided nobody was likely to make a move for a time, so I went back and stoked up the fire in the kitchen range and added a mite of water to the coffee so’s there’d be a-plenty.  Off the living room there was a door opened into what must have been old Reed Talon’s office. There were more books in there than I’d ever seen at one time in my life, and there were some sketches like of buildings and bridges, all with figures showing measurements written in. I couldn’t make much of some of them, although others were plain enough. Studying those sketches made me wonder how a man would feel who built something like a bridge or a boat or a church or the like. It would be something to just stand back and look up at it and think he’d done it. Made a sight more sense than wandering around the country settin’ up in the middle of a horse.

Time to time I catnapped. Sometimes I’d prowl a mite, and a couple of times I put on that slicker and went outside.

There was a wide porch on the house, roofed over, but with a good long parapet or wall that was four feet high. Talon had put loopholes in that wall a man could shoot from, and he’d built wisely and well.  When I came in I sat down with coffee, and then I heard those old shoes a-scufflin’ and here come Em Talon.

“Well, Logan, it’s good to see a Sackett again. It’s been a good many years.” “I hear tell some of them have moved up around Shalako, out in western Colorado,” I suggested. “Fact is, I know there’s several out there. Cumberland Sacketts,” I added, “good folks, too.”

“The man who helped pa had some boys back in Tennessee. I often wonder what became of him.” She filled her cup. “His oldest boy was named for William Tell.” “Met him. He’s a good man, and he’s sure enough hell on wheels with a six-shooter. No back-up to him.”

“Never was back-up in no Sackett I can call to mind. I reckon there were some who lacked sand, but there’s a rotten apple in every barrel.” She was a canny old woman, and we set there over coffee, with once in a while a look out to see if anybody was coming in on us. We talked of the Clinch Mountains, the Cumberland Gap country, and folks who’d moved west to hunt for land.

“Talon was a good man,” she said. “I married well, if I do say it. When he first rode up to my gate I knowed he was the man for me, or none.  “All the Talons had a gift for working with their hands, they had the love of good wood in their fingers, an’ when a Talon taken wood into his hands he felt of it like he loved it.”

She looked over at me. “It’s like you Sacketts with your guns.”

“From what they tell me you’re pretty good your own self.”

“Had to be. Pa wasn’t always home, and there were Injuns. I was never like some.

Lots of folks lost relatives to Injuns, and hated ‘em because. Me, I never did.  They was just something else to contend against, like the storms, the stampedes, the drought, and the grasshoppers. A time or two I seen grasshoppers come in clouds that would darken the sun and strip bare the land like a plague.” She stared off, as if calling up her memories.

“Shoot? Well, I guess yes. Gun loads was mighty scarce back yonder in the hills, and when somebody went out for meat for our family he or she was expected to come back with meat for every load taken.”

She refilled my cup and hers. “Logan, I got to find Milo. This here place belongs to the boys, him and Barnabas. I’m not so young as I used to be, an’ one night I’ll fall asleep and those out there, they’ll close in an’ finish me off.  I need he’p, Logan.”

I shifted in my chair, feeling guilty-like. I’d lost no ponies around here.  Californy was where I’d be fixing to be, and then I had to put my oar into that squabble down in town.

“I could stay on a few days,” I said. “There’s nobody waitin’ for me yonder. Or anywheres else,” I added, thinking on it. I guess since my folks died nobody had ever waited on my coming or cared what happened.  “That Planner,” I said, “he carries a gun in a shoulder holster.” “He does? Well, I reckon he carries one someplace. He’s killed a few. Nobody braces him.” She looked up at me, real sharp. “You seen Johannes?” “Not to know him. There were several men a-settin’ in the saloon, in the Bon Ton. But I don’t know—“ “Wouldn’t have been him. Johannes Duckett. He’s some kin to Planner, and he’s not quite right in the head, I think. Or maybe he’s just strange. But he’s a dead shot with a gun of any kind and he’s a back-shooter ... he’ll shoot you front, back, or sideways. Mostly he cares for the livery stable.” “I didn’t see anybody.”

“Well, he was around there, then. Whenever he ain’t there, somebody else is, and when Johannes is about you just don’t see him unless he’s of a mind to let you.” After a time she went off to bed and I fussed around a mite, and taken a turn outside. Pretty soon Pennywell came down to spell me and I curled up on a mattress to take five.

Daylight was coming through the shutters when I awakened, and I could hear folks stirring around out in the kitchen. From the porch I could look over that layout there by the gate, and of a sudden I started gettin’ sore.  Holding an old lady like that! And shooting at her so’s she didn’t dare stir out in front of her own house.

Setting there on the porch in the shadows I studied the layout and made up my mind that come sundown I was going to do some moving around of my own. Californy looked bright and pretty to me and I wasn’t going to leave here with those fellers out there makin’ trouble for Aunt Em.

Out back I fetched a bait of corn from the bin for my horse—I guess he’d never had it so good.

Em Talon was right. They had some mighty fine stock out yonder in the fenced pasture behind the barn, so I saddled up, roped myself a half dozen horses, and brought them up to the corral one at a time. Then I stripped the gear from the borrowed horse and turned it loose.

It ran off a ways, then commenced to graze out there betwixt those boys and the house. Finally as if it taken a notion to travel, it moved off.  Leaning on the corral I studied those horses. The ones I’d picked were mighty fine stock, all wearing the Empty brand. There was a tough-looking strawberry roan that I liked right off, and a steeldust gelding with a wise look about him.  Those were good horses but they hadn’t been under a saddle for months, maybe.

They’d take some riding, so I made up my mind to do it.  Whilst I was puttering around I got to studying on where Milo Talon might be. If I was to get shut of this job I’d better find him ... and that wasn’t easy to do.

Milo was a man who covered country. There’d be folks in Brown’s Hole might know where he was, or up in the Hole-in-the-Wall country. What I had to do was start the word moving along the trails. It might take time, but if Milo was alive, he’d hear it.

Meanwhile there was a lot to be done. I topped off those broncs, and they showed me plenty of action, but they were good stock. To make sure we’d have plenty of riding stock in case of trouble, I topped off a few others, too.  The gate to the corral was sagging and a board on the back step had come loose, so I made out to fix them up. I never cared much for such work, liking to do nothing I couldn’t do from a saddle, but it had to be done.  Working around, I gave the place some study. Old Talon, who had moved in here when the Injuns were on the warpath often as not, had built with cunning. And that was what had Planner’s boys in a bind ... he’d built so there was no way he could be got at.

Moreover, each building was like a fort, and it was easy to move from one to the other without exposing yourself to rifle fire from the outside.  There are a lot of places in the mountains where small valleys or ravines open out into the plains. Talon had found such a place and built so that there was no access except right through his ranch. Which allowed him to control the grazing in a succession of small but pleasant valleys that cut deep into the mountains.  He had located most of the possibilities for trails into the area and had blasted rock to block them off, or had felled trees across them. It was a rugged area of deep canyons, rushing streams, and wild, broken ridges.  There isn’t any place that I ever saw that couldn’t be got into or out of, but often it isn’t easy, and nobody wants to go scouting in rough country, scrambling up rock slides and the like when he is apt to get his skull opened up for trying.

Talon had been thinking about Injuns, I figure, but maybe he’d had the foresight to know that a lot of the savages wear store-bought clothes. Anyway, he was ready ... else his widow would have been buried deep and this place would have been cut up and divided, or taken over by Planner.  Meanwhile night was coming on. Just to see what would happen I taken a blanket on a stick and moved it in the shadows of the porch, standing well inside.  Sure enough, a rifle blasted and a bullet went right through that blanket. Now out where they were all they’d be able to see was something moving. They wouldn’t know but what it was Em Talon.

Come evening time when the shadows are long and it begins to get hard to see, I taken my Winchester and went out through the kitchen.  Pennywell stopped me. “Where you going?”

Em turned from the stove. “I just fixed supper,” she said, “you set down.” “Keep it warmed up. I’ll be back.” I hesitated in the back door. “Those boys out there can spread it around. I want to see what they do when it’s all gathered up.”

Outside I moved into the shadows. Nobody ever said no Clinch Mountain Sackett was anything but mean, and me and my brother Nolan, we shaped up to be the meanest. I never asked no favors and never gave none that I can recall, not when it came to fighting.

We Sackett boys had grown up among the Indians. Cherokees mostly, but we’d known and hunted with Creeks, Chickasaws, Choctaws, and Shawnees. What I done right then any one of those Injuns could have done, but I figure I did it as well as most. Anyway, I moved across that open ground, sort of filtering through the shadows, like.

There were three men settin’ by that fire and I stood up and walked amongst them. I was right on them before they saw me and I kicked the boiling coffeepot into the lap of the nearest one.

The man whose back was to me started to get up and turn and I pushed him into the fire. Then I taken a swing with my rifle and fetched the next one in the belly. He went down and I walked into that outfit and never gave them a chance to get set.

Like I said, I’m a big man, but that ain’t the important part. My shoulders and arms have beef on them from wrassling broncs and steers, from swinging an ax and rafting logs down the Mississippi, and I was feeling no mercy for an outfit that would tackle an old woman.

The one I’d shoved into the fire jumped out of it and turned, grabbing for his six-shooter. Well, if he wanted to play that way he could. I just pointed my rifle at him, which I held only in my right hand, and let him have the big one right through the third button on his shirt. If he ever figured to sew that particular button on again he was going to have a scrape it off his backbone ...  if he had any.

The man into whose lap I’d kicked the coffeepot had troubles enough. He was jumping around like mad and I could see I’d ruined his social life for some time to come. He’d been scalded real good and he wasn’t going to ride anywhere, not anywhere at all.

The other one was on his hands and knees, gasping and groaning. I pushed him over on his back with my boot and put the rifle in his face and looked down the barrel at him.

“You ever been to Wyoming?” I asked him. “Or Montana?”

He stared at me, his face a sickly yellow like his insides must have been.  “Well, when you can get on your feet, you start for one or the other, and you keep going. If I ever see you around again I ain’t going to like it.” Taking up the three rifles I busted them over the nearest rock, then threw the rest of them into the fire along with the ammunition and their tent.  Then I sort of backed off into the night and went back to the house.  Aunt Em an’ Pennywell, they were on the porch watching the fire out there, and when I came up the steps I said, “You kep’ my supper warm, ma’am?” “Yes, I did. Dish it up, Pennywell.”

When I sat down to table, Aunt Em she said nothing at all, but Pennywell was younger and almighty curious. “What happened out there? What did you do?” “Like Samson,” I said, “I went among the Philistines and smote them, hip and thigh.” And after a good swallow of coffee, I grinned at her and said, “And one of them in the belly.”