Six Days to Sundown
By Paul Lederer
4.5/5
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About this ebook
Casey Storm doesn’t know who the Shadow Riders are. He only knows that they want to kill him. A dozen men in black slickers set upon Casey as soon as he reaches Montana, chasing him across the freezing plains for reasons he can only guess at. They chase him until his horse dies and keep chasing him even after he tumbles to the ground. He escapes only by chance, tripping and falling into a hidden coulee. The Shadow Riders pass on—and a winter storm descends.
Thick snow falls as Casey staggers up to the covered wagon, begging for shelter. The inhabitants are also on the run from the Shadow Riders, who seem to have mistaken Casey for Stan Deveraux, the gunman who promised to lead the settlers to safety. They have six days to reach the fabled land known as Sundown—six days before their property is stolen, and they are left to die at the hands of the Shadow Riders.
Paul Lederer
Paul Lederer spent much of his childhood and young adult life in Texas. He worked for years in Asia and the Middle East for a military intelligence arm. Under his own name, he is best known for Tecumseh and the Indian Heritage Series, which focuses on American Indian life. He believes that the finest Westerns reflect ordinary people caught in unusual and dangerous circumstances, trying their best to act with honor.
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Six Days to Sundown - Paul Lederer
ONE
Montana was bleeding. To the west, the sky cast scattered colors against the leaden sky, like reflections from a shattered stained-glass window. Deep umber, washy violet and hazy crimson streaked the clouds and sketched crazy shadows across the land. To the east, the far-running sky was steel-dust gray, cold and somber. A ground mist was beginning to rise from the long prairie flats as the pursuers spurred their horses forward.
Casey Storm lay head downward in the coulée where he had faltered, stumbled and plunged into its sandy depths. He could do nothing to help himself, to lift himself up, to try to scramble onward. His race was run and he had lost to the Shadow Riders.
Why they wanted to kill him he still did not know. He only knew that they would do that if they found him again.
His own horse, the big buckskin he had been riding for three years, had nearly run itself to death before a chance shot from his pursuers stopped the big horse in its tracks and sent it rolling head over heels with Casey given only a split second to kick free of the stirrups and leap from the tumbling animal. He had managed to keep his grip on his Henry repeating rifle, but there were only three rounds remaining in its tube magazine, hardly enough to hold off the Shadow Riders. At a rough count there had been ten or twelve of them when they first emerged from the shadowy haze of twilight time. All of them wore black slickers and were faceless in the gloom.
Casey had reined in, lifting a hand to the men, hoping to find trail information and possibly even a camp with hot coffee, his own supplies being nearly depleted. Instead, when the riders were still fifty yards away, one of them had shouldered his rifle and begun to fire. Prudence inspired Casey to slap spurs to the big buckskin’s flanks and begin an all-out run across the long-grass plains, rifle bullets pursuing him.
After his horse had gone down, Casey had run on in a crouch, his breath coming in short gasps, his heart racing wildly until at last he had tripped over an unseen root and fallen sprawled against the sandy bluff of the coulée.
He could hear them coming still, their horses now at a walk, knowing that he was on foot. He could hear muttered words being exchanged, though none came clearly. The sky continued to darken and the colors faded to a uniform grayness, tending toward blue-black. Never had a man prayed more for night to envelop the world, for the icy darkness to settle than did Casey. He did not move, look back, try to position himself for a last desperate struggle. He lay face down in the sand as the shadows mingled and pooled beneath the willow brush that clotted the coulée bottom. He knew the Shadow Riders would kill him without hesitation if they found him.
They had already proved that.
Who they could be, why they wanted him dead he could not guess. He had only recently ridden into the Montana country out of Cheyenne, Wyoming, where things had gotten a little too tight for him, partly because of his own carelessness. But this band of nameless, faceless men had swarmed upon him without cause like a group of enraged hostile Indians, and there had to be a reason for it.
Casey wondered at that moment as the sky faded and he lay helplessly against the cold earth if he would live long enough to discover what that reason was.
Now, lying as still as a dead man he could hear them speaking in low tones, hear nervous horses pawing at the earth on the rim of the coulée, shaking their heads so that their bridle chains rattled. One man’s voice was appreciably louder than the others, reckless and angry.
‘We’re not going to find him on this night! Probably broke his neck when the horse rolled.’
‘Shut up, Earl!’ a second man hissed. ‘We’ve got to find him.’
‘You couldn’t find a mountain on a night like this. Besides, it’s going to rain. I tell you he broke his neck.’
The second man responded crossly. ‘Keep your voice down. You’ll make targets of us all if he’s lurking out there.’
One of the riders had walked his pony so near to the edge of the coulée that a few small rocks followed by a trickle of sand washed down across Casey where he lay.
The man called Earl laughed loudly. ‘Targets? If there’s a man living who could pick us out in this blackness, I’d give him a medal!’
‘Just quiet down,’ the other said impatiently. ‘We’ll keep looking. McCoy wants him dead, you know that.’
‘And what McCoy wants he gets,’ Earl answered bitterly.
‘So long as he’s paying my wages – and yours.’
Their horses rested now, seeing nothing ahead of them but the pitch blackness of the night plains, Casey heard them turn their mounts and ride away. He had been confining his breathing to slow, labored puffs. Now, as the sounds of the Shadow Riders dimmed and were swallowed by the night, he sat up, wrapped his arms around his knees and took in a series of deep, resuscitating gulps of cold air. The small effort brought stabbing pain to his side and he realized that he had probably broken a rib or two in the tumble from the buckskin’s saddle.
Very cautiously he rose to his feet, looking around carefully, listening intently. The riders had gone, but it was possible they had left a watcher behind. Seeing no one, hearing nothing, he started down the flank of the sandy wash toward the brush-clotted bottom. In the darkness he fought his way through the knots of willow brush and sumac to the far side, climbed painfully up the opposite bank and on to level land again, his arms and face scratched, his ribs aching in protest.
The few words he had heard exchanged between the riders had done nothing to illuminate him. He knew no man named McCoy, so why would he – whoever he was – want Casey dead? He only knew that he had blundered into trouble and that he wanted now to get as far away from it as possible.
Trouble, after all, was the reason he had left Cheyenne. A man hopes that trouble can be left behind, but it seemed to cling to Casey Storm like a plaster. Standing on the bank of the coulée, his rifle in his hand, he looked up into the darkness, but the moon was hidden in the tumult of the skies and no stars winked on to give him his bearings. Utilizing the prevailing wind as his rough compass, he began trudging slowly westward. Hatless, injured and lost, he walked on through the cold Montana night.
An hour later it began to rain.
Lightning illuminated the crooked sky and thunder racketed so near at hand that it was deafening. The rain fell in silver pellets, driving against Casey’s shoulders and face with such violence that he was tempted to curl up embryonically against the cold, sodden earth and let the night have its way. To do so would have been suicidal; there was no way of knowing how long the angry storm would continue to rage. The temperature was dropping rapidly. He had to find shelter, any rough refuge. A thicket to cut the biting wind, a hollow log! Anything at all.
He had heard all the stories about these north plains storms which rose like angry beasts and could blanket the world in minutes with snow, of the ten-foot drifts and men who had sacrificed their ponies, cut them open to crawl inside of them for their body heat in a last desperate attempt to survive. It was not snowing, not yet, but these tales manifested themselves luridly in his mind as he struggled on against the cold, buckshot rain and grappling wind. His boots groped their way forward. The earth underneath their soles was growing sodden and slick. His head was bowed necessarily. The rain was a driving, blinding force. He staggered more than walked on. He had no sense of direction and little energy left. He could not defeat the elements by will alone. Once he did stop, lifted his face to the tumult of the Montana sky and shouted, ‘Damn you, McCoy! Whoever you are, I curse you.’
He stumbled on then, his legs leaden, effectively blinded by the dark of the storm. Casey walked for miles – or was that only in his mind? Time and distance had lost their meaning as the rain continued to fall, the lightning to crackle with blinding brilliance at one moment; in the next allowing the night to sink back into Stygian darkness.
He halted abruptly. Stumbling on, his feet frozen, lungs filled with cold air that made each breath seem life-threatening, he had not noticed that the wind was now at his back! Had he been wandering in circles? He knew this could happen even to experienced trailsmen in territory they knew well. Casey did not know this land intimately. He paused, wiping the cold water from his eyes. The storm had shifted direction – that was all there was to it. Or so he convinced himself. At any rate there was no choice but to continue, to seek shelter. Or to lie down and die.
Some time near midnight it began to snow.
The temperature plunged with appalling suddenness, harsh sleet began to cut at Casey’s face like icy daggers. Then the snow began. Huge, fluffy flakes at first and then a constant, impenetrable veil of twisting, wind-driven snow. Casey bowed his head and plunged on once again, seeking shelter, any poor shelter.
With his head bowed to the forces of the storm, in the near-complete darkness he walked directly into a solid, waist-high object and stumbled back, gasping in pain as fire shot through his injured ribs. Like a blind man seeking, he stuck out searching fingers and found the object again. It was the lowered plank tailgate of a wagon.
Peering into the wrath of the storm he could make out the distinctive shape of a covered wagon’s canvas roof and hear the fabric snapping against the iron bands supporting it. Abandoned? Occupied? Either way it made no difference to Casey Storm. He shouted out as loudly as he could above the battering rush of the storm and painfully clambered up on to the tailgate and into the wagon.
‘Come