but do you mind if we head on up the trail for a ways first? I donât particularly relish the view here while Iâm eating.â
* * *
Falcon made a fire of very dry wood, putting it next to a large boulder under a slight overhang so the smoke would be dispersed by the time it rose into view above them. While he brewed coffee in a pot and fried some fatback and beans, Hawk gave him his first lessons in finding the hidden springs and underground water in the high desert regions of the Dragoons.
âFirst, you look for any kind of bird activity, âcause they knows where the water is. Ifân you see some doves flying toward a particular spot, âspecially at dusk when they come in to drink after feeding all day on grain, you can be fairly sure theyâs water somewhereâs nearby.â
Falcon used a fork to turn the bacon in the skillet, paying close attention to the pearls of knowledge Hawk was sharing with him. He knew it might well mean the difference between life or death in the coming days.
âNow, to find the underground water, you look fer a place that has some shade to it, like near some rocks or in the bottom of an arroyo or dry wash. Ifân you see some green to the weeds there, or a small tree or brush, chances are thereâs water not too far âneath the surface.â
âIâve heard, though to tell the truth Iâve never had to try it, that some of the cactuses have a lot of liquid in them thatâs drinkable.â
Hawk nodded as he plucked a still sizzling chunk of meat from the skillet and bounced it back and forth between his hands until it cooled enough to pop it into his mouth. He spoke around the mouthful of food as he chewed. âThatâs correct, partner. The one you want to try is the barrel cactus. Theyâs short and squatty and round on top. Best way to get the water out of âem is to cut âem off at the base and hold âem up over your head and let it run right on down your gullet. Got to be careful, though. Them thorns is murder on your hands.â
Finally the meal was ready, and Falcon piled heaping helpings of beans and fried bacon onto plates while Hawk poured them both coffee into tin mugs.
They sat on the ground, leaning back against their saddles, and enjoyed the first hot meal theyâd had in several days. Neither talked until their plates were picked clean.
Hawk scrubbed his plate with a handful of sand and wiped it dry with a dirty bandanna. He leaned back and took out a cloth sack of tobacco and built himself a cigarette, then offered his fixinâs to Falcon.
As they smoked, Falcon asked, âWhat do you plan to do after we finish with the Indians, Hawk?â
Hawk shrugged, as if he hadnât given it much thought. âI dunno. Go back to mininâ, I guess.â He looked up from his cigarette to stare at Falcon. âTo tell you the honest truth, I really donât âspect to come out of this fracas without attracting some lead.â
âOh?â
âI just donât think itâs in the cards for us to go up against this many redskins anâ come out of it with our skins intact.â
âWhy do you say that?â
âInjuns ainât like white men. They donât think like us, anâ they sure as hell donât act like us.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWell, ifân a white man is up against long odds, âspecially if his fight is with someone armed a lot betterân he is, heâll most likely run away and live to fight another day.â
As he smoked, the cigarette dangling from the corner of his mouth, Hawk absentmindedly picked up a stick from the ground and began to whittle on it while he talked. âA redskin, on the other hand, thinks itâs a mark of bravery to go up against a superior force. Hell, Iâve seen a lone brave armed only with a tomahawk charge a squadron of men with repeating rifles, anâ never flinch
Barbara Delinsky
Lynn Red
Karen Robards
Rebecca Zanetti
Bryan Burrough
MC Beaton
Olivia Darling
Marquita Valentine
Jonathan Kellerman
Susan Bordo