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wheels farther north, were the rocky badlands below the salt hills. We could see the holes that led to the worked-out mines; they gaped like empty<br />

eyesockets.<br />

“We may as well give <strong>this</strong> up,” I said. “We know where the tracks go—up to where the salties live.”<br />

“Not yet,” Jamie said. “Look here, Roland. You’ve never seen anything like <strong>this</strong>.”<br />

The tracks began to change, the claws merging into the curved shapes of large unshod hooves.<br />

“It lost its bear-shape,” I said, “and became . . . what? A bull?”<br />

“I think so,” Jamie said. “Let’s go a little further. I have an idea.”<br />

As we approached the long outbuilding, the hoofprints became pawprints. The bull had become some kind of monstrous cat. These tracks were<br />

large at first, then started to grow smaller, as if the thing were shrinking from the size of a lion to that of a cougar even as it ran. When they veered<br />

off the lane and onto the dirt path leading to the tack shed, we found a large patch of jugweed grass that had been beaten down. The broken stalks<br />

were bloody.<br />

“It fell,” Jamie said. “I think it fell . . . and then thrashed.” He looked up from the bed of matted weed. His face was thoughtful. “I think it was in pain.”<br />

“Good,” I said. “Now look there.” I pointed to the path, which was imprinted with the hooves of many horses. And other signs, as well.<br />

Bare feet, going to the doors of the building, which were run back on rusty metal tracks.<br />

Jamie turned to me, wide-eyed. I put my finger to my lips, and drew one of my revolvers. Jamie did likewise, and we moved toward the shed. I<br />

waved him around to the far side. He nodded and split off to the left.<br />

I stood outside the open doors, gun held up, giving Jamie time to get to the other end of the building. I heard nothing. When I judged my pard must<br />

be in place, I bent down, picked up a good-size stone with my free hand, and tossed it inside. It thumped, then rolled across wood. There was still<br />

nothing else to hear. I swung inside, crouched low, gun at the ready.<br />

The place seemed empty, but there were so many shadows it was at first hard to tell <strong>for</strong> sure. It was already warm, and by noonday would be an<br />

oven. I saw a pair of empty stalls on either side, a little smithy-stove next to drawers full of rusty shoes and equally rusty shoe-nails, dust-covered<br />

jugs of liniment and stinkum, branding irons in a tin sleeve, and a large pile of old tack that needed either to be mended or thrown out. Above a<br />

couple of benches hung a fair assortment of tools on pegs. Most were as rusty as the shoes and nails. There were a few wooden hitching hooks<br />

and a pedestal pump over a cement trough. The water in the trough hadn’t been changed <strong>for</strong> a while; as my eyes adjusted to the dimness, I could<br />

see bits of straw floating on the surface. I kenned that <strong>this</strong> had once been more than a tack shed. It had also been a kind of hostelry where the<br />

ranch’s working stock was seen to. Likely a jackleg veterinary, as well. Horses could be led in at one end, dealt with, and led out the other. But it<br />

looked in disrepair, abandoned.<br />

The tracks of the thing that had by then been human led up the center aisle to other doors, also open, at the far end. I followed them. “Jamie? It’s<br />

me. Don’t shoot me, <strong>for</strong> <strong>you</strong>r father’s sake.”<br />

I stepped outside. Jamie had holstered his gun, and now pointed at a large heap of horseapples. “He knows what he is, Roland.”<br />

“You know <strong>this</strong> from a pile of horseshit?”<br />

“As happens, I do.”<br />

He didn’t tell me how, but after a few seconds I saw it <strong>for</strong> myself. The hostelry had been abandoned, probably in favor of one built closer in to the<br />

main house, but the horseapples were fresh. “If he came a-horseback, he came as a man.”<br />

“Aye. And left as one.”<br />

I squatted on my hunkers and thought about <strong>this</strong>. Jamie rolled a smoke and let me. When I looked up, he was smiling a little.<br />

“Do <strong>you</strong> see what it means, Roland?”<br />

“Two hundred salties, give or take,” I said. I’ve ever been slow, but in the end I usually get there.<br />

“Aye.”<br />

“Salties, mind, not pokies or proddies. Diggers, not riders. As a rule.”<br />

“As <strong>you</strong> say.”<br />

“How many of em up there have horses, do <strong>you</strong> suppose? How many even know how to ride?”<br />

His smile broadened. “There might be twenty or thirty, I suppose.”<br />

“It’s better than two hundred,” I said. “Better by a long stride. We’ll go up as soon as—”<br />

I never finished what I was going to say, because that’s when the moaning started. It was coming from the tack shed I’d dismissed as empty. How<br />

glad I was at that moment Cort wasn’t there. He would have cuffed my ear and sent me sprawling. At least in his prime, he would have.<br />

Jamie and I looked into each other’s startled eyes, then ran back inside. The moaning continued, but the place looked as empty as be<strong>for</strong>e. Then<br />

that big heap of old tack—busted hames, bridles, cinch straps and reins—started to heave up and down, as if it were breathing. The tangled<br />

bunches of leather began to tumble away to either side and from them a boy was born. His white-blond hair was sticking up in all directions. He<br />

wore jeans and an old shirt that hung open and unbuttoned. He didn’t look hurt, but in the shadows it was hard to tell.<br />

“Is it gone?” he asked in a trembling voice. “Please, sais, say it is. Say it’s gone.”<br />

“It is,” I said.<br />

He started to wade his way out of the pile, but a strip of leather had gotten wound around one of his legs and he fell <strong>for</strong>ward. I caught him and saw<br />

a pair of eyes, bright blue and utterly terrified, looking up into my face.<br />

Then he passed out.<br />

* * *<br />

I carried him to the trough. Jamie pulled off his bandanna, dipped it in the water, and began to wipe the boy’s dirt-streaked face with it. He might<br />

have been eleven; he might have been a year or two <strong>you</strong>nger. He was so thin it was hard to tell. After a bit his eyes fluttered open. He looked from<br />

me to Jamie and then back to me again. “Who are <strong>you</strong>?” he asked. “You don’t b’long to the ranch.”<br />

“We’re friends of the ranch,” I said. “Who are <strong>you</strong>?”<br />

“Bill Streeter,” he said. “The proddies call me Young Bill.”<br />

“Aye, do they? And is <strong>you</strong>r father Old Bill?”<br />

He sat up, took Jamie’s bandanna, dipped it in the trough, and squeezed it out so the water ran down his thin chest. “No, Old Bill’s my granther,<br />

went into the clearing two years ago. My da’, he’s just plain Bill.” Something about speaking his father’s name made his eyes widen. He grasped<br />

my arm. “He ain’t dead, is he? Say he ain’t, sai!”<br />

Jamie and I exchanged another look, and that scared him worse than ever.<br />

“Say he ain’t! Please say my daddy ain’t dead!” He started to cry.<br />

“Hush and go easy now,” I said. “What is he, <strong>you</strong>r da’? A proddie?”<br />

“Nay, no, he’s the cook. Say he ain’t dead!”

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