Dark Angel Riding
By Paul Lederer
4/5
()
Revenge
Betrayal
Ranching
Loyalty
Justice
Loyal Sidekick
Mysterious Stranger
Damsel in Distress
Femme Fatale
Struggle for Survival
Quest for Justice
Loyal Horse
Lone Cowboy
Power of Friendship
Redemption
Survival
Western Frontier Life
Western Frontier
Loyalty & Betrayal
Cattle Rustling
About this ebook
John Dancer hauls himself out of bed and stuffs his swollen ankle into his boot, gritting his teeth through the pain. That boot won’t come off again unless he cuts through the leather, but for now it will do just fine. His ankle was blown apart by a Winchester rifle, and he will never walk right on it again. John Dancer can’t run, but he can ride—and he is fine with dealing justice on horseback.
His trouble started three months earlier, when his drifter lifestyle led him to an abandoned ranch, where a woman lay weeping over the body of her lynched husband. His instincts told him to ride on, but he couldn’t leave the woman alone, and he stayed behind to help her bury her man. When the raiders who killed him returned, Dancer was caught in the middle, his ankle destroyed and his thoughts turned forever towards revenge.
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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Dark Angel Riding - Paul Lederer
ONE
From his upstairs window in the Brownsville Hotel, John Dancer looked out across the whitesand desert, watching the shadows beneath the thorny ocotillo plants and scattered mesquite bushes stretch out before the glare of orange light cast by the rising sun. A mockingbird perched briefly on his window ledge, cocked a surprised head at him and quickly flew away, its throat filled with scolding sounds.
Dancer smiled faintly and returned to his rumpled bed where he sat for a long minute staring at the blank wall of the room, the white pitcher and washbasin on the bureau, the clouded oval mirror which reflected only another blank wall.
He looked with a pang of trepidation at his boots, dreading the moment. He had been wearing only soft moccasins on his feet for a long while. Now his sturdy, scuffed boots presented a significant challenge. He had risen in the early pre-dawn hours and managed, with infinite care and spasms of pain to dress himself in the faded red shirt and black jeans he now wore. Each movement caused jagged torment to flare up in his tightly wrapped ribcage. The broken bones were nearly mended, but they violently objected to any movement that was not carefully planned, gently executed.
Dancer had no choice but to move on. He had been staying in the hotel for two months now, half the time flat on his back; now his funds were exhausted. If he was careful with his few remaining dollars he had enough to provision himself, pay for his horse’s board and stock his saddlebags with enough ammunition to do what must be done.
Broken, his body was still unwilling, but his spirit raced with fiery determination. Two months is a long time to remain a dead man. It was time to return.
With a sigh, he leaned to pick up his left boot. His ribs complained again at the small exertion. Dancer cursed the demons of pain to silence. Tugging at the mule-ear straps he drew his calf-high boot on. The easy part, then, had been accomplished. Now he morosely studied the other boot, and then his swollen, shattered right foot. On either side of the ankle was a knob where displaced bone had reconstructed itself grotesquely. The doctor who had strapped him into his encasing rib bandages had examined the deformed ankle and shaken his head. ‘It’ll never be any good again,’ was the physician’s unnecessary prognosis.
‘Amazing what a .44-40 slug can do to the human body,’ the youngish doctor said. ‘Tendon, bone, flesh.’ He was not callous, but only candid. ‘You’ll never walk again, Mr Dancer. Not without extreme pain.’
‘I’ll ride, then,’ Dancer had told the physician with stony certainty. The young doctor’s eyes flickered behind his spectacles as he studied the expression on his lanky, curly-headed patient’s face. ‘There’s places I have to go,’ Dancer told him. ‘I’ll get there if I have to crawl.’
The doctor, a mild man from the East, saw the fire in Dancer’s faded blue eyes and began wrapping the swollen, broken ankle. He believed Dancer. Believed he would be able to do whatever it was that he had planned, and was glad that he himself was not going to be standing in John Dancer’s way.
Now Dancer delayed. He wiped back his dark hair with the fingers of both hands, took a deep breath and thrust the toes of his foot into his boot. As he gripped the straps perspiration began to bead his forehead. He stifled a cry of pain as he tugged steadily, strongly at the boot, watching the swollen, misshapen object that was his ankle slide into his boot, inch by tormenting inch until, rising, he silently groaned and stamped his foot down hard, his heel settling into the boot.
Then he slumped back onto the bed, the throb and ache searing through his ankle, the whole of his left leg. A soft rap on his door brought Dancer instantly upright and he snatched his Colt revolver from the bureau top, earing back the blue-steel hammer.
‘Who is it?’ Dancer asked in a low growl.
‘Me, Sadie, Mr Dancer.’
Dancer lowered the hammer of the Colt and hobbled to the door. Upon opening it he found the tiny chestnut-haired maid who had taken care of him these last long weeks. Sadie Fairchild stood at the threshold of the room, towels folded over her arm, a steaming bucket of hot water in her free hand. Her dark eyes were inquisitive, growing anxious as she studied John Dancer from his freshly washed dark hair to the tight-fitting high boots he now wore.
‘I came for your soak,’ she said, a slight tremor in her voice. ‘But I see. …’
‘Come on in,’ Dancer said, leaving the door open as she passed him and placed the bucket of water on the floor, the towels on the bureau. Beyond the window the sky was losing its dawn tint, fading to a clear blue-white. Sadie remained standing, her arms crossed beneath her breasts.
‘I guess they didn’t tell you,’ Dancer said. ‘I’m leaving this morning.’
‘They didn’t tell me,’ Sadie replied softly.
Since the night John Dancer had dragged himself into the hotel and taken a room, Sadie Fairchild had been tending to his needs. Each morning she brought a bucket of hot water to pour into the basin so that John could soak his damaged ankle. When he needed meals delivered, mail sent, aspirin or – occasionally – whiskey to dampen his pain, she cheerfully provided these services.
Sometimes at night she would read to him, seated in a wooden chair beside the bed where the wounded man lay, her voice tender and low. Though he did not know it, at times Sadie would sit and watch him sleep, long after the book had been closed and the night crept past, stroking his forehead when the occasional nightmare swam through his unconscious mind.
‘Is it money, John?’ she asked, studying him intently. He had unintentionally mentioned to her that his funds were nearly exhausted. ‘If that is all it is, I can. …’
Dancer waved a careless hand. ‘It’s not that, Sadie. It’s just that it’s time to go. I have matters to attend to.’
‘Your foot is no better!’ she said with impulsive heat.
‘I can ride.’
‘You can be killed,’ Sadie said, her voice lowering. She shifted her eyes away from his. They had spoken together for long hours over the months; they knew more than they needed to know about each other’s troubles.
Sadie Fairchild had been only a child when her family, trekking westward, had been raided by a band of Comanches west of Brownsville. Through a small miracle she had been left alive, lost and hungry, fearful and small on the wide prairie until discovered by an army patrol. The owners of the hotel, Guy Travers and his wife, Tess, had taken the orphaned child in. Sadie had remained in their service for years. She found that she feared the wide land deeply and could never again even consider venturing out onto the empty plains. Also, her devotion to Guy Travers – shark though he was – and to Tess, was unshakeable. She was their child, they the only parents she had known.
‘A lot of men,’ Sadie tried again as Dancer belted on his Colt revolver, bracing himself heavily on his left leg, ‘live full lives, rewarding lives without guns. Without carving a path into Hell.’
Dancer didn’t quite smile. There was nothing amusing about Sadie’s words or her fear, but the corners of his broad mouth did lift slightly as he responded.
‘You’re right, of course. You are a wise woman, Sadie.’ Somberly, he added, ‘But when a man is given no choice, he will charge Hell with a pocketful of stones if he must. Or he relinquishes the right to call himself a man.’
‘You mustn’t do this. …’ to me, is what she nearly blurted out, but refrained from saying. She performed meaningless habitual rituals now as she kept her moist eyes turned away from Dancer’s – opening the window, stripping the bed of its linen, straightening the braided rug at the foot of the bed. When none of these small distractions could longer disguise her fear, she spun to face Dancer and said furiously:
‘For God’s sake, John! She is only another woman!’
Immediately she regretted her outburst. John Dancer seemed not to have heard her. He was packing his few belongings into his saddlebags, not so much as glancing at her. Sadie felt diminished, as if her outburst had shrunken her in his eyes, made her sound like another jealous female – jealous about a woman she had never met or seen, described only through Dancer’s eyes on those long, quiet, somehow comforting nights when she had seated herself close to him, wanting to know him, to find an anchor, a polar star in her life beyond the security of the Travers family.
Sadie felt at once rejected and, as one who has made a fool of herself, as causing her own rejection.
John Dancer said, ‘Have Guy make up my bill, and if you could send young Toby to the stable for my horse. …’ He fumbled in his pocket for a pair of silver dollars to offer her, saw that even that gesture was offensive to Sadie, and let his words stumble to a halt.
‘I wasn’t meaning to treat you like. …’
‘A servant?’ Sadie suggested. But that was all that she had been to John Dancer, it seemed now. Dancer didn’t reply. ‘I’ll send Toby for your gray,’ she promised. Moving like an automaton now, Sadie gathered her pail and towels and started toward