One of you all catch him, said Oren, and lets quit this damn nonsense.
The door opened behind Oren and Mr Johnson stood there in his hat and boots and nightshirt. Shut the door, Mr Johnson, said Oren. Come in if you want.
John Grady dropped the loop over the horse’s neck and walked the horse down along the rope and reached up through the loop and took hold of the trailing bridlereins and threw the rope off.
Dont get on that horse, said Oren.
It’s my horse.
Well you can tell that to Mac then. He’ll be out here in a minute.
Go on bud, said Billy. Put the damn horse up like the man asked you.
John Grady looked at him and he looked at Oren and then he turned and led the horse back down the barn bay and put it up in the stall.
Bunch of damned ignorance, said Oren. Come on, Mr Johnson. Damn.
The old man turned and went out and Oren followed and pulled the door shut behind him. When John Grady came limping out of the stall he was carrying the saddle by the horn, the stirrups dragging in the dirt. He crossed the bay toward the tackroom. Billy leaned against the jamb watching him. When he came out of the tackroom he passed Billy without looking at him.
You’re really somethin, said Billy. You know that?
John Grady turned at the door of his bunkroom and he looked at Billy and he looked down the hall of the lit barn and spat quietly in the dirt and looked at Billy again. It wasnt any of your business, he said. Was it.
Billy shook his head. I will be damned, he said.
IN THE MOUNTAINS they saw deer in the headlights and in the headlights the deer were pale as ghosts and as soundless. They turned their red eyes toward this unreckoned sun and sidled and grouped and leapt the bar ditch by ones and twos. A small doe lost her footing on the macadam and scrabbled wildly and sank onto her hindquarters and rose again and vanished with the others into the chaparral beyond the roadside. Troy held the whiskey up to the dashlights to check the level in the bottle and unscrewed the cap and drank and screwed the cap back on and passed the bottle to Billy. Be no lack of deer to hunt down here it looks like.
Billy unscrewed the cap from the bottle and drank and sat watching the white line down the dark road. I dont doubt but what it’s good country.
You dont want to leave Mac.
I dont know. Not without some cause to.
Loyal to the outfit.
It aint just that. You need to find you a hole at some point. Hell, I’m twenty-eight years old.
You dont look it.
Yeah?
You look forty-eight. Pass the whiskey.
Billy peered out at the high desert. The bellied lightwires raced against the night.
They wont care for us drinkin?
She dont particularly like it. But there aint much she can do about it. Anyway it aint like we was goin to show up down there kneewalkin drunk.
Will your brother take a drink?
Troy nodded solemnly. Quicker than a minnow can swim a dipper.
Billy drank and handed over the bottle.
What was the kid goin to do? said Troy.
I dont know.
Did you and him have a fallin out?
No. He’s all right. He just said he had somethin he needed to do.
He can flat ride a horse. I’ll say that.
Yes he can.
He’s a salty little booger.
He’s all right. He’s just got his own notions about things.
That horse he thinks so much of is just a damned outlaw if you want my opinion.
Billy nodded. Yep.
So what’s he want with it?
I guess that’s what he wants with it.
You still think he’s going to have it follerin him around like a dog?
Yeah. I think it.
I’ll believe it when I see it.
You want to lay some money?
Troy shook a cigarette from the pack on the dash and put it in his mouth and pushed in the lighter. I dont want to take your money.
Hell, dont be backwards about takin my money.
I think I’ll pass. He aint goin to like them crutches.
Not even a little bit.
How long is he supposed to be on em?
I dont know. A couple of weeks. Doctor told him a sprain could be worse than a break.
I’ll bet he aint on em a week.
I’ll bet he aint either.
A jackrabbit froze in the road. Its red eye shone.
Go on dumb-ass, Billy said.
The rabbit made a soft thud under the truck. Troy took the lighter from the dashboard and lit his cigarette with it and put the lighter back in the receptacle.
When I got out of the army I went up to Amarillo with Gene Edmonds for the rodeo and stock show. He’d fixed us up with dates and all. We was supposed to be at their house to pick em up at ten oclock in the mornin and it was after midnight fore we left out of El Paso. Gene had a brand new Olds Eighty-eight and he pitched me the keys and told me to drive. Quick as we hit highway eighty he looked over at me, told me to shower down on it. That thing would strictly motivate. I pushed it up to about eighty, eighty-five. Still had about a yard of pedal left. He looked over again. I said: How fast do you want to go? He said just whatever you feel comfortable with. Hell. I didnt do nothin but roll her on up to about a hundred and ten and here we went. Old long flat road. Had about six hundred miles of it in front of us.