

Beschreibung
Informationen zum Autor Louis L'Amour Klappentext Louis L'Amour tells the story of two brothers who must struggle to survive in a wild and beautiful land to build themselves a ranch and a future. Trouble was following Flagan Sackett with a vengeance. Captured ...Informationen zum Autor Louis L'Amour Klappentext Louis L'Amour tells the story of two brothers who must struggle to survive in a wild and beautiful land to build themselves a ranch and a future. Trouble was following Flagan Sackett with a vengeance. Captured and tortured by a band of Apaches, he escaped into the rugged San Juan country, where he managed to stay alive until his brother Galloway could find him. But the brothers were about to encounter worse trouble ahead. Their plan to establish a ranch angered the Dunn clan, who had decided that the vast range would be theirs alone. Now Galloway and Flagan would face an enemy who killed for sport-but as long as other Sacketts lived, they would not fight alone. Zusammenfassung Louis L'Amour tells the story of two brothers who must struggle to survive in a wild and beautiful land to build themselves a ranch and a future. Trouble was following Flagan Sackett with a vengeance. Captured and tortured by a band of Apaches! he escaped into the rugged San Juan country! where he managed to stay alive until his brother Galloway could find him. But the brothers were about to encounter worse trouble ahead. Their plan to establish a ranch angered the Dunn clan! who had decided that the vast range would be theirs alone. Now Galloway and Flagan would face an enemy who killed for sportbut as long as other Sacketts lived! they would not fight alone.
Autorentext
Louis L'Amour
Klappentext
Louis L'Amour tells the story of two brothers who must struggle to survive in a wild and beautiful land to build themselves a ranch and a future.
Trouble was following Flagan Sackett with a vengeance. Captured and tortured by a band of Apaches, he escaped into the rugged San Juan country, where he managed to stay alive until his brother Galloway could find him. But the brothers were about to encounter worse trouble ahead. Their plan to establish a ranch angered the Dunn clan, who had decided that the vast range would be theirs alone. Now Galloway and Flagan would face an enemy who killed for sport-but as long as other Sacketts lived, they would not fight alone.
Leseprobe
Chapter 1
 
The old elk walked up the knoll where the long wind blew. The wolves followed.
 
The elk realized what was happening, but he didn’t know it was only a part of something that had been going on since life began.
 
He didn’t know that it was because of these wolves or their kindred that he had been strong, brave, and free-running all his past years. For it was the wolves who kept the elk herds in shape by weeding out the weak, the old, and the inept.
 
Now his time had come, and the wolves were there. He no longer had the speed to outrun them nor the get-about to outfight them, and there were four wolves working as a team, not one of them weighing less than a hundred pounds and two of them nearly twice that.
 
All he had going for him was his wisdom, and so far he was making a fair country try in getting himself to a place where he could make a stand. You could see, plain as the snow on the mountains yonder, that he was heading for the rocks where he could get his back to the wall.
 
His trouble was that wolves, like Indians, are patient. They had hunted elk before, had seen all of this happen many times, and they knew they were going to get that elk.
 
They didn’t know about me. Coming up as I had, they’d caught no wind of me, nor could they guess it was my work they were doing. For I was figuring on having most of that elk myself.
 
When a man has been on the run and hasn’t had a bite in three days, he’s ready to eat an elk—head, hoofs, and horns—all by himself. Trouble was, I’d no way of killing an elk … or anything else, really, and if those wolves got the idea I was as bad off as I was they might take right in after me.
 
A lobo is too smart to harry a man unless he’s down and well-nigh helpless. They don’t like the man smell, which always means trouble, but a wolf is born with a keen sense of something ready for the kill … which I was. Up to a point, I was.
 
My feet were raw and bloody, the flesh churned into a bloody mess by running over the broken rock, gravel, and stubble of the desert. My body was worn with hunger, thirst, and exhaustion to a point where I could scarcely walk. But there was that inside me, whatever it was that made me a man, that was a whole long way from being whipped.
 
The wolves could smell blood, they could smell a festering wound, but could they smell the heart of a man? The nerve that was in him?
 
That elk sprinted for the rocks and the wolves taken in after him, wary of his hoofs, shy of the vicious drive of those forefeet that could stab and cut a wolf to a cripple. The horns didn’t worry them too much, but a wolf is a shrewd hunter and wants to lose no hide for his meal.
 
My instinct is for mountains. The Sacketts of our branch were mountain people, hill folk from Tennessee, and when trouble showed it was our way to take to the hills again. At least until we got our second wind. That was why I pointed toward the mountains yonder.
 
Ever since I’d got shut of those Jicarilla Apaches I’d been heading for the hills, but they hadn’t left me much to go on. I was making no complaints. If they still had me by this time I’d be dead … or wishing I was.
 
Somebody back yonder stirred up a pack of trouble and those Apache warriors had taken off like somebody’d set their breechclouts afire, leaving me with the squaws.
 
Now squaws are no bargain. They take to torturing with genuine pleasure. Thing was, when the warriors taken off they also took all the ponies in camp, so I just cut loose and started to run.
 
The squaws came close to catching me, with my hands tied and all. But I was a long-legged man, barefooted and stark naked and knowing what would happen if they caught me. When the warriors returned they taken after me, too.
 
By that time I was afar off and had gotten my hands free, and was just beginning to run. All that day and into the night I ran … maybe fifty miles … but an Apache is like a hound on the trail. So they were back yonder coming after me, and if I didn’t get something to eat I was a finished man.
 
The elk had got the rock behind him and turned to fight, but for the time those wolves were just a-setting there, looking at him, their tongues hanging out.
 
There was scattered cedar where I lay, and I kept my eyes open for a club, a-wishing all the time for Galloway to show up. But for all I knew he was miles away down in New Mexico.
 
Worming my way along the ground, I got closer to the wolves. It wasn’t going to do me a sight of good to come up on them until they’d made their kill. I was sorry for the elk, but it was no use. If this bunch didn’t get him the next would.
 
Sure enough, when I was still sixty, seventy yards away that elk turned too far after one wolf and another one slipped in behind and hamstrung him. The elk went down, making a game fight of it, but he had no chance. About that time I got to my knees, yelled, and threw a rock into their midst.
 
You never seen the like. That rock lit close to one big wolf with a cropped ear and he jumped like he’d been hit. Maybe sand from the ground stung him. Anyway, they turned to stare at me, waving my arms and yelling.
 
They backed up as I rose to my feet and started slowly toward them. I was holding two stones and I could fling passing well, so I let drive again and had the luck to hit one on the leg.
 
He jumped and yelped, s…