Read Off the Mangrove Coast (Ss) (2000) Online
Authors: Louis L'amour
Published: | 2010 |
Off The Mangrove Coast
Louis L'amour
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From The Jungles Of Borneo To The Hidden Canyons Of The American West, From Small-Town Fight Clubs To A Parisian Cafe At the end of World War II, these are tales of betrayal and revenge, courage and cowardice, glory and greed, as only Louis L Amour can tell them.
Here are vintage stories of men and women who dare what others will never attempt, who fight for justice and dreams when the odds are against them. A charismatic boxer with quick hands and a hair-trigger temper itches to fight all comers but if he's ever going to get a shot at a championship, he will first have to fight the man who ruined his father. A beautiful movie star finds a dead man in her apartment and begs a former lover to clear her name, only to enmesh the tough private eye in a murder with ties to the mob.
Here, too, are tales of high adventure. A reluctant hero, hired to guide a diamond-hunting couple up a river ruled by headhunters and pirates, risks
everything in pursuit of a legendary stone and the mysterious warlord who guards it. And in the title story, , a young renegade who'd grown to manhood riding freights, prizefighting, and working mines sails the exotic South China Sea with a trio of dangerous men in search of treasure they figure to divide four ways. But when it's time to dive for the prize, can he trust any of them to guard his back?
Combining electrifying action scenes, vivid historical detail, and characters who seem to leap off the page, these spectacular stories honor the legend of Louis U Amour. A memorable addition to the author's already impressive catalogue of work, celebrates L'Amour's unequalled genius, creative vision, and humanity.
Chapter
I
A brutal blow in the ribs jerked Tandy Moore from a sound sleep. Gasping, he rolled into a fetal position and looked up to see a brakeman standing over him with his foot drawn back for another kick. With a lunge Tandy was on his feet, his dark eyes blazing. Fists cocked, he started for the brakeman, who backed suddenly away. "Unload!" he said harshly. "Get off! An' be quick about it!"
Tandy was a big young man with wide shoulders and a sun-darkened face, darkened still further by a stubble of black beard. He chucked with cold humor.
"Nope," Tandy said grimly, and with relish. "If you want me off, you put me off! Come on, I'm going to like this!"
Instead of a meek and frightened tramp, the brake-man had uncovered a wolf with bared teeth. The brakeman backed away still farther.
"You get off!" he insisted. "If that bull down to the yards finds you here, he'll report it an' I'll get chewed out!"
Tandy Moore relaxed a bit. "You watch yourself, mister! You can lose teeth walkin' up an' kickin' a guy that way!" He grabbed the edge of the gondola and lifted himself to the top, then swung his feet over to the ladder. "Say, Jack? What town is this anyway? Not that it makes much difference."
"Astoria, Oregon. End of the line." "Thanks." Tandy climbed down the ladder, gauged the speed of the train, and dropped off, hitting the cinders on the run.
As though it had been planned for him, a path slanted down off the grade and into a dense jungle of brush that lined the sides and bottom of a shallow ditch. He slowed and started down the path.
Astoria was almost home, but he wasn't going home. There was nothing there for him anymore. He trotted along near the foot of a steeply slanting hill. He could smell the sea and the gray sky was spitting a thin mist of rain.
At the bottom of the muddy path lay a mossy gray plank bridging a trickle of water, and beyond it the trail slanted up and finally entered a patch of woods surrounded by a wasteland of logged-off stumps.
Almost as soon as Moore entered the thicket, he smelled the smoke of a campfire. He stopped for a moment, brushing at his baggy, gray tweed trousers with his hand. He wore a wool shirt open at the neck, and a worn leather jacket. His razor, comb, and toothbrush lay in one pocket of the jacket. He had no other possessions. He wore no hat, and his black hair was a coarse mass of unruly curls. As presentable as a hobo could be, he started forward.
Of the four men who sat around the fire, only two commanded his attention. A short, square-shouldered, square-faced man with intelligent eyes reclined on the ground, leaning on an elbow. Nearby a big man with black hair freely sprinkled with gray stood over the fire.
There was something familiar about the big man's face, but Tandy was sure he had never seen him before. His once-powerful build was apparently now overlaid with a layer of softness, and his eyes were blue and pleasant, almost mild.
The other two were typical of the road, a gray-faced man, old and leathery, and a younger man with dirty skin, white under the grime, and a weak chin and mouth.
"How's for some coffee?" Tandy asked, his eyes shifting from one to the other.
"Ain't ready yet, chum. Don't know that we have enough, anyway." The white-faced young man looked up at him. "They booted you off that drag, huh?"
Tensing, Tandy turned his head and looked down at the fellow, his eyes turning cold. It was an old song and this was how it always started.
"I got off on my own," he said harshly. "Nobody makes me do nothin'!"
"Tough guy?" The fellow looked away. "Well, some-body'll take all that out of you."
Tandy reached down and collared him, jerking him to his tiptoes. They were of the same age, but there the resemblance ceased, for where there was bleak power in Tandy's hard young face, there was only weakness in the tramp's.
"It ain't gonna be you, is it, sucker? You crack wise again and I'll slap some sense into you!" Tandy said coolly.
"Put him down," the big man said quietly. "You've scared the wits out of him now. No use to hit him."
Tandy had no intention of hitting him unless he had to, but the remark irritated him more. He dropped the other man and turned.
"Maybe you want to start something?" he demanded aggressively.
The big man only smiled and shook his head. "No, kid, I don't give a damn what you do. Just don't make a fool of yourself."
"Fool, huh?" Tandy could feel them backing him up, cornering him. "You listen to me, you yellow ..." He reached for the big man.
A fist smashed into his mouth, and then another crossed to his jaw and he hit the dirt flat on his back.
Tandy Moore lay on the ground for an instant, more amazed at the power of that blow than hurt. The big man stood by the fire, calm and unruffled. Rage overcame Tandy, he came off the ground with a lunge and threw everything he had into a wicked right hand.
It caught only empty air, but a big, hard-knuckled fist slammed into his chest and stopped his rush, then a right crossed on his jaw and lights exploded in his brain. He went down again but threw himself over and up in one continuous movement. His head buzzing, he spat blood from broken lips and began to circle warily. This big fellow could punch.
Tandy lunged suddenly and swung, but the big man sidestepped smoothly and Tandy fell past him. He cringed, half expecting a blow before he could turn, but none came. He whirled, his fists ready, and the big man stood there calmly, his hands on his hips.
"Cut it out, kid," he said quietly. "I don't want to beat your skull in. You can't fight a lick on earth!"
"Who says I can't!" Tandy lunged and swung, only this time he was thinking and as he swung with his right, he shifted suddenly and brought up a short, wicked left into the big man's liver.
The fellow's face went gray, and the square-faced man on the ground sat up suddenly. "Watch it, Gus!" he warned.
Gus backed away hastily, and seeing his advantage, Tandy moved in, more cautious but poised and ready. But he ran into something different, for the big man was moving now, strangely graceful. A left stiffened his mouth, a right smashed him on the chin, and another left dropped him to his knees.
Tandy got to his feet and licked his cut lips. The old guy was fast.
"You can punch, darn you!" he growled. "But this scrap ain't over. I'll fight until you drop!"
"Kid," the man warned, "we're fightin' for no good reason. You're carrying a chip but it's not for us. If I put you down again, I'll not let you get up. You know I'm not yellow, and I know you've got nerve enough to tackle all of us. What do you say we cut this out?"
Tandy hesitated, backing up. The man on the ground spoke, "Come on, son, have some coffee."
Tandy dropped his hands with a shrug.
"Mister," he said with a shamefaced grin, "I shouldn't have gone off like I did. I asked for it." He eyed Gus with respect. "You can sure use your dukes, though!"
"Don't take it hard, kid." The square-faced man smiled at him. "He used to be a prizefighter."
Across the fire the white-faced kid kept his mouth shut, not looking at either of them.
Tandy Moore shrugged. "Well he got me, but that fancy stuff ain't no good in a real scrap! Why, there's plenty of men in the lumber camps and mines could beat Joe Louis's head in if they had the chance."
"Don't kid yourself," Gus said quietly. "Fightin' is like anything else. A professional fighter does his job better than a greenhorn because he knows how.
"That fancy stuff, as you call it, is nothin' but a lot of things a lot of fighters learned over a thousand years or more. That's how scientific boxing was born. You were using it when you feinted and hit me with the left."
Tandy stared at him, then shrugged. "Ahhh, I figure you can either fight or you can't!"
Gus smiled at Tandy. "How many times have you been licked, kid?"
"Me?" Tandy bristled. "Nobody never licked me!" "That's what I figured," Gus said. "You are big enough, tough enough, and aggressive enough so you could fight every night around hobo jungles like this one and never lose. In the ring, almost any half-baked preliminary boy would cut you to ribbons.
"I was through as a fighter ten years ago. I haven't -> trained since but right now I could chop you into pieces and never catch a punch. I was careless, or you wouldn't have clipped me as you did."
Tandy scoffed. "Maybe, but if I had a chance at one of those prelim boys you talk about, I'd show you!"
"Gus" the square-faced man had seated himself on a log "maybe this is the guy? What do you think?"
Gus stared at Tandy with a new expression in his eyes. He looked him over thoughtfully, nodded slowly. "Maybe ... Kid, did you mean what you said? Would you want to try it?"
Tandy grinned. "I sure would! If there was a shot at some dough!"
The gymnasium in Astoria was no polished and airy retreat for overstuffed businessmen. It was a dim and musty basement with a heavy canvas bag, darkened around the middle by countless punches thrown by sweat-soaked gloves, a ring slightly smaller than regulation, its ropes wound with gauze, three creaking speed bags, and a broken horse. In one corner there were barbells made from different sizes of car and truck brake drums. A wan light filtered through dirty windows set high in the walls.
It was there, in a borrowed pair of blue trunks that clung precariously to his lean hips, and under them a suit of winter underwear rescued from a basement table by Gus Coe, that Tandy Moore began the process of learning to be a fighter. Their sole capital was a ten-dollar advance from a bored promoter, and five dollars Gus wheedled from a poolroom proprietor. Briggs, Gus's friend of the square face, leaned back against the wall with a watch in his hand, and Gus stood by while Tandy, bored and uncomfortable, looked at the heavy bag doubtfully.
"Now look," Gus said patiently, "you got a left hand but you don't use it right. Lift that left fist up to shoulder height an' hold it well out. When you hit, punch straight from the shoulder and step in with that left foot. Not much, just a couple of inches, maybe. But step in. Now try it."
Tandy tried it. His gloved fist smacked the bag solidly but without much force. Tandy looked unhappily at Gus.
"You mean like that? I couldn't break an egg!"
"You keep trying it. Shoot it straight out, make it snap. An' bring your fist back on the same line your punch traveled." He stepped up to the bag. "Like this "