McBride watched as Leggett lit his cigar, then said, ‘‘What’s your interest in this, Theo? Do you really care about the Chinese girls or do you want to make a name for yourself as a crusading newspaperman?’’
‘‘I care about High Hopes. This was a nice place to live before Gamble Trask got here and I want it to go back to how it was. Now I see corruption everywhere. Trask gives the miners what they want and directly or indirectly, a lot of people— merchants, bankers, even the railroads—are profiting from his enterprises. If he’s not stopped and stopped soon, High Hopes is doomed. Trask will suck it dry, then toss away what’s left of it to rot in the sun. We’ll end up a ghost town and only the pack rats will live here.’’
‘‘You’ve still got the miners. Even if Trask goes, they’ll always need a place to spend their money.’’
‘‘The Spanish Peaks mines are all but played out. Another year, maybe two, the miners will be moving on. There’s been talk of another big strike in the Montana Territory and some have already left.’’ Leggett studied the glowing end of his cigar. ‘‘John, as I see it, the future of this town lies in cattle. The local ranchers could ship their herds from here instead of trailing west through the mountains to Cimarron and running off tons of beef. High Hopes could become the major shipping center for the Colorado cattle industry and the town would prosper without the slime tracks of Gamble Trask’s dirty fingers all over it.
‘‘There are some others who think the same way as I do and so did Marshal Lute Clark. After my press was destroyed, he moved to shut down the Golden Garter and Hack Burns shot him. There were maybe a hundred men in the saloon that night, and every man jack of them swore Burns drew in self-defense. When Trask made Burns the new city marshal few made any objection. They were too busy counting their money.’’
McBride stifled a yawn, the late hour getting to him. ‘‘And now you want me to shut down Trask?’’
Leggett nodded. ‘‘That’s about the size of it, I reckon. You’re good with your fists and a gun. We saw that tonight. We need a man like you to lead us. The men who think as I do—Dr. Cox, Grant Wilson, who owns the hardware store, Ned Barlow, the blacksmith, and a few others—they’re all good men, but they’re not gunfighters. I plan on taking my case against Trask all the way to the state capital, but you have to buy me some time.’’
‘‘I may not be around tomorrow,’’ McBride said. ‘‘Have you considered that? I’m not a gunfighter and I don’t even want the name of one. And I’m no match for Hack Burns, or at least that’s what he told me. Chances are, I’ll be on the first train out of here in the morning.’’
Around them translucent moonlight was silvering the smoke-colored leaves of the cottonwoods and the creek babbled nonsense to itself as it ran over a bed of sand and pebbles. Out on the plains the coyotes were again yipping their hunger, lacing the darkness with ribbons of sound.
Leggett stuffed his cigar back in his mouth and puffed furiously. ‘‘John, I—’’
The racketing roar of a rifle shattered the night and suddenly McBride’s face was spattered with blood and brains. He saw Leggett fall . . . and then he was running.
Chapter 8
A bullet cut the air next to McBride’s ear and a second kicked up a startled exclamation point of dirt at his feet. He dived into thick brush along the creek bank and pulled his gun from his pocket.
How many unfired cartridges were left after his fight with Jim Nolan? He couldn’t remember and now was not the time to think about it. Out there somebody wanted to kill him real bad and now his whole attention must be on surviving.
From over by the cottonwoods, McBride heard Leggett groan. The man was still alive. Had the hidden rifleman heard it too? A couple of searching shots rattled through the branches of the trees, answering his question.
McBride noted the flare of the rifle. It was off to his right, but he couldn’t tell how far. Whoever the rifleman was, he’d shot at the glow of Leggett’s cigar and hit his target. He’d have to be wary of a man with that kind of gun skill.
It was in McBride’s mind to back out of the brush, then work his way to his left and come up on the bushwhacker from behind. A good plan, but as soon as he rose up to walk or even crawl, he’d be out in the open and a dead man. There had to be another way. The man out there was patient, waiting for a killing shot. And he was good at his job. Real good.
Four bullets, fast and evenly spaced, thudded into trees and crackled through brush along the creek bank. McBride knew the man was trying to flush him, like he would a flock of quail. He could try firing at the rifle flash, but hitting his target with a .38 at distance and in the dark was an uncertain thing.
He’d have to get closer. A lot closer.
Then McBride had an idea, or at least the germ of one.
He inched forward, trying to be as quiet as possible. Where was the edge of the creek bank? A few more inches and he stopped, listening. There was only the wind, rising now as the night grew a little cooler. It whispered to the night as it explored among the cottonwoods.
McBride moved forward again, expecting to draw a bullet at any second. The land around him was flat, he recalled, here and there some shallow, rolling hills. This was rifle country and about then he decided that the Smith & Wesson was mighty poor company for a hunted man.
Even though he was moving forward at a snail’s pace, the brush tore at his back and sides and once he almost cried out in pain when a sharp thorn dug its way across his swollen eye.
McBride’s head broke through the brush and what he saw appalled him. Here the creek suddenly curved away from him, and the bank was a good twenty feet from where he lay. The land between was flat, covered in short grass dappled with moonlight.
It was a killing ground.
John McBride swallowed hard, his heart hammering in his chest. He set down his gun, wiped a sweaty palm on his pants, then picked the .38 up again. He was scared, more scared than he’d ever been in his life. He felt that the night had eyes, watching him, measuring him, finding him wanting.
Angry at himself for the fear he felt, McBride decided to back out of the brush again and go back to his original plan. He had started to wriggle backward when an idea came to him. Even a blind pig will find an acorn once in a while, he decided, allowing himself a small, grim smile.
He lay on his side and broke open the Smith & Wesson. He extracted three spent shells, held them in his right hand, then rotated the cylinder so that the others would be in line to fall under the hammer.
The skin under McBride’s eye was bleeding where the thorn had raked him and it smarted like a dozen wasp stings, adding to his discomfort and growing rage. He felt like a trapped rat and he directed all his irritation toward the man hidden out there in the darkness. Right then, McBride wanted to put a bullet into him so bad he could taste it.
The brush had closed over McBride, but when he carefully turned his head he saw a break a couple of feet behind him where the sky was visible. He eased back, and froze when a twig snapped under his weight. The noise drew a probing bullet that thudded into a tree several yards away.
A minute passed, then another. He did not dare breathe, staying still, listening to the night. The rifleman did not fire again, and McBride resumed his backward crawl. When he reached the break in the thick brush, he rose up enough to get one foot under him. When the time came, he’d have to run faster than he’d ever done in his life and pushing off on the foot would help.
Swiveling from the waist, a motion that instantly stabbed pain into his tortured lower back, he drew back his arm, then threw the empty shells as far as he could. He heard them rattle into undergrowth a few yards away, immediately drawing fire from the rifleman.
Then he was up and running.
McBride crashed out of the brush and pounded across the grass between him and the creek bank. A bullet cracked spitefully past his head and another burned across his neck. He dived off the bank into the creek, hitting the water hard. His right knee thudded into a sub
merged rock and he gasped in pain. He fell on his back, the rushing water instantly soaking him, then rose and threw himself against the opposite bank.
Shots hammered into the ground above his head, but McBride stayed where he was. When the firing stopped he crouched low and made his way carefully along the streambed. Twenty yards ahead of him, barely visible in the darkness, the creek curved around a dead cottonwood, its trunk split into a V by some past frost. McBride reached the bend, his gun up and ready. Using the tree for cover, he raised his head and looked around the trunk into the gloom. He saw nothing.
Then something moved, a sudden, jerky motion, a momentary flash of white.
McBride touched his tongue to suddenly dry lips. He could hear his heart pounding in his ears. Was the bushwhacker wearing a white shirt or hat? It was possible. A man sure of himself and his skill with a rifle might not have bothered to dress in dark clothing.
There it was again. A quick flicker of white. Then slow, steady footfalls coming toward him, soft on the grass. The wind was making a different sound, no longer whispering, sighing through the skeletal limbs of the dead cottonwood like a sailor’s widow.
McBride held his gun in both hands and pushed it out in front of him. Far in the distance the coyotes were talking and from farther away still, he heard the howl of a hunting wolf pack.
‘‘McBride, old son,’’ he whispered to himself, ‘‘you’re a long way from New York.’’
The footsteps came closer. McBride steeled himself, surprised that the Smith & Wesson was steady in his hands. His fear was gone, all his concentration on the gunman walking toward him.
A small paint horse emerged from the gloom. The animal sensed the presence of a human and stopped, tossing its head, the bit jangling. Pent-up breath hissed from between McBride’s teeth and for a moment he rested his head on his outstretched arms, his heart hammering. The horse was saddled and could only be the mount of the man who was trying to kill him.
The paint took a few steps closer. It was standing on the bank beside the cottonwood. McBride had never sat on a horse in his life, but he could use this one. He climbed out of the creek and stepped to the paint, keeping the horse between him and the rifleman out there in the long grass.
The reins were trailing and he gathered them up and swung the horse around so that it was facing the way it had come. The animal would be between him and the bushwhacker and he’d walk the paint into the darkness, trusting that if the man saw his horse, he wouldn’t spot an extra pair of legs until it was too late. McBride figured to walk a good distance and then let the horse go and hide out somewhere in the gloom until the man gave up and left.
He stood at the pony’s shoulder, the reins in his left hand near the animal’s chin. He tried to push the horse forward, but the little paint planted its feet and stubbornly refused to budge.
‘‘Giddyup,’’ McBride whispered urgently. The fear was back and his mouth was dry. The horse shook its head violently, the bit chiming loud in the quiet as it tried to pull away from him.
‘‘Damn it, giddyup,’’ McBride rasped, irritated beyond all measure at the obstinate orneriness of equines.
A long, low whistle came out of the darkness. The horse’s head came up, its ears pricked forward, arcs of white showing in its black eyes. Then the paint started to trot, McBride running at its side.
He knew he was heading right for the hidden rifleman. The man must have heard his mount’s bit jangle and, perhaps fearing wolves, had whistled the animal closer.
The paint began to canter and McBride could no longer keep up. Suddenly the horse was ten yards in front of him and he was completely exposed.
Flame stabbed out of the darkness. Two shots, close together. McBride heard a scream and the horse went down, its rear legs flailing wildly as it collapsed. A moment later a tall man in a wide-brimmed hat, a rifle slanted across his chest, emerged from the moonlight-splashed gloom. He and McBride saw each other at the same time. The man shot from the hip and levered his rifle again. McBride fired. Once, twice, three times, triggering the Smith & Wesson very fast. The rifleman staggered, then went to his knees. He shot at McBride and the bullet cut the air above the big man’s head. The gunman tried to work his rifle again, but the effort was too much of him. He pitched forward onto his face and lay still.
McBride shoved his now empty gun into his pocket and walked warily toward the fallen man. He kneeled beside the man and rolled him on his back—then cursed loud, long and vehemently.
He was looking at the round, freckled face of a boy. A puncher by the look of him, he couldn’t have been any older than sixteen. All three of McBride’s bullets had hit squarely in the middle of the kid’s shirt pocket, very close, like the ace of clubs on a playing card. The boy’s blue eyes were wide open, staring at McBride without expression, and the death shadows were already gathering under his eyes. Quickly McBride searched the kid’s pockets and found what he’d expected to find—a few nickels and dimes and five shiny double eagles.
McBride rose to his feet, a hot anger building in him. Bushwhacker or no, the killer of Theo Leggett, this boy was still some mother’s son, and she would soon be grieving for him.
Someone had paid the young puncher a hundred dollars to silence Theo Leggett and kill McBride for listening to him. The old man talked too much and was threatening a state investigation. The only one who had an interest in seeing him dead was Gamble Trask. He had paid the blood money, hiring a boy to do his dirty work.
McBride checked on the paint horse. It was dead. He walked back to the creek, splashed across and went to where the young Chinese man was bending over Theo’s body.
‘‘Very bad,’’ the man said, looking up as McBride stepped beside him. ‘‘Half his skull blown away. He’s been asking for you.’’
McBride kneeled beside Theo. Despite his terrible wound the old man was desperately clinging to life, trying to eke out a few more seconds. ‘‘Theo,’’ McBride said, ‘‘I’m here.’’
Leggett’s eyes opened, already glazing in death as he struggled to raise his head. ‘‘John,’’ he whispered, ‘‘listen to me . . . trains . . . don’t let Trask . . . trains . . .’’
‘‘Theo, I’m not understanding you,’’ McBride said hopelessly.
‘‘Trains . . . orphan trains . . . don’t let Trask—’’
The old man’s eyes were still staring into McBride’s, but the life was gone from them forever.
McBride turned to the Chinese man. ‘‘Chang, isn’t it?’’
‘‘Yes, my name is Chang.’’
‘‘I’ll send an undertaker for Theo.’’
‘‘No, no undertaker. Bad for business have death vulture here. I will bury him, say the Christian words. Real nice ceremony, you’ll see.’’
‘‘Lay Theo away decent, Chang. Bury him in his clothes. I don’t want him to meet his Maker naked.’’
‘‘Decent, very decent. You no worry about that. He was good customer one time, Mr. Leggett. I see to him, bury him in his suit. Say the words.’’
McBride nodded, his anger scalding him, like he’d swallowed boiling-hot lead.
He turned his back on Chang, crossed the creek again and walked through the darkness to the young cowboy’s body. He had never used a Winchester, but he was familiar with the rifle, since every police precinct in New York had at least a few of them. McBride stripped .44-.40 cartridges from the dead boy’s belt and fed them into the Winchester. The kid’s gun was still in the holster, but that, McBride left alone. His Smith & Wesson was less powerful than the Colt, but he had trained with the self-cocking revolver and knew it to be the faster and more accurate shooter.
McBride laid the Winchester on the grass, then picked up the dead cowboy and threw him over his shoulder. He was a big man, strong in the back and shoulders, and the kid weighed little. He bent at the knees, picked up the rifle and started walking back toward town.
It was time to call on Gamble Trask.
Chapter 9
The wi
nd was blowing much stronger, driving hard and fast off the vast plain between the Arkansas and the Platte, and a cloud of rising dust veiled the moon. Men stepped along the boardwalk, hats pulled low over their faces, now and then stepping in place as they bent against sudden gusts that filled their mouths and eyes with grit. The wind was talking, answered by the creak and bang of the chained signs that hung outside the stores. Scraps of paper spiraled into the air like fluttering white doves, only to disappear from sight as they were borne away over the rooftops.
John McBride trudged along the middle of the street with his burden, the Winchester hanging loose in his right hand. A skinny, yellow dog walked out of an alley, trotted a few steps toward him, then thought better of it and ran away, tail between its legs. The wind teased McBride unmercifully, slapping at his pants, threatening to lift the hat off his head. Yellow dust covered him from the top of his hat to the toes of his boots as he reached the Golden Garter and stepped onto the boardwalk.
The panels of the saloon’s batwing doors rattled noisily against each other and the windows vibrated in their frames. From somewhere close a screen door slammed, opening and shutting on the whim of the wind.
McBride stepped inside.
For a moment he stood there, tall and terrible, looking around him. His left eye was now completely swollen shut and blood from the thorn that had caught him had dried into black fingers on his cheek. The wind and dust had taken their toll on him, and his teeth were bared as he fought for breath.
A saloon girl shrieked at the sight of him and men shrank back as though he was a dreadful apparition that had appeared from the darkness.
Ralph Compton West of the Law Page 6