Thinking that he had maybe touched a tender spot, judging by her reaction, he immediately regretted his attempt to tease. “I’m sorry, Hope. I reckon I shouldn’t have said anything.” Ready to retreat then, he pushed his chair back. “I guess I’d better get back to work.”
Hope wasn’t finished with the subject. “Since you brought it up, Justin asked me to marry him three weeks ago and I told him no.”
“You told him no?” Clint asked. “But I thought you two were goin’ to get hitched.”
“Well, you thought wrong,” she said. “I’m not going to marry someone I don’t love. I’m fond of Justin—he’s a good friend—but I don’t want to marry him.” She waited for that to sink in to see if he had any notion of what she felt inside. When he just continued to stare at her, she said, “I love someone else, but he hasn’t asked me, so I have to assume that he doesn’t love me.” This caught Rena’s attention and she stopped what she was doing to hear Clint’s response.
Clint was stunned. There wasn’t anyone else that Hope had been seeing. He suddenly felt numb all over. Could she be possibly referring to him? In a moment of confused desperation, he forced himself to speak. “I reckon you know I’ve always had a hankerin’ for you.”
Hope looked at Rena and shook her head, perplexed. “You’ve always had a hankering for me?” She echoed. “You have a hankering for a piece of taffy! You have a hankering for a slice of pie!”
He was dumbfounded, knowing he had somehow said the wrong thing, and it seemed to have made her angry. There was no way he could undo what he had just blundered into. The only thing he could think of to do was to retreat, so he got to his feet and had started to head for the door when he was suddenly struck in the back. He whirled around to find Rena standing behind him, her wooden spoon poised for another blow.
“You ask!” she demanded.
He looked back at Hope, standing there with her hands on her hips, a challenging look in her eyes. It was an instant in time that would no doubt define the rest of his life, for if he was wrong, he was determined to pack his bedroll and his saddlebags and leave the Double-V-Bar for good. He spat it out as fast as he could say it. “I love you, and I wanna marry you!”
“Well, it took you long enough,” Hope said.
“Is that a yes or no?” Clint asked nervously.
“Oh, I guess it’s a yes. I’ve had a hankering, too.”
Read on for a look at the next thrilling adventure from Charles G. West,
THE DEVIL’S POSSE
Available in March 2015 from Signet.
“Here you go, boys!” Oscar Bradley called out as he approached the group of men waiting at the corner of the corral, their saddles and other gear on the ground beside it. “It’s payday.” He picked a saddle to sit on and set the leather bag in which he kept his notebook on the ground in front of him. “Like I told you when you signed on back in Ogallala, this is gonna be my last drive, and I’d pay you a bonus if we made it here in less than twenty-three days.” He paused to look around at the expectant faces. “Well, we made it in twenty-one, with the cattle in good shape. But the price for cattle is down, so I ain’t gonna give you that bonus.” He paused again to witness the looks of shock and disappointment, but unable to play the joke out any further, he cracked, “I’m just joshin’ ya. I got top dollar for the cattle, but you oughta see the look on your faces.” The silent void just struck over the drovers immediately erupted into a burst of cackling relief. “Like I said, you can each pick one horse outta this bunch in the corral, too. Now, who’s first?”
“I reckon I am,” Smokey Lewis volunteered, and stepped forward. The cook on the drive, Smokey owned his chuck wagon and the team of horses that pulled it. He had a separate arrangement with Oscar, since he had come along as an independent contractor to do the cooking. “You might not really be japin’, so I’ll get my money before you run out.” His remark, made in jest, brought a few chuckles from the other men. Oscar Bradley was a fair man. Each of his drovers knew that he would lose money on the sale of the cattle before he would go back on his word to them. Their only regret was the fact that this was Oscar’s last drive.
One by one, the men stepped up to receive their pay. Oscar marked each man’s name off in his notebook with his pencil, then shook the man’s hand. He paused briefly when the Cross brothers stepped up. Billy, the younger, was first. He and his brother, Logan, had been working for Oscar since they were teenage boys, and they had proven to be his most dependable drovers. “I’m sorry I don’t have something else for you fellers, but like I told you, I’m headin’ back to Omaha to sit in a rockin’ chair on my daughter’s front porch. I know I’d sure as hell give you a good recommendation, if anybody was to ask me.”
“Thanks, Oscar,” Logan replied.
“What are you plannin’ to do, go back to Ogallala with the rest of the boys?” Oscar asked.
“I reckon so,” Logan said. “We ain’t talked about doin’ anything else.”
“Except gettin’ a drink of whiskey first thing,” Billy piped up. “That’s about as long as I wanna stay around this place.” He and Logan had already decided that there was no future for them in Fort Pierre. It seemed the only sensible thing for them to do was to return to Ogallala with the others in hopes of signing on with another cattleman. Herding cattle was all they knew.
“Hang around till I get everybody paid,” Oscar said. “There’s a little somethin’ I’d like to run by you.”
Billy glanced at his brother and Logan responded with a shrug. “Sure thing, Oscar,” Logan said. “I’m gonna go throw my saddle on that flea-bitten gray standin’ over by the fence before somebody else has the same idea.” The gray had been his favorite and the one that he had most often ridden. It was the only one he had named, calling it Pepper. Having already set his sights on a buckskin, Billy followed him.
After every man had selected a horse and saddled it, Smokey Lewis motioned to Logan and said, “We’re goin’ over to the Cattleman’s Saloon. You and Billy comin’?”
“You go ahead,” Logan said. “We’ll be along.”
When the others had gone, Oscar put his notebook away and picked up his leather bag. “I was talkin’ to a feller at the cattle sale, and he said he was lookin’ to hire a couple of men to help him drive some horses over to Sturgis in the Black Hills. He’s got two men who work for him, but he could use a couple more, since he wound up buyin’ more than he planned.” Oscar smiled and winked. “I sold him the rest of the horses here in the corral at such a good price, he couldn’t pass it up.” He paused for their reaction before continuing. “Anyway, I told him I knew two good men who might be interested. Whaddaya think? You wanna drive some horses over to the Black Hills? There’s a helluva lot goin’ on up that way ever since the government opened the hills up for prospectors. This feller said there’s a heap of travel on the roads between here and Sturgis—mule trains, bull trains, wagons, and everything else that rolls or trots. Might be somethin’ else over that way for you boys.”
As usual, Billy looked at his older brother for his reaction. “How long a drive would it be?” Logan asked.
“He said it’s about a hundred and fifty miles from here,” Oscar said. “It’d take a week or more, I expect. I told him I’d see if you were interested.”
Again, looking to Logan for his opinion, Billy shrugged and joked, “I don’t recollect any appointments we’ve got. Whadda you think, Logan?”
“Wouldn’t hurt to talk to the man,” Logan replied. “Where do we find him?”
“He said he’ll be in O’Malley’s Place in about an hour from now. It’s that little saloon down the street from the hotel. His name’s Matt Morrison—seems like a reasonable feller.”
“Okay, we’ll go talk to him,” Logan said. “That all right with you?” he asked Billy, knowing that his brother would agree. When his brother shrugged indifferently, he turned back to Bra
dley. “Much obliged, Oscar. We appreciate it.” They shook hands again, and then he and Billy climbed into their saddles.
Oscar stood there and watched them as they rode off toward the town of Fort Pierre. I wish I was as young as those two, he thought. I’d ride to the Black Hills with them.
* * *
Fort Pierre was settled on the west bank of the Missouri River, on a level plain that provided easy access to the river. It was a pleasant setting for a town, but it held no attraction for the Cross brothers. They rode past the Cattleman’s Saloon, even though there was plenty of time to have a drink or two with the rest of Oscar’s crew before Mr. Morrison was supposed to be at O’Malley’s. They both agreed that it might cause some resentment if the others found out that Oscar had favored them with his recommendation.
There were a few horses tied up in front of O’Malley’s, though not as many as those at the larger saloon’s hitching rail. Dismounting, they pulled their rifles from the saddle slings and walked through the doorway, the door having been left open to draw some air into the stuffy interior. They paused to let their eyes adjust to the darkness of the room, a sharp contrast to the bright summer sunshine outside. After a moment, they started toward a table against the opposite wall, thinking it a good place to watch the door and hope to spot Morrison when he walked in.
They had taken no more than a few steps when they were stopped by the bartender. “Howdy, gents,” he greeted them cordially. “If you don’t mind, I’d appreciate it if you’d leave those rifles on that table by the door.” When both men balked for a second, he continued. “I reckon you fellers ain’t ever been in here before. We ask every customer to do the same.” He smiled then to show he meant nothing personal.
Logan looked back toward the door. Like his brother, he hadn’t noticed the table with half a dozen pistols on it. “Sure,” he said, “seems like a good idea.” He and Billy went back and propped their rifles against the table and laid their pistols on top. Then they proceeded toward the table they had selected.
“What’s your poison?” Roy, the bartender, asked as they passed by the bar.
“Whiskey,” Billy answered. “Just whatever you got—rye, if I’ve got a choice.” Neither he nor Logan was a heavy drinker, so it really didn’t matter.
“I’ve got rye,” Roy said. “And I’ve also got some smooth Kentucky bourbon, if you’d rather have it.”
“Which is the cheapest?” Logan asked.
“Rye,” Roy said.
“Then we’ll have that, and a couple of glasses of beer to chase it,” Logan said, and stopped to wait for it while Billy continued to the table.
“Well, here’s to another cattle drive behind us,” Logan said after they were seated. He raised his shot glass in a toast. Billy raised his glass to meet it, and they tossed the fiery whiskey down.
“Whew!” Billy coughed. “That stuff burns all the way down.”
Logan laughed. “It makes a difference when it’s been a long time between drinks.”
Working slowly on the beer, they looked around them at the sparse crowd in the saloon. Only three other tables were occupied. And of the three, only one had more than two men quietly enjoying an afternoon drink of whiskey. That table, back in a corner of the room, was occupied by three men and a woman. The two brothers had sat there for only a few minutes before the woman got up to take an empty bottle to the bar to exchange for a full one. On her way past them, she openly eyed the two strangers, and on her way back, she favored Billy with a smile. It didn’t surprise Logan. His younger brother had been blessed with the good looks of his mother, while he seemed to have inherited the brawn and strength of his father. It often amused Logan, because he wasn’t sure that Billy’s handsome features might better be called a curse. The thought had no sooner occurred to him than he began to hear a raising of the voices at the corner table. He turned to Billy and asked, “You smiled back at her, didn’t you?”
“I don’t know. I mighta,” Billy answered. “Why?”
Logan gave his younger brother a tired sigh. “That’s why,” he said when the conversation at the corner table suddenly escalated into a loud argument.
“You don’t own me!” the woman exclaimed indignantly, and rose to her feet.
“Set your ass back down!” one of the men demanded. “Countin’ all the whiskey you drank, I sure as hell made a down payment on you.” His remark brought a laugh from his two companions, who seemed to be enjoying the spat between the two.
“I’ll set my ass where I damn well please,” the woman replied. A large-framed, long-legged woman, who appeared to have many miles etched into a not unpleasant face, she seemed capable of handling the likes of her rough company. “I’ve wasted enough time on you and your friends. You coulda got drunk without me, if that’s all you were interested in.”
“Set down!” the man demanded again, and grabbed her wrist.
Logan glanced at the bartender. Seeing that he was now aware of the potential trouble brewing at the corner table, Logan was satisfied that the bartender would handle the situation before it became violent. As he had figured, Roy walked back to the table where the woman was still standing defiantly before the three men. “Hey, fellers,” he began, “ain’t no need to get your backs up. Gracie didn’t mean nothin’ by it. Right, Gracie?” Gracie didn’t answer. She just continued to glare at the belligerent bully holding her wrist. Since Gracie was obviously not inclined to apologize, Roy attempted to appease the quarrelsome brute. “Let her go and we’ll have the next round on the house. Whaddaya say?”
“I ain’t takin’ no sass from a broken-down old whore,” the bully replied. He looked back at the woman and said, “I told you to set down.” To enforce the order, he attempted to pull her down on the chair, but she fought against his efforts. The ensuing struggle knocked the chair over and landed Gracie on the floor, her wrist still captured in the brute’s hand.
“Mister,” Roy said, “I’m gonna have to ask you and your friends to leave now. I think you’ve had enough.”
Fully agitated at that point, the bully clamped down as tight as he could on the woman’s wrist while she strained to free herself. “I’ll leave when I’m ready to leave,” he roared, then threatened, “How’d you like it if I tore this whole damn place down?”
“Wouldn’t like it,” Roy replied.
To this point, the few other patrons of the saloon had watched in silence. Seeing that things had seemingly gotten out of hand, two of the men got up and made a hasty retreat out the door. “Damn,” Logan cursed softly when it became obvious that Roy’s efforts to defuse a situation already gone bad were not going to succeed, for Logan had no desire to get involved in the altercation. “You had to smile at her,” he said wearily aside to Billy.
“Hell, I didn’t know,” Billy replied lamely.
By now, Gracie was desperate to free herself from the brute’s clutches. When her struggles proved useless, she resorted to attacking his arm with her fingernails. “Yow!” her captor roared in pain, and struck her roughly with a backhand across her face.
That was as much as the Cross brothers could tolerate. Logan was the first to move. “That’s far enough,” he stated emphatically as he rose to his feet. “Billy, go over there by the door and take care of those weapons.” He walked over to the corner table to confront the troublemakers. “All right, the man here asked you politely to get outta his saloon. Now I’m tellin’ you that it’s time for you to turn the lady loose and do what he says.”
His statement was enough to cause the bully to release his hold on Gracie, but he got to his feet and kicked his chair back. “And just who do you think you are, big mouth?”
“I’m the feller who’s gonna whip your ass if you don’t get outta here like I said,” Logan told him.
“Huh,” the brute snorted defiantly, “you gonna whip all three of us?”
“If I have to,” Logan rep
lied calmly. His assessment of the trio told him that they all appeared too drunk to put up much of a fight—that, and the fact that the man’s two companions did not seem overly enthusiastic about joining in. And he was not discounting Billy’s help after his brother finished emptying all the cartridges out of the weapons on the table by the door.
“He’s talkin’ mighty big, ain’t he, boys?” the bully snarled with a sneer. “Let’s see if he can back it up.”
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