Slocum 419
Page 5
“That could take days. Months, maybe.”
“There’s a time period that would narrow it down. Say claims filed in the last three months or so. Shouldn’t be that hard.”
Abner stroked his chin with the fingers of his right hand.
“I might be able to get that search warrant, but you’d have to point me in the right direction.”
“I have a name or two. I’ll get others if I can.”
Abner continued looking at the wanted flyers and handing them to Slocum until he had gone through the entire stack.
“That’s the lot,” Hellinger said. He rubbed his eyes beneath the lenses of his smoked glasses.
“Those help you, Constable?” Slocum asked.
“What?”
“The smoked eyeglasses.”
“It’s the damned light. From the window yonder. Any light. Hurts like hell.”
“But are you nearly blind?”
“Nearsighted. I got some kind of foreign stuff growing over my eyes. Magnifies the light and makes me nearsighted.”
“You ought to see an eye doctor,” Slocum said.
“Ain’t one here in Durango. Nearest one is probably in Denver.”
“Your sight is worth a trip up north.”
“I reckon. One of these days.”
Slocum stood up. “How soon can you get a search warrant from that judge?” he asked as he looked down at Hellinger.
“A day or two, I reckon. Judge Carroway is fond of hunting cougars. Has him a couple of dogs, English pointers, that track ’em. Saw him head out before dawn this morning when I come out of the privy. He lives next to me.”
“I’m at the hotel.”
“I don’t know why in hell you’re goin’ after lawbreakers in Durango, Slocum, but I guess I ought to be thankful to you for helping out.”
“I just don’t like to see bad men take the lives of good men. Besides, when I saw Nichols fly out of that mine, it stuck with me. One minute he’s digging in his own mine and the next he’s deader than a ten-penny nail in an outhouse.”
“Must have been a hell of a thing.”
“And then there’s the mystery, the hidden stuff.”
“Mystery?”
“Women can be bitches, and some turn out to be killers. But most of them use poison, and a few of them take up the six-gun. But to dynamite a man takes a cold heart and a heap of nerve.”
Hellinger blinked behind his dark glasses.
“Be hell to hang a woman, though.”
“Not this one,” Slocum said. “She’d make a pretty nice cottonwood flower.”
Abner winced at the thought.
“You take care, Slocum. Women have wiles, you know. You can’t trust the bad ones.”
“No, you can’t.”
“And stay away from dynamite if you can.”
Slocum grunted a good-bye and left the constable’s office.
He tried to decide if Constable Hellinger was being funny when he said that last to him. A constable with a sense of humor. Might help. Couldn’t hurt.
But there was nothing funny about what he had to do while Hellinger was getting that search warrant.
He would be on his own until then.
Hunting a wolf. A rabid wolf, at that.
8
Faron Clemson sat at the long table with his two daughters, Lacey and Stacey, identical twins in their early twenties.
The room was a converted kitchen and dining room connected to a bunkhouse next door that had been converted into a three-bedroom dwelling. In this room, the stove remained and was still used, along with the dining table and chairs.
The three were eating lunch, consisting of roast beef sandwiches, boiled new potatoes, and cooked turnips.
“You girls did a good job this morning,” their father said. “Clean and neat.”
“You set up all the wires and dynamite, Daddy,” Lacey said. “All I had to do was push down the plunger.”
“I was nervous waiting for Lacey with just me and the horses,” Stacey said.
“Well, that was a special idea of mine,” Clemson said. “I didn’t like that guy anyways, and he had his eyes on both of you.”
“He gave me the willies,” Lacey said.
“Me, too,” Stacey said. “But I don’t like that kind of thing.”
“What kind of thing?” Faron asked.
“Murder,” she said.
“Aw, think of your lives ahead, when you’re both rich,” Faron said.
“That’s what you keep promising, Daddy,” Lacey said.
“I wonder what Ma thinks about us killing that man,” Stacey said.
“Your mother’s got ice water in her veins. She don’t care one whit. Lord knows, her own hands are plenty dirty.”
“You could never tell it by looking at her,” Stacey said. “Where is she anyway? I thought she was coming for lunch.”
“She’ll be here,” Faron said.
As if on cue, the door opened and their mother walked in. She looked harried and her gray hair was streaming in all directions.
“You’re a mite late, Clara,” Faron said. “I’ll get you a sandwich.”
She sat down in one of the chairs. She and Faron had never married, but she had given birth to the two girls and they had been together for more than twenty years. And they had been on the run for the last ten years.
“I’m too nervous to eat,” Clara said. “I’m in a tizzy over what happened at the office this morning.”
“Fogarty give you a bad time?” Faron asked.
Her daughters looked at her with questioning eyes.
“No, it was a man who came in snooping around about that deed transfer.”
“What man? The law?”
“No, but I think he knows more than he should about Wolf and the rest of the bunch. He asked a lot of questions and forced Abel to produce the transfer papers for the Jenkins mine. He knows the papers are a forgery.”
“Who in hell is this jasper?” Faron demanded.
Clara looked at him. Her hands were shaking as they rubbed back and forth on the table.
“Slocum. John Slocum. I don’t know why he’s asking all these questions. He’s not from Durango. He’s big and tall and wears all black clothes. He looks mean to me.”
“Slocum, eh? Never heard of him. Maybe he’s kin to Jenkins.”
“No, I don’t think so. But he’s got something stuck in his craw and I don’t think he’s going to go away. He could find out about the whole scheme. I think he’s going to get a search warrant from the judge and ransack Abel’s office.”
“He can’t prove nothin’,” Faron said.
“I just don’t know. Abel’s sick about it. So am I.”
“Well, Wolf’s got to know. He’s forging papers on that miner we blew up this morning. He won’t like it none.”
“I’m worried about you girls,” Clara said, looking at her daughters. “You might go to prison over this if that Slocum finds out what you did.”
“Well, I’m not going to prison,” Lacey said. “I’ll run first. As far as I can.”
“Me, too,” Stacey said. “Oooh, I couldn’t stand to be locked up in a prison.”
“Faron,” Clara said, “I think we all ought to leave before this goes any further.”
Faron shook his head.
“No need for that. This Slocum feller’s just one man. Wolf’s got enough guns to get rid of this jasper.”
“What if the constable backs up Slocum?” she asked. “And maybe hires on some deputies. Faron, I’m scared. Scared stiff.”
“Wolf can take care of Slocum. He don’t like folks buttin’ into his business.”
“Where does it all stop, Faron?” Clara asked. “If Wolf gets rid of Slocum, he might have to kill the constable, too. The
n we might get federal marshals in here, and we’ll all go either to prison or the gallows.”
“Calm down, Clara. We’ve gotten this far with no trouble from the law. Wolf can get us out of this fix right smart.”
“I don’t know,” she said.
“I think Ma’s right, Daddy,” Lacey said. “We ought to git while the gittin’s good. I never liked the whole idea of Wolf jumping claims.”
“And I hate this filthy town,” Stacey said. “Wolf’s made us into murderers while he sits on his fat ass copying signatures and swilling down whiskey.”
“You’d better not say such around Wolf,” Faron said. “He’s going to make us rich, you’ll see.”
“Gold won’t help us in prison,” Lacey said. Stacey pouted and nodded her head.
“Maybe there’s a way we can get to Slocum,” Faron said.
“How?” Clara asked.
“Set him up like we did with that Jenkins feller,” Faron said.
“Oh no,” Lacey exclaimed.
“Be easy for a pretty gal like you, Lacey. Or maybe both of you can brace him, then Wolf can bust in and shoot him dead.”
Clara frowned.
“That’s putting our girls in danger,” she said.
“What? For ten minutes of work? If this Slocum is a real man, he won’t pass up the chance to bed a couple of good-lookin’ gals.”
He looked at Clara for support.
She looked at Lacey and Stacey. Tears welled up in her eyes. She wiped them away with dabbing fingers.
“There is a lot of money at stake,” she said. “Enough to send our girls to college. That’s what I dream of. That’s why I go along with your schemes, Faron.”
“Then, we’ll go to Wolf and tell him how he can get to Slocum. Girls, you’ll have to help us out on this.”
“Oh, Daddy,” Lacey said. “We’re not whores.”
Faron jerked back as if he had been slapped in the face.
“No, you ain’t,” he said. “And I ain’t askin’ you to go the whole way with this Slocum feller. Just get him into bed. Get him drunk if you have to. Then, you both step aside and let Wolf do his work. You can leave before he shoots Slocum so you won’t have to see it even.”
“I don’t like it none,” Stacey said.
“Too risky,” Lacey said. “We’d have to both play like we was whores.”
Faron took a bite out of his sandwich. He chewed it and swallowed before he spoke again.
“No, you just be yourselves,” he said to both girls. “You flirt and talk sweet and he’ll see that you’re not whores, but just two eager girls who want to bed him.”
Clara laughed harshly.
“If I were younger . . .” she said.
Faron shot her a scowl.
“Clara, honey, you’d—”
“Don’t say it, Faron.”
“In your day, you could have any man you wanted.”
“This one is quite handsome,” she said.
“Oh?” Lacey said, her eyebrows arching like a pair of caterpillars.
“How handsome?” Stacey asked.
“Beautiful handsome,” Clara said. “If I was ten years younger, I might—”
“You just shut up, woman,” Faron snapped.
He got up from the table and walked to the wall. He took his hat off a peg and slammed it down on his head.
“Where are you going?” Clara asked.
“I got to tell Wolf about this Slocum feller and about how we can get rid of him using the twins.”
“You’re a cold-blooded bastard, Faron,” Clara said. She reached across the table and grabbed a hand from each girl. She squeezed them hard.
“It would only be for a little while,” she said. “As a favor to me and your pa.”
Faron stalked out of the room.
Clara jumped when the door slammed shut. She released her grip on the girls’ hands.
“I’ll make it up to you,” she said to them. “Buy you some pretties when this is all over.”
“Tell us again about how handsome Slocum is, Ma,” Lacey said.
“Yes, do tell us, Ma,” Stacey said.
Clara smiled at them and patted her hair. She closed her eyes and thought of Slocum and how to put her feelings into words. It would not take much, she thought, for Slocum to stir up the lust in her own heart.
And she wished she were ten years younger.
9
Lou Darvin saw the two men crouching behind a juniper bush behind his building. He held a bucket of feed to take to the horses in the back corral. Jasper Nichols was already out there, working the pump handle up and down to fill the water trough.
Lou felt his heart skip a beat. Something inside his belly froze into a hard cold mass. The two men were looking at Jasper, who did not see them lurking behind the small juniper.
Lou opened his mouth to shout a warning. He took a step toward the back lot, his face ruddy with alarm.
That was as far as he got. His voice never left his throat. Instead, he felt a crushing blow to the top of his head.
His head flopped back and the sky overheard spun in a dizzy whirlpool of blue pinwheels with white clouds caught in the spiral spool.
The pail fell from his hands and struck the ground. Corn and oats splayed from the bucket into the dirt like so much confetti. Then everything went dark as he fell to the ground, knocked out cold.
Grunting, Art Nestor dropped the piece of lead pipe to the ground and walked out into the open. He lifted a hand to signal to the two men in hiding.
Whit Grummon and Bert Loomis both stepped out. They walked with long strides toward Jasper, who could not hear them over the creak and grind of the water pump as he pushed and pulled on the long iron handle.
Slocum entered the large storeroom in time to see Lou crash to the ground and hear the dull clang of the bucket. He saw the man throw down the pipe and raise his hand.
“You there,” Slocum called.
Nestor turned and saw the silhouette of a tall man framed in the light from the open door behind him. He wheeled and his hand darted downward for his pistol.
“Back off!” Nestor yelled as his hand pulled his pistol from its holster.
Slocum crouched and his hand was like lightning as it streaked for his .45 Colt. Before Nestor’s gun could clear leather, Slocum’s pistol was hip-high in his hand and his thumb pressed down on the hammer to cock it.
There was a loud click in the empty storage building and Nestor knew he had a split second to live.
“Damn you,” he growled.
Slocum’s finger squeezed the trigger and his pistol roared. It spewed smoke and fiery sparks from the muzzle.
Nestor’s front sight caught on the lip of his holster.
The lead ball from Slocum’s iron slammed into his chest with the force of a sixteen-pound maul. Blood squirted from a split breastbone and drenched Nestor’s belly with a crimson stain. He staggered backward. His fingers relaxed and the pistol fell from his hand, tumbling from the lip of his holster.
He hit the ground with a thud, gasping for air from collapsed lungs.
Outside, Whit Grummon and Bert Loomis stopped when they heard the shot from inside the storage building.
Jasper stopped pumping and looked over to see his boss lying on the ground and another man falling backward.
“Get him now,” Whit growled at Bert.
Bert drew his pistol and shot Jasper in the back.
Jasper spun around from the force that tore out a chunk of soft flesh from just above his hip.
Whit pulled his own pistol free just as Slocum stepped into view. He saw the tall man in black out of the corner of his eye.
Jasper staggered away from the pump, his hand on his wound, the fingers running red from the gush of blood.
Whit fired at
the young man. It was a quick shot and struck Jasper just to the left of his spine. Jasper crumpled and fell to the ground. Pain flooded his senses as his head struck the ground. Dirt and grit lacerated one side of his face.
He groaned in agony.
Whit turned to fire at Slocum, who stepped over Nestor’s body and ran toward the two gunmen in a zigzag course.
Whit fired his pistol and he knew his shot would go wild.
The bullet whistled past Slocum’s ear and he fired at Whit on the run.
His aim was true. The Colt bucked in his hand, but the barrel held steady when he squeezed the trigger.
Whit doubled over in pain as Slocum’s bullet slammed into his abdomen with the force of a pile driver. He grunted and bent over.
Behind him, Loomis stood frozen for a moment. He saw his partner buckle to his knees and his face drained of color. He fired one shot that sizzled over Slocum’s head. Then he turned tail and ran down the alley.
Slocum followed him. Loomis turned and took aim, but Slocum was faster, squeezing the trigger of his Colt. His bullet struck Loomis in the left calf.
Adrenaline pumped through Loomis’s veins, and he continued to run until he was out of sight. Then the pain caught up with him, and he limped between two buildings and stopped to catch his breath. The pain was intense, but the bullet had gone clean through. He tore a handkerchief in half and stuffed one half in each bullet hole.
Then he tied a bandanna above the wound and limped onto the street, heading for the quarters he shared with Wolf and the other men in his gang.
Slocum reached the dying Whit and looked down on him as a tendril of smoke lazed from the muzzle of his Colt.
“Bastard,” Whit spat. His face was contorted in agony and he tried to lift his pistol up to fire at Slocum.
Slocum stepped on Whit’s wrist and ground down on it with his heel. Whit’s fingers went limp and the pistol slid from his hand.
“Wolf send you here to do his dirty work?” Slocum said as he gazed down at the stricken man.
“Go to hell,” Whit grunted. Blood pumped from a black hole in his abdomen. He grimaced in pain.
“I’ll meet you there by and by,” Slocum said.
“Who in hell are you?” Whit muttered through his teeth.