Longarm #398 : Longarm and the Range War (9781101553701)

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Longarm #398 : Longarm and the Range War (9781101553701) Page 4

by Evans, Tabor


  Tyler nodded. “Indeed, I do.” He turned his head and said, “Dear, would you excuse us for a few minutes, please.”

  “Oh, piffle. I know what your man talk will be about. You intend to tell Custis that the Basque sheepherders drink and . . . whatever . . . at Rosie’s but the Mexican goatherds go to Doris’s.”

  “I think I don’t want to know how you know that,” her husband said.

  Longarm had to hide a smile that kept tugging at the corners of his lips. It seemed that Nell Tyler was quite a handful.

  Tyler gave Longarm a half-apologetic, half-embarrassed shrug and said, “That is exactly what I intended to tell you.”

  Longarm let the laugh out and rose from the table. “Then if you will excuse me, I’ll leave the two of you to get into your fight without me to interfere.”

  John Tyler remained seated. “I would go with you, Longarm, but . . .”

  “Could be better this way anyhow,” Longarm said. “For the first little while there won’t nobody know who I am or what I’m doin’ here. Once they do know, they’ll like to clam up. As just a passing stranger, I might could hear something interesting.”

  “Our door is never locked so let yourself in whenever you want,” Nell told him.

  “Thank you, ma’ am, and thank you for that fine supper too.” Longarm plucked his Stetson off the hat rack beside the door and let himself out into the evening air, cool almost to the point of being chilly.

  He walked the short distance to town and stopped for a moment in front of the handsome courthouse. He would be seeing more of that come tomorrow, but for now he was content just to get the feel of the town.

  There were three saloons, Rosie’s, Doris’s, and one no-name little outfit where, judging from the lack of traffic in and out of its doors, a man could get nothing more than a drink and perhaps a game of billiards.

  The two that also served as whorehouses for the solitary herdsmen were situated on opposite corners a block and a half from the courthouse. Both were brightly lighted and very active, with men streaming in and out frequently. The sounds of piano music came from one of them, but from a distance Longarm could not tell from which.

  Since he was at least a little bit familiar with Mexicans, to the point anyway of having met a good many, he headed for Doris’s place first.

  When Longarm arrived, the saloon was busy; the noise made by a trio of minstrels and the singing that went with their music practically hit him a physical blow when he walked in the door. He had no idea what they were singing about or what sort of song it might have been, as it was sung entirely in Spanish. As an Anglo adrift in a sea of Mexicans, he felt a little out of place.

  A long bar ran down the wall on the left. Tables—well-attended ones—filled much of the floor, while at the back he could see a rather limp and wilted-looking whore passing by one table after another, offering herself to one and all. A good many of the patrons were eating something out of large wooden bowls, while virtually everyone had a beer or a shot on the table. Or both.

  “Help you?” the bartender asked when Longarm presented himself at the bar.

  “Beer, please.”

  “Ten cents.”

  Longarm laid his money down while the bartender drew a beer, leaving much too much head on it. The man took Longarm’s dime without a word and stepped a few paces down the bar, where he got into an animated conversation in Spanish.

  Longarm took a swallow of the crisply refreshing beer but left most of it on the bar untouched. He could spend the next three nights standing there and not learn a thing, as he could grasp the meaning of not one word in twenty.

  Back on the street, he wondered if there was any point in going over to Rosie’s, or if the talk there would be as unintelligible as it had been in Doris’s.

  There was only one way to find out.

  The result was just as bad as at Doris’s, with the exception that in Rosie’s place there were two Anglos in search of the whores. Those ladies of the night were busy at this post-dinner hour. A fellow had to wait for one of them to become available.

  Longarm stayed long enough to drink a beer. And to decide there was less than no point in trying to eavesdrop on the Basques. Their language—he asked—was called Euskara, and it was like nothing else he’d ever heard.

  At least the bartender was a little more pleasant than the one across the street. And the whores were a hell of a lot better looking.

  Longarm finished the last of his beer—the suds had not been nearly as deep on the beer he was served in Rosie’s—and left a nickel tip for the barman, then left.

  He still wanted to find a little better evening entertainment than playing cribbage with John and Nell Tyler, so he walked down the street to the no-name saloon, where he found peace and quiet save for the clicking of billiard balls.

  Better than the quiet, he also found a good label of rye whiskey in the no-name place.

  And the barman was a woman. Not a bad-looking woman, except for the fact that she looked big enough and tough enough to knock heads if things became rowdy on a Saturday night.

  “You look like a man who’s found what he was looking for,” she said when he leaned on her bar.

  “I am,” he told her, pointing to the row of bottles on the back wall. “See that one, third from the left. I’d like a glass o’ that, if you please.”

  “Fifteen cents,” she said. “You want a beer to go with that?”

  Longarm shook his head. “No, I wouldn’t want anything to wash that fine flavor off my tongue.”

  The lady nodded her approval and brought the bottle and a small tumbler. “My name is Helen,” she said when she had set the glass down and poured a generous measure of rye.

  “I’m Custis.”

  “You’re the marshal up here from Denver, aren’t you?”

  He gave her a quizzical look. Helen laughed and said, “Samuel Johnson over at the mercantile has a big mouth. He came in here after he closed up for the night. He said the federal man from Denver got in this afternoon, and since you’re the only stranger I’ve seen in town lately, well, you pretty much have to be him.”

  “I plead guilty,” Longarm told her. “Say this really is good stuff.” The rye lay smooth and warm on his tongue before he swallowed it.

  “If there is anything I can do to help you while you’re here,” Helen said, “just let me know.” She smiled. “I have a vested interest in this community. I want it to be safe and prosperous.”

  “You don’t seem to do much business with the, um, livestock raisers,” he observed.

  “Not directly, I don’t, but if the town prospers, then so do the men who are my customers. Like I said. A vested interest.”

  “Fair enough.” He swallowed the rest of his rye.

  “Another?”

  He nodded, and Helen poured, this time an even more generous amount.

  Longarm decided he had found the place where he would be spending his leisure time while he was in Dwyer.

  Chapter 13

  “Did you learn anything last night?” John Tyler asked as Longarm seated himself at the breakfast table.

  “Sure did,” Longarm responded. “Learned I won’t be doing any eavesdropping around either bunch o’ those fellas. I couldn’t understand a word they was sayin’.” He glanced up to see if Nell was nearby. She was not, so he continued, “I also found a place that serves real good whiskey.”

  “That would be Helen Birch’s place,” Tyler said.

  “That’s right. She said her name is Helen. She owns it?”

  Tyler nodded. “She and her husband came here about, oh, five years ago. He opened the saloon while she tended to the home. Then Cory . . . that was her husband’s name, Cory . . . he let things get a little too rowdy one night and got himself stabbed for his troubles. The man lingered for nearly a month before he finally died. They say the dying was a real blessing as he’d been stabbed in the stomach. Gangrene got all through his body.” Tyler shrugged. “Everybody thought Helen would sel
l out or just close up after Cory was gone, but she opened the place back up and has kept it going ever since. She runs a good place. Won’t allow any ladies of the night, though, and won’t tolerate any troubles in her place.”

  “She looks big enough to enforce that,” Longarm said.

  “Oh, she is. She keeps a bung starter under the counter, and she isn’t afraid to bust a man’s head open with it if he steps out of line.”

  Longarm smiled. “I’ll try an’ keep that in mind.”

  Nell came out of the kitchen bearing a tray that was piled high with flapjacks and pork chops and fried potatoes.

  “It is a wonderful thing that you are here, Longarm,” John Tyler said. “When we’re alone, all I get for breakfast is oatmeal and coffee.”

  Nell set the tray down and gave her husband a swat on the back of his head, then went back into her kitchen for the coffeepot to offer John a refill and in Longarm’s case his first cup of the day.

  After breakfast, Longarm helped Tyler out onto the porch, where the man settled into his chair with a sigh. “I hate being laid up this way,” he said, “but letting that damned bronc bust me up like this is my own fault. I should’ve bailed off him when I felt him slip, but I thought I could ride the bastard down.” He grimaced. “I was wrong.”

  “You might find this hard to believe,” Longarm said, pulling a cheroot from his pocket and lighting it, “but I was wrong about something once my own self.”

  “Really?” Tyler said with mock surprise. “I never would’ve guessed it. If you don’t mind me changing the subject, what do you intend to do now?”

  “If you’ll tell me where I can rent a horse,” Longarm said, puffing contentedly on his cigar and blowing a few smoke rings, “reckon I will ride out and talk to whoever is in charge of those two groups of herders.”

  “We have a livery the second block west of the courthouse, which reminds me. I need to take you down there to swear you in as a McConnell County special deputy. Mind if I ask you to hitch our mare up to the buggy so I can get down there? I suppose I could make it that far on crutches, but I’d rather not try.”

  “That’s no bother at all,” Longarm said. “We can take care of that, then I’ll rent me a horse after. You got a barn out back?”

  “We do.”

  “Big enough to handle a visiting animal?” Longarm asked.

  “Big enough,” Tyler said, “and plenty of grass hay and mixed feed grain too.”

  “Then if you don’t mind, I’ll tell your liveryman that I’ll keep the animal for as long as I need him. Just in case I need to go someplace in a hurry, I won’t have to waste time walking over to the livery.”

  “I understand.”

  “Thinking of renting,” Longarm said, “we haven’t spoke yet about how much I need t’ pay for my room an’ board.”

  Tyler waved the question away with a sweep of his hand. “You’re here to help me and you’re staying in my house. Nell and I wouldn’t think of charging you rent.”

  “Thanks.” Longarm resolved to do something to help defray the cost of his keep while he was staying with the Tylers. Groceries, perhaps, or something else Nell would appreciate. He stood. “Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ll go find that buggy o’ yours an’ bring it around front when I have it hitched an’ ready.”

  Chapter 14

  Longarm left Tyler’s sleek little chestnut mare tied to an iron post shaped to look like a jockey, although one whose paint was chipped and peeling. He helped Tyler out of the buggy and up the courthouse steps.

  “Over this way,” Tyler said, pointing toward a door that read COUNTY CLERK on the frosted glass panel. “My office is in the basement. One good-sized room and two small cells. Around back there’s an entrance from the outside. I’ll give you a key so you can come and go as you please.”

  Longarm opened the door to the clerk’s office and stood aside while Tyler made his way inside on the crutches.

  There were three men in the office, laboring over ledgers and piles of paper. Longarm had no idea what could possibly require the efforts of three clerical workers in a county as sparsely populated as McConnell . . . but then it sometimes seemed to him that the first order of business for any government agency was to expand itself. At the expense of its taxpayers. Apparently that rule was no different here than in Denver.

  “Benjamin, this is the gentleman I told you would be coming,” Tyler said.

  The oldest of the three workers, a slender man with thinning, gray hair, looked up from his ledgers and smiled. He rose and came to the counter, where he extended his hand. “Benjamin Laffler,” he said.

  “Custis Long,” Longarm said in return, taking the man’s hand to shake.

  “What can I do for you gents?” Laffler asked.

  “I want to swear Custis in as a McConnell deputy, Ben. We need for you to witness the oath and record it.”

  “Can we afford . . . ?”

  “He will serve without pay,” Tyler cut in.

  Laffler said, “In that case, Long, welcome to our county. Wait just a moment while I fetch a Bible and we can do this.”

  Three minutes later, having affirmed his fealty, Longarm was a duly sworn officer of McConnell County, Wyoming Territory.

  “There are some badges in my desk downstairs,” Tyler told him, “or you can just continue to use your own. Benjamin, do you have any extra keys to the sheriff’s office?”

  “I do. I’ll get one for you.” He turned away and went to the back of the room, to a file cabinet, where he began rummaging inside a lower drawer. A minute later he was back with a key for the new deputy.

  “Do you want to go down to your office?” Longarm asked when they were again in the hallway outside the clerk’s office.

  Tyler shook his head. “That would be too much, I think. I’d have to go down the steps outside then all the way around the building and down those steps too. It’s just . . . Not until I get off these damned crutches, if you don’t mind.”

  “Makes no nevermind t’ me, John, and in that case let’s get you home. I’ll beg one more cup o’ Nell’s good coffee and then go see what I can do toward having a saddle horse.”

  “Fine,” Tyler said. When he was again settled onto the seat of the buggy, he grumbled, “These crutches might not be so bad except the damn things cut into my armpits no matter how Nell tries to pad them. Lordy, I will be glad when I can get rid of them.”

  He drove to his house and as close as he could get to the front gate, then said, “If you don’t mind taking it from here, this is the shortest way into the house.”

  “Don’t mind at all,” Longarm said.

  Longarm secured the mare to a hitching weight, then helped Tyler down from the buggy and back to his chair on the front porch. He tapped on the door and told Nell they were back, then returned to the buggy and drove it around to the little barn in back of the house.

  He stripped the harness from the mare and hung it, secured the horse in her stall, and parked the buggy under an overhang at the side of the barn. By the time he returned to the front of the house, there was a cup of steaming hot coffee waiting for him.

  “Herself wants to know if you will be back for lunch,” Tyler said, inclining his head toward the house—as if there were any question just who he meant by “herself.”

  “No, I expect not,” Longarm said, taking a swallow that quickly turned into a careful sip of the very hot coffee. “I’ll get me a horse an’ then see how things go from there. Any idea where I can find these sheepmen an’ goatherds?”

  “Easy enough. Just ride up the valley. You’ll see their camps and their flocks scattered every damn place you look. There isn’t any one person in charge of either bunch, though. They are all independent as hell. And twice as ornery.”

  “All right then.” Longarm sat until he finished the coffee, then got up and excused himself. “I’d set an’ visit awhile, but what I come here to do is serious stuff. Reckon I shouldn’t keep it waiting for my laziness.”

&nb
sp; “We’ll expect you back when we see the whites of your eyes,” Tyler said, “whenever that might be.”

  “Fair enough.” Longarm shook the man’s hand and headed for Dwyer’s livery.

  Chapter 15

  “I’m looking for a fella name of Anthony,” Longarm said to the young man who was busy braiding horsehair.

  The young fellow looked up from his work. “That would be me,” he said.

  Longarm was surprised. Hostlers were generally older men who had decided to retire from the rugged work of a cowhand or wrangler but could not stand to completely give up the game. Anthony DeCaro was anything but that stereotype. He looked like a city boy—with the emphasis on “boy”—yet John Tyler had vouched for DeCaro’s knowledge and abilities.

  “I’ m the . . .”

  “I know who you are,” DeCaro said with a grin. “The whole town does. Probably the whole county by now.”

  Longarm could only shake his head in wonder. The town of Dwyer seemed to have faster communications than Denver’s telephone system could have offered. “I need . . .”

  “I know what you need,” DeCaro said. “You’ll be wanting a saddle horse to use while you’re up here.”

  “That’s right,” Longarm said. “The sheriff said you know your horses and you’re honest. He suggested I get you to pick something out for me.”

  “I’ll be happy to do that,” the young livery stable owner said. “First though I have a question for you. Are you looking for a horse that’s fast or one that’s steady? That is, do you expect to be chasing after someone or will you be riding off the road and want a horse you can count on to not stumble?”

  “Steady,” Longarm told him. “If I do my job right, I won’t have t’ be running no horse races across bad country.”

  “Then I have a good one for you. He won’t win any races if you do get into any, but you can count on him to take you wherever you want to go without getting busted up like John was.”

  “Then drag him out here, son, and let me take a look at him.”

 

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