“Now, Jimmy.” Caleb raised a brow. “You break into people’s rooms often, just to look?”
The boy shrugged. “Never got a chance ta see a Peacemaker’s stuff before. The old one stayed out at Warner’s.”
“And you didn’t go snooping while you were at school out there?”
The kid snorted. “I don’ go to school. ’Specially not out there.”
Caleb sat on the bed, and the boy scooted away. “You don’t go at all? Who’s teaching you to control your power, then?”
“Nobody. I just . . . do.”
Caleb frowned. “You’re what, nine?”
“I’m twelve!”
For twelve, the boy was positively scrawny. And if he really was twelve, he was woefully and dangerously uneducated.
“Hold your hand out, Jimmy, palm to me.” Reluctantly, the boy did, and Caleb mirrored the gesture, leaving an inch of air between their outstretched hands. “Zoek,” he mouthed silently. Seek.
Caleb’s power went searching, feeling across the dead space between their palms to tickle over the boy’s skin. Jimmy flinched at the first tingle but didn’t withdraw, and his own talent rose in answer. Soon, flickers of blue electricity were dancing back and forth between them in ever more intricate patterns.
“Are . . . are you doing this?” Jimmy finally asked, his eyes wide under his rough bangs.
“We’re doing this.” Caleb kept his eyes on the display, carefully reining in both his power and the boy’s. Jimmy would be formidable when he was older, but only if he was trained before he accidentally scoured himself. “You’re very strong, Jimmy. You need to learn how to harness this before you hurt yourself or someone else.”
Jimmy’s hand clenched into a fist, and the power disappeared with a faint pop. “I ain’ goin’ out to Warner’s place. He’s got bad men out there.”
“I’m inclined to agree with you. But . . . have you thought about Miss Sinclair? She’s right across the hall, and I’ll bet she’d be happy to have a student.” Someone had to take this boy in hand. Soon.
There was a rebellious set to the boy’s jaw, but he at least looked thoughtful.
“Jimmy? Dammit boy, where are you?” Teddy appeared in the open doorway, and the Scot frowned. “Boy, I told you to be scrubbin’ out those pots and pans, not botherin’ my guests.”
“We was just talkin’.” Jimmy slid off the bed, reaching to pat Ernst once more. “Nice ta meetcha, Ernst. And you too, mister.” He gave a nod to Caleb and wandered off with all the nonchalance in the world.
Teddy looked to Caleb. “Was he riflin’ through yer things?”
“He tried. But I’ve got wards on the dangerous things, so no harm done.”
The bartender sighed, shaking his head. “Sorry about that, Agent. Boy’s got a thief’s heart, and I cannae seem to break him of it.”
“Someone needs to take that boy’s education in hand. Before he scours himself or someone else.” Caleb pushed his trunk back under his bed with one boot. “He may be strong enough to get into West Point, with proper training. And a decent education, of course.”
“Really?” Teddy glanced back down the hallway after Jimmy, surprise on his face. “Never knew the lad had that much talent. Most of the wee ones here, they . . . well, they’re nothin’ remarkable.”
“The group I saw earlier was still young. Maybe they’ll grow into it.” With a weary sigh, Caleb started to pull off his boots. “Thank you for your hospitality today, Teddy. By all accounts, I’m not sure I deserved it. My predecessor left a hard trail for me to follow.”
The dark Scot gave him a grin. “You be yer own man, Agent Marcus. Folks’ll learn soon enough. Good night.”
“Good night, Teddy.” The bartender closed the door as he left, leaving Caleb alone in his room with Ernst.
The jackalope snuggled against Caleb’s side as the Peacemaker lay back and threw an arm across his eyes. “I have one question, Caleb.”
“Hmm?”
“What does a rancher, out here in the forgotten armpit of nothing, need with a unit of armed men at his beck and call?”
“And a highly skilled sniper. I was wondering the same thing myself, Ernst.” Caleb stroked the soft fur of his familiar. “Let’s get some sleep. Since we’re stuck here anyway, I may as well do some actual investigating tomorrow.”
Chapter 3
Something loud pounded at Caleb’s skull, drawing him out of a fitful sleep. His usual nightmares faded slowly, and the sound of church bells mingled with the remembered bellow of cannon fire for long confusing moments.
“Caleb? Caleb! I think you ought to wake up.” Ernst’s voice prodded him fully awake finally, and he opened his eyes to find the jackalope perched on the bedside table, staring out the single window. “Something’s happening. Everyone’s running to the church, and the bell is pealing.”
“It’s not Sunday. . . .” Caleb pushed himself upright, reaching for his shirt. He made a mental note to find out if there was a laundry in town. This shirt was on its last legs, and the one stuffed in his saddlebags was worse.
Dressed and armed with both gun and staff, Caleb followed the last of the townsfolk to their church, where a small crowd surrounded a rather shaken-looking family of five. The two little girls clung to their mother’s skirts, and the boy, barely ten, did his best to stand next to his father and look manly. There was no mistaking the pallor of his cheeks or the shock in his wide eyes, though.
Abel Warner was also present, giving orders from the back of his sleek transport, calling for townsfolk to fetch food and water for the new arrivals, sending someone after the doctor, who had yet to appear. Standing at strategic intervals, their hands resting idly on their guns, his armed thugs kept wary eyes out.
Caleb slid into the crowd next to Hector, keeping his voice low. “What’s going on?”
“Anderson family. They’ve got a homestead up in the foothills, and the reds hit them last night. They hid until first light, then made their way in on foot. Took them more’n three hours of walking to get here.”
“Anyone hurt?”
“Doesn’t look like it. Just scared them to death. Don’t know what’s left of their place, though.” Hector shook his head, his eyes grim. “Third homestead hit this month.”
Caleb clapped the shopkeeper on the shoulder and edged his way through the crowd. As he got closer, he saw Ernst already clasped tightly in the smallest child’s arms, the jackalope’s antlers visibly vibrating with his soothing purr. The children, at least, were enchanted with the furry creature enough to forget about their harrowing experience. That was the purpose of Ernst’s small, furry forms. When he was cute and nonthreatening, people would embrace him easily, and he was able to soothe distress with simple contact. With the children taken care of, Caleb could focus on the adults.
Warner had dismounted and stood talking to the father. “I’ll take my boys out to your place, Allen, and we’ll see what damage was done and what we can recover. Until you get back on your feet again, you know you’re more than welcome to stay out at my place. I’ve got plenty of room.”
“Thank you, Abel. I . . . Thank God no one was hurt, but . . . I just don’t know what we’re going to do. They took the cows, and there’s no time to plant new crops before winter, and . . .” Allen Anderson had the bleak look of a man who could only stare up at the cliff he’d just been pushed off. Rescue was far enough away to seem merely an illusion.
Warner’s glance landed on Caleb as he reached the front of the throng. “Ah, Peacemaker! There you are. I’m taking a bunch of the lads out to Anderson’s place. We could use a man of your skills, if you’d like to come along.”
“Thank you, Mr. Warner. I think I’ll do that.” He transferred his staff to his left hand to shake Anderson’s. “Mr. Anderson, I’m Caleb Marcus, the new Peacemaker for the region. I’m very glad your family wasn’t harmed.”r />
“Thank you, sir. So am I.” Power flickered between the two men where their hands touched. Anderson’s fear was augmenting what would normally be a mediocre ability at best into something spiky and unpredictable. Spurred by the man’s highly emotional state, it was nearing dangerously overloaded levels. Anderson would have no idea how to control that much power.
Caleb narrowed his eyes in concentration, feeding back along the channels to smooth the jagged edges in the other man’s power, bleeding off the excess energy through Caleb’s own body. The last thing they needed was the homesteader exploding out of sheer nerves.
Tension went out of the other man’s shoulders, and he gulped air like he’d been running for miles. His grip tightened on Caleb’s, squeezing hard. “Thank you,” he whispered, glancing toward his wife and children. “I don’t know how much longer I could have held on. The children are in the same state, and I couldn’t . . .”
The Peacemaker nodded, patting him on the shoulder. “It’s all right. That’s why I have Ernst.”
The jackalope flicked a glance toward Caleb at the sound of his name, but never stopped his chirpy little purr. They’d done this before, the pair of them, and Ernst knew just what needed to be done for the children during such a tragedy. The sparks of bled-off power were visible at the ends of his fur, dissipating in tiny snaps of static electricity. The longer the children stroked his silky coat, the calmer they became, their fear and agitation channeled away through the body of Caleb’s familiar.
“I’ll get my transport, Mr. Warner, and I’ll meet you back here.” He paused long enough to speak to Mrs. Anderson and give smiles to the little ones. The presence of the jackalope seemed to have bolstered them, and some life came back to their wide, staring eyes. “Ernst, are you coming with me or staying here?”
“I’ll stay with the children if that’s all right.”
Caleb hesitated, mentally mapping out the distance he intended to cover that day. If his bond with Ernst had a limit, they had yet to find it, but he still felt uneasy about being too far apart from his familiar for long. Still, the children needed all the comfort they could get, and he would be able to feel the connection to the little jackalope even at great distance. It would be nothing for him to simply pop to Caleb’s side if necessary. “I’ll call you if I need you.”
The hauler-turned-transport raised some eyebrows among Warner’s men, but Caleb just shrugged. “My transport is being repaired. This was what was available for rent.”
Warner frowned at that. “Isby? You’re having Isby repair your transport?”
“He is the smith.”
“The man is scoured, Agent Marcus. Surely you realized that. You can’t be an arcanosmith without power.” The rancher sidled his transport closer to Caleb’s. “You bring your transport out to my ranch. I have my own arcanosmith there.”
“Thank you, sir, but if Mr. Isby says he can repair it, then I believe him.”
Warner’s lips thinned. “Suit yourself.”
With a bit more organizing, the scouting party was off. Caleb found himself surrounded by at least fifteen of Warner’s men, all of whom looked like they would just as soon knife someone in a dark alley as not. A handful of the townsmen also rode out with them, giving Caleb the comfort of additional witnesses, but he regretted Ernst’s absence. An extra pair of loyal eyes would have been welcome.
He paid special attention to a slender man on a gleaming new transport who caught up to the group about a mile outside of town. Though it was hard to tell with the man mounted, he looked to be a good foot shorter than Caleb and as rail thin as a youth. Beneath the wide brim of his hat, his face was smooth and soft like a boy’s, and even shadowed, his eyes were so pale as to be almost colorless. The cold, empty gaze flickered across Caleb for no more than a heartbeat and dismissed him just as quickly, but that brief encounter gave the Peacemaker shivers despite the early morning heat. Even without the buffalo rifle strapped to his saddle, there would no mistaking Kaspar Schmidt. The man fell in at Warner’s side, and the group never slowed their pace.
The ride would have been long even if Caleb had been on a proper transport. As it was, the hauler’s girth was exceedingly uncomfortable, and when they’d progressed into the foothills after an hour, the thing’s cumbersome bulk made travel over the rocks and hills more difficult than it would have been with a lighter mount. At least it was cooler in the hills, with the searing heat of the prairie left behind them for the moment.
The purple mountains loomed over them like giants who had just noticed the insects crawling around their feet. As Caleb carefully navigated his mount through the brush and branches, he had the distinct feeling that they were being watched, and that the watcher did not approve of their presence. He took a tighter grip on his staff, resting the butt of it in his stirrup.
He was not the only one unnerved. Most of the men loosened their guns in their holsters, flickers of blue light dancing over the bullets in their cylinders. More than a few murmured under their breath, their eyes searching the thickening undergrowth for hostile natives.
The wildlife scattered ahead of the wheeze and gasp of the arcane-fueled gears and the incessant tromping noise of their transports’ metal hooves. They deserted their perches and hiding places in flocks and droves, fleeing from the band of invaders. Even the wind stilled until the only sound was the steady snap and crackle of mashed branches and twigs. Anyone could have been there in the shadows, and it would have been impossible to tell. Caleb resisted the urge to send a seeking surge out through the trees, not certain he truly wanted the answer.
Whatever watched them—be it red Indians, brave and curious wildlife, or the mountains themselves—it left them alone. They followed a barely visible wagon track into the trees, climbing steadily upward for another forty-five minutes before they came upon the Andersons’ homestead.
The house itself still stood. That much was a blessing. Perhaps even the Indians were loath to burn the place in the tinder-dry forest.
“Higgins, Randolph, take watch. I don’t want anyone sneaking up on us.” Warner dismissed two of his men, who circled wide around the cleared area, presumably taking up watch posts. Schmidt dismounted, collecting his rifle, and surveyed the trees that towered over them. There was no mistaking the calculating look in his cold eyes as he also chose a place to perch and watch.
Caleb swung down off his mount, his muscles complaining loudly about their mistreatment, but he was careful not to grimace or limp. Maintaining any sort of authority was going to be tough enough around Warner, who was obviously used to being obeyed without question.
The Anderson family had a small house, obviously made out of logs hewn from the very spot on which it stood. There was a little outbuilding to the north, surrounded by a fence, where presumably they had kept their cows. The fence itself had been largely destroyed, with lengthy sections of wood splintered into nothing and posts yanked out of the ground entirely.
Their garden to the south had likewise been trampled. It had taken painstaking work to cut fertile ground out of the rocky soil, and there was a clear path to a nearby stream where they had run metal piping to bring water to the parched plants in an effort to help them survive. All of that was in vain now, and the food plants were mashed into the dirt clods beneath. Mangled bits of metal, the remains of an arcane-powered water pump, were scattered across the garden. It was impossible to tell what the family had even intended to produce.
“Arrows here!” One of the men plucked a few shafts from the side of the house like errant porcupine quills. Several more were located, buried in the fence posts or broken underfoot in the melee.
“Let’s gather some clothes for them before the reds come back.” Several men disappeared into the house, while more took up positions of wariness, fingering their guns nervously.
Caleb crouched at the edge of the garden, planting his staff in the loose soil and leaning on it i
dly. There was another arrow at his feet, and he picked it up, rolling it between his fingers. The head was knapped from stone, precise slivers taken from each surface to give it a razor-sharp edge that shone almost like it was oiled. The shaft was straight, and Caleb let it rest on the tip of one finger, finding it perfectly balanced. The feathers and head had been bound on with cotton thread.
Frowning, the Peacemaker looked at the garden again. The tracks of the panicked cows were obvious among the slaughtered vegetables. The terrified bovines had been stampeded through the garden multiple times. But nowhere did he see the spoor of any horses. Transport tracks were visible where they’d ridden in moments before, but those were heavier marks, perfectly round. Horses left more oval-shaped tracks, uneven and chipped where their hooves had worn away. He rose and walked the full length of the garden to be sure, then went to inspect the corral, too.
Evidence of the cows was everywhere, from their dung to their tracks, but there was nothing to show that the Indians had ridden through. Only their arrows, and one lonely tomahawk found embedded in the side of the Andersons’ wagon.
They came in on foot. Approached silently in the dead of the night. It was possible. Though everything Caleb had learned of the local natives—the militant Dog Soldiers of the Cheyenne—indicated that they were a formidable cavalry. Why would they give up their mounts for this raid? It would sow so much more confusion having the big animals galloping around, trumpeting their shrill cries.
Investigating more of the recovered arrows showed that each of them bore the same fletching. They’re supposed to be unique, a different style for every brave. And they were tied with cotton thread, not sinew. They could have stolen it from anywhere. One of the other raided homesteads.
Peacemaker (9780698140820) Page 4