Dusty Fog's Civil War 7

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by J. T. Edson


  Across flashed Dusty’s hands, passing each other and working in perfect unison. The matched Colts swept from their holsters, angling outwards. Flame ripped from both barrels at almost the same moment; less than a second from when his hands began to move.

  At the door, Frost saw Dusty partially disappear behind two swirling clouds of burned black powder’s smoke from which sparked red spurts of flame. Just realizing the implications of what he saw, the aide felt a savage impact against his shoulder. Pain roared through him and he spun around, screaming, to fall into the passage beyond the door.

  Still turning the barrel of his Colt, the Provost Marshal saw the same as Frost. A moment later he died. The bullet from Dusty’s second Colt struck him between the eyes. In going backwards, he fired his revolver. Dusty felt the breeze of its lead passing his face.

  Bringing the Smith & Wesson ready cocked from the drawer, Trumpeter started to point it in Verncombe’s direction. Although he guessed the other’s intentions, the colonel stood without a movement. Amazement twisted the satisfaction from Trumpeter’s features as he saw his ‘rescuers’ struck down by Dusty’s bullets. Suddenly, shockingly, he realized that the small Texan had ruined another of his carefully-made plans. Fear, fury and self-preservation drove Trumpeter to react. Mouthing wild curses, he forgot Verncombe and tried to line the revolver on the greater danger.

  Cocking his Colts, Dusty twisted his torso towards the desk. Like extensions of his will, the long barrels directed themselves to the Yankee general. First left then right hand revolver roared, coming so close together that the detonations barely formed two separate sounds. Trumpeter’s head jolted as if struck by an invisible hand. The force of the two bullets’ arrival lifted him backwards. Disintegrating under his weight, the chair on which he had fallen let him sprawl lifeless to the floor.

  Again Dusty drew back the hammers of his guns, although he did so as an instinctive, trained reaction rather than by conscious thought. Turning, he brought the Colts in Verncombe’s direction. The colonel stood with open hands dangling loosely at his sides, but Dusty knew it was not fear that kept him out of the fight. Career-soldier and man of honor, Verncombe could understand why Dusty had taken such a desperate chance. More than that, the colonel hated the deed which had caused the small Texan to come and face Trumpeter. As far as Verncombe was concerned, the War did not exist at that moment.

  ‘Leave the letter,’ Verncombe said as shouts of alarm and running feet sounded in the passage.

  ‘Sure, colonel,’ Dusty replied, lowering the hammers and twirling away the Colts. ‘Thanks.’

  With that the small Texan turned and stepped through the drapes. Two strides carried him across the balcony. His work in Little Rock was done. With Trumpeter dead, Verncombe would rescind the offer of a reward for Dusty’s death. Now he must try to escape.

  Down at the main gate, the two sentries faced the house, gesticulating and talking. If they had seen Dusty come through the drapes, they gave no sign of it. He stepped on to the balustrade and jumped into the tree. Landing on a branch, he climbed rapidly downwards. Just as he had hoped, all the activity was in the house. While men dashed to investigate the shooting, they stayed inside the building. That had been something Dusty had relied upon—or hoped would happen—when making his plans. Who could blame the Yankees for not realizing what had happened? Nobody could have foreseen that a Rebel would dare break into the private residence of the general commanding the Union’s Army of Arkansas.

  Swinging from the lowest branch, Dusty dropped to the ground. He landed running, darting to the nearest of the decorative bushes and making for the east wall.

  In Trumpeter’s office, Verncombe had moved towards the end of the desk. He looked at the first of the men to enter the room and barked, ‘See if there’s anything you can do for the general!’

  Knowing that Trumpeter was beyond all human aid, the colonel sprang to the window, Passing through the drapes, he allowed them to fall back into place behind him. Striding along the balcony, he looked around, Drawing his revolver, he lined and fired it downwards.

  ‘Over there!’ he roared as the sentries ran towards the house. ‘He’s heading for the west wall!’

  Satisfied that he had diverted the search, for he guessed which way Dusty had come into the grounds, Verncombe returned to the window and blocked the other men’s path as they tried to emerge,

  ‘Thanks again, colonel,’ Dusty breathed, continuing his swift, crouching run through the garden.

  Approaching the wall, he saw that its top had changed shape. Two strange elongated humps lay on it. They stirred as he drew nearer and Betty’s voice came from one of them.

  ‘Jump, Dusty!’

  Leaping up, Dusty felt his outstretched arms caught in Betty’s and Kiowa’s hands. Aided by the girl’s not inconsiderable strength, the power of the sergeant’s wiry frame took the strain of his captain’s weight. Bracing his feet against the wall, Dusty walked up it. From the top, Dusty and his helpers dropped down to where Billy Jack was discarding his borrowed disguise.

  ‘Over there, pronto!’ Dusty snapped.

  Not until running towards the wall of the next building did Dusty notice that his cousin had been thinking of herself. The skirt was gone, leaving her legs clad in riding breeches and boots; which Dusty knew she had been wearing all the time. However, she had the unconscious sentry’s tunic on; its sleeves either rolled up or cut off to the desired level. Dusty wondered which of them had realized that the blouse’s white material showed up in the dark and would draw attention to its wearer.

  The time was not suitable for Dusty to satisfy his curiosity. Already men from the adjacent house, disturbed by the shooting and noise from the general’s residence, were coming to investigate. Fortunately they made so much noise that it drowned out the sound of the Texans running feet. Flattening themselves against the wall of the building nearest to the edge of town, Dusty’s party watched soldiers streaming by. The men went towards the front entrance of Trumpeter’s house, so missed seeing the four figures. Nor did the rear wall’s sentries do better, their attention being concentrated on the inside of the grounds.

  ‘Are you all right, Dusty?’ Betty asked as they hurried away from the houses.

  ‘Sure,’ he replied.

  ‘How about Trumpeter?’ Billy Jack inquired.

  ‘He’s dead,’ Dusty answered.

  ‘Figured he might be,’ drawled the sergeant major. ‘Now we’ll have another fire-eater coming out here looking to make life miserable for us.’

  ‘I thought you enjoyed being miserable,’ Betty pointed out. ‘I do,’ Billy Jack confessed, then brightened up a little. ‘I never thought of it like that. Things ain’t so bad after all.’

  ‘It’s lucky that feller on the balcony got all twisted around like that,’ Kiowa remarked. ‘He sent them sentries off the wrong way.’

  ‘Real lucky,’ Dusty agreed.

  The truth about Verncombe’s ‘mistake’ could ruin the colonel’s career, so Dusty would never tell what had really happened.

  Nobody saw them leave town. Behind them the alarm bell clanged, but they rejoined Red and Sandy, mounted their horses and rode south-east without hearing any sound of pursuit.

  In Trumpeter’s office, Verncombe looked at the assembled staff officers. All of them knew him and most of them respected him as a competent officer and good man.

  ‘It was Dusty Fog,’ the colonel told them and picked up the sheet of paper. ‘He came as a result of this letter which the general had circulated amongst the guerilla bands.’

  While the letter passed from hand to hand, accompanied by startled or angry exclamations at its contents, Verncombe explained how it had been the cause of Georgina Blaze’s death.

  Sitting on a chair in the corner of the office, having his shoulder bandaged, Frost watched and listened. It quickly became obvious that the senior officers present, the ones whose opinions counted in the final analysis, felt revulsion at the letter and disagreed with its purp
ose. Sick with pain and anxiety, he gave thought to saving his own skin. Deciding that his only hope lay in transferring the blame, he sought for a way of doing it. viii

  By the time the note had been read, the officer-of-the-day and sergeant-of-the-guard arrived to report that the search of the grounds had been without result. The officer was under the impression that the intruder had gone to the west, then doubled back behind the house to go over the east-side wall. The sentry from that section had been found, stripped of his overcoat and tunic, bound and gagged, against one of the adjacent buildings.

  While that information was being digested, a breathless soldier dashed in to say that every telegraph wire out of town had been cut. Wexler had supplied men to help with that part of Dusty’s plan.

  ‘That’s Fog’s way all right,’ growled the Quartermaster’s Department colonel, bitterly aware that he would have to produce wire to replace the missing lengths. Like all members of his Department, he hated parting with any kind of stores.

  ‘Orders, sir?’ prompted the Town Major, looking at the senior officer present—and, with Trumpeter dead, acting commanding general of the Army of Arkansas.

  ‘First we must rescind this bounty offer,’ Verncombe stated firmly. ‘I want that starting now, without any delay, and completed as quickly as possible.’

  Mutters of agreement followed the words. None of the older officers wanted it even thought that members of the United States Army condoned Trumpeter’s behavior in placing the bounty. So they saw the urgency to make a public retraction.

  ‘Next we’ll organize a search of the town,’ Verncombe went on. ‘I want patrols ready to leave at dawn. They’d never pick up Fog’s trail in the dark.’

  ‘It will give him a good start over our men,’ the officer of the day protested. ‘We should alert the garrisons between here and the Ouachita River so that they can get out searching parties.’

  ‘That’s true enough,’ agreed the Town Major, an infantry officer with no clear idea of the difficulties involved in doing so.

  Thinking of the superb riding skill and excellent horses of the Texas Light Cavalry, Verncombe doubted if any man in his command could reach the garrisons before Dusty Fog and party were safely by them.

  ‘Select your best courier, major,’ the colonel ordered. ‘Send him off as quickly as you can.’ He raised his eye piously towards the roof and continued, ‘I sure hope he gets there in time.’

  DUSTY FOG’S CIVIL WAR 7: KILL DUSTY FOG!

  By J. T. Edson

  First published by Transworld Publishers Limited in 1970

  Copyright © 1970, 2017 by J. T. Edson

  First Smashwords Edition: April 2017

  Names, characters and incidents in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information or storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.

  Our cover features Two Generals Die, painted by Andy Thomas, and used by permission.

  Andy Thomas Artist, Carthage Missouri

  Andy is known for his action westerns and storytelling paintings and documenting historical events through history.

  This is a Piccadilly Publishing Book

  Series Editor: Ben Bridges

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  i

  * Luff: derogatory name for a young 1st lieutenant.

  ii Soft-shell: a liberal-intellectual.

  iii Peckerwood: derogatory name for a white Southerner.

  iv The Man: in this case, the Provost Marshal.

  v So called due to their alleged resemblance in shape to the elbow of a stovepipe and because after about forty-eight hours’ wear the socks, like the pipe, had a hole at each end.

  vi Sharp-shooter: Civil war name for a sniper.

  vii The normal Army model had an eight-inch barrel.

  viii Frost later declared that Trumpeter and the Provost Marshal had conspired to murder Verncombe, but insisted that he had been an innocent pawn and had intended to warn the colonel. While nobody believed his story, it could not be disproved and it came in useful as a means of avoiding a too-close examination of Verncombe’s conduct after the shooting. Wishing to disassociate themselves from Trumpeter’s actions, the Union’s high command was anxious for the affair to pass over without complications.

 

 

 


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