Stringer and the Oil Well Indians
Page 1
STRINGER AND THE OIL WELL INDIANS
STRINGER SERIES #10
LOU CAMERON
STRINGER AND THE OIL WELL INDIANS
Copyright © 1989 by Lou Cameron.
First ebook edition copyright 2012 AudioGO. All Rights Reserved.
Trade ISBN 978-1-62064-158-3
Library ISBN 978-0-7927-9076-1
Cover photo © iStockPhoto/dmathies
STRINGER AND THE OIL WELL INDIANS
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
MORE EBOOKS BY LOU CAMERON
CHAPTER ONE
The first thing Stringer noticed about Tulsa was that he seemed overdressed for the occasion. Recalling the erstwhile flag stop of Creek City as a cow town, he’d dropped off the night train in faded but clean blue denims and a reasonably clean Rough Rider hat that was supposed to be pearl gray. But the planks of the railroad platform were coated with sticky black rock-oil and a mist of the same stinky stuff was descending on him from the sullen red midnight sky. So he ran with his gladstone bag for the shelter of the depot waiting room, lest he wind up looking like that tar baby in the Uncle Remus stories.
As he braced his already greasy gladstone on a bench to get at his yellow rain slicker, an older gent puffing a pipe across the aisle chuckled and said, “Great minds run in the same channels. Old Blackjack Sinclair just brung in another gusher up to the west end of town. Won’t be a fine night out for man nor beast until they cap the son of a bitch with a Christmas tree.”
He spat and added, morosely, “I wish they wouldn’t drill right here in town, don’t you?”
Stringer didn’t answer until he’d slipped into his slicker. Then he opined rock-oil sure smelled disgusting. As the old-timer allowed there was money in stink, if you had enough of it to sell, Stringer considered the S&W .38 reposing in its coiled gun rig atop his other possibles. The Indian Nation had been rough country in its day, he knew. But, hell, a new century had dawned and they were calling it the Oklahoma Territory these days. He’d been sent to do a feature on the spanking new rock-oil industry, not to start a war, so he proceeded to shut the lid on his old sixgun, and would have, had not the streetside door crashed open to admit a burly black figure with a .45 in each hand and a string of curses already blasting from its lips.
Since Stringer heard his own name braided in with “Nosy son of a bitch!” and “Meddling motherfucker!” he naturally dove to the floor and rolled under the bench with the gun from his own open bag, just as the greasy gunslick in the doorway got down to tearing slivers from the backrest of the bench with a fusillade of flying slugs. Blinded by his own gunsmoke in the poorly-lit waiting room, the cuss in the doorway ceased fire long enough to call out, “Where are you at? Stand up and fight like a man, you pencil-pushing sissy-boy!”
So Stringer rose, where he wasn’t expected to, and put three rounds into his attacker’s chest, with somewhat better aim.
The black hulk staggered back outside and the sprung doors swung shut as if nothing much had happened. A still smoking .45 that lay just inside the door told Stringer something had. He knew better than to chase the other gun and whoever might still be holding it out that way. So he whirled and ran out the doorway on the platform side as, behind him, an elderly voice called wistfully, “Hey, can I come out now?”
Stringer didn’t know. So he just circled the frame building until he could stick his head and gun muzzle around a streetside corner to see what he might have wrought. There were no street lamps shining at this hour. But the glowering light of the red sky above illuminated the black form near the doorway well enough for Stringer to move closer, reloading as he watched for any signs of life and failing to see any.
There were no signs of life from the man he’d just shot, but there were plenty of other black figures headed his way now, drawn to the sounds of gunplay. Stringer kicked the remaining six-gun near the dead man inside as he opened the door and followed it, calling out, “It’s over, old son, and I sure hope you’ll recall whose notion it was to start it.”
The old timer he’d been talking to before didn’t answer. He wasn’t there any more. Some gents were like that when two gents they neither knowed nor owed got into a fight that could lead to all sorts of tedious questions.
So Stringer was standing alone by his open gladstone, his .38 holstered under his slicker while he rolled a smoke and waited for the inevitable.
The inevitable entered with his own gun drawn and a silver star pinned to his oily slicker. Stringer noticed the deputy had a slight but hard to place accent as he nodded in a friendly enough way and announced, “I’d be Deputy Marshal Chris Madsen. I hope you’ve heard of me. I don’t like to brag, but it can save unfortunate moves on the parts of others if I just say my name, right out. You’ve heard of me, I hope?”
Stringer regarded the somewhat older and much heavier man with respect as he replied, “I’ve heard of you. They say you’re the fastest Swede in the west.”
Madsen looked pained and said, “I’ll have you know I’m Danish, and I’ll thank you to keep that in mind. I’m an awfully sweet-natured cuss, myself. But some Danes take being called a Swede about the way a Cherokee takes being called a Creek.”
Another deputy came in the far door with his gun drawn. He said, “The yard bulls say they spotted a man crossing the tracks in one hell of a hurry, just after they heard the same shots we did. No sign of him now, and they didn’t see enough of him to describe him.”
Chris Madsen cocked a questioning eyebrow at Stringer, who said, “That would have been my one and only witness. I was the one as shot the gent out front. I don’t know why, either. They call me Stringer MacKail. I write for the San Francisco Sun. My feature editor sent me to write up your new oil boom and I’d just gotten off the eastbound when that other owlhoot busted in here cussing and shooting.”
Madsen frowned thoughtfully and said, “I’m tempted to buy a story that dumb. It’s been my experience that folks usually premeditate an ingenious excuse as well as the murder to go with it.”
The husky lawman lowered his gun muzzle to his side, but then he added, “We’d best go have a talk with my boss about it, now. Button your slicker over that .38 and we’ll treat you as decent as you treat us, for now.”
As Stringer did as he was told, Madsen turned to the deputy covering him from the far side and said, “You and the other boys had best see the dead man to the undertaker. Have them put him on ice until we can figure out who’s burying him. Make sure you pat him down for I.D. before you report back to the lockup.” Then he added, “Let’s go, MacKail,” and Stringer took the lead, as he knew he was supposed to.
Outside, the drizzle of rock-oil had let up. But the night was still overcast and the clouds above still glowed like flickering embers. Madsen waved his .45 indicating the direction they were headed, and said it wasn’t far, adding, “I’m sure glad they capped that well at last. Blackjack Sinclair is a real pest, drilling right through an old lady’s front porch like that and gushing everyone downwind without a word of warning.”
As they strode up the tarry rutted street, each rut filled to overflowing with reeking rock-oil, Stringer could see by the sky glow that they were surrounded by a forest of big black oil well derricks. None of them seemed to be on fire, so he asked Madsen why the skies above glowed so red at night.
Madsen explained, “Gas flares. The oil fizzles out of the ground filled
with bubbles of natural gas and they got to get rid of it somehow. There’s little market for the stuff and it’s too dangerous to just let it drift. As you can see, it’s highly inflammable. So it’s better to flame it on purpose than it is to let it catch fire by accident.” Then he said, “That doorway to your right is where we’re going. You go first and make sure your hands are polite as you enter. My boss, Bill Tilghman, is quicker on the draw than me and he doesn’t like surprises.”
Stringer could see that as he opened the door and stepped into the front office of the glorified shack. The lean and somewhat older man behind the desk set up in front of the row of holding cages rose from his seat with catlike grace and put a thoughtful hand to the grips of his low slung six-gun. Then he spotted his deputy behind Stringer and relaxed, asking, “What have we here?” in a calm and almost friendly voice.
Stringer knew who he was. Senior Deputy U.S. Marshal William Tilghman had become a legend in his own time. Stringer was mildly surprised but not astounded to note that the man who’d cleaned up the Cherokee Strip had a pleasant amiable face behind a walrus moustache of steel wire suitable for scrubbing pots and pans.
Chris Madsen introduced Stringer and told Tilghman, “He strikes me as a reasonable young cuss, considering the wild story he has to tell.” So Tilghman moved over to a nearby filing cabinet to take three hotel tumblers and a fifth of rye from a drawer as he told Stringer he’d just love to hear his tale.
As Stringer repeated the details of his mysterious shoot-out to the two older lawmen, he noticed neither Tilghman nor Madsen seemed to require as much refreshment as they served him. He knew better than to ask if they were trying to get him drunk. Stringer had a clear conscience and a Scotch stomach for hard liquor. So all three of them were still sober as he ran out of things to say and said so.
Bill Tilghman nodded soberly and allowed, “I’ve read the stuff you write for the newspapers, MacKail. You do lard it on a mite about events west of the Big Muddy, no offense, but, so far, I’ve yet to catch you in a total fib. Leaving your rude welcome to our fair city aside for now, what brung you to Tulsa in the first place?”
Stringer smiled thinly and said, “My boss, old Sam Barca, seems to think unusual events are happening here. He recalls what you now call Tulsa as a sleepy little crossroads called Creek Town. I guess nobody knew there was oil under it when it grew up around an Indian trading post.”
Tilghman grimaced and replied, “It was tough enough as it was. There’s so-called civilized Creek to the south, Osage to the north and Cherokee to the east. All three get along better with white Sooners than one another, and now this oil boom has the usual whores, gamblers and general misfits drifting in to spice up an already simmering stew. I’d say you just met up with one of the same, if I could say who he might have been. The town law they had here gave up on trying to control Tulsa more than a week ago. That’s how come me and my boys was sent over from our regular post at Perry with direct orders to hold down the noise.” He took a sip from his own glass before adding, “You sure are a noisy young cuss, and I’d feel a lot better about you if that witness had come forward.”
The door behind Stringer opened and the deputy he’d seen back at the depot came in to hang up his greasy slicker as he sighed arid stated, “That dead son of a bitch had shit as well as rock-oil all over his damned wallet. But I done my duty. A voter’s registration card he was packing says he used to be a James J. Woods from Amarillo.”
Bill Tilghman grinned like a mean little kid as he told Stringer, “You’re free to go, MacKail. I recall that alias from a wanted flier the Texas Rangers sent me a spell back. The real name was Jack Holt. Used to work for Pinkerton. Got fired for strike-breaking beyond the call of duty or common sense. Since then he’s been in business for himself as a hired gun.”
Chris Madsen blinked thoughtfully. “Wasn’t Jack Holt the name we were given in connection with that pretty young Creek gal the Creeks accused the Cherokee of raping and murdering a year or so back, Bill?”
Tilghman nodded and said, “That, too. But I doubt he was out to ravage this boy’s fair white body. He killed for hard cash, not pleasure.” Then he cocked an eyebrow at Stringer to add, “We’d best go over it all again, old son. For a man who just arrived in Tulsa, you seem to make enemies mighty sudden.”
Stringer shook his head and said, “I’ve already told you all I know, damn it. Save for you boys and that old man at the railroad depot I just don’t know anyone in this town!”
Chris Madsen said, “Try it this way, then. You’ve a rep as a muck-racking newspaper man, no offense, and Lord knows there’s a heap of muck to be raked in this neck of the woods. How do you know some slicker you exposed in the past got here ahead of you, heard you were coming, and sent Holt to head you off at that depot before you could write mean things about anyone?”
Stringer didn’t answer as he ran that through his brain a time or two.
Bill Tilghman said, “I read what you wrote not long ago about them fellers selling stock in that salted silver mine. Our job is to keep the peace, not look into oil well stocks. But I can tell you there’s a heap of such bullshit taking place in Tulsa these days.”
Stringer shook his head and said, “I learned a little about the mining game covering the Alaska Gold Rush, right after the war with Spain. But you gents have to know more about drilling for oil than I do. I just got here. This is the first oil boom I’ve ever covered.”
Tilghman insisted, “You mean tried to, don’t you? Seems to me someone hired Holt to gun you before you could even have a look around. You could be overly modest. I said I’d read your stuff, and you do have a nose for flimflamming. Just what were you figuring on looking at and writing about here, starting from the top.”
Stringer shrugged and said, “I arrived with an open mind. I just told you it was my first oil boom. Sam Barca told me to look for local color. The rock-oil industry is new to most of our readers as well. We’d heard back in Frisco what you just said about sudden money attracting colorful characters from all over the West, and you know how Wild West features sell.”
Bill Tilghman suppressed a groan and said, “If you write any wild West bullshit about me and mine I’ll sue you. That crazy Ned Buntline published a string of outright lies about me and my boys, and poor old Judge Parker, then he up and died before we could get at him. He even writ that he’d presented me with one of his Buntline Specials, and I never met the son of a bitch.”
Stringer smiled and said, “I’ve heard you don’t like to give interviews, sir. That’s likely why you’re not as famous as say, old Wyatt Earp.”
Bill Tilghman scowled and said, „That piss ant’s as big a liar as Ned Buntline was,” and Chris Madsen chimed in, “We recall him in the Indian Nation as a horse thief. It was his elder brother, Virgil, as rid shotgun for Wells Fargo and got to wear a town deputy badge until they shot him. Old Wyatt was never no more than a tagalong kid brother.”
Stringer sighed and said, “They told me much the same tale in Tombstone, last time I was there. My editor was afraid to publish my account of the O.K. Corral Fight as it really happened. Wyatt’s made a lot of friends in the new moving picture game out on the West Coast and, hell, his version makes for a more exciting two-reeler. I’d sure like to take down your version of the way you, Heck Thomas, and old Bill, here, cleaned the plow of the Doolin-Dalton gang a few years back, Chris.”
Madsen just look disgusted. Tilghman said, “No, you wouldn’t. Them two young whores they had riding with ’em, Cattle Annie and Little Britches, already told enough lies about me and mine. It’s my own fault for taking ’em in alive, soft-hearted as I am. Forget ancient history, MacKail. The question before the house, in the here and now, is who sent Jack Holt after you and what we ought to do about it.”
Stringer shrugged and said, “I don’t see what anyone can do about it unless and until they make their next move. I don’t have even a wild guess as to who might want me dead, or why.”
Bill Tilghm
an nodded and replied, “That’s what I just said. You were lucky as hell at the depot. You owe Blackjack Sinclair your life. If he hadn’t brought in that gusher just before you arrived, you’d have doubtless strode straight for Main Street with your own gun packed away in your gladstone, like you said. Holt must have been waiting for you in the open when you both started to get lubricated from on high. Running through that mist of rock-oil must have made that hired gun so mad he wasn’t able to approach you with a cool head and sneaky smile. So you won that time. The next one they send after you will know you ain’t a gent to be treated so careless, and you won’t know him at all as he comes sidewinding your way. So, if I was you, I’d hop the next train out. As things stand now, your future here in Tulsa figures to be fatal. You’d best stay here with us until the next train pulls in around four in the morning. We can likely put you on board safe and sound, see?”
Stringer shook his head and said, “I don’t run out of town that easy, even when I know who wants me out of town. I’m paid to write about such doings, not run from them. But since you’re so interested in my comfort, could you point me at a decent hotel, assuming I’m not under arrest anymore?”
Bill Tilghman sighed and said, “You sure must get paid a lot more than I do. I’ve backed out of saloons for less reason than this and I’m not ashamed to say so. That’s how I got to be so much older and wiser than you.”
Chris Madsen said, “The Osage Inn down the street is as decent a hotel as you can get to from here without a cavalry troop covering your back. Do you want me to walk him over there, Bill?”
Tilghman nodded and said, “Take a couple of the boys with you and see if you can’t talk some sense into him along the way.”
Madsen nodded and took a ten-gauge shotgun from the gun rack near the door as Tilghman told Stringer, “We’ll be proud to hang anyone who backshoots you, provided we catch him. But we have better things to do than ride herd on a wayward youth who just won’t pay attention to his elders. Once you kiss old Chris goodnight, you’ll be on your own, you poor stubborn sap.”