Stuart Brannon's Final Shot

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by Stephen Bly




  A Stuart Brannon Novel

  STUART BRANNON’S FINAL SHOT

  By Stephen Bly

  With Janet Chester Bly, Russell Bly, Michael Bly, and Aaron Bly

  In Memoriam

  STEPHEN BLY

  August 17, 1944 – June 9, 2011

  The Stuart Brannon Novels

  Read the complete series by Stephen Bly:

  Hard Winter at Broken Arrow Crossing

  False Claims at the Little Stephen Mine

  Last Hanging at Paradise Meadow

  Final Justice at Adobe Wells

  Standoff at Sunrise Creek

  Son of an Arizona Legend

  The Stuart Brannon Novels are available in

  trade-paper editions and

  all popular eBook formats

  Dedication

  To the doctors and many

  other staff members of

  St. Joseph’s Hospital and

  St. Joseph’s Cancer Center,

  Lewiston, Idaho,

  who ministered mercy,

  aid, and comfort

  for our father, grandfather,

  brother, and husband

  in his last days.

  Prologue

  Early Monday morning, June 5, 1905, near Seaside, Oregon

  At twilight, twelve-year-old Hack Howard lined his cot with a couple lumpy pillows and covered them with the thin blanket that was his orphan farm issue. He picked up his worn leather shoes with only one gap in the right sole so he could slink quietly through the room.

  None of the dozen of his male roommates stirred or stopped snoring.

  He slid the door open, then closed it to a slit as his face warmed, his breath quickened. Miss Penelope Tagg left her station, slipped down the hallway in her sleek nightgown and pink, silky boudoir cap over long strands of brunette locks for her early morning coffee break. Hack sidled past the opening with his lanky frame, then stole to the front door. He unlocked it with the key he’d made out of a spoon in the blacksmith’s shop.

  “Hack, you’re slow in some ways. Some call you a simpleton,” Mr. Smythe, the orphan farm director had told him on several occasions, “but you’re not dumb.”

  He slinked down the steps, threw off the branches from a bicycle he had hidden in the woods, then rode hard and fast to the dock at the beach. Like he’d done many times before.

  He borrowed one of the smaller orphan farm canoes to row out to Hack’s Hideaway, his own secret cove on the huge Tillamook Head cape that jutted out to sea, to check on the wildlife and rule over his domain. He had discovered an accessible route to this place during an orphan farm field trip—a secluded, small cove with a very narrow, winding entrance, and a canoe length’s ride from the dock.

  But this time when he untied the canoe, he heard his name called: “Hack?”

  He whirled around.

  “It’s me, Bueno. Please, let me go too. I won’t tell, honest I won’t.”

  Hack considered his options and figured he had no choice. Either he took the younger boy with him or risked detection by the orphan farm director. That would mean no more trips to his special place.

  So the two boys canoed west to the rock and forest cliff outcropping that Hack loved to explore. He noticed that Bueno rowed as heavy and even as he did. Maybe stronger. The younger boy, though shorter, had a stockier build, bigger, tighter muscles on his arms. They made fast time. He hid his canoe in a tiny cove and tied his shirt to a tree to rustle in the wind and lead him back to the right cove. Like he always did.

  They had been at Hack’s Hideaway for more than an hour, to listen to owls hoot, watch curious flocks of crows caw and circle them, see hawks and gulls soar, collect fuzzy orange and black caterpillars and long, slimy slugs. They chased various creatures that scurried over fallen tree limbs through ferns. Several small thrushes, bright-eyed birds in the upper reaches of the tallest spruce, sang their hearts out in a swelling melody.

  Hack even showed Bueno his private fort, a hole down an incline in a circle of tree branches, with pine bedding and room to play or munch snacks. They rough-and-tumbled for a while.

  Then they heard a motor’s roar.

  They climbed out to scan the sea and spied a boat headed to a much larger cove around the bend. They skimmed on hands and knees up to a higher overlook, behind a trio of stubby spruces.

  The boat landed on the far side, on a wider stretch of beach. Three men got out. The hands of one of them were fastened behind him, some cloth tied over his mouth. The other two men shouted at each other and hurled a few punches, then one of them began to climb up the incline in their direction.

  “Run,” Hack said, as intense as he could in a whisper.

  They scurried down to the canoe and rowed away as fast as they could, leaving the shirt to swing in the breeze, clinging to the needles. They looked back once when they thought they heard a rumbling sound like thunder. Or was that a gunshot? They couldn’t see the men and only hoped the men could not spot them to chase them with the motorboat.

  The return to the dock seemed longer. Their arms ached with the strain of the racing speed. The waves skipped higher and the horizon lightened enough to reveal them in full view for miles around. They stooped low as they rowed. At long last, they bumped up against the dock. Bueno jumped out and pulled the rope tight to tie on the railing. The canoe bobbed and the rope slipped out of his hands.

  Hack kept throwing it back to Bueno. After a half dozen attempts, Bueno got the canoe moored. Then they heard the motor of a boat and detected a gray blob of movement behind them. Hack stood like a statue in the canoe. He couldn’t move.

  “Jump,” yelled Bueno. “Quick.”

  After a couple deep gulps of air, Hack took a flying leap towards the dock. But he crashed against it and splashed into the water that pulled him a few yards towards the sea. He screamed in panic. His arms and legs flailed.

  “I can’t swim,” he hollered.

  While Bueno scooted closer to the dock’s edge, the motorboat pulled up to the end. A single male got out. Bueno couldn’t tell if it was one of the men from the big bay or not, but he was desperate.

  “Please,” Bueno called out. “Can you help my friend?”

  “What are you doing here?” The man’s brown woven hat was pulled down over his ears. His brown gloved hands clenched into balls. His dark eyes pierced into Bueno’s.

  While Hack floundered in the water, Bueno made another plea.

  “Please, sir, help my friend.”

  “What have you boys been up to?” the man demanded. “Are you from the orphan farm?”

  Desperate to save Hack, Bueno blurted out his first thought. He had never told a fib and he didn’t know how.

  “We rowed out to Hack’s Hideaway and just came back. We meant no harm.”

  “Hideaway? Do you mean Tillamook Head?” The man shook Bueno until he got too rattled to think. “Where did you go? What did you see?”

  “We saw three men and they seemed mean, so we came back.”

  Now Bueno couldn’t bear it anymore. He tore away from the man and jumped into the salty water as his friend sunk under again. He swam out and pulled Hack up by the chin to keep him afloat for several minutes, then tugged him back to shore.

  When he got there, the man he had talked to was gone, but both Miss Penelope Tagg and Miss Henrietta Ober, aides from the orphan farm, had arrived. Each held a switch. They scolded the boys as they revived Hack.

  Later, Hack told Mr. Smythe, the director, they had been crab-trapping on behalf of the orphanage and he had slipped on the deck and fallen into the w
ater.

  “And you caught no crabs?”

  “No, sir.”

  “I’m not surprised. The river’s the best place for that. And Bueno saved you from drowning?”

  “Yes, he did. I cannot tell a lie.”

  “You owe him a debt of gratitude and so do we.”

  For a long time Hack never tried to visit his hideaway again.

  One

  Sunday afternoon, June 11, 1905, south of Portland

  “I thought you was dead.” The words rumbled out of some deep, dark pit of tales told at late night campfires and smoky saloons. Thick drops of dirty sweat careened down the bearded man’s face. A ripped-in-shreds shirtsleeve exposed a long, jagged old scar on his left arm. Bloodshot brown eyes glared into the future as if forecasting bad news. Very bad news.

  “A common mistake.”

  A faded, red bandana brushed the man’s bulging neck. His bronzed face held to the tight expression of a man looking for an advantage. “No foolin’. Argentiferous Jones said he shot you dead over a poker hand in Bisbee. I believe you was packin’ three queens.”

  “He was wrong.” Every eye in the dining car watched the trigger of Stuart Brannon’s drawn Colt .44 revolver, ready to witness a sudden blast.

  “I can see that now and would like to be given a chance to atone for my erroneous assumption.”

  “I’m sure you would. You stopped this train on a tall trestle in the middle of a river, cold-cocked the conductor, stole the possessions of all the passengers and whatever else of cargo you found on board, and in the mix scared the women, children, and most of the men near to death. Out West a man can hang for such offenses.”

  He tried to straighten his bowlegs, puffed out his huge chest. His good eye glared at Brannon like the headlight of a locomotive. “What do you get out of this? Surely you don’t expect to shoot me in front of these delicate ladies. What if I just put down my pistol and…”

  Brannon glared right back. “And what do all of us get out of that?”

  The man croaked out the words. “A clear conscience?”

  “Already got one.” Brannon shoved the muzzle closer to the man’s ripped ten-gallon-hat with the creased crown and molded brim.

  “What if I return the money and goods to all these fine folks on the train?”

  “That’s a start.”

  He dropped a leather sack to the carpeted floor, stepped back, and raised his hands. “What else can I do?”

  “Hike down the track to the next town and turn yourself in to the sheriff for robbing this train.”

  “You mean, turn myself in on my own accord?”

  “Yep. You can do it. We’ll just ride on up ahead and let them know you’re on your way.”

  “No one does that, especially Slash Barranca.” He studied Brannon to watch for the reaction.

  Brannon didn’t blink. “Well, Slash, here’s your chance to stand out from a crowd of no-goods.”

  “So, you know who I am?”

  “Nope. Never heard of you.”

  “Are you sure you’re the original Stuart Brannon?”

  “The real question is, do you trust that I’m Stuart Brannon? If you aren’t certain, then make your move and see what happens. And if you still wonder, then say goodbye to these nice folks. I’m pullin’ this trigger right now. So, what’s your choice?”

  The man looked over the crowd. His gaze stopped at two men in their fifties in brown suits. One of them glared a kind of warning. The other looked down. Brannon wondered if Barranca was going to make an appeal to them. But his chin drooped to his chest and his words blurted out with such force, the windows almost rattled. “Yeah, you’re Brannon, all right.”

  “Good. Leave the stash, your gun and your boots in the car. Then, start walkin’.”

  “Now, how do you expect me to make it to town without boots?”

  “Very slow. By the time you get to the other side of the bridge, there should be a nice little posse gathered. And don’t think about diving over the edge. You’ve got one foot of water and a fifty foot drop.”

  Slash Barranca pulled up his pants’ legs as he climbed out of the train and stepped onto the rough track surface. Applause and “hurrahs” rocked the car as the train rolled away without the bootless outlaw. The staff seemed eager to return order and routine for the passengers as quick as possible.

  Announcements of supper followed with beefsteak, fried eggs and fried potatoes wheeled out to the dining car. A little overdone, but no one complained.

  A huge sign made of logs greeted them at the next stop when they transported the injured conductor off the train.

  100 Miles to Portland, Oregon

  Home of the world’s famous

  Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition

  Brannon stretched his arms and legs and tried to remove the dust from his travel suit. No amount of brushing or shaking made a dent. He pulled out a copy of Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson that his daughter-in-law, Jannette, had given him before he left Arizona, but his mind wandered. He ran through the recent events once more.

  It started at the Prescott Post Office with one of those rosy-scented letters from Lady Harriet Reed-Fletcher.

  When Lady Fletcher sends you a scented letter, it’s a dangerous omen.

  The answer he gave her was “no.”

  At fifty-eight years old, Stuart Brannon had no intention of leaving his beloved ranch or Arizona Territory, not even for a long-time, good friend like Harriet. No matter how many times she offered her appeal—“I need one more celebrity… It’s for the Willamette Orphan Farm… It won’t cost you anything.” But she could not convince him to go to Oregon, especially to participate in a golf tournament charity event in conjunction with the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition.

  What was she thinking?

  Yes, Captains Lewis and Clark were his heroes.

  Yes, they deserved a gala celebration.

  And yes, from what he heard, the Oregon coast promised a refreshing change from the desert landscape.

  But he had never once picked up a golf club. An old rancher and retired lawman playing on a golf course? What a ridiculous idea.

  And the Triple B ranch needed him.

  Or he needed the ranch, since his adopted son, Littlefoot Brannon, could oversee and do most of the work.

  Life had become a peaceful routine. L.F. and his wife, Jannette, provided him with four over-active grandchildren, who played tag, leapfrog, hopscotch and occasional simple card games, but more important, listened to his stories.

  No more evil men to track down. No one trying to shoot him in the back. No lawless gangs preying on the innocent… not near his ranch anyway.

  Then the telegram came from another friend, Theodore Roosevelt.

  Stuart, I need you in Portland. Tom Wiseman is missing. I think there’s a cover-up going on. Say you’re going to the Exposition. Find out how a U.S. Marshal can disappear and no one knows why. T.R.

  If Tom Wiseman had vanished, Brannon suspected the marshal initiated the event. But why? And where?

  But he was too close a friend to ignore this plea. As a government worker, as well as an Arizona rancher, Tom Wiseman had aided him with personal and legal problems. And many times Tom Wiseman had stood with Brannon against lawbreakers, when no one else could or would.

  And how could he refuse a request from the President of the United States?

  Still, Brannon wondered how much help he could contribute. He could track Wiseman through the hills of Colorado or the deserts of Arizona. But searching the coastal environs of Oregon? A local might do better.

  The boy who tugged on his pant leg looked a bit older than his grandson, Everett, but he had similar big, brown eyes that looked at the world like a ball of mystery that had to be pounced on, juggled and unraveled anew each day. “Mr. Brannon, you’re famous like them two explorers, Lewis and Clark, aren’t ya?”

  Brannon tussled the boy’s copper-colored hair. “Son, some Arizona outlaws know my na
me, but few others.”

  “My daddy says… he’s the man sitting way over there by that window holding his hat between his knees. The pretty lady next to him with the red hair and reading a book is my mama.” The boy swallowed and wiped his nose with his sleeve.

  Brannon guessed the man to be in his thirties, dark-haired, but already starting to bald. Next to the woman was a young girl with auburn hair, fresh into puberty, holding a squalling baby. “What does your daddy say?”

  “He told me you done cattle drives all over South America and brought more than a thousand Mexican beef into Arizona Territory, all by your lonesome, and kilt off a hundred horses in the bargain, run ’em right into the ground.”

  “Now, son, that’s what mountain man Jim Bridger called stretchers. I want you to get it right, tell it straight. I did have the privilege of helping out with several of the great cattle drives, but that was to Kansas. And I entered Arizona Territory with two hundred head.”

  “You oughta know and you can call me Drift. That’s the name I picked for when I’m all growed up and carryin’ a Colt revolver, just like yours. Then I’ll be a brave captain in the U.S. Army and kill over a thousand…”

  “Well, Drift, I scouted for them. That’s all.”

  “And you built your ranch out of all the gold you prospected at the Little Stephen Mine. At sunrise it shines like heaven’s streets.”

  “I’m afraid I didn’t wind up with more than a small poke from that mine and my Triple B house is made of wood and very rustic. In fact, it’s gotten a tad rundown over the years. Your daddy’s tellin’ you some mighty huge windies.” He winked at the boy.

  “But how about that time you was a U.S. Marshal with Wyatt Earp and Buffalo Bill Cody as your deputies and you three saved all those drowning women from a terrible flood in that huge canyon?”

  “Why, I do believe I’ve never heard that one before and don’t even know an event close to make it an exaggeration. That one’s an outright lie.”

  “Mama says honest men always become famous. But Daddy says most that try to be brave end up dead. And here you lived through that shootout with the train robber, so you must be one of the honest ones. I do know you’re famous. My whole family knows you, even the ones back home in Dinuba. That’s in Calyfornia.” He hitched in a deep breath after his bigger-than-boy-sized soliloquy.

 

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