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Gunman and the Angel

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by George Snyder




  The Gunman and the Angel

  Beautiful Mandy Lee enjoys an elegant and genteel life in North Carolina, but hides an unconventional past. Raised by gunfighter Dan Quint, Mandy is quick on the draw and harbors a burning need for revenge against Monte Steep, the man who murdered her family. And when she learns that Dan, who has his own reasons for hunting Steep, has finally tracked him down, she has to decide whether to forgo her life of luxury and her rich fiancé to rejoin Dan on his quest for vengeance.

  The Gunman and the Angel

  George Snyder

  ROBERT HALE

  © George Snyder 2018

  First published in Great Britain 2018

  ISBN 978-0-7198-2588-0

  The Crowood Press

  The Stable Block

  Crowood Lane

  Ramsbury

  Marlborough

  Wiltshire SN8 2HR

  www.bhwesterns.com

  Robert Hale is an imprint of The Crowood Press

  The right of George Snyder to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him

  in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

  All rights reserved. This e-book is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

  For my Granddaughter Jessica, the inspiration for Mandy Lee

  PART ONE

  MANDY LEE

  Chapter One

  Dan Quint rode through New Mexico Territory but was still miles out of Santa Fe. He’d been camping in the open plain and now rode west along the banks of the Pecos River, about halfway between Santa Fe and the Texas border. He remembered pushing longhorns across the Pecos with Shorty Kendrick and Isom Dura throughout that first trail drive in ’65 – about six years before, when he was just a pup, barely over twenty.

  Willows, pines, and cottonwoods surrounded him. The air was damp, but there’d been no rain all day. With the sun down to dusk, he had shot a big rabbit with the Henry – near blew the head off – so he had something to eat after dark when he got settled. He found a five-foot high overhanging rock covering fifteen feet in case rain came down, with plenty of grass along the bank. He didn’t worry about Rowdy leaving him or somebody trying to steal the buckskin. The horse would make so much noise, Dan could gun the thief down before he got five steps. He set up camp with the saddle and his bedroll. He fed Rowdy a couple handfuls of oats and let him graze the grass and drink river water while the fire at the edge of the overhang cooked the skinned and dressed rabbit. Above the crackling of the fire, he heard the river, something never possible before with the bawling of Texas longhorns.

  ‘Hello, the camp.’ A man’s voice came from the trees.

  Dan felt a stitch of surprise. He stood with the Colt in his hand, then knelt and backed under the overhanging rock. ‘Say yourself and move in the firelight with empty hands.’

  ‘Clyde McCabe, Deputy Marshal.’ The man stepped out of the trees with palms out. ‘Mean no harm to a lone rider.’

  Firelight flickered on his stubbled face that looked hacked from granite, his Montana Peak Stetson tattered and torn at the corners. He wore a Colt cross-draw stuck at his belly in a cartridge belt. His face and body shifted, willow lean and easy moving – about thirty. The badge shone.

  ‘Step in,’ Dan said, holstering the Colt. ‘I’m Dan Quint.’

  ‘I’ll move on if you say. No wish to bother.’

  Dan said, ‘Bring in your horse. I got a good-size rabbit roasting, warm beans, and hot coffee. Enough for two if we ain’t hoggish. I can use the company – been riding lonesome since Abilene.’

  After McCabe’s saddle and bedroll were spread on the other side of the campfire from Dan’s, the two men set to on rabbit and beans washed down with hot, strong coffee. They saved conversation for after the meal. While Dan cleaned up, Clyde produced a pint bottle of whiskey.

  ‘Got something to lace the coffee and take the chill off.’

  Dan nodded, and as host, figured he’d be first to get information.

  Clyde said, ‘Deputy Marshal of Rio Gila City. We had a posse took off after some bank-robber killers a month ago. Volunteers had to leave the posse; get back to farm, business, women, whores, wife and family – things men can’t stay away from more’n a month. Town marshal went back with them, said he’d recruit more to join us. Me and a couple boys stayed out, tracked the killers to North Bend then up along the Santa Fe. A week ago, we run onto them, and my two fellow deputies got gunned down in an exchange, three miles off the trail. It headed back south toward Texas and the Mexican border. Now it appears to head west.’

  Dan listened with interest. ‘Five men?’

  ‘Four now. I caught one through the neck.’

  ‘Know who it was you hit?’

  Clyde shook his head. ‘He carried two Colts and a backup Derringer in his vest, fancy dresser, bowler hat.’

  ‘Shaved head?’

  ‘That’s him.’

  ‘I heard he’s called Three Gun Baldy.’

  ‘In Rio Gila City, they killed a teller and another deputy, Dode Chittim. They pinned me down and got away, but I managed to wound another jasper. In Santa Fe, I wired the marshal back in Rio Gila City, wrote him about what happened to the other two deputies, and the bandit I shot. I meet him and seven new men in Sierra Vista.’

  ‘Anybody get a good look at them?’

  ‘They wore bandannas. Just the eyes, the leader’s eyes.’

  ‘One brown, one gray.’

  ‘That’s them.’

  ‘Monte Steep,’ Dan said.

  ‘The outlaw bandit? We kinda figured that.’

  ‘I’m after him myself.’ Dan slugged down a swallow of coffee. ‘He rustled some cattle he shouldn’t have.’

  ‘We don’t know who it was I wounded at the bank.’

  ‘I hear tell it was Tom Baily.’

  Clyde stared across the campfire. ‘That one I never heard of or seen before.’

  ‘I just know of the four.’

  Clyde raised his knees and rested his forearms on them. ‘You come originally from Abilene?’

  ‘Across the plains.’

  A period of silence followed.

  The deputy looked hard at Dan. ‘You got some Injun?’

  Dan nodded. ‘Quarter Cherokee, on my ma’s side.’

  Clyde squinted, his face a mass of tiny wrinkles in a granite slab. ‘You’re Deadly Dan Quint. I heard of you from down San Antonio way.’

  ‘A lot of wild stories going around.’

  ‘You put the word out you looking for Monte Steep a long time now.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Got to be for more than cattle rustling.’

  ‘It is. He dry-gulched my brother seven years ago. Been on his trail ever since. Sometimes, I lose the trail but so far I managed to pick it up again.’

  Clyde finished his coffee. ‘You’re dead set after Monte Steep?’

  ‘I am.’

  ‘The Federal Poster is up to a thousand dollars now.’

  ‘You don’t say?’

  ‘Good incentive. A man can buy a house with a little piece of property for that. Maybe attract a wife.’

  ‘I don’t need no more incentive.’

  Clyde moved to his saddle to stretch out. ‘You’re welcome to ride along, Deadly Dan Quint.’

  ‘I might for a bit.’

&
nbsp; ‘Me and the marshal back in Rio Gila City figure on a split for that poster reward.’

  ‘I got no interest in poster money. For me, this ain’t about money.’

  ‘It’s always about money, Dan,’ Clyde said.

  ‘You’d brace the marshal for it all?’

  ‘Or him, me. I should have been marshal, and he knows it. He may not show with any men.’

  ‘You mean nobody could be coming?’

  ‘Could be just you and me in a showdown with them four. The marshal already has what he wants in town. I had a woman, adorable little thing from back east, was going to be my wife. When I became marshal. we was to be married. Gene Mount come along with the happy smile, glad handing, buying fellas drinks, sweet-talking Josephine. He had personality.’

  Dan said, ‘He got the job and the woman.’

  ‘I think Josephine would have been impressed with me if I was marshal. She went with the badge. I ain’t a big talker, not much personality.’ Clyde sighed deeply with a catch in his throat. ‘And he might figure a way to cheat me out of the poster reward, in case we get that Monte Steep desperado.’

  ‘Steep is slippery,’ Dan said.

  Clyde shifted position. ‘You got somebody waiting for you in Abilene?’

  ‘A saloon owner.’

  ‘She a good woman?’

  ‘She’s sure good to me. Spoils me better than a cowhand deserves.’

  Clyde squinted, his granite features sharp in the firelight. ‘Do you trust her? I mean, you trust her around other men?’

  ‘She knows about men. But, if she chooses some other fella, I got no say.’

  ‘A slick-talker might put a hand on her back and sweep her right off her feet.’

  Dan smiled. ‘Could happen, I reckon.’

  Clyde watched the fire. He scratched under his arm and shook his head. ‘Ah, I’ll never find another sweet Josephine.’

  Dan pulled the makings for a smoke. ‘Life is full of surprises.’ He tossed the pouch to Clyde. They stretched back on saddles. Under the protection of the overhang, they smoked and watched as gathering clouds beyond the rocks blotted any stars.

  Clyde said, ‘Surprises? Where you figure the trail is leading?’

  ‘They’ll stay away from towns.’ Dan drew on his smoke. ‘They still got bank money on them. They might head back across the Rio Grande.’

  ‘You followed ’em to Mexico before?’

  ‘I have.’

  ‘Don’t know if my fellow deputies will cross the border.’

  ‘Won’t matter,’ Dan said.

  Clyde inhaled and eased the smoke out. ‘Might be just you and me.’

  ‘I always figured to pull down on them alone.’

  ‘No telling what might happen when we catch them varmints,’ Clyde said.

  ‘No telling.’

  ‘As you say, Dan, life is full of surprises.’

  Chapter Two

  Wearing slickers, Dan Quint and Clyde McCabe rode through heavy mist into Arizona Territory. The outlaws ahead of them apparently weren’t concerned about pursuit any more. Puddles formed in desert hoof prints made the trail easy to follow. Four horses moving toward Tucson. Mist thickened to hard rain. They didn’t talk, but rode walking horses beside each other, their heads bent, the rain washing off their Stetsons and slickers. Looking up now and then, they were ever mindful of ambush.

  The trail curved southwest, away from Tucson. Monte Steep and his gang were sure enough headed for the Colorado, then maybe south. Dan didn’t want to cross back into Mexico – the last showdown had left him shot to pieces. Tom Baily, wounded, likely slowed them down. Dan figured to pick up the pace, maybe catch them before they reached the river and got into Mexico. As rain eased, he saw something different in the sand.

  Hoof print puddles of only three horses, sand prints sprayed forward, horses spurred to a run.

  Dan said, ‘They know we’re back here, Clyde.’

  ‘We ought to split?’

  ‘Foothills ahead – good place to ambush. One of them might have circled back. You cut right here. I’ll ride ahead and come in from the front. That work for you?’

  Without hesitation, Clyde heeled his mount and turned to the right. He galloped fast, his body in rhythm in the saddle, past prickly pear cactus, saguaro, mesquite, sagebrush and tan wet prairie grass. Ahead of him a mesa rose then flattened to ragged rocks, blending up to hills. Clouds broke into bright sun against desert blue sky. Rowdy ran past and ahead of the mesa, then turned for a break in the cliffs leading to rocky hills.

  Dan heard a rifle shot.

  Clyde never made it to the cliffs. His horse somersaulted and bounced against low surface rocks, its head twisted at an odd angle. Clyde vaulted twice and rolled once. He lay still.

  By then, Dan had passed the mesa. He ran Rowdy between rocks of the foothills. He pulled the buckskin up and swung out of the saddle taking the Henry with him. Over the top of the rocks, Dan saw Clyde push to his feet, then pull a rifle from the saddle scabbard, but it came out in two pieces, busted by a boulder.

  Clyde got the Colt in his hand, looking at his still horse. Another rifle shot rang out from the hills. Clyde flew around to his right and grabbed his shoulder. He dove behind his fallen horse. A rider on horseback came out of the foothills, running his mount, standing in the stirrups, rifle to his shoulder. In sunshine, waist-length hair flowed behind him like a flag from under a bowler hat. His body was thick.

  The only gang member Dan could figure was Louisiana Tex. Dumb move to ride out of protection but maybe Tex figured Clyde was about done and rode out to finish him off. Or maybe he just wasn’t very bright.

  Clyde fired his .44 but didn’t have the range yet for accuracy. Tex kept coming, ready to fire.

  Dan braced himself against chest-high rocks, aimed the Henry carefully and squeezed off a shot. The stock bucked against his shoulder. The echo blast ricocheted across the desert, immediately followed by another shot. Tex rolled back out of the saddle over the rump of his horse. Clyde jerked from his feet and fell back, his tattered Stetson flying from his head. Tex had fired an instant after Dan.

  Dan scrambled down rocks and jumped into Rowdy’s saddle. He ran the buckskin out of the hills beside the mesa and at full gallop toward Clyde. The Henry was back in its scabbard. Tex had gotten to his knees, both hands over his bleeding chest. His horse had run out of sight. Dan came clear of the rocks and turned to ride straight for him.

  Clyde began to move. He rolled to his side and reached out for his .44.

  Dan unhooked the thong and pulled his Colt. He squinted with gritted teeth, not knowing if he would make it. He was within fifty yards, riding up on Louisiana Tex.

  With his rifle out of reach, Tex slid one bloody hand from his chest to pull a revolver. He aimed at Clyde; fired, missed, fell forward to his elbows. He aimed again, fired, missed.

  By then, Dan was close to forty yards. He fired and hit Tex in the right leg. Tex rolled to his back then continued to his stomach.

  From his side, Clyde fired his .44, but the blood from his head wound was blinding his vision. The slug hit Tex in the shoulder.

  Tex fired at Dan, and missed. He turned his revolver and fired again, hitting Clyde through the nose.

  Dan fired, the slug tearing through Tex’s temple. His head jerked as he rolled to his back.

  Clyde’s head dropped, frozen in death.

  Dan eased Rowdy to a trot and turned toward Clyde. Sudden silence washed across the desert. Clyde’s horse lay still with a broken neck. Off the buckskin, Dan bent to Clyde. There was no face, no life, only blood oozing from wounds. Dan walked over to Louisiana Tex. He saw a hand move, reaching for the Navy Colt .36. Eyes blinked, the forehead frowned. The air cracked with a gunshot as Dan shot the man through the heart.

  He’d be left for the buzzards.

  Dan needed most of the next morning to pick up the trail again. He had buried Clyde McCabe in a rock grave close to the foothills. There had been nothing in the pockets of Lo
uisiana Tex as to Christian-name or next of kin. Dan slipped the Navy Colt and Clyde’s pistol into his saddle bags. He tied Tex’s rifle along Rowdy’s left stirrup. All Clyde had was the picture of a beautiful woman with curly, dark hair to her shoulders and the name, Josephine on the back. Another man’s wife, married to the marshal of Rio Gila City, Gene Mount – Clyde’s rival for many things. Dan pondered if Josephine would care that Clyde was dead.

  The trail headed toward the Mescal Mountains and the Rio Gila River west of Tucson. Hard to tell where they were headed now – maybe not Mexico, maybe to Yuma City and across the Colorado out California way – new territory for bank robbery and killing. They had slowed the pace again. With the gunshots, they might figure everybody ended up dead. Nothing to worry about. Louisiana Tex had seen Dan with the deputy but wouldn’t have had time to tell Steep the cowhand was back on the trail. To Steep, the shooting meant Tex was probably wounded or dead after dry-gulching the deputy. The rest of the marshal’s posse was back in Gila City. Louisiana Tex would either catch up or end his life in the desert.

  There were three now; Monte Steep, Big Nose Rox Levant, and the wounded Tom Baily. Tom’s wounds couldn’t be too bad. The trio was moving along well. Dan had no personal grouch with Tom Baily. The man hadn’t affected him personally. The other two were going to die because they had to. Tom might have to because of association.

  Dan followed the westward trail all day and into the night. He rested Rowdy for short periods, ate jerky, sipped water from his canteen. There were plenty of rabbits, but he didn’t want the noise of a shot. Let them think everybody was dead. Desert remained desert with misty mirage hills on the horizon, but mostly he passed tablelands of the flat mesa with cliff sides.

  The outlaws stuck to the course of the Rio Gila River. They bypassed Yuma City and kept southwest toward where the Rio Gila flowed into the Colorado River. Dan had heard of a ferry across the Colorado from Yuma City to California. Maybe they might wait for a heavy rain – double back to cross at night. Dress heavy.

 

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