LONGARM AND THE BRAZOS DEVIL
By Tabor Evans
Jove Books New York Copyright (C) 1996 by Jove Publications, Inc. All rights reserved.
This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by mimeograph or any other means, without permission. For information address: The Berkley Publishing Group, 200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.
ISBN: 0-515-11828-1
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A Jove Book / published by arrangement with the author
Printing history Jove edition / March 1996
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
DON’T MISS THESE ALL-ACTION WESTERN SERIES FROM THE BERKLEY PUBLISHING GROUP
THE GUNSMITH by J. R. Roberts Clint Adams was a legend among lawmen, outlaws, and ladies. They called him … the Gunsmith.
LONGARM by Tabor Evans The popular long-running series about U.S. Deputy Marshal Long—his life, his loves, his fight for justice.
SLOCUM by Jake Logan Today’s longest-running action Western. John Slocum rides a deadly trail of hot blood and cold steel.
McMASTERS by Lee Morgan The blazing new series from the creators of Longarm. When McMasters shoots, he shoots to kill. To his enemies, he is the most dangerous man they have ever known.
Chapter 1
Clods of dirt hitting him in the back of the head woke Longarm up. He tasted dirt in his mouth too, and it took an effort on his part not to gag and spit it out. He didn’t want Lloyd and Rainey to know he was conscious again, not until he was sure what was going on, anyway. Longarm already had a pretty good idea.
He figured he was lying facedown in the grave the two polecats had made him dig, and that dirt pattering down around him meant they were filling up the hole.
They were burying him alive.
Longarm repressed a shudder at the thought. His theory was confirmed a moment later when a harsh but familiar voice said from somewhere above him, “Hell, Mitch, I thought sure he’d wake up by now. How hard did you hit him with that shovel anyway?”
“Not hard enough to kill him,” Mitch Rainey replied. Another shovelful of dirt thudded down on Longarm’s back this time.
“It’d be a lot more fun if he knew we were puttin’ him in the ground like this. Reckon if he wakes up in time he’ll start screamin’ and beggin’ for his life?”
“I doubt it, Jimmy. He said his name was Long, so I figure he’s the one they call Longarm. He’s got quite a rep.”
Longarm heard a spitting sound. Jimmy Lloyd said, “Shoot, he didn’t look so high-an’-mighty to me, not the way we got the drop on him and made the poor bastard dig his own grave ‘fore you clouted him.”
More dirt hit Longarm in the back of the head.
“We were lucky,” Mitch said. “If he hadn’t been so sick, we wouldn’t have been able to sneak up on him like that.”
That was damn sure true, Longarm thought bitterly. If he hadn’t eaten that bad beef last night over at Pickettville, none of this would have happened. If he hadn’t been on his hands and knees puking his guts out, a couple of two-bit owlhoots like Rainey and Lloyd would never have gotten within a hundred yards of him without him being aware of it. Longarm didn’t know what tasted worse in his mouth: Texas dirt, leftover vomit—or failure.
But he wasn’t dead yet, he reminded himself … just half-buried.
The dirt was piling up around his head and shoulders and torso, filling the narrow gaps between his body and the sides of the rough grave. Longarm lifted his head a fraction of an inch, not enough to be noticed by the two killers standing above him. That allowed him to breathe a little easier, although the air was still dense with the smell of damp earth. He had fallen with his right arm underneath him when Rainey belted him from behind with a shovel, which was as close to a lucky break as he was likely to get. He could move his hand a little without Rainey and Lloyd seeing what he was doing.
Trouble was, that hand and arm were more than half numb from the weight of his body lying on them. He couldn’t be certain his muscles were going to do what he wanted when he called on them for action. He flexed his fingers against his belly, trying to work some feeling back into them.
He had heard the two outlaws coming earlier, but not in time to do much more than straighten up from his undignified position. Lloyd had rammed the muzzle of a Winchester into his back and Rainey had grabbed his arm, then reached over and plucked Longarm’s .44 from its cross-draw rig. Hauled unceremoniously to his feet, Longarm had had no choice but to go along with the two outlaws for the moment, in hopes of finding an opportunity to turn the tables on them.
The opportunity hadn’t come. Rainey and Lloyd might not be any great shakes as outlaws, but they were careful. They had both stood well back and covered him with their rifles while they forced him to dig a hole with one of their shovels. They had laughed and hooted at him while they discussed what they were going to do to the no-good law-dog they had captured. Longarm had seethed, but that had been all he could do. Then, while Lloyd kept jabbering, Rainey had come up behind Longarm with the extra shovel and whacked him a good one on the back of the head. He was lucky the blow hadn’t caved in his skull, Longarm knew. But as Rainey had just admitted, he hadn’t intended to kill the deputy United States marshal. He and his companion wanted Longarm alive so that they could savor his death.
They had made a mistake, though. They had gotten his handgun, but they didn’t know about the little two-shot derringer attached to his watch chain and hidden inside his vest. The derringer around which Longarm’s fingers had just closed.
Cautiously, he worked the weapon free from the pocket of his vest and tightened his grip on it. Pins and needles shot up and down his arm, but at least he could feel something again in that extremity. He would have a chance—maybe not a fair shake, but at least a chance—and that was all he had ever asked for in life since he had left West-by-God Virginia all those years ago.
“Don’t cover up his head all the way,” Lloyd said with a cackle of laughter. “I still want him to wake up. Put some dirt on his feet instead.”
No point in postponing things any longer, Longarm decided. He was as ready as he was going to be. He flipped over as fast as he could in the narrow grave and said, “I’m alive, Jimmy.” His fist came up out of the loose dirt with the derringer clutched in it. He hoped like blazes that all the grit hadn’t fouled the firing mechanism.
The scene above him was imprinted on his brain in an instant. Jimmy Lloyd stood to his left, holding the Winchester loosely as he gaped down open-mouthed at Longarm. Mitch Rainey was to the right, the shovel he had been using to throw dirt on Longarm still gripped in both of his hands. The derringer gave a spiteful little crack as it sent a bullet through the open mouth of Lloyd. The outlaw was thrown backward as the slug bored up through his brain and burst out the back of his skull.
“Shit!” Mitch Rainey yelled as he flung the shovel aside wildly and grabbed for the pistol holstered on his hip. However, Longarm had tracked the derringer to the right by the time Rainey’s fingers slapped the butt of his Colt. The little weapon spat its second lead pellet.
Longarm was aiming at Rainey’s balls. That seemed to be a good target from his angle, and the shot would have sure as hell put the outlaw on the ground if it had gone home. Instead, though, Rainey’s contortions as he struggled to draw his gun turned his body just enough so that Longarm’s bullet merely clipped him on the outside of the right hip. Rainey staggered back, yelling in pain.
Bending himself almost double with the effort, Longarm jackknifed up out of the grave. It was only about four feet deep because Rainey and Lloyd had gotten tired of standing there and watching Longarm dig. The lawman put his hands on the ground and pushed himself up, vaulting into the air as he emerged from the hole. He came out to the left, toward the spot where Lloyd had disappeared. The dead man was sprawled on the ground next to the grave, the fallen Winchester beside him.
Longarm dropped the empty derringer, flung out an arm, and grabbed the rifle’s breech as he lowered his shoulder and rolled over the corpse. Rainey’s gun blasted, but the bullet thudded into Lloyd, who was long past being hurt by it. Longarm tumbled completely over and came up with his right hand through the lever of the Winchester. His finger found the rifle’s trigger as he brought the barrel in line with Rainey on the other side of the long, narrow hole in the ground.
There had been no way for Longarm to know if the Winchester was ready to fire, but luck was with him again. The rifle bucked in his hands as it blasted. Rainey was scuttling away from the other side of the grave like a desperate crab. The outlaw went down hard, the impact as he landed on the ground knocking the gun out of his hand.
Longarm came up on one knee and levered the Winchester in the same motion, jacking another round into the rifle’s chamber. He brought it to his shoulder, aiming at Rainey’s fallen gun as the outlaw groped toward the Colt. Longarm fired. The bullet slammed into the revolver and kicked it a good dozen feet from Rainey’s outstretched fingers. Longarm levered the rifle again and said, “The next one goes in your head, Mitch, unless you settle down and don’t move again.”
Rainey cussed a blue streak, but he remained motionless on the ground as Longarm climbed to his feet. He circled the grave, still covering Rainey with the Winchester. As far as Longarm could see, the outlaw had only had the one gun on him. Rainey’s rifle was in the saddle boot of the Appaloosa tied to a bush about forty feet away, next to Lloyd’s chestnut. The gray gelding Longarm had rented in a stable over in Weatherford a few days earlier seemed to have run off. Longarm didn’t much care; the son of a bitch had had an uncomfortable gait about him. Billy Vail might pitch a fit, though, when the Justice Department got charged an inflated purchase price for the animal.
There was nothing Longarm could do about that now. He peered at Rainey over the barrel of the Winchester and asked, “Where’d I get you the second time, old son?” He couldn’t see but one patch of blood on the outlaw’s clothes, and that stain was on Rainey’s hip.
“You only hit me the once, you bastard,” Rainey said. He pressed the palm of his hand against his hip and winced. “A rock rolled under my foot; otherwise I wouldn’t have fallen down and you’d be a dead man now, Long!”
So luck had smiled on him yet again, Longarm thought. Well, it was only fair. If not for that tainted beef, he wouldn’t have been in such a bad fix to start with, and the steak hadn’t smelled or tasted bad. He made a mental vow to never again buy a meal in Pickettville, Texas, should he ever find himself there again.
“If you ain’t injured, get up on your feet,” he told Rainey.
“My hip’s broke!” the outlaw protested.
Longarm sighed. “I doubt that mighty serious-like, the way you were squirming after that six-shooter you dropped a couple of minutes ago. That bullet just creased you, Rainey, but the next one sure as hell won’t.”
Muttering under his breath, Rainey climbed awkwardly to his feet. He listed to the right, favoring the injured hip, but he was able to stand up and hobble away from the grave.
Longarm checked Rainey’s pistol. The cylinder had been smashed and the frame bent by the bullet from the Winchester; the gun was useless, not even worth picking up off the ground. Longarm went back around the grave to make sure Jimmy Lloyd was dead, not that there was much doubt in his mind. It was mighty difficult to survive having half your brain blown out the back of your head, and Lloyd hadn’t managed to beat those odds.
Longarm found his own .44 stuck behind Lloyd’s belt. He tugged the revolver loose and settled it back in the cross-draw rig, then took Lloyd’s Colt as well. That done, he started trying to brush some of the dirt off his clothes. One good thing about the brown tweed which his trousers and coat were made from was that it didn’t show mud stains too much.
“Hey!” Rainey yelled. “How long you going to make me stand here? I’m in pain, you know!”
“Ask me if I care,” muttered Longarm. He spotted his flat-crowned, snuff-brown Stetson on the ground not far away and picked it up. It was none the worse for wear, since he had already taken it off and set it aside earlier before he’d started throwing up.
He settled the hat on his head and brushed some dirt out of the wide, sweeping brown mustache on his upper lip. He spat a few times, clearing his mouth of the last of the grit and the aftertaste from being sick. A good healthy shot of Maryland rye would have cleaned his mouth even better, but what was left of the bottle he had bought in Weatherford had been carried off by that stupid gray horse. Longarm sighed again. The trials and tribulations of being a lawman sometimes made him wonder why he kept on packing a badge.
It wasn’t like he wanted to go back to cowboying or scouting for the army, though. His years of riding for Uncle Sam’s Justice Department had been eventful, dangerous ones, but he wouldn’t have traded them for a more settled existence. Having to put up occasionally with murderous assholes like Rainey and Lloyd was the price he paid for the freedom he enjoyed.
“Stay where you are,” Longarm advised Rainey. He went over to the Appaloosa and the chestnut. Rainey’s Appaloosa was the better mount, which was not surprising considering that Rainey was the brains of the two-man outfit. According to the reports Longarm had read, Rainey had seemed to be in charge during the stagecoach holdups the two outlaws had carried out. He had probably planned the jobs, which had netted a few good payoffs and a lot of miserly ones. But the important thing as far as Longarm and his boss, Chief Marshal Billy Vail, were concerned was that several U.S. mail pouches had been stolen, making the crimes a federal matter.
Most of the time Vail would have contented himself with sending wires from the office in Denver to the Texas Rangers and the local law in these parts, advising them of the federal warrants that had been issued on Rainey and Lloyd. In this case, however, Billy had judged it prudent to find an excuse for getting Longarm out of town for a while, so he had sent his top deputy to Texas to run down the two outlaws. Longarm had sworn up and down that he hadn’t known the pretty young redhead was actually the newlywed bride of an elderly but still powerful Congressman, but to no avail.
He had taken the train to Fort Worth, caught a stagecoach to Weatherford, some twenty miles to the west, and rented a horse there. It hadn’t taken him very long to get on the trail of Rainey and Lloyd, since they were proud of being desperadoes and took advantage of every opportunity to proclaim how bad they were to anybody who was willing to listen, but several days of riding in circles through this rugged Brazos River country had been required before he finally closed in on them.
And then his damned stomach had gone crazy on him, which was how he’d wound up facedown in a grave he had dug himself.
Now, surprisingly enough, his belly didn’t feel too bad. He supposed he had gotten rid of everything that was upsetting it. In fact, he was a little hungry. After a night of feeling queasy, he hadn’t eaten any breakfast this morning, so his insides were pretty empty.
Longarm untied the horses and led them over toward Rainey. “There’s a town called Cottonwood Springs not far from here, if I recollect right,” he said. “Ought to be a doctor there to look at your hip, and we can catch a stage there for Weatherford and Fort Worth.”
“Where the hell you taking me?” demanded Rainey.
“Back to Denver, so you can be tried on those federal wants. You haven’t killed anybody as far as I know, so I reckon you’ll wind up in prison for a few years. You’re a lot luckier than your partner, Rainey.”
The outlaw didn’t look like he considered himself lucky. He glowered at Longarm, and when the lawman told him to climb up on the chestnut, he said angrily, “That’s Jimmy’s horse. The Appaloosa’s mine.”
“I think you’ve got more to worry about than who rides which horse,” Longarm told him in a deceptively mild voice. “Now climb up into that saddle.”
Still complaining, Rainey did as he was told. Then he pointed at Lloyd’s body and asked, “What about Jimmy? You can’t just leave him laying out here for the buzzards and the wolves!”
“I suppose you’re right,” Longarm said. Keeping the Winchester pointed in Rainey’s general direction, he walked over to the other outlaw and hooked the toe of his right boot underneath Lloyd’s shoulder. “Since we’ve got a grave right handy …”
A powerful motion of Longarm’s leg rolled the body into the hole. Lloyd’s corpse thumped to the bottom of the grave.
“You want to cover him up?” Longarm asked.
Chapter 2
Calling Longarm a cold-hearted son of a bitch and every other name he could think of, Rainey got down from the saddle and used one of the shovels to fill up the grave. Longarm could have sent the undertaker out from Cottonwood Springs to fetch in the body, but there seemed to be a certain irony in burying Lloyd here, the sort of thing the dime-novel writers called poetic justice. Besides, Billy Vail would accept Longarm’s word for it that Jimmy Lloyd was buried good and proper, even if he didn’t like it.
“I’m liable to bleed to death before you ever get me to town,” Rainey said as he mounted up again.
“Doesn’t look like that stain on your jeans is much bigger now than it was earlier,” Longarm said. “Appears to me that wound’s not much more than a bullet burn. You’ll live to go to jail.” Longarm paused, then added, “That’s if you don’t try anything else funny. If I have to kill you for resisting arrest, my boss won’t ever question it. And I don’t mind telling you, Rainey, I didn’t want to come down here to Texas after a couple of two-bit badmen like you and your partner in the first place. My mood’s just gotten worse since I’ve been here.”
“You shouldn’t ought to threaten a prisoner like that,” Rainey whined.
“Just remember what I told you.”
If the truth were known, Longarm thought, Billy Vail hated it when he sent his top deputy after prisoners and Longarm came back with either corpses or death certificates. But the men a deputy U.S. marshal usually tangled with weren’t the sort you’d find singing hymns in a church choir on Sunday morning. A lawman out here on the frontier couldn’t avoid shooting a few fellas every now and then. So Longarm hoped fervently that Mitch Rainey wouldn’t give him any more trouble. But Rainey didn’t have to know that.
It was early autumn, and the air here was crisp and clean, which only seemed to add to Longarm’s hunger. The landscape was fairly rugged, with lots of hills and bluffs and little valleys. Cedar and post oak breaks dotted the terrain. From time to time, through gaps in the hills, Longarm caught a glimpse of a winding stream, and knew it was the Brazos River. He had crossed and recrossed the stream a dozen times in the past few days as he searched for his quarry. The summer had been a dry one, so the river was low in most places, a narrow, meandering flow that left much of the streambed dry and sandy. Further south, from around Waco on to the Gulf, the Brazos was a pretty good-sized river, but in this stretch and further west and north, in the Seven Fingers country, it didn’t amount to much except in times of heavy rain. Then it could come roaring down through these gullies in a sudden flood.
Longarm’s mind wasn’t really on the river. He rode with one eye on his prisoner and the other eye on the trail. He hadn’t given up all hope of running across that gray gelding. The jughead had taken off with all his possibles, including his own Winchester and the McClellan saddle that Longarm preferred to the stockman’s model, which was what was cinched onto the Appaloosa’s back. If he was able to recover his gear, it would improve his disposition a little.
In the meantime, he was still hungry, so he guided the apaloosa with his knees and began rummaging in Rainey’s saddlebags. “You got anything to eat in here?” he asked.
“You stay out of them bags!” Rainey yelped. “What’s in there is none of your business, Long. Hell, you’re nothing but a damned thief hiding behind a badge.”
“Oh, hush up,” Longarm snapped, irritated. “I’ve got a right to search a prisoner’s belongings for evidence—what the hell!”
He lifted his hand out of the bag and stared at the strands of glittering jewelry that hung from his fingers. The necklace and the bracelet were both decorated with an abundance of gems and precious stones. Longarm let out a low whistle.
“You put them baubles back!” Rainey shouted. “They’re not yours!”
“Where in Hades did you get any loot like this?” asked Longarm. “The way I understood it, you and Lloyd didn’t get much from those stage holdups except cash and some bonds. Unless you pulled another job recently that wasn’t in the report I read.” Longarm shook his head. “Anyway, what woman in her right mind would take a stagecoach ride wearing anything like this?”
Rainey glared at him. “Jimmy and I found that jewelry. We didn’t steal it, I swear! So it’s not evidence and you don’t have any right to keep it.”
Longarm snorted in disgust and said, “You expect me to believe you just found jewelry like this out in the middle of nowhere?”
“It’s true, I tell you. Jimmy could tell you himself—if you hadn’t shot him.”
“Yeah, and I’m sure I’d believe him too,” Longarm drawled. “If there’s any law in Cottonwood Springs, I intend to ask him about these. Maybe he’ll know where they came from.”
Rainey still looked angry, but he didn’t say anything else. Longarm was grateful for that. He put the necklace and bracelet in one of the inside pockets of his coat and resumed his search of the saddlebags. As far as he was concerned, what he turned up next was even better than a handful of fancy jewelry.
“Bacon and biscuits!” he exclaimed. “You been holding out on me, Mitch. Got a fryin’ pan anywhere in this gear?”
“Over here in Jimmy’s saddlebag,” Rainey answered reluctantly.
“When we find a good place, we’ll stop and fry us up a mess of this bacon for lunch. That sound all right to you?”
“Sure. Why the hell not?” Rainey’s tone was bitter, but Longarm ignored it.
They had been following a game trail for the past few minutes, and it led inevitably toward the river. As they came within sight of the Brazos once again, Longarm saw that the trail ended at a small clearing on the riverbank. He couldn’t have asked for a better place to make a noon camp.
The two men rode into the clearing, which was surrounded by a thick growth of post oaks and live oaks. Longarm swung down from the saddle, taking Jimmy Lloyd’s Winchester with him. Rainey’s rifle was still in the boot. “You can get down now,” Longarm told the outlaw. “We’ll be here for a while.”
Rainey dismounted, wincing as he did so. “Reckon you ought to take a look at this wound you gave me?” he asked. “I don’t want it to fester up on me.”
Longarm suspected Rainey just wanted to get close enough so that he could make a grab for a gun. With a shake of his head, Longarm said, “You’ll be all right.”
Rainey blew out his breath in a noisy sigh and started muttering about highhanded lawmen who killed a fella’s partner and then didn’t give a damn about whether or not a gent got blood poisoning from the bullet wound that the damned highhanded lawman had been responsible for in the first place. Longarm paid no attention to the complaints. Instead he gestured with the barrel of the Winchester in his hands and said, “Go over there to that post oak tree.”
“What for?” Rainey asked with a suspicious frown.
“Just do it.”
The outlaw walked slowly to the tree Longarm had indicated, then said, “All right, I’m here. Now what?”
“Hug it.”
Rainey’s frown deepened as he pulled his head back to stare at Longarm. “What?”
“I said hug the tree.”
“I’m an outlaw, damn it!” Rainey burst out. “I don’t go around huggin’ trees!”
“You do now,” Longarm said calmly. He lifted the barrel of the rifle a little for emphasis.
Rainey rolled his eyes, gritted his teeth, then faced the tree and threw his arms around it. The trunk of the post oak was slender enough so that his arms easily encircled it.
“That’s good,” Longarm said. “Now, stay just like that for-“
Rainey had his back to Longarm now and couldn’t see the lawman. “What the hell are you doing?” he asked anxiously as he twisted his neck and tried to look back over his shoulder. “What in blazes are you up to, Long?”
Without answering, Longarm walked around the tree and reached underneath his coat. He brought out a pair of handcuffs. Sometimes he kept the cuffs in his saddlebags, but today he’d had them on him, which was another stroke of luck. Otherwise the gray would have carried them off too when he spooked and ran away.
“Stick your arms out,” Longarm instructed.
Rainey saw the handcuffs, and his eyes widened as he said, “Aw, hell, Deputy, you can’t-“
Longarm lifted the Winchester again.
Rainey bit back a mouthful of profanity and extended his arms. Longarm clapped the cuffs on him with one smooth, practiced movement. Rainey couldn’t go anywhere now unless he figured out a way to uproot that post oak and carry it along with him, which Longarm didn’t think was very likely. Longarm took a deep breath. He could relax again now, at least for a little while.
“I’ll start that bacon frying,” he said as he went back toward the horses.
“You could’ve let me take a leak first before you cuffed me to this damn tree,” Rainey said.
“Well, I guess having to wait will keep your mind off any mischief you might be thinking about,” Longarm replied with a grin.
Over the next few minutes, he ignored Rainey’s near-constant complaining and gathered enough small, fallen branches from underneath the trees to make a nice fire in the clearing. Some of the leaves had already fallen with the onset of autumn, and they made good kindling. Longarm had the fire going in no time. He fetched the frying pan from Lloyd’s saddlebags and the bacon and already cooked biscuits from Rainey’s. Longarm remembered an old trail cook he’d met who claimed his biscuits were the hardest substance known to man, but these would run the old-timer’s a close second. They would soften up a mite once they were soaked in some bacon grease, though.
Longarm was kneeling beside the frying pan, listening to the crackle of the bacon and whistling an old cavalry tune about a big black charger and a little white mare, when out of the corner of his eye he caught a flicker of movement downstream. Turning his head to look more closely, he saw the gray gelding he had rented from the stable in Weatherford. The horse was about two hundred yards away, and had emerged from the woods to drink from the stream.
“Well, what do you know?” Longarm said to himself. He stood up and called to his prisoner, “I got to go do something, Rainey. You stay right there.”
“Where the hell do you think I’d be going?” the outlaw asked bitterly.
Longarm didn’t bother answering. He started walking along the riverbank, moving slowly and on foot so he wouldn’t spook the gray again. As the trees grew closer to the edge of the bank, he had to move down into the streambed itself, which was dry along here. The nearest channel of the Brazos was a good fifty yards away. Longarm remembered too late that he’d left the bacon on the fire. It would probably be cooked to a black crisp by the time he got back with the horse, but that couldn’t be helped. He could always fry up more bacon. Recovering his saddle and rig was more important.
A bend of the river took him out of sight of Rainey. The Brazos twisted again a little farther downstream, where the gray was still drinking. Once Longarm reached that spot, he would be able to look back upstream and see the place where he had camped with his prisoner. He wasn’t worried about Rainey going anywhere, though. Not with his arms around that tree and the handcuffs on his wrists.
Longarm drew steadily closer to the horse. The gray looked up and saw him coming, but didn’t seem particularly upset by the sight. That was good, Longarm thought. The horse had settled down since its flight earlier, and that would make it easier to catch. He moved a few steps closer and lifted a hand, reaching out to the gray as he spoke softly and quietly to it, the calming words of a veteran rider who had settled down many a mount. Longarm’s fingers were almost touching the reins.
That was when Mitch Rainey started to scream.
Longarm’s head jerked around as the shrieks cut through the air. The horse let out a shrill whinny and danced away from him. Longarm said, “Damn!” and lunged after the gray, reaching for the reins. He was too late. The gelding whirled around and raced off into the trees.
Longarm hesitated, torn between going after the horse and finding out what was wrong with Rainey. The prisoner was still screaming—harsh, terrible sounds, as if he was being tortured.
With another curse, Longarm turned and looked upstream. He saw Rainey, still cuffed to the tree, and there was movement beyond the outlaw. The noontime shadows were thick underneath the oaks, so Longarm couldn’t tell what was up there that had spooked Rainey so badly. He didn’t know if there were any bears left in this part of the country, but there were certainly still plenty of wolves around. Maybe some old lobo had decided that a man cuffed to a tree made a tempting target.
“Hold on, Rainey, I’m coming!” Longarm shouted as he broke into a run toward the clearing. The sandy streambed made for slow going, though, and it seemed to tug hard at his stovepipe cavalry boots with every step he took. As he ran, he drew his pistol and fired it once into the air, hoping the shot might scare off whatever was tormenting Rainey.
The outlaw’s cries were fading now, not from any lack of effort on his part, but simply because he had screamed so long and so loud that his throat had to be completely raw by now. He was still making terrified little wheezing noises when Longarm reached him a few moments later.
Longarm peered into the grove of trees, searching intently for whatever had set Rainey to screaming. He didn’t see a blessed thing that looked out of the ordinary. Whatever Rainey had spotted up here earlier was gone now. Longarm holstered his gun and looked Rainey over, thinking that maybe the outlaw had been attacked. Other than the dried blood from the bullet crease on his hip, however, there was no sign that Rainey was hurt.
Rainey’s eyes were open about as far as humanly possible, and under his tan, his features had an ashen pallor. He kept opening and closing his mouth and uttering small sounds that made no sense. Longarm had heard of people being scared out of their wits before, but Mitch Rainey was probably the only person he’d ever seen who really matched that description.
“What happened here, Rainey?” demanded Longarm. “Why’d you start yelling your fool head off?”
Rainey didn’t answer him, didn’t even look at him. Instead, Rainey’s gaze was still fixed on the spot where Longarm thought he’d seen something moving.
“Damn it, Rainey,” Longarm said, angry now because once again he had lost that gray gelding and all the gear that was on the horse. “Tell me what you saw.”
Rainey’s mouth worked some more, but the sounds that came out were nonsense. Longarm sighed in disgust. Rainey was completely incoherent with fear.
Maybe there were some tracks on the ground, Longarm thought. He went over to the spot Rainey kept staring at and brushed aside some of the leaves that had fallen from the oaks. The ground underneath was fairly soft and took prints well.
Longarm frowned. There were tracks there, all right, but none like he had ever seen before. He hunkered down to get a closer look at them.
At first glance the prints looked like they might have been made by a pair of bare human feet. But even though Longarm had known some old boys with pretty big clodhoppers, he had never seen human feet large enough to make tracks like these. The prints were easily more than twelve inches long. More like fifteen or sixteen, Longarm judged.
It was possible, Longarm supposed, that a fella could grow big enough to have such enormous feet. Some of his previous assignments had taken him to circuses and carnivals, so he was aware that some truly surprising freaks of nature popped up from time to time. But a man couldn’t grow pads and claws like a bear on the front of his foot, and for all the world, that was what these tracks looked like: half-man, half-bear.
Suddenly, an eerie cry floated through the air. The sound made Longarm’s head snap up, and he felt the skin on the back of his neck prickling. Instinctively, he reached for the butt of his gun. The call had the strangest quality to it Longarm had ever heard. It was almost human, but not quite. On the other hand, it didn’t sound like a critter either. It had too much of a man-sound to it for that.
Coldness trickled down Longarm’s back like a vagrant drop of winter rain creeping past an oilskin slicker. He was very glad that the cry seemed to come from a good distance away.
Rainey started sobbing.
Longarm took another look at the strange prints and then stood up. He figured Rainey had gotten a good look at whatever had left those tracks and made that sound. Obviously, the thing was enough to spook even a hardened outlaw. Longarm stepped closer to the tree and looked at Rainey’s wrists. He hadn’t noticed it before, but they were scraped raw and bloody where Rainey had tried unsuccessfully to pull them out of the handcuffs. Rainey had been desperate to get away.
“Don’t worry about it, old son,” Longarm told the whimpering outlaw. “Whatever it was, it’s gone now, and I don’t reckon it’ll be back. Chances are, it was just as scared of you as you were of it.”
Rainey didn’t even seem to hear him. The man just kept making sounds like a whipped puppy.
Longarm glanced at the tracks again. He might be able to follow the thing’s trail, but he had a prisoner to take care of and the job came first. At least, that was the way he was going to look at it.
Chapter 3
Just as Longarm had expected, the bacon he’d been frying was nothing but charred little strips of unrecognizable blackness. He didn’t care; he had lost his appetite again. If he wanted, he could gnaw on one of those hard biscuits while he was in the saddle, because he was sure of one thing. He and Rainey were getting the hell out of there.
Rainey’s sobs had subsided. The outlaw slumped against the rough bark of the post oak’s trunk, his arms wrapped tightly around it as if by holding on to the tree he could also hold on to his sanity. He looked much too shaken to try anything, but Longarm hadn’t lived this long by being careless. He unfastened one side of the cuffs and then stepped back quickly, bringing up the Winchester that he had tucked underneath his arm while he freed his prisoner.
Rainey didn’t move. He just kept hugging that tree.
Finally, when Rainey didn’t respond to the lawman’s orders to get mounted, Longarm moved closer and took hold of Rainey’s shoulder. He had to practically pry the outlaw away from the tree, and when he did he saw there was a large wet stain on the front of Rainey’s trousers. That wasn’t a surprise considering how frightened Rainey had been. Besides, he had complained about being cuffed to the tree before he’d had a chance to relieve himself. Longarm felt a little guilty about that now.
But only a little, and the feeling faded even more when he recalled how Rainey and Lloyd had been about to bury him alive only a few hours earlier. He wasn’t going to waste perfectly good pity on a hardcase like Rainey. “Come on,” he growled. “Either get on that horse and come with me, or I’ll leave you here, Rainey.”
At last something Longarm said seemed to get through to Rainey’s stunned brain. He began shaking his head, and the motion became more vehement, almost violent. He understood the threat, and evidently it was the worst one Longarm could have used. Rainey headed for the chestnut.
The outlaw’s arms and legs were trembling, making him awkward as he climbed into the saddle. His eyes darted back and forth constantly as if he expected the horror to reappear at any second. Both of his hands tightly gripped the saddlehorn.
Longarm tossed the burned bacon onto the ground, cleaned the frying pan with sand from the riverbed, then put it away. He swung up onto the Appaloosa and inclined his head to the east. “This looks like as good a place as any to cross the river. Cottonwood Springs can’t be more than ten miles the other side of the Brazos.”
Rainey paid no attention to him. Longarm grimaced and rode close enough to reach out and take the chestnut’s reins. He dallied them around his own saddlehorn for a moment while he refastened the cuff around Rainey’s wrist. Rainey didn’t put up a fight, didn’t even seem to notice what Longarm was doing, in fact. He was too busy looking every which way for whatever had scared him.
For a long moment, Longarm studied the outlaw’s face. If there was the slightest chance Rainey was trying to pull some sort of trick so that he could escape, Longarm wanted to nip that hope in the bud. The fear on Rainey’s face and in his eyes seemed utterly genuine, though. Longarm shrugged, loosened the chestnut’s reins from his saddle and held them, and nudged the Appaloosa into an easy walk.
The bed of the Brazos was almost a hundred yards wide at this point, even though the river itself was much smaller at the moment. Still, the crossing wasn’t without its dangers. Closer to the center of the streambed were patches of quicksand that had to be avoided. The water itself was only about eighteen inches deep and the current was sluggish, but again, there were perilous spots where a man and a horse could be pulled down.
Longarm and Rainey reached the eastern side of the river without incident and rode up onto the bank. A ridge ran along this part of the Brazos, with rocky bluffs at the top of the slope overlooking the stream. The climb was fairly steep, but the Appaloosa and the chestnut managed it with no trouble. When they reached the top, some instinct made Longarm rein in and look back over his shoulder. Down below, across the Brazos, he could see the place where he and Rainey had meant to have their noon meal.
Longarm halfway expected to see some sort of monster hunkered there in the clearing, drawn back perhaps by the smell of the burned bacon. But there was nothing, only the peaceful-looking riverbank. Longarm’s eyes probed the trees on the far side of the Brazos, but he spotted no movement.
That in itself was a mite strange, he realized with a slight frown. Those oaks should have been full of birds and squirrels. Autumn wasn’t so far advanced that all the critters would have headed for their winter homes. At this moment, however, the far side of the river seemed devoid of wildlife.
It was as if the birds and squirrels, which were oftentimes smarter than folks gave them credit for, were hiding out from something that scared them too.
Longarm gave a little shake of his head and turned back to face east. Unless he got completely lost, he and Rainey could make Cottonwood Springs well before dark. Suddenly, that seemed like an even better idea to Longarm than it had earlier.
Longarm had run into more than his share of strange things over the years. He had tracked the Wendigo, the mythical beast of the Plains Indians, and tangled with murderous mechanical men. His job had put him on the trail of ghosts, grave robbers, mad magicians, and cannibal Indians. He had heard tales as well about the so-called monsters that lurked in the lonely places of the frontier. Some had their source in the stories of the Indians, like the Wendigo and the legendary Sasquatch. Texans had their own yarns, like the one about the monster of Caddo Lake, over in the piney woods of East Texas, and Longarm remembered hearing about a horrible creature that was half-man and half-goat living along the Trinity River northwest of Fort Worth. Then there was Espantosa Lake, down in South Texas, which was supposedly haunted by the ghosts of Spanish conquistadores who had been thrown in by their Indian captors and dragged to their deaths by the weight of their armor.
But those tracks he had found, along with the look on Rainey’s face and the way the prisoner was acting, made Longarm feel about as downright creepy as he ever had. He would be glad when they reached Cottonwood Springs and got back among normal folks again.
The farther they traveled away from the Brazos, the better Longarm felt. Rainey calmed down a little too, and stopped twisting his head around so that he could constantly peer in fright over his shoulders. Instead he sat hunched forward in the saddle, his eyes downcast, not paying attention to much of anything. At least he was quiet and not causing any trouble, and Longarm was grateful for small favors.
When Longarm’s appetite returned, he took out one of the biscuits and used his pocketknife to cut hunks off it. He had to suck on the pieces of biscuit like they were hard candy for a while before he was able to chew them, but they were surprisingly filling. Rainey didn’t nod, shake his head, or even look up when Longarm offered him some of the biscuit. Longarm shrugged. If the outlaw wanted to go hungry, that was Rainey’s lookout. When Longarm was finished with the biscuit, he took a cheroot from his vest pocket and regarded it critically for a moment before putting it in his mouth. The cigar was a little bent from when he had fallen into that grave, but it wasn’t broken. He scratched a lucifer into life, held the flame to the tip of the cheroot, and puffed contentedly on it.
Not long after leaving the vicinity of the river, Longarm and Rainey came upon a wagon road that ran east and west. Longarm nudged the Appaloosa onto the trace and headed east, leading the chestnut with Rainey on it. A couple of miles down the trail they reached a crossroad. Wooden signs nailed to a post informed Longarm that the crossroad ran south to Fort Belknap and the town of Graham, while the northbound trail would have taken them to Cimarron Springs and Archer City. To the west, the way they had come, the main road led to Fort Griffin, and to the east, the direction they were headed, lay Cottonwood Springs. Ultimately, Longarm recalled, this road would take them to Jacksboro, Decatur, Boyd’s Mill, and Fort Worth. For the time being, however, Longarm would settle for Cottonwood Springs, where he could find a doctor to tend Rainey’s wound, then maybe lock the prisoner up in the local jail and enjoy a bath, a hot meal, and a night’s sleep in a hotel bed. Longarm sighed in anticipation at the thought.
The rest of the trip to Cottonwood Springs passed without incident. It was after the middle of the afternoon when the two riders came within sight of the settlement. The first things to be visible were the steeples of a pair of churches, one on each end of town. Knowing how folks in this part of the country felt about religion, Longarm was confident that one of the houses of worship was of the Baptist persuasion and the other was likely Methodist. It had always amazed Longarm how people could almost come to blows over whether it was best to be a dunker or a sprinkler. He subscribed to the theory contained in the old hymn “Farther Along We’ll Know More about It,” so he tended to be tolerant of other folks’ beliefs.
As Longarm and Rainey drew closer, the lawman made out more buildings. He hadn’t passed through Cottonwood Springs during his wanderings in the past few days, so he wasn’t sure how big the town was. It looked to be good-sized, which buoyed Longarm’s hopes of finding the place equipped with both a doctor and a sturdy jailhouse. “Come on, Rainey,” he said as they reached the point where the wagon road turned into the main street of the town. “Let’s get that bullet crease tended to.”
“Damn well about time,” muttered Rainey, and the outlaw’s surly response let Longarm know that Rainey was getting somewhat back to normal. The man had been silent ever since before they had crossed the Brazos.
Longarm hipped around in the saddle to look at Rainey. “You ready to talk about what you saw back there?” Longarm didn’t particularly want to bring up the subject, but his curiosity got the best of him.
Rainey shook his head, stone-faced. “Don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said. “I didn’t see nothing.”
Longarm reined in and frowned. “Hold on there, old son. You mean to tell me you didn’t see something that made you start screaming like a banshee?”
“I didn’t see a thing,” Rainey said stubbornly.
Longarm glowered at the outlaw. “Then why’s your voice so hoarse? I’ll tell you why—it’s from all that yelling you did.”
Rainey shook his head.
Longarm took out another cheroot and stuck it in his mouth unlit. His teeth clamped down hard on the cylinder of tobacco. If that was the way Rainey wanted to be about it, fine. What had happened back there at the Brazos didn’t have anything to do with Rainey and Lloyd trying to murder him, and it didn’t affect the mission that had brought him here, which was to apprehend the pair of outlaws. With a grimace, Longarm turned around and prodded the Appaloosa into a walk.
As he did so, he became aware that there were quite a few people on the streets of Cottonwood Springs, and most of them seemed to be staring at him and his prisoner. The looks on their faces weren’t hostile or anything, just … surprised, Longarm decided after a moment. Like they couldn’t believe a couple of strangers were riding into town, especially from the west.
Come to think of it, he hadn’t seen any other pilgrims on the road this afternoon, Longarm realized, and he would have thought that the road to Fort Griffin would be a well-traveled route. An uneasy sensation prickled along his spine again.
There were no boardwalks in Cottonwood Springs, but several of the businesses had elevated porches built onto the front of the buildings. Longarm veered the Appaloosa toward a hotel called the Cottonwood House. As usual for a small town, several elderly men were sitting on cane-bottomed chairs on the hotel’s porch. Longarm brought the horses to a stop by the hitch rack and nodded to the loafers. “Afternoon, gentlemen,” he said. “Can one of you tell me whereabouts I might find the local law?”
The old-timers just stared at him and didn’t say anything.
Longarm swallowed his irritation and impatience. “You do have a sheriff or a marshal here in Cottonwood Springs, don’t you?”
One of the men finally said something, even though it wasn’t an answer to either of Longarm’s questions. “You come here from somewhere around the Brazos, stranger?”
“That’s right. The other side of the river, in fact.”
Two more of the old men looked at each other, and one of them said, “He crossed the Brazos.” From the tone of his voice, Longarm might just as well have hopped down to Texas from the moon.
This time Longarm couldn’t contain his reaction. He snapped, “Look, I’m a deputy United States marshal. Have you got any law around here or not?”
The first old-timer who had spoken buffed up and said, “No call to get all peevish, mister. If you were lookin’ for Mal Burley, why didn’t you just say so?”
Longarm gritted his teeth and refrained from pointing out that he had done that very thing a few seconds earlier.
“You’ll find Mal down at the bank,” the old man said, pointing to a substantial brick building about a block away. “I wouldn’t bother him right now, though. He’s talkin’ to Mr. Thorp.”
Longarm didn’t know or care who Mr. Thorp was, but he didn’t waste his time or breath saying so. He just nodded to the codger, grunted “Thanks,” and headed the Appaloosa toward the bank, leading the chestnut behind him.
Before he could reach the bank, Longarm spotted a man wearing a star pinned to his vest emerging from the brick building. In contrast to his name, Mal Burley was short, slender, and narrow-shouldered. Most small-town lawmen relied on brawn to get their jobs done, but Burley wouldn’t have that luxury. On the other hand, Cottonwood Springs looked like the sort of place that was fairly peaceful most of the time, even though for some reason there were a lot of people in town at the moment.
Another man followed Burley out of the bank. He wore a town suit, but his boots and Stetson were those of a rancher. He was medium-sized—which still made him bigger than the local marshal—and had graying dark hair. His clean-shaven face wore a belligerent expression.
Longarm was already within earshot as the local lawman swung around and said to the man following him, “I told you, Mr. Thorp, I’m doing everything I can. You said you wanted reports every day, and it’s not my fault that there’s nothing new to tell you.”
“It’s been three weeks, Mal,” Thorp said. “You can’t blame me for being worried.”
“No, sir, I sure can’t,” agreed Burley. “But I can’t change the way things are either.”
Thorp’s mouth tightened. “Maybe it’s time I made a change.”
For a moment, Burley didn’t say anything. Then he nodded curtly and said, “You do whatever you have to do, Mr. Thorp.”
“I always do.”
This exchange was interesting as all get out, Longarm thought as he reined up in front of the bank, but it didn’t have a damned thing to do with him. He cleared his throat and said, “Marshal Burley?”
Both Burley and Thorp looked up at him in surprise. They had been so wrapped up in their own conversation they hadn’t seen him approaching with his prisoner. Burley asked, “What can I do for you, mister?”
“Name’s Custis Long. I’m a deputy United States marshal out of Denver, and this is a federal prisoner I have with me. I was wondering if I might take advantage of your hospitality and put him in your lockup for a spell. He needs a doctor to look at him too.”
“A federal badge, eh?” Burley said, clearly a little annoyed at the interruption but interested and impressed in spite of himself.
“That’s right. I’ve got my bona fides right here.” Longarm reached under his coat and took from an inner pocket the small leather folder which contained his badge and identification papers. He handed them to Burley, having to lean over in the saddle to do so because of the man’s short stature. Burley studied the badge for a moment, and as he did Thorp was also examining it over his shoulder.
“Looks like you’re the genuine article, Marshal Long,” Burley said as he handed the folder back to Longarm. “You can leave your prisoner in my jail for as long as you like. I don’t get too many customers in Cottonwood Springs. Not likely we’ll run out of room. I’ll send word for Doc Carson to come down there, if that’s all right.”
“Much obliged.”
“Who have you got there?”
“His name’s Mitch Rainey,” Longarm said. “He and his partner have been holding up stages hereabouts.”
Burley let out a low whistle. “You caught up to Rainey and Lloyd?” He sounded impressed.
Longarm didn’t want to point out that it hadn’t been all that difficult of a chore, when it had obviously proved too much for this local lawman. He merely shrugged and jerked a thumb over his shoulder toward the prisoner. “There’s half of ‘em.”
“Where’s Lloyd?”
“In a shallow grave about twenty miles a little north by west from here.”
Thorp stepped forward, suddenly showing even more interest. “That’s on the other side of the Brazos.”
“Yes, sir, it is,” Longarm agreed. “We crossed the river along about noon.”
Thorp reached out, grabbing hold of the Appaloosa’s bridle. “Did you see it, man?” he demanded in a shaky voice. “Did you see it?”
Longarm wasn’t sure he wanted to hear the answer, but he asked the question anyway. “See what?”
“The Brazos Devil!”
Chapter 4
Longarm hesitated, unsure how to respond to the man. He looked over at Marshal Mal Burley, but didn’t get any clue from the diminutive lawman. Longarm had a pretty good idea what Thorp was talking about, but he didn’t know how much he wanted to say about the incident beside the river earlier in the day.
He was saved from having to say anything by the pitiful whimper Rainey suddenly let out. The outlaw might have been almost back to normal when they entered town, but now he was hunched over in his saddle again and that terrified, furtive look had returned to his eyes. His breath hissed between tightly clenched teeth.
Thorp turned toward him. “You have seen it!” he exclaimed. “You must have! Was there a woman with it?”
The man’s excitement was drawing a crowd, and Longarm heard the murmured comments that leaped from bystander to bystander. “The strangers had a run-in with the Brazos Devil!” one man said. Variations on that theme filled the air.
“Maybe we’d better go on over to your jail,” Longarm suggested to Burley as he put away his cheroot still unlit. “Then you can tell me what’s going on here.”
“Not a bad idea,” Burley said. He lifted his arms and raised his voice as he addressed the gathering crowd, and the words boomed out with a surprising resonance for a man of his size. “Just go on about your business, folks! This is nothing to do with the Brazos Devil!”
Nobody seemed to believe him, but the crowd parted to let Longarm, Rainey, and Burley through as they headed for the jail. Thorp strode along right behind them as if he belonged, and for all Longarm knew, he did. Maybe he was the mayor of Cottonwood Springs; Longarm just didn’t know.
He didn’t know anything about a creature called the Brazos Devil either, but he could make a reasonable guess. The people in this area had themselves a local legend, and judging by its name, the Brazos Devil was some sort of monster, like the Wendigo, Sasquatch, the Caddo Critter, and that Goatman.
Well, Rainey had seen something, whether he denied it now or not, and something had made those tracks Longarm had found near the river. It had been his experience that things supernatural always turned out to have some logical, reasonable explanation. But there was always a first time …
The crowd trailed along behind Longarm and his companions, and stood around chattering excitedly while Longarm dismounted and hauled Rainey down from the chestnut’s saddle. Marshal Burley took the reins and looped them around the hitch rack in front of the jailhouse made from blocks of native stone. After sending one of the bystanders down the street to fetch the doctor, he led the way inside and the crowd stopped short of entering—all but Thorp, that is. He shut the door behind them and said urgently, “Was there a woman with the creature?”
Longarm ignored the question for the time being. He took hold of Rainey’s arm and pulled the outlaw across the small office in the front of the jail toward a heavy wooden door with a small barred window set in it. Longarm knew from experience that such a door always led to the cell block. Burley went first, using a key from a large ring to open the cellblock door.
The cells on the other side were all vacant, their doors standing open. Longarm took Rainey to the closest one and shoved him, not too roughly, through the door. He slammed it shut with a clang.
Rainey was quaking like an aspen. He sank down on the cell’s hard bunk and drew his legs up beside him, curling himself into a ball. He seemed to relax a little then, as if the knowledge that he was locked in a cell made him feel better instead of worse. Rainey might be locked away from everything, Longarm thought—but everything was also locked away from Rainey.
Thorp came into the cell block. “Well, what about it?” he said harshly. “For God’s sake, tell me what you saw out there!”
“I’m getting a mite tired of your tone of voice, mister,” Longarm said. “Hell, we haven’t even been introduced yet, and you’re already full of questions.”
Thorp’s eyes widened as if no one ever talked to him that way, and Burley stepped smoothly between him and Longarm. “This is Mr. Benjamin Thorp, Marshal,” the local star-packer said, “owner of the Bank of Cottonwood Springs and the Rocking T ranch.”
“And the richest man in town,” Longarm guessed.
“I don’t give a damn about money right now,” Thorp said. “I just want my wife back. Did you see her or not?”
“I didn’t see anything,” Longarm said, “but I wish one of you fellas would tell me what this is all about.”
Thorp opened his mouth to speak again, but Burley stopped him by saying, “Come back out into the office with me, Marshal Long, and I’ll explain the whole thing. Maybe you can suggest something I haven’t thought of.”
Longarm couldn’t tell about that until he knew what was going on. He followed Burley from the cell block into the office, and Benjamin Thorp brought up the rear.
Burley went behind an old desk with a scarred wooden top and gestured toward a chair in front of the desk. The chair was padded with black leather. Longarm sat down, propped his right ankle on his left knee, and took off his hat, dropping it on the floor beside him. Burley settled himself on a chair behind the desk, and since the seat was out of sight, Longarm wondered idly if the local lawman had boosted it with a couple of books or something. Burley seemed taller sitting down. Another of the padded chairs like the one Longarm was sitting in was against the wall of the small room, but Thorp didn’t take it. Instead he started pacing back and forth.
Burley said, “I’d tell you to take it easy, Mr. Thorp, but I know it wouldn’t do any good.”
“Damned right it wouldn’t,” growled Thorp. “I’m not going to relax until my wife is back with me, safe and sound! Hell, how can you expect a man to take it easy when the women he loves has been dragged off by some unholy monster!”
Burley held up a hand. “You go right ahead and pace,” he said, “while I tell Marshal Long what happened.”
Longarm took that cheroot from his pocket again. “Reckon I can guess some of it,” he said as he struck a match with a flick of his iron-hard thumbnail. “Mrs. Thorp is missing, and for some reason you folks think she was carried off by a critter called the Brazos Devil.”
“I thought you said you hadn’t seen it,” Thorp snapped.
“I haven’t.”
“Then how did you know-“
“I’ve got eyes and ears,” Longarm said patiently. “And ever since Rainey and I rode into Cottonwood Springs a little while ago, folks have been acting pretty worked up about something. I just listened and put it all together.”
Burley leaned back in his chair and asked, “Had you ever heard of the Brazos Devil before today, Marshal?”
Longarm took a puff on the cheroot and shook his head. “Nope. But I’ve heard other local legends that I’d be willing to bet are similar. This here Brazos Devil—he’s some sort of hairy half-man, half-monster, right?”
That’s what the people who have seen him say,” Burley admitted. “They claim he’s about seven feet tall and covered with fur.”
“Anybody ever stop to think that maybe it’s a bear?” asked Longarm as he remembered those prints he had seen in the soft dirt. He didn’t want to mention them just yet.
“Well, in the first place, there aren’t any bears in these parts. There probably aren’t any bears in Texas this side of the Big Bend. And for another thing, people have seen it run, and it doesn’t run like a bear. It runs like a man.”
“Folks have seen it close up, have they?” Longarm was still skeptical, but he was curious enough about this matter to forgo that hot meal and bath and hotel room for a while.
“Not too close,” Burley said with a shrug. “But close enough to tell that it wasn’t like anything they’d ever seen before.” He sighed and added grimly, “I’m afraid the only ones who have gotten a really good look at the Brazos Devil can’t tell us anything about it.”
“Too afraid?” Longarm asked, thinking about Rainey’s reaction and the stunned silence that had gripped the outlaw for most of the afternoon.
“Too dead,” Burley said.
“Damn it, Mal!” Thorp burst out miserably. “You know that thing’s got Emmaline!”
Burley grimaced and leaned forward. “Sorry, Mr. Thorp. I guess I wasn’t thinking. I didn’t mean to upset you even more.”
Longarm had a feeling Thorp, as the town’s leading citizen, must have installed Burley in the marshal’s job, either directly or through his influence. But Longarm didn’t depend on the banker and rancher for his livelihood, so he said bluntly, “You’re saying this Brazos Devil has killed folks?”
“Four that we know of, including Matt Hardcastle, Mr. Thorp’s foreman. Matt was killed when the thing ran off with Mrs. Thorp.”
Longarm blew out another cloud of blue smoke. “Back up a mite and tell me about that.”
“I don’t know,” Burley said. “Maybe Mr. Thorp…”
Thorp took off his hat, ran a hand over his thinning hair, then breathed deeply and put a look of resolve on his face. “It hurts to talk about it,” he said, “but if there’s a chance you might be able to help us, Marshal Long, I suppose I can bring myself to do it.”
“I can’t promise anything,” Longarm said mildly, “but I’m willing to listen.”
“All right. About three weeks ago, my wife went out for a ride on our ranch. It’s her habit to go riding several times a week.”
“Horseback riding, you mean? Not in a buggy?” Longarm interrupted to ask.
Thorp nodded. “That’s right. Emmaline is very fond of it and is actually a good horsewoman. She grew up in Louisiana, and she never got a chance to ride horses when she was a child. I go with her whenever I can, but my business keeps me either at the ranch house or here in town most of the time.”
“So you sent your foreman, this fella Hardcastle, with her whenever you couldn’t go,” Longarm ventured.
“Yes. Especially after what happened to the Lavery boys.”
Longarm looked at Burley, and the marshal said, “Howard Lavery’s three sons. The Lavery’s have a little spread southwest of here, and the boys were found dead on the road about six weeks ago.”
“Killed?” Longarm asked.
Burley nodded, his narrow features bleak. “Torn all to pieces, in fact. It like to’ve turned my stomach. Something ripped those fellas apart with its bare hands. There hasn’t been too much traffic on the road since then.”
Thorp shuddered and lifted a hand, covering his face for a moment. He took a deep breath and went on. “After that, I tried to persuade Emmaline that her horseback rides weren’t a good idea, but she wouldn’t hear of giving them up.” He gave a little shrug. “You don’t know Emmaline, Marshal, but there’s no arguing with her when she gets something in her head. She insisted she was perfectly safe as long as Matt or I was with her.”
“But she wasn’t,” Longarm said heavily.
Thorp clearly had to force himself to go on. “Matt’s horse came back alone to the ranch. There … there was blood on the saddle. The men sent word to me in town immediately, and also started a search party on the horse’s back-trail. By the time I got to the ranch and caught up with them, they … they had found Matt’s … body.”
“He was torn up just like the Lavery boys,” Burley put in. “But there was no sign of Mrs. Thorp or her horse, so it could be she got away from whatever attacked Hardcastle.”
“That was three weeks ago, Mal!” exclaimed Thorp. “If Emmaline was all right, why hasn’t she come home by now?”
“Maybe what she saw scared her so bad she hasn’t stopped running yet,” Longarm suggested. “I’ve heard of folks who had such a shock that they clean forgot who they were.”
Thorp frowned and said, “That’s mighty unlikely, don’t you think, Deputy?”
No more so than jumping to the conclusion that Emmaline Thorp had been dragged off by a monster, Longarm thought, but he kept that to himself and merely shrugged. He said, “I don’t know the lady. You tell me, Mr. Thorp.”
Thorp shook his head decisively. “No, that wouldn’t happen. Emmaline is too levelheaded to completely lose her wits just because she was frightened. The only reason she wouldn’t come back to the ranch house is if she couldn’t.”
Before the discussion could continue, the office door opened and a heavyset man carrying a black medical bag came in. He had jowls like a bulldog and was wide across the shoulders, but his hands were surprisingly small, almost delicate. He nodded to Thorp and Longarm, then said to Burley, “I hear you’ve got a patient for me, Mal.”
“I’ll take you back to him, Doc,” Burley said as he stood up and reached for the key ring.
“The fella’s got a bullet crease on his right hip,” Longarm offered. “It never bled much, so I don’t figure it amounts to anything.
Doc Carson nodded. “Doubtless you’re correct, sir, but the wound should still be examined and cleaned.”
Burley opened the heavy door and took the physician into the cell block. Longarm smoked in silence and Thorp paced until Burley returned, leaving the cellblock door open this time.
As the local lawman settled himself behind the desk again, Longarm asked, “Did Mrs. Thorp’s horse leave any tracks you could follow?”
“Matt’s body was found on a rocky outcropping over the river,” Thorp said. “The ground was too hard to take tracks.”
“What about in the rest of the area? Any hoofprints or … anything else?”
If Thorp or Burley noticed the slight pause, neither man gave any sign of it. Burley shook his head and said, “There had been too many riders milling around there, what with the search party and everything. There weren’t any tracks that meant anything.”
“Where’d this happen?”
“Like I said, it was on one of the bluffs overlooking the river on my ranch,” replied Thorp. “My spread runs from the Fort Griffin road north for about fifteen miles along the east side of the Brazos.”
Longarm considered that for a moment as he smoked. “That means Rainey and I were on your land when we came across the river today.”
“That’s right, but I don’t worry about people crossing my spread. The northern boundary and part of the eastern boundary are fenced to keep my stock from wandering too much, but otherwise it’s all open range. The river forms a natural barrier to the west.”
“Then the place where Hardcastle’s body was found probably wasn’t very far from where Rainey and I came across.”
“Describe the spot to me,” Thorp suggested. Longarm did so, and the rancher nodded. “That’s about two miles north of where Matt’s body was found,” he said. His features were taut with repressed anger and anxiety as he went on. “I’ve been patient, Long. That outlaw you brought in obviously saw something out there. Don’t you think under the circumstances you ought to tell us about it?”
The man had a point, Longarm had to give him that. Quickly, he told Thorp and Burley about the incident beside the river, even describing the mysterious footprints this time. Thorp became even more agitated and excited as Longarm talked, and Burley leaned forward eagerly.
“Rainey had to have seen the Brazos Devil!” Thorp said when Longarm was finished. “That’s the only explanation that makes any sense!”
“And those tracks you saw sound like the same ones we found around the bodies of the Lavery boys,” Burley put in. “It must’ve been the creature.”
“Hold on a minute,” Longarm said with a stubborn frown. “I don’t know if I’m willing to just assume such a critter even exists.”
“How can you doubt it?” demanded Thorp. “Look at all the evidence!”
“That’s what I’m trying to do-“
Longarm was saved from further arguing by the reappearance of the doctor. Carson was closing his bag as he came out of the cell block. “You were right, sir,” he said to Longarm. “The wound on the patient’s hip is superficial. He’ll be bruised and sore for a few days, but there won’t be any lasting effects.” Carson hesitated, then added, “I’m more concerned about the man’s, ah, mental state.”
“He hasn’t calmed down any?” Longarm asked.
“He’s well nigh catatonic. That means-“
“I know what it means,” Longarm said. “He’s so shaken up about something that he’s pulled back into himself and ain’t letting anybody else in.”
“Exactly,” agreed the physician.
“What are the chances of making him talk, Doc?” asked Thorp.
Carson shook his head. “Hard to say. Cases like this where the patient has suffered a great shock are almost impossible to predict.”
“He seemed to be coming around earlier,” Longarm said, until he got reminded again of what happened out there.”
“Then that’s a good sign. With time, he may make a full recovery.” Carson shrugged. “Or maybe not.”
Thorp took a step toward the cellblock door. “Well, he’ll just have to come out of it, because I’ve got to talk to him!”
Carson put a hand out to stop him. “Sorry, Mr. Thorp, but it won’t do you any good to browbeat the man, especially now. I gave him a sedative since he seemed so disturbed. He’s sound asleep by now.”
“Damn it, Carson!” Thorp burst out. “You didn’t have the right-“
“The man is my patient. I had the right to make a medical judgment, and I did so.”
Longarm also wished the doctor hadn’t knocked Rainey out, but it was too late now to do anything about it. He said, “There’s no sense in getting upset, Thorp. Rainey’ll wake up sooner or later, and you and the marshal can talk to him then.”
“Yes, and in the meantime that monster has even more time to put my wife through the tortures of hell!”
“We don’t know that Mrs. Thorp is in any danger,” Burley said. “Maybe the Devil’s just sort of … holding her prisoner.”
The withering look Thorp gave Burley made it clear just how likely the rancher considered that possibility.
As for Longarm, he wondered why the creature—assuming that the Brazos Devil even existed, and that was a mighty big assumption—would carry off a woman when its other encounters with men had proven fatal. There was only one reason Longarm could think of, and it was a horrifying prospect that had no doubt occurred to Thorp, Burley, and everybody else in Cottonwood Springs. Maybe the monster had wanted a mate.
Longarm put that image out of his mind with a little shake of his head. He still had his own job to tend to, and something else had occurred to him. He said, “Mr. Thorp, you reckon I could use the safe in your bank to lock up some valuables overnight?”
“Of course,” Thorp replied with a wave of his hand, obviously distracted and a bit put out by the question.
Longarm put his hand inside his coat. “Unless, that is, one of you gents happens to know who these baubles belong to so that I can get ‘em back to their rightful owner?” He took out the necklace and bracelet he had found in Rainey’s saddlebag.
He should have figured it out sooner, he realized immediately. But all it took was the strangled sound Thorp made, the widening of the man’s eyes, and the heartfelt curse that came from Burley’s lips. “Where did you get those?” the marshal asked hoarsely.
Longarm sat forward, his muscles tense. “You’re saying they belong to-“
“They belong to my wife!” Thorp said in a voice that was almost a wail. “That’s Emmaline’s jewelry!”
Chapter 5
Longarm stared at the man for a second, then asked, “Was she wearing these things when she disappeared?”
Thorp seemed to have aged another year or so in the moment since he had seen the shiny necklace and bracelet in Longarm’s hand. He nodded without saying anything.
“Your wife wore geegaws like this to go horseback riding on a ranch?” Longarm asked with a frown.
“I told you she was raised in Louisiana,” Thorp said. “New Orleans, to be exact. She always liked nice things. She said that.. just because she was living on a ranch was no reason not to … to enjoy her jewelry.”
Thorp appeared to be on the verge of breaking down. Carson moved to his side and said solicitously, “Maybe I ought to give you something too, Mr. Thorp.”
Thorp pulled away from the doctor and shook his head vigorously. “I don’t want anything,” he said. “I have to be able to think clearly.”
It might be a little too late for that, Longarm figured. Thorp seemed about one step away from losing his mind, and Longarm supposed he couldn’t blame the man for that. He himself didn’t want to start believing in monsters, but something had happened to Emmaline Thorp, and the overwhelming odds were that it was bad.
Longarm stood up and handed the jewelry to Thorp. reckon you’d better take care of these,” he said. “Your wife’ll want ‘em when she gets back.”
Thorp nodded numbly. “Where did you get them?”
Longarm inclined his head toward the cellblock door. “Rainey had them in his saddlebags.”
“Then … maybe he and his partner had Emmaline-” Thorp wheeled and lunged toward the cell block. “I’ll kill him!”
Longarm’s hand shot out and clamped down on Thorp’s arm, jerking the rancher to a stop. Burley was already up and moving, putting himself between Thorp and the cell block. “Hold on there!” Longarm said in a hard voice. “I already thought of what you’re thinking, Thorp, and I got to admit you might be right.”
“Are you saying Rainey and Lloyd killed Matt Hardcastle instead of the Brazos Devil?” asked Burley.
Longarm shrugged. “I’m not saying anything. But even if … something else … killed Hardcastle, Mrs. Thorp could’ve been running away from whatever it was when she bumped into those two outlaws.”
If that was the case, it was possible, even likely, that a couple of hardcases like Rainey and Lloyd would have raped her. And if she’d put up a fight, one of them could have hit her too hard …”
It was a plausible explanation. Just because Rainey and Lloyd hadn’t killed anybody that Longarm knew of didn’t mean he could put rape and murder past them. They had certainly been quick enough to try to kill him, and in a particularly cruel and gruesome fashion at that.
“Rainey’s knocked out right now,” Longarm said. “When he wakes up, we’ll question him.”
“If he’s coherent again,” Doc Carson put in.
“He’ll be coherent enough to answer our questions,” Thorp said coldly. “If he wants to live to see another sunrise, he’ll answer us.”
Longarm refrained from pointing out that Rainey was a federal prisoner. He wasn’t about to let Thorp or anybody else kill a prisoner in his charge.
But Longarm wanted to get to the bottom of this mess too, and the best place to start would be by questioning Rainey when he regained his senses.
In the meantime, he was long overdue for that bath and a hot meal. He looked at Burley and said, “I’m leaving Rainey in your custody, Marshal. I expect nothing’ll happen to him while I go clean up and get myself a meal.”
Burley nodded curtly. “Nobody will bother the prisoner, Deputy Long. You’ve got my word on that.” He looked meaningfully at Thorp.
The rancher seemed to have recovered his own senses a little. He said, “Don’t worry, Long. Right now, the man in that cell block is worth even more to me than he is to you.” Thorp looked at the heavy wooden door and drew a deep breath. “He’s going to tell me what happened to my wife.”
Rainey slept through the night as the sedative Carson had given him did its work, and he was surprisingly lucid the next morning. Longarm was on hand when Burley and Thorp questioned the outlaw. He was feeling considerably more human himself after a night’s sleep and a hearty breakfast. He would have felt even better, Longarm reflected, if his slumber hadn’t been haunted by images of giant hairy creatures that ran like men.
Rainey shook his head stubbornly to every question Burley and Thorp threw at him. “I didn’t see nothin’ out there,” he insisted. “And I sure as hell didn’t see your wife, mister. Jimmy and me, we never laid a hand on her, ‘cause we didn’t run into her.”
“What about this jewelry?” asked Thorp as he held up the necklace and bracelet.
Rainey’s eyes lit up with avarice at the sight of the jewelry, but the reaction was fleeting. He became sullen again and said, “Like I told Long, we found that stuff on the trail.”
“Found it,” repeated Burley.
“That’s right, damn it! And we picked it up too. Would you ride away and leave something like that laying on the ground?”
Thorp growled, “And we’re supposed to take the word of a holdup man that that’s what happened.” He snorted in contempt.
Thorp was more in control of himself this morning, Longarm noted. The man was still upset, of course, and hollow-eyed from lack of sleep. But the rage that had gripped him the day before seemed to have subsided. That made the questioning easier, if not more fruitful.
“Listen, Rainey,” Longarm put in from his position leaning against the bars of the opposite cell, his arms crossed over his chest, “you’ll make it easier on yourself if you tell us the truth.”
“I am telling the truth, damn it! Can’t any of you get that through your head? I’m already behind bars! What in blazes do I have to gain by lying?”
“Right now you’re facing federal charges of stealing Uncle Sam’s mail and assault and attempted murder of a deputy marshal, namely me,” Longarm told him. “That’ll land you in Leavenworth for a fair number of years, but if you behave yourself I reckon you got a good chance of coming out alive.” Longarm’s voice grew quieter and more menacing. “But if you and your late pard had anything to do with Mrs. Thorp’s disappearance, old son, I don’t reckon you’ll live to see Denver, let alone Leavenworth. I might just ride off and let these good folks here in Cottonwood Springs have you. So if you know anything at all about Mrs. Thorp, you’d be smart to tell us.”
Truth to tell, Longarm didn’t know what he would do if Rainey confessed to murdering Emmaline Thorp. He had already lost Lloyd; he didn’t want to lose the remaining bandit too. But he couldn’t in all good conscience deny Texas law the opportunity to deal with a killer. Not to mention the fact that if he tried to take Rainey away under those circumstances, he might wind up on the wrong end of a lynch rope too.
It didn’t come to that. Rainey looked from Longarm to Burley to Thorp, and he said miserably, “I swear, gents, I never saw any woman over there on the other side of the Brazos. Jimmy and me found that jewelry, just like I said, and I’ll swear to that on as big a stack of bibles as you want to pile UP.”
Thorp glared at him for a moment, then grabbed the bars of the cell so tightly that his knuckles turned white. “You’re lying!” he hissed between his teeth. “Burley, let me in there with him for five minutes! By God, I’ll have the truth out of him!”
Rainey was sitting on the bunk. He cringed back against the wall and pointed a finger at Thorp. “You can’t do that, Marshal!” he yelled at Burley. “You keep that crazy man away from me! It ain’t fittin’ that he’s even in here.”
Burley put a hand on Thorp’s arm. “Come on, Mr. Thorp. We’re just wasting our time here. Let’s go out in the office and talk about it.”
“We’ve been talking for three weeks, goddamn it! None of it has brought my wife back! I’m tired of talking!”
Longarm got on Thorp’s other side, and he and Burley were able to steer the upset rancher out of the cell block. Thorp went reluctantly, and he spat curses back over his shoulder at Rainey as the two lawmen led him out.
Longarm felt a little relieved when the cellblock door was closed and locked. Thorp was damned near frothing at the mouth by this time, and Longarm supposed he couldn’t blame him. He and Burley got Thorp settled down in the chair in front of the desk.
Burley looked at Longarm and asked, “What do you think, Long? Is Rainey telling the truth?”
Longarm rubbed a thumbnail along his freshly shaven jaw and then tugged on his right earlobe in thought. “I think he is,” he finally said.
“That’s insane!” Thorp exploded. “He has to be lying!”
“He’s still pretty shook up after that scare he had yesterday,” Longarm said, “and he knows how much trouble he’s in here. If he and Lloyd did have anything to do with your wife’s disappearance, I think he’d lie about it, all right, but he wouldn’t just dummy up like that. His sort usually starts trying to spin some fancy yarn to take them off the hook, and that’s what trips ‘em up. When you’re dealing with owlhoots like Rainey, a good rule of thumb is the simpler the story, the more likely it is to be true.”
Thorp shook his head. “I still don’t believe him.” He glowered at Longarm. “And you’re not going to take him back to Denver when he may be the key to finding my wife either!”
Longarm had done some debating with himself on that very subject. He had been gone from Denver long enough already, and it was time to be getting back with his prisoner. On the other hand, he couldn’t blame Burley and Thorp for wanting to keep Rainey here in Cottonwood Springs until the matter of Emmaline Thorp’s disappearance was settled. He had come up with a compromise, and he said now, “I don’t intend to move on right away, especially since I noticed you’ve got a Western Union office here. I’ll send a wire to my boss to let him know that Lloyd’s dead and Rainey is in custody, but I’ll tell him we’ll be delayed for a few days at the request of the local authorities. That ought to placate Billy … for a while.”
“Thanks, Long,” Burley said. “I’m glad you’re cooperating. I don’t have any desire to get in a ruckus with the U.S. government.”
Thorp stood up. “You two can throw bouquets at each other all you want. I’m going back in there and question that owlhoot some more.”
Before Longarm or Burley could say anything, the door of the marshal’s office opened, and a tall, thin young man in a suit and a stiff collar came in and said, “Mr. Thorp, I think you’d better get over to the bank right away.”
“What the hell’s wrong, Stanley?” Thorp asked, not bothering to conceal his irritation. He kept staring at the cell block door as if he could see something on the other side of it.
The young man swallowed hard and said, “There are some … people there to see you. One of them said to tell you his name was Booth.”
Thorp’s head jerked around. “Booth?” he repeated. “My God, I didn’t expect him so soon.”
Burley said worriedly, “What’s going on here, Mr. Thorp? Who’s this fella Booth?”
Thorp ignored him. He stalked over to the door, seemingly galvanized by the news his assistant had brought. “Thanks, Stanley,” he said. He went out, trailed by the young man.
Longarm and Burley exchanged a glance. Burley didn’t like this, and Longarm’s instincts told him it could be more trouble too. Acting as if with one mind, both men started toward the door.
A crowd had already started gathering in front of the bank, Longarm saw as he and Burley emerged from the marshal’s office. And with good reason, because the people standing on the porch in front of the bank were like nothing the good citizens of Cottonwood Springs had ever seen before.
The man and the woman standing together were normal enough, Longarm saw as he and Burley drew closer. Thorp had already reached the bank and was shaking hands with the man, who wore a fringed buckskin coat, a big cream-colored Stetson, tight brown trousers, and high-topped black boots. It was the sort of outfit one of those Wild West Show impresarios back East would wear, Longarm thought. The gent was tall and lean and had a dark spade beard.
The woman was dressed more elegantly, her gown the height of fashion even though it was a little dusty at the moment, no doubt from riding in one of the wagons that were parked in front of the bank. Longarm put her age around thirty, which made her about fifteen years younger than the man she was with. She had dark red hair under a feathered hat, and she was undeniably beautiful.
Their two companions were the ones attracting most of the attention from the townspeople. One of the men was tall and broad-shouldered and had a turban of some sort that came to a point on top wrapped around his head. His beard stuck out in two tufts, one on each side of his chin, and his face was the color of saddle leather. He wore boots and loose trousers and a tunic with a broad leather sash tied around his waist. Tucked behind that sash was a wicked-looking sword with a wide, curving blade. He was armed as well with a rifle equipped with a sling, which he carried over one shoulder. Longarm didn’t recognize the rifle and wondered if it was of foreign manufacture, because the gent carrying it sure as hell was.
The other man also wore a turban, and his tunic came almost to his knees. He was as dark-skinned as his partner but clean-shaven, and he wasn’t armed as far as Longarm could tell. He was also about half the size of the man standing next to him on the porch of the bank. From Longarm’s reading in the Denver Public Library on those days close to the end of the month when he’d run out of drinking and gambling money, Longarm recognized both of them as being from India or some such Asian country.
The wagons that had evidently brought the foursome to Cottonwood Springs were ordinary, medium-sized vehicles with canvas coverings over their beds, the type of wagons that could be bought or rented at practically any wagon yard. The teams hitched to them were good enough, Longarm saw, running his eyes over them as would any experienced judge of horseflesh, but like the wagons they pulled, they were quite common. It was the people who had arrived in these conveyances who were out of the ordinary.
Burley stepped up onto the porch and asked bluntly, “Who’s this, Mr. Thorp?”
“The man who’s going to find my wife,” Thorp said. “The man who’s going to track down the Brazos Devil and kill it once and for all. Marshal Burley, this is John Booth, Lord Beechmuir, and his wife Lady Beechmuir.”
“How do you do, Marshal?” John Booth said to Burley in a strong British accent. He extended a hand, which the local lawman shook a little dubiously. “It’s quite an honor to be here in your community. Quite an honor indeed to be asked to hunt down this bloody beast that’s been plaguing you and your citizens, eh, what?”
Thorp was excited. He had forgotten for the moment about Rainey, Longarm saw, and was worked up again about the Brazos Devil. He turned to Longarm and Burley and said, “I read in the newspaper that Lord Beechmuir was in San Antonio on a visit, and I figured he’d be the perfect man for the job. After all, he’s hunted big game all over the world, haven’t you, Lord Beechmuir?”
“Indeed,” said the Englishman. “Elephants in Africa, tigers in India … you name it and I’ve shot it.” He moved slightly aside. “Allow me to introduce my wife. Helene, this is Mr. Benjamin Thorp, our host.”
Helene Booth murmured a properly demure greeting and shook hands with Thorp, although she looked as if she halfway expected him to kiss her hand instead of shake it. As she turned away, her eyes met Longarm’s for an instant, and he felt as if somebody had just punched him in the belly. There was something incredibly powerful about Helene’s gaze, something raw and primordial that called out to the male animal residing deep within Longarm, the atavistic savage that dwelled inside all men.
“Lordy,” he muttered to himself, sweeping those thoughts away with an effort. Unless he missed his guess, Helene Booth was one damned horny woman.
“… my servants, Absalom Singh and Randamar Ghote, Booth was saying. Singh was the tall one with the sword and the beard, judging by the way he bowed when Booth said the name. That would make Ghote the little one, and Longarm wondered idly if anybody had ever called him Billy.
“There have been some unexpected developments, Lord Beechmuir,” Thorp said, “but I still want you to try to track down the creature we think may be out there somewhere along the Brazos. We still can’t rule out the possibility that it exists, and that it took my wife.”
“Please, call me John,” Booth replied. “And you can be assured that I shall do my utmost to rescue your lovely bride, Benjamin. The head of this Brazos Devil of yours will make quite the trophy for the wall of my club back in London, eh?”
Longarm felt almost as if he had stepped into the middle of some opera house play without knowing it. He wished for a second he had headed for Graham or Palo Pinto or some other town instead of Cottonwood Springs. He had a job to do, and the presence of an English big-game hunter, his overheated redheaded wife, and a couple of turban-wearing Indians of the subcontinent sort would just complicate things.
He was about to find out just how much of a complication, because Booth went on. “I believe this is one hunt I would make even without that twenty-thousand-dollar bounty you’re offering, Benjamin.”
Chapter 6
“Bounty?” Marshal Burley repeated. “Did you say something about a bounty, Mr. Booth?”
“That’s correct,” the Englishman said. “Twenty thousand dollars for the head of the Brazos Devil.” He added to Thorp, “Quite sporting of you, Benjamin, I must say.”
Burley turned to Thorp and said in an accusing tone, “You didn’t tell me anything about a bounty, Mr. Thorp.”
“Well, it’s none of your business,” snapped the rancher, looking not the least bit repentant. “After more than a week had gone by and you hadn’t found any sign of Emmaline, I knew I had to do something.”
Longarm knew what Burley was worried about, and the local lawman confirmed it by saying in a half-groan, “Money like that will bring in half the men in the state, and they’ll be shooting at anything that moves between here and the Brazos! Tell me you didn’t put an advertisement in the newspapers!”
“That’s exactly what I did,” Thorp said. “I ran the notice in papers in Fort Worth, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, Galveston, and New Orleans.”
Burley closed his eyes and grimaced.
“But I wrote personally to Lord Beechmuir,” Thorp went on. “He’s the first one to arrive.”
Burley looked at the Englishman. “You really think you can track down that varmint, Mr. Booth?”
“Of course I can,” Booth asserted. “I tracked a particular lion halfway across the veldt once. A killer, he was, with a taste for human flesh.”
“I’ll take your word for it,” Burley told him. “I just hope you find the Brazos Devil in a hurry, before a bunch of bounty hunters come down on this town like a plague of locusts.”
Longarm figured the marshal was exaggerating a little, but probably not by much. Nothing drew folks like the chance of a big payoff. People sometimes lost all common sense when they smelled the possibility of money.
“I intend to begin my search as soon as possible,” Booth assured Burley. “I’ll be making my headquarters at Mr. Thorp’s ranch.” Booth looked over at Thorp. “I believe you said that I could use your men as beaters, Benjamin, once I’ve discovered the general location of the animal?”
“My hands will do whatever you say,” Thorp replied with a nod. “Everything I have is at your disposal.”
“Well, I’ll take a small party into the bush first. Myself and Singh and a couple of men should do just fine. Then, once I’ve found the beast, I can send a rider back to fetch assistance.”
Thorp nodded. “Sounds good to me. Why don’t we go on out to the ranch so you can get settled in?” He managed to smile at Lady Beechmuir. “I’m sure her ladyship is tired after the trip up here from San Antonio.”
“I wouldn’t mind freshening up a bit,” Helene said, returning Thorp’s smile.
“It’s settled then.” Thorp cast a meaningful glance at Burley. “Isn’t it, Mal?”
“I suppose so, Mr. Thorp,” Burley responded grudgingly. “But like I said, I sure hope you find that monster in a hurry.”
For Emmaline Thorp’s sake, so did Longarm.
The visitors climbed back into the wagons, Booth and his wife getting into the first one along with the servant Randamar Ghote, who handled the team. The fierce-looking Singh stepped up to the box of the second wagon and took the reins. Benjamin Thorp fetched his buggy from the nearby livery stable and led the little procession out of Cottonwood Springs.
Mal Burley watched them go and muttered under his breath, “Did you ever see anything like that?”
Longarm knew the local marshal wasn’t really talking to him, but he replied anyway. “Not particularly, though I’ve run across a heap of strange things in my time. That big fella with the sword, I think he’s what they call a Sikh. Mighty fine fighting men, from what I hear.”
“I don’t care. I just want the whole lot out of my town where they won’t cause trouble.” Burley lifted a hand and rubbed wearily at his temple. “And I wish Mr. Thorp had asked me first before posting a bounty on the Brazos Devil. I don’t think he really knows what he’s started.”
“I don’t reckon he cares,” Longarm said. “He strikes me as the sort of gent who generally does what he wants.”
“Yeah,” Burley said, nodding slowly. “That describes Mr. Thorp, all right.” He looked over at Longarm. “You’re still going to stay in these parts for a few days, aren’t you? Mr. Thorp seems to have forgotten that Rainey may be mixed up with his wife’s disappearance, but I haven’t.”
Longarm thought about the developments of the morning and replied honestly, “I don’t think you could get me to leave now if you wanted to, Marshal.”
With the show over for the time being, Longarm went over to the Western Union office and sent that telegram to Billy Vail in Denver, informing his boss that Mitch Rainey was his prisoner and that he had been forced to kill Jimmy Lloyd in the process of apprehending the outlaws. He went on to say that Rainey was in jail in Cottonwood Springs, pending the outcome of a possible jurisdictional dispute. When the telegrapher was finished tapping out the message, he looked up from his key at Longarm and asked, “Do you want to wait for a reply, Marshal?”
“No, and don’t come looking for me when one comes in either, old son,” Longarm told him. “I’ll come by and pick it up when I get the chance.”
That ought to take care of it, he thought as he left the telegraph office and paused on the street outside to fire up a cheroot. As long as he could honestly claim that he had not received any instructions to proceed directly to Denver and jurisdictional disputes be damned, he felt justified in waiting to see what happened next in Cottonwood Springs.
He sauntered back toward the jail, and found the office empty. Longarm knew where Burley kept the ring of keys, though, so he took it from the desk and unlocked the cellblock door. Rainey looked up dispiritedly from his bunk as Longarm stepped into the aisle between the rows of cells.
“Come to badger me some more about that woman, Long?” the prisoner asked.
Longarm hooked a stool with the toe of his boot and drew it over so that he could sit down in front of Rainey’s cell. “Nope,” he said as he took the cheroot out of his mouth. “It just so happens that I believe your story, Rainey.”
The outlaw frowned at him. “Really?”
Longarm nodded solemnly and said, “Yep.”
“Well, you’re the first law-dog that ever believed a word I said,” Rainey allowed with a shake of his head. “Even when I was telling the truth, no man wearing a badge ever took it as gospel.”
“And just how often were you really telling the truth, old son?”
A sly grin stretched across Rainey’s face. “Ever’ now and then.”
Longarm chuckled. He didn’t feel much beyond contempt for Rainey, but he could pretend otherwise if it might get him some answers. “I been thinking about that jewelry. Just where did you say you and Lloyd found it?”
“Don’t recall that I ever did say exactly … but it was a couple miles southeast of the place where we jumped you.”
Longarm nodded, thinking about what he knew of the geography of the area. “On the far side of the river?”
“Yeah.”
That would put the spot generally opposite the point where Matt Hardcastle’s savaged body had been found, Longarm decided. He said, “Was the stuff out in the open, or was it hid under a bush or something?”
“Well, there’s a game trail through there, and it was at the side of the trail, not in the middle, if that’s what you’re asking.
Longarm considered. He knew very little about Emmaline Thorp, had no idea how cool-headed she might be in the face of danger. But it was possible she could have dropped the necklace and bracelet on purpose, hoping that the jewelry would tell any searchers she had been there. In that case she could have tossed them to the side of the trail, hoping her captor wouldn’t notice. Which evidently had been what happened, or the jewelry wouldn’t have been there for the two outlaws to find.
Longarm hoped his line of reasoning was correct, because that would mean Mrs. Thorp hadn’t been killed outright, like Hardcastle and the Lavery boys. If whoever—or whatever—had grabbed her had had a reason for not killing her then, maybe she was still alive.
As for the existence of the creature known as the Brazos Devil, Longarm wasn’t ready to make up his mind on that question just yet. Maybe Lord Beechmuir, that big-game hunter from England, would be able to find and kill the beast. Longarm recalled that gorillas had been considered legends and myths—the mysterious ape-men of Africa, they had been called—until somebody had actually captured one and brought it back to civilization. Maybe this so-called Brazos Devil was an American cousin of the gorilla.
He stood up, dropped the butt of his cheroot on the floor, and crushed it out with his boot. “I sure as hell hope you’re telling the truth, Rainey,” he told the prisoner. “If you’re not, I don’t reckon I can help you much. If Thorp finds out you hurt his wife …” Longarm just shook his head and didn’t finish the sentence.
Rainey gulped. “I said it before and I’ll say it again. Jimmy and me never even saw that woman, let alone did anything to her.”
Before Longarm could say anything else, he heard the front door of the office open. “Hey!” Burley exclaimed a second later when he saw the open cellblock door.
“It’s all right, Marshal,” Longarm called to the local lawman. “I’m just back here talking to the prisoner.”
Burley appeared in the open door, a frown on his face. “I’m not sure I like the idea of you waltzing into my jail like that, Long.”
Longarm shrugged. “I didn’t figure you’d mind. Sorry if I stepped on your toes.”
“Well, it’s all right, I reckon,” Burley said grudgingly. “Rainey is your prisoner, after all, and if I’d been here I wouldn’t have minded letting you talk to him.”
“Marshal, why don’t you take me on to Denver, like you said you were going to?” Rainey demanded of Longarm. “I don’t have anything to do with this business here.”
Longarm shook his head, forestalling any protest Burley might make to the suggestion. “One bite at a time,” he told Rainey. “That’s the way we’re going to eat this apple.”
Burley and Longarm ate lunch together at the Red Rooster Cafe, just around the corner from the hotel. The breakfast Longarm had had in the hotel dining room had been all right, if nothing special, but the fried steak and potatoes served up at the Red Rooster made Longarm’s taste buds stand up and salute. So did the peach cobbler with which he concluded the meal.
“That was mighty fine,” he told Burley as they left the cafe. “Much obliged to you for recommending the place.”
“The chili’s even better,” Burley told him, “but I wouldn’t eat it if I was going to be in polite company any time in the next twenty-four hours.”
Longarm grinned, then changed the subject by saying, “I was thinking about taking a ride out to Thorp’s ranch. Reckon you could tell me how to find it?”
Burley had seemed almost human there for a minute—fried steak and peach cobbler had a way of doing that to a man—but his pleasant expression disappeared, only to be replaced by the usual sour frown. “What do you want to do that for?” he asked.
“Thought I’d see if he wants an extra hand along on that monster hunt he’s getting up.”
“I don’t know if that’s a good idea,” Burley said dubiously.
“I can take that Englishman right to the spot where something spooked Rainey,” Longarm pointed out. “Maybe he could pick up the trail there.”
“Rainey claims he didn’t see anything. I thought you believed his story.”
“I believe he and his partner found that jewelry and didn’t have anything to do with Mrs. Thorp’s disappearance or Hardcastle’s murder. But I know damned good and well he saw something that scared the piss out of him. I was there. I never saw a man so shook-up in all my life.”
Burley nodded slowly. “Maybe you should go along with that Lord Beechmuir then. You ever have any dealings with English lords and ladies, Long?”
“A little, here and there,” Longarm said. “I reckon underneath all the airs they put on, they’re just folks like you and me.”
“Like you, maybe.” Burley shook his head. “Not like me.”
He went on to give Longarm directions to Thorp’s ranch, which wouldn’t be difficult to find. Longarm had stabled the Appaloosa and the chestnut at the only livery barn in Cottonwood Springs, so he headed over there to saddle up the Appaloosa.
The ride out to the Rocking T took about an hour, as Longarm expected it to. He followed the Fort Griffin road west out of Cottonwood Springs and turned to the north on a smaller road before reaching the river. The ranch house was about two miles up that road.
Also as Longarm expected, the house Benjamin Thorp had built for his bride from New Orleans was quite a place. It sat on a hilltop with a spectacular view of the entire Brazos River valley to the west. There was a one-story stone house in front that might have been Thorp’s original homestead and ranch house, but spreading out behind it with a wing to either side was a three-story, whitewashed frame structure with white-columned porches flanking the stone house. The arrangement gave the house a bizarre look, half Texas frontier and half antebellum plantation. Longarm found it attractive in a strange sort of way, although architecture was not one of his interests. Down the hill from the big house were barns and corrals and a long, narrow bunkhouse where the hands of the Rocking T undoubtedly lived. Longarm had seen quite a few cattle during his ride out to the ranch, and all of the animals had looked fat and healthy. Evidently, Benjamin Thorp had himself a prosperous spread here to go with that bank he owned in town.
Longarm didn’t see the wagons that had brought the visitors from Cottonwood Springs. The vehicles had probably been put away in one of the barns, he thought, and the teams turned out in a corral. The trail he was following split in two, one path going toward the bunkhouse and the barns, the other curving up the hill to that hybrid house. That was the one Longarm followed.
A fence made of logs supported by stone pillars ran around the yard in front of the house. Longarm swung down from the Appaloosa and tied the reins to one of the logs. There was a gap in the fence that served as a gate, with a flagstone walk on the other side of it. Longarm followed that to the front door of the stone structure. He slapped a heavy brass knocker up and down a couple of times.
To his surprise, the big Sikh answered the summons. Longarm was just about as tall as Absalom Singh. He nodded to the fierce-looking foreigner and said, “I’ve come to see Mr. Thorp and Lord Beechmuir. Name’s Custis Long. I’m a U.S. deputy marshal.”
Longarm didn’t know if Singh spoke any English or not. Stolid and expressionless, the man stepped back to let Longarm enter the house.
Benjamin Thorp came through a door on the other side of the room, which was furnished with a heavy sofa, a couple of chairs, and a bearskin rug on the puncheon floor. On one side of the room was a fireplace with a massive stone mantel over it. A pair of horns decorated the wall above the fireplace. Longarm could tell from the wide sweep of the horns that they had come from a Texas longhorn.
Thorp had a big cigar in his mouth. He took it out and said, “What are you doing here, Marshal?”
“Came to talk to you and Lord Beechmuir. I want to go along on the hunt for that critter.”
“I thought you didn’t believe in the Brazos Devil,” Thorp said, lifting one eyebrow in an expression of smug surprise.
“I’m not sure I do,” Longarm said honestly, “but I’m willing to keep an open mind about it.”
Thorp sighed, and suddenly he looked older again. “I find that I have to believe in the creature, Marshal Long. As horrible as being taken captive by it might be for Emmaline, I think she has a better chance of still being alive if that’s what happened. If that outlaw Rainey is lying… if Emmaline wound up in the hands of him and his partner… then I have no doubt she’s dead now.”
“Chances are you’re right,” Longarm agreed, being brutally frank about it. “I reckon for your sake—and the sake of your wife—I hope there really is a Brazos Devil too.”
Thorp inclined his head toward the door behind him. “Well, come on in. I don’t believe you met Lord and Lady Beechmuir in town. I’ll introduce you.”
Longarm followed Thorp into the other part of the house, into a much more tastefully appointed drawing room. The influence of Emmaline Thorp was readily visible here in the rugs, the delicate furniture, the crystal chandelier, and the lace curtains over the windows. This could have been a drawing room in a Southern mansion. John and Helene Booth were seated on a small divan, both of them holding glasses of brandy. The Indian servant, Ghote, hovered in the background.
Booth came to his feet as Longarm and Thorp entered the room. The rancher said, “Lord Beechmuir, I neglected to introduce this gentleman while we were in town. This is Marshal Custis Long, who also has an interest in this affair. He has a prisoner in jail in Cottonwood Springs who is involved, at least indirectly, in my wife’s disappearance.”
Booth extended a hand. “It’s a great pleasure to meet you, Marshal. However, I was under the impression that Mr. Burley was the local constable.”
“He is,” Longarm said as he returned the Englishman’s firm grip. “I’m a deputy United States marshal.”
“Ah, a representative of your country’s government,” said Booth. “I’m pleased and honored to make your acquaintance.” He turned and held out a hand toward his wife. “Allow me to present Lady Beechmuir.”
Longarm smiled at Helene and acted on an impulse, bending over the hand she held up to him and brushing his lips across the back as he took it. “The honor’s all mine, ma’am.”
“My, aren’t you the charming gentleman, even if you do look like a cowboy, Marshal Long,” she said.
“I prefer to think of myself as a diamond in the rough, ma’am.”
The fires he had seen in her eyes earlier were banked now, but he could still feel some heat coming from her. Not being in the habit of standing around and flirting with married women—at least not while their husbands were in the room—Longarm released her hand and smiled politely at her, then turned back to Thorp and Lord Beechmuir.
“Like I told Mr. Thorp,” he said to the Englishman, “I rode out here to volunteer to go along with you when you start looking for the Brazos Devil.”
“Do you have any big-game hunting experience, Marshal Long?”
“Well, I’ve shot my share of grizzly bears and mountain lions,” Longarm said, “but only when they were fixing to jump me. I’ve had more experience hunting men, and those who have seen it say the Brazos Devil is half-man.”
“And half-monster,” Thorp put in. “But we’ll be glad for the help, won’t we, Lord Beechmuir?”
“Of course. Always good to have another competent chap along for a hunt.”
Helene said, “Marshal Long looks very competent indeed.”
Longarm figured he had better ignore that, but then chivalry got the better of him and he nodded to her. “Thank you, ma’am.” To Thorp he said, “What time do you plan on leaving in the morning?”
“We’ll be on the trail early. You think you can show us where Rainey saw whatever he claims he didn’t see?”
“That’s just what I planned to do,” Longarm said.
Booth raised his glass of brandy. “I propose a toast, gentlemen … although perhaps that’s not the proper thing to do, considering the plight that has brought us here, Benjamin.”
Thorp shook his head and said, “No, that’s all right, your lordship. I’m very concerned about my wife’s safety, of course, but I realize this is an important undertaking for you too. Hunting down a creature like the one we’ve got around here will make you more famous than ever.”
“Yes, but your dear bride’s return is of course the most important thing.”
While Thorp and Booth were trading those comments, the servant Ghote glided forward and pressed a glass of brandy into Longarm’s hand. Longarm noticed that Ghote had a fresh glass for Lady Beechmuir as well. Her ladyship had polished off the first one.
Booth raised his glass. “To the Brazos Devil, my friends,” he said in his mellifluous voice. “And to us, the men who will bring the creature back … dead or alive.”
Chapter 7
Thorp insisted that Longarm stay for supper. The man was distracted by the situation and his worry about his wife, but the Western tradition of hospitality ran deep. Longarm accepted the invitation, and was glad he did. The middle-aged black woman who served as cook and housekeeper for the Rocking T dished up some fine grub, Longarm discovered as he put away several helpings of ham, sweet potatoes, and greens.
After the meal, Longarm, Thorp, and Lord Beechmuir went into the main room of the stone house, which Longarm figured served as a study of sorts for the rancher. As he handed cigars to the other two men, Thorp confirmed that this part of the house had been his original dwelling when he’d started the Rocking T, long before he went to New Orleans on a business trip and unexpectedly brought back a bride.
Smoking cigars and having another brandy with Thorp and Booth was enjoyable enough, but Longarm didn’t want to linger too long. “I’d best be heading back to town so I can get some sleep,” he said after a few minutes. “I’ll be out here around sunup in the morning, Mr. Thorp.”
“That’ll be fine, Marshal,” Thorp said with a nod. “Is there anything you’ll need?”
“Well, if you’ve got a good Winchester I could borrow, I’m without a saddle gun. That rented nag of mine ran off with mine when he spooked yesterday. I was hoping he might wander into Cottonwood Springs so I could get my rig back, but that doesn’t look like it’s going to happen.”
“I’ve got plenty of spare rifles, and you’re welcome to use one of them.”
“Better yet,” Lord Beechmuir said, “I’d be delighted to have you use one of my guns, Marshal Long. Have you ever fired a Markham & Halliday elephant gun?”
“No, sir, can’t say as I have,” Longarm replied dryly.
“Quite a magnificent weapon, don’t you know! If you need to drop a charging rogue elephant in its tracks, you couldn’t want a better gun.”
Longarm coughed discreetly. “I appreciate the offer, your lordship, but I reckon that’d be a mite too much power for me to handle. I’ll stick with a Winchester ‘73.”
“Certainly. A man should be comfortable with his weapons, I always say.”
Longarm looked around for his hat, not quite sure where he had put it, but Ghote was suddenly there, holding out the Stetson to him. Longarm took it from the servant, who seemed to move about as quietly as a Comanche in the dark of the moon. He settled the hat on his head, nodded to Thorp and Booth, and said, “I’ll see you gents in the morning. Say good night to Lady Beechmuir for me.”
“Indeed I shall,” Booth assured him.
Earlier in the day, Thorp had had Longarm’s Appaloosa taken down to the barns, unsaddled, rubbed down, and grained and watered. Longarm headed down the hill now, figuring he could find one of the ranch hands around the barns who could tell him where to locate the horse. He was only halfway down the hill, however, making his way past a grove of oaks, when a soft voice stopped him.
“Good evening, Marshal Long,” Helene Booth said from the shadows underneath the trees.
Longarm stopped and turned toward the oaks. Instinctively he reached up and gave the brim of his hat a polite tug. “Evenin’, ma’am,” he said. “Pardon my asking, but what might you be doing out here in the dark?”
“Getting a breath of air.” He saw movement in the shadows as she came closer to him. “It’s a lovely night, don’t you think?”
“Yes, ma’am,” Longarm said. And it was. The air was crisp with autumn coolness and clear enough so that every star overhead seemed to sparkle individually.
“Would you be kind enough to stroll with me for a moment?” asked Helene.
“Well, ma’am, I’m sure your husband would be glad to take a walk with you. I just left him up at the house.”
Longarm was taking a step back toward the house as he spoke, but Lady Beechmuir stopped him by saying, “I’ve just spent several interminable days cramped up in a wagon with my husband, Marshal Long. I’ve had an abundance of his company, thank you very much.”
“I was just on my way to get my horse and head back to town,” he said.
“Surely you can spare me a few minutes, Custis. Do your friends call you that? I shall call you Custis.”
She didn’t sound like she would tolerate any argument on the subject, so he just nodded and said, “That’d be fine, ma’am.”
“And you simply must stop calling me ma’am!”
“All right … your ladyship.”
She made a noise of exasperation. “We’re not in England now, Custis. My name is Helene. Call me whatever you would call any other frontier woman in these circumstances.”
“Well, I’d likely call her missus,” said Longarm.
Helene laughed and stepped even closer to him. She was on the edge of the shadows now, and he could see her much better. He could smell her too, a heady mixture of the brandy on her breath, the perfume she wore, and an undeniable undercurrent of woman-scent. Just taking a deep breath around her, Longarm thought, was enough to get a man all hot and bothered.
“Call me Helene,” she said, and again her tone brooked no argument. “Please, take my hand and walk with me.” She held out her hand toward him.
He might get away from here quicker and easier if he just played along with her for a spell, Longarm figured. Besides, he hardly ever ran the other way when a beautiful woman wanted to flirt with him, even one who was married, although he did try to steer clear of causing serious trouble between a husband and wife. He reached out and took her hand. What could she do? he asked himself. Try to seduce him right here within sight of the house where she and her husband were staying? Didn’t seem likely.
Which only went to show how wrong a gent could be sometimes, he realized a moment after he had stepped into the gloom underneath the trees with Lady Beechmuir. She had her mouth pressed hotly to his and was rubbing those noble curves all over him.
Longarm was taken by surprise, so when she practically lunged against him, it was natural enough that his arms went around her. And when her hot, wet tongue speared between his lips to invade his mouth and fence with his own tongue, it was only to be expected that his shaft would spring to attention and prod its hard length against her soft flesh. She ground her belly against him, moaning low in her throat as she felt the size of him through his trousers and her gown.
Longarm managed to get his mouth away from hers long enough to say breathlessly, “Hold on there!”
Her hand came up and boldly caressed his groin as she laughed and said, “Hold on where? Here?”
Longarm gritted his teeth together and tried to tell both his brain and his body that this wasn’t a good idea. The way Helene was toying with him, he wasn’t going to be able to think of anything in a minute. He reached down, took hold of her wrist, and moved it away, despite the fact that it was a difficult thing for him to do. It took a great deal of willpower.
“Now look here, ma’am-“
“Helene! You said you’d call me Helene.”
“Ma’am,” he insisted, “you’re a married woman. If that ain’t enough, your husband is right up the hill there, and he’s an English lord at that.”
“You’re not telling me anything I don’t already know, Custis,” she said as she tried to grope him again and he fended her off. “What’s your point—no, wait, I think I’ve found it.”
Longarm cussed under his breath and disengaged her hand again as firmly as he could without hurting her. “I’m no prude,” he told her, “and I reckon I’ve had a few married ladies in my bed at one time or another, but this just ain’t right. You’d better let me go on back to Cottonwood Springs whilst you go back to your husband, ma’am.”
Abruptly, she pulled loose from his grip and moved away a step. “You are a most exasperating man!” she exclaimed. “Don’t you find me attractive?”
“I sure do,” he replied honestly, “but that’s got nothing to do with it.”
Helene laughed again, and the sound was full of scorn. “My God,” she said. “John comes here hunting for some mythical beast, and I find something I thought was equally fanciful: a moral man.”
“Most folks wouldn’t call me that,” Longarm said, also honestly.
“Yes, but they’d be wrong. They just don’t know you well enough. Tell me, Custis, what would you be doing right if I wasn’t married?”
Longarm took a deep breath. “Well, ma’am, I reckon I’d have that pretty gown of yours up around your hips and we’d be getting a whole heap better acquainted, if you get my drift.”
She laughed again, but this time she sounded genuinely amused. “Indeed I do get your drift, Marshal Long.” She sighed. “But I fear that’s all I’ll be getting from you tonight.”
“Yes, ma’am, I expect that’s true.”
“All right. Go on back to Cottonwood Springs. I know when I’m wasting my time.” Helene hesitated, then added, “But I warn you, Custis … I regard you now as a challenge. And I have always adored challenges.”
Longarm didn’t like the sound of that at all, but there wasn’t much he could do about it. He tugged on the brim of his hat one more time and backed quickly out of the trees. “Good night, ma’am.”
“Good night, Marshal.”
He started walking toward the barns again, puffing out his cheeks and then blowing out the air in a sigh of relief as he went. That had been a close call. Chances were, nothing would have happened if he had gone ahead and given Lady Beechmuir what she wanted. But he was damned if he wanted to go monster-hunting the next morning with a man he had cuckolded the night before. Especially since Lord Beechmuir would probably be carrying one of those big old elephant guns …
Something made Longarm pause suddenly and look over his shoulder. He thought he caught a glimpse of movement on the hill between the trees and the house. It might have been Helene going back in, he thought.
Or it might have been something else, and he wondered where that slippery-footed servant Ghote was right about now. Could the fellow have been spying on his mistress and seen and overheard what had happened in the grove? Longarm didn’t much like that thought, but there was nothing he could do about it now. He walked on quickly toward the barn, anxious to put the Rocking T behind him for the time being.
Longarm had told Benjamin Thorp that he wanted to get some sleep, but he wasn’t really tired enough to go up to his hotel room when he got back to Cottonwood Springs. The sound of piano music floating past the batwing doors of the town’s only good-sized saloon drew his attention, and Longarm realized that what he really wanted was a drink of good rye whiskey and maybe a hand or two of cards in a friendly poker game. That would relax him enough so he could get a good night’s sleep. He angled the Appaloosa toward the saloon, which was just up the block from the hotel.
The only trouble with his plan was that all hell broke loose before he got where he was going.
A scream suddenly overrode the strains of the piano, and a man hurtled out through the batwings to sprawl limply in the street in front of Longarm. There was a sound like a mountain lion’s howl inside the saloon, and it took Longarm a second to realize that the awful screech had come from the throat of a human being. Shouted curses and more screams filled the air, followed by the crashing of furniture and the unmistakable thud of fists against flesh.
Longarm reined in the horse and thought for a moment about turning around and going back to the hotel. He had seen probably a hundred saloon brawls in his time, and had participated in too damned many of them. With any luck, Mal Burley would be along pretty soon to break this one up before it got too serious.
But then a gun went off a couple of times inside the saloon and the screaming got worse. Longarm bit back a curse and sent the Appaloosa forward again. He had carried a badge for too blasted long to start turning his back on trouble now.
Longarm had heard only two shots, but there was no telling if that was a good sign or not. He swung down from the saddle, paused just long enough to loop the Appaloosa’s reins around the hitch rack alongside a dozen other horses, then stepped up onto the saloon’s porch with one stride of his long legs. His right hand reached across his body to make sure his Colt was loose in its holster before he slapped the batwings aside and stepped into the melee.
The first thing Longarm saw was a chair flying through the air at his head. He ducked frantically. The chair missed him and smashed into the batwings behind him, tearing one of the swinging doors loose from its hinges. Longarm heard that hideous howl again, and then a deep voice bellowed out over the confusion, “I’m Catamount Jack, and I’m a ring-tailed wonder!” The man the voice belonged to threw back his head and howled again.
Longarm could see that because the man stood taller than any of the knot of struggling figures around him. As Longarm watched, the man who called himself Catamount Jack reached out, snagged two of the combatants by the shoulders, and rammed their skulls together with enough force to knock out both of them. They slumped to the floor when the big man let go of them. At the same time, Catamount Jack was shrugging off the blows that rained in on him as if he didn’t even feel them.
He wore buckskins and a broad-brimmed, nearly shapeless brown hat. He was thin, appearing almost gaunt because of his height, but when his knobby fists snapped out into the faces of his opponents, there was plenty of power behind the punches. The blows sent men staggering backward or falling on their rumps when they landed.
Longarm saw a man in the silk shin, fancy vest, and cutaway coat of a professional gambler waving a pistol around. “Get out of the way!” the man shouted at the crowd around Catamount Jack. “I’ll plug the old bastard!”
Longarm figured the gambler was the one who had fired the other two shots. The man was already impatiently easing back the hammer for another try. Longarm moved fast, reaching over the gambler’s shoulder with his left hand. His fingers closed around the cylinder of the pistol, preventing it from turning.
“Let go, you son of a bitch!” the gambler yelled as he twisted toward Longarm. Longarm hit him then, a short punch that traveled no more than six inches but still possessed enough power to jerk the gambler’s head to the side. The man’s eyes rolled up in their sockets and he unhinged at the knees. Longarm plucked the gun easily from his grip as he fell. After easing down the hammer, Longarm stuck the pistol behind his belt and turned his attention once more to the fracas in the center of the room. There was no way of knowing what had started the battle, but evidently it was everybody else in the room versus Catamount Jack. Jack’s mallet-like fists had already laid out more than half a dozen of his opponents, but he was still outnumbered more than twenty to one.
Make that twenty to two, Longarm thought as he saw a man swinging a whiskey bottle at the back of Catamount Jack’s head, only to have a smaller figure in buckskins dart out of nowhere, kick him in the groin, then clout him over the head with a six-gun when he bent over in agony. Catamount Jack had at least one ally.
Or maybe two, Longarm grudgingly admitted, because no matter what the provocation, no matter who had started it, he didn’t like to see a fight this uneven. Even as he hoped he wasn’t making a mistake, he reached out, grabbed the shoulder of one of the men attacking Catamount Jack, and spun the gent around. Longarm slammed a fist into the middle of the man’s surprised face.
He was able to down two more of the brawlers before they realized what was happening. Then some of them turned away from Catamount Jack to deal with this new threat. Longarm buried his fist in the belly of one man and shoved him aside to backhand another. He was starting to absorb some punishment himself now, as some of the flurry of punches got past his guard and rocked him back a step. Somebody grabbed him from the side, and he drove an elbow into the man’s solar plexus. Another man got hold of his coat collar and jerked him off balance.
Longarm knew he couldn’t afford to fall down. Once you were on the floor, it was too easy to get trampled in a melee like this. He had seen men killed that way, stomped to death by other men who didn’t know or care who they were stepping on. He slapped one of his booted feet on the floor to steady himself, spreading his legs wide apart. He couldn’t see Catamount Jack anymore; the press of angry men around him was too thick.
Suddenly some of them fell back, and Longarm caught a glimpse of that smaller, buckskin-clad figure. The man had holstered his pistol and was wielding a broken chair leg now, lashing out around him and dropping his larger opponents left and right. Longarm grinned, grateful for the respite, and punched a gent in the jaw. The figure in buckskins jabbed another man in the belly, then slapped the makeshift club against the side of his head, dropping him. Longarm grabbed one of his opponents, head-butted him, then shoved him into two more men. Their feet and legs got tangled up and all three of them went crashing down. Longarm found himself bumping shoulders with the figure in buckskins.
“Pretty good fight, eh?” Longarm grunted as he blocked a blow and lashed out with a punch of his own.
“Damn right!” came the reply in a voice full of excitement. A woman’s voice.
Longarm’s head snapped around, his eyes widening in surprise, and he found himself staring into blue eyes above a nice little nose that had a scattering of freckles across it. Blond curls were escaping from underneath the hat the woman in buckskins had crammed down on his—her!—head. Longarm opened his mouth to say something else.
Then something cracked across the back of his head before he could speak, and he felt himself tumbling forward. A boot dug into his ribs in a vicious kick as he fell. He heard the woman in buckskins yell, “Hey!” Then she cried out in pain.
Longarm’s shoulder hit the floor first. He rolled over, coming to rest on his back just as a weight landed on top of him, knocking all the air out of his lungs. As consciousness slipped away from him, he realized that for the second time tonight, he had his arms full of firm female flesh.
And if a fella had to get himself knocked out, he supposed, that was as good a way to plummet into blackness as any, and better than most.
Chapter 8
“By all rights, I ought to lock you up back there with the others,” Mal Burley was saying angrily half an hour later. “The only reason I didn’t is because you’re a fellow lawman and I thought I ought to give you the benefit of the doubt. You were trying to break up that fight, weren’t you, Marshal Long? The witnesses I talked to said you were right in the middle of it.”
Longarm took the wet towel off the back of his neck and sighed. “I appreciate the professional courtesy, Marshal,” he said wearily. “To tell the truth, I’m not sure now what I was doing, but it seemed like a good idea at the time.”
Burley snorted. “Well, I know who started the fight at least. That hombre who calls himself Catamount Jack seems damned proud of the fact that he did. He hasn’t stopped talking about it since I threw him and that wildcat daughter of his into a cell.”
Longarm lifted his head and said, “You locked up the girl?”
“She was part of the fight too,” Burley said defensively. “I heard eyewitness accounts of how she knocked out at least three men. She may have even cracked Jordy Higgins’ skull!”
Longarm stood up. His head still hurt, but not as bad as it had when he first woke up on the cot in the jail’s back room where Burley sometimes slept. The marshal of Cottonwood Springs had been standing over him, glaring down at him, and Burley had lost no time in informing Longarm of what had happened. Longarm had been out cold on the floor of the saloon when Burley came in with a shotgun and broke up the brawl by firing one of the weapon’s barrels into the ceiling. Commandeering some “volunteers” from the crowd, Burley had ordered that all the unconscious combatants be dragged down to the jail, while he had used the shotgun to prod the ones who were still upright into moving. The cell block was full at the moment, and Doc Carson was in there now checking over the men who had been knocked out. The physician had already examined Longarm and proclaimed him to be all right, with the exception of a bad headache from the blow he had suffered.
Moving on legs that were still a little shaky, Longarm headed toward the cellblock door. “Is the girl all right?” he asked. “You said she’s Catamount Jack’s daughter?”
“That’s what she claims,” replied Burley, “and I don’t know why anybody would say that unless it was true! She wasn’t knocked out like you, just stunned a mite. Doc’s already checked her out and said she’ll be just fine.”
Longarm swung open the door, which was closed but not locked. There were six cells back here, three on each side of the wide aisle. Mitch Rainey was in the first cell on the right, Catamount Jack and his daughter were in the second one, and the rest of the brawlers from the saloon were crowded into the remaining four cells. There was a lot of groaning and cussing going on among them.
There were no complaints coming from the cell containing Catamount Jack and the girl, however. They were sitting side by side on the bunk, arms around each other’s shoulders, bellowing out the obscene lyrics of an old sailor’s song. Longarm frowned at them, and even Rainey, in the next cell, was looking a little askance at the pair.
The girl stopped singing when she saw Longarm. “There he is!” she called out. “There’s that handsome fella I told you about, Pa.”
She had taken off her hat so that her honey-colored curls spilled around her shoulders. Her face was smudged with dirt and had a smear of blood on the forehead, but she was still a reasonably attractive young woman. She grinned at Longarm.
Catamount Jack stood up and came over to the door of the cell. He thrust his ham-like right hand through the bars. “Hear tell you pitched in on our side durin’ that little fracas, stranger,” he said. “Much obliged, even though me an’ Lucy didn’t really need no help. We’d’ve cleaned up that bunch sooner or later.”
Longarm shook hands with the man, expecting a bone-crushing grip and getting one.
“I’m Catamount Jack Vermilion,” the big man went on, and this here’s my girl-child Lucy. Who might you be?”
“Custis Long.” Longarm paused, then added, “I’m a deputy United States marshal.”
Catamount Jack’s eyes narrowed. “Lawman, eh? First time one o’ them critters ever tried to give me a hand. But like I said, I’m obliged anyway.”
“What in blazes was that brawl all about?” asked Longarm.
Catamount Jack jerked a callused thumb over his shoulder. “Some no-good scoundrels made aspersions about my little girl’s honor. Said no self-respectin’ female’d come into a saloon wearin’ buckskins. Natcherly, we had to set ‘em straight, and their pards took offense at the way we done it.”
“You damn near busted their heads open,” Burley said from behind Longarm.
Catamount Jack leaned over to peer around Longarm and frown at Burley. “Ain’t nobody insults my little girl without payin’ for it!”
Longarm turned to look at the local badge. “Did those witnesses you were talking about say whether or not the fight started the way Mr. Vermilion says it did?”
“Well,” Burley said grudgingly, “I reckon there could have been some comments made about the young lady before the trouble started. But that didn’t give them the right to try to tear up the whole saloon!”
“We can settle this right easy,” Catamount Jack proposed. “How much did the damages come to? I don’t mind payin’ for ‘em. Hell, ever’ good fight’s got its price.”
“I talked to Dave Kilroy, the owner of the saloon,” Burley said. “He put the damages at two hundred dollars.”
That figure sounded a bit inflated to Longarm, but he didn’t say anything. It wouldn’t matter anyway. From the looks of the ragged buckskins worn by Catamount Jack and Lucy, they likely didn’t have two dollars between them, let alone two hundred.
What Catamount Jack did next surprised both Longarm and Burley. The big man reached inside his shirt and pulled out a leather pouch. The clinking sound of coins came from the pouch as he opened the drawstring top. “Fair enough, I reckon,” said Catamount Jack as he spilled double eagles into the open palm of his other hand. He counted out ten of the twenty-dollar gold pieces and put the others back in the pouch, then extended his hand through the bars with the two hundred dollars. “There you go.”
Burley didn’t take the coins. “Where’d you get loot like that?” he asked suspiciously. “I don’t recall hearing about any bank robberies around here lately.”
“Bank robberies!” Catamount Jack repeated, sounding offended. “Hell, that’s honest-earned money, Marshal. Lucy and me been wolvin’ all summer up Montana way. The cattlemen up there still pay good money to get rid o’ wolves.”
“All right,” Burley said with a sigh. He took the double eagles from Catamount Jack. “There’s still the matter of the fine for disturbing the peace.”
Longarm inclined his head toward the men in the other cells. “Are you planning to fine all of those gents too, Marshal? Seems to me they were disturbing the peace just as much as Mr. Vermilion and his daughter.”
“Yeah!” Lucy suddenly said. “There wouldn’t’ve been no fight if they hadn’t cast ‘spersions on me.”
Burley stood there for a moment, a frown on his forehead and a grimace pulling at his mouth. “All right, I’ll drop the charges against everybody,” he said. “I suppose you want me to let you out of there now.”
“Well,” Catamount Jack said, his tone surprisingly mild, “I did pay for the damages we done.”
Burley took the ring of keys from his belt and opened the cell door, still making a face. Catamount Jack turned and held out a hand to his daughter. Lucy picked up her hat, jammed it back on her head, and stood up to join him. Longarm stepped back so both of them could leave the cell.
Catamount Jack slapped a big hand on his back, almost staggering him. “How ‘bout havin’ a drink with us, Custis?” he asked. “I reckon you’re the closest thing we got to a friend in this town tonight.”
Longarm started to decline the offer, then decided that it might be wise to keep an eye on the two of them for a while, just to make sure they didn’t start any more fights. Besides, if Lucy Vermilion was cleaned up a mite, he had a feeling she would be a damned nice-looking woman.
“Sure,” he said with a nod. “I’ll have a drink with you.”
“I don’t want any more trouble,” warned Burley.
“There won’t be,” Longarm promised him.
Some of the other prisoners, who had heard everything that was said, began yelling to be released from their cells since they weren’t going to be charged with anything. Burley jerked a thumb at the cellblock door and said to Longarm, “Get ‘em out of here before I let any of these other jaspers loose.”
“Good idea,” Longarm agreed. He steered Catamount Jack and Lucy toward the door.
Once they were outside, Catamount Jack took a deep breath and slapped his hands against his chest. “Air always smells better when you’re a free man,” he declared.
Longarm understood and agreed with that sentiment. He said dryly, “That’s why I try to stay out of jail.”
“That ain’t fair,” Lucy protested. “It ain’t our fault we got locked up-“
“Yes, it was, girl,” her father broke in. “Might as well be honest about it, since Custis here is our friend. We was both in a mood to howl tonight, Custis, and if them cowboys hadn’t said what they did, likely we’d’ve found some other reason to start a ruckus. Ain’t that right, Lucy?”
“Well, maybe,” she admitted, then changed the subject by saying, “I thought we were goin’ to have another drink.”
“There’s only the one saloon in town,” Longarm said, “and I’m not sure any of us would be too welcome in there again tonight. But maybe I could duck in and buy a bottle without getting the proprietor too upset. Maryland rye all right with you folks?”
“Hell of a lot better’n the panther piss we usually drink!” Catamount Jack said with a laugh. He took out his money pouch and handed Longarm one of the double eagles. “That’ll be fine, Custis. Whilst you’re doin’ that, we’ll get our mules. They’re tied up at the rack in front of the saloon.”
Quite a few bottles of liquor had gotten smashed during the brawl, but luck was with Longarm. There was an unbroken bottle of rye behind the bar, and Dave Kilroy was glad to sell it to him, especially once Longarm had informed the saloonkeeper that Marshal Burley had collected enough money from Catamount Jack to pay for the damages.
“I hope that wild man never comes in here again,” Kilroy said with a shudder. “I’ve seen my share of loco customers, but he was just about the worst.” Kilroy glared across the bar at Longarm. “And you just about broke the jaw of my best dealer, I’m told.”
“Mighty sorry about that,” Longarm said contritely. “Seemed like the best thing to do at the time, considering how he was waving that gun around. I figured if I didn’t stop him, somebody innocent might get shot.”
“Nobody innocent ever comes in a saloon,” Kilroy said, then shrugged. “But I reckon you’re right. Still, I don’t want Vermilion and his girl in here again.”
“I’ll make sure they know to steer clear of your place,” Longarm promised.
He carried the bottle of rye outside and found Catamount Jack and Lucy waiting in the middle of the street. They were leading four mules. Two of the beasts wore saddles, while the others were pack animals.
“Where did you plan to spend the night?” Longarm asked as he gave Catamount Jack the change from the twenty-dollar gold piece. “I think there are some vacant rooms at the hotel.”
The big man snorted in disgust. “Hotel?” he repeated. “I don’t mind buyin’ a bottle of booze or payin’ for the damages from a good fight, but I ain’t throwin’ away good money on no hotel room. Not as long as there’s ground for a bed and a starry sky for the ceilin’.”
“We figured we’d camp just outside of town,” Lucy said. “Got a good place picked out and everything.”
“All right,” Longarm said. “Lead the way.”
As he walked to the western outskirts of Cottonwood Springs with Catamount Jack and Lucy, he realized the evening certainly hadn’t turned out the way he’d thought it would when he returned from Thorp’s Rocking T ranch. For one thing, he still had a headache from being clouted. And he sure as hell hadn’t expected to run into two such colorful characters. But he found himself liking the Vermilions, father and daughter, and once he had shared some of the rye with them, maybe they would settle down for the night and he could return to the hotel knowing there wouldn’t be any more trouble.
A thought occurred to Longarm as they left the lights of the settlement behind. “Might not be a very good idea to camp out here after all,” he said. “There’s some sort of wild critter that may be running loose around here. Several people have been killed so far. I don’t know if it would come this close to town, but you might not want to take the chance.”
Catamount Jack laughed and patted the stock of a rifle sticking up from the saddle boot on his mule. “This here’s a Sharps Big Fifty I used to kill more’n five thousand buffalo in my time, Custis. You know how much kick this carbine’s got?”
“Plenty,” Longarm admitted.
“As long as I got this Big Fifty with me, I ain’t scared of no critter, man or beast. And if you’re talkin’ about the Brazos Devil, I hope he shows up! That’d suit me just fine.”
“You know about the Brazos Devil?” Longarm asked with a surprised frown.
“Know about him? Hell, that varmint’s the reason we’re here, ain’t it, Lucy?”
“That’s right,” Lucy said. “We’re goin’ to get us that twenty-thousand-dollar bounty when we bring in the Brazos Devil’s head!”
Mal Burley sighed wearily as he sank down in the chair behind his desk. He put his boots on the little wooden footstool he kept in the desk’s kneehole; otherwise his feet wouldn’t reach the floor, and as somebody who had been short all his life, he knew how tiresome that was.
Even more tiresome were all the complaints he had heard as he unlocked the cell doors and let the prisoners file out of the jail. It wasn’t enough that he wasn’t charging them with disturbing the peace. They were mad because he hadn’t fined Catamount Jack Vermilion either. The way they saw it, Catamount Jack had started the whole thing, so he ought to have to pay.
“Just be glad I didn’t make you pass the hat to cover the damages to Kilroy’s place,” Burley had snapped at them. “Vermilion paid the whole thing, and you boys aren’t out a red cent!”
That had shut them up for the most part, although there had been some grumbling still going on as they left. Nobody was locked up back in the cell block now except Mitch Rainey, and Burley was glad of that. He despised the outlaw, and believed there was a better than even chance Rainey had had something to do with Emmaline Thorp’s disappearance and Matt Hardcastle’s murder. But Burley had to admit Rainey hadn’t caused any trouble during the more than twenty-four hours he had been locked up here.
Burley took off his hat and tossed it on the desk. He closed his eyes and scrubbed a hand over his face, then gave a little shake of his head. He reached for the desk drawer where he kept a small silver flask. One nip and he’d be ready to head for his cot.
That was when the prisoner started screaming bloody murder.
Actually the cries were just incoherent screeches, Burley realized as he leaped to his feet and ran toward the cellblock door. As he fumbled the key into the lock and turned it, he heard Rainey begin to say frantically, “Get it away from me, get it away from me!”
Could be Rainey was just having a fit, Burley thought, but he had to be certain. He pulled his gun from its holster as he swung the door open and ran into the cell block.
Rainey was squirming around on the bunk, kicking his feet and slapping his hands at empty air. “Get it away, get it away!” he screamed again.
“What is it?” yelled Burley. “I don’t see anything!”
“At the window!” Rainey shrieked. “At the window! It’s in the alley! God, don’t let it get me!”
Burley thought Rainey was imagining things, but then he heard a rustling noise and a growl coming from outside the small, barred window in the cell. The marshal’s breath caught in his throat. The way Rainey was acting, the Brazos Devil could be right outside the jail!
Burley’s heart began pounding wildly in his chest. He wasn’t sure why the Brazos Devil would risk coming all the way into town like this, but if he could capture or kill the beast, he could collect that twenty-thousand-dollar bounty from Benjamin Thorp. Not only that, it would improve his shaky standing with the town’s most influential citizen. Those thoughts flashed through Burley’s head in an instant, and the next second he was unlocking the door of the cell. He rushed across to the window, ready to stick his gun out through the bars and start blasting.
He lifted himself on his toes, straining to peer through the opening. Unable to quite see out, Burley grabbed the slops bucket from underneath the bunk and overturned it, heedless of the foul mess that it made on the floor. Rainey was still cowering on the bunk, eyes wide with terror as he made feeble pushing motions with his hands. Burley placed the overturned bucket under the window and stepped up on it, balancing himself as he looked out.
There wasn’t much light in the alley alongside the jail, but enough illumination filtered into it from the moon and stars that Burley would be able to see anything as big as the Brazos Devil. He twisted his neck from side to side, searching anxiously for any sign of the creature. He heard the growling sound again, and it made the hair on the back of his neck stand up. Then, right underneath the window, a dog barked.
“Hey!” Burley exclaimed. “There’s nothing out here but an old mutt-“
He was turning as he spoke, directing the angry words at Rainey. Before he could finish the sentence, however, Rainey’s shoulder slammed into his midsection, smashing him back against the wall. Burley grunted in pain and tried to bring his gun around, the bitter realization that he had been tricked flooding through him. Rainey grabbed his wrist before Burley could bring the weapon into play, and used his other hand to hook a vicious punch into Burley’s midsection. Burley felt himself falling off the overturned bucket.
Rainey caught the marshal around the throat and drove his head against the wall again. Burley went limp, the gun slipping from his fingers. Blackness closed in around him, and his last thought before he passed out was a curse at what a fool he had been.
Chapter 9
The spot Catamount Jack and Lucy had picked for their campsite was a clearing in a grove of cottonwoods northwest of town. A small spring-fed creek ran through the trees, and Longarm supposed that was where the settlement had gotten its name. He had to admit the clearing was a pretty place to camp. An evening breeze, cool but not cold, was blowing through the partially bare branches of the cottonwoods, making a lulling sound. The grass on the ground was still thick from the previous summer. Catamount Jack and Lucy unsaddled their riding mules and unloaded the pack animals while Longarm got a small fire going. When the mules had been staked out for the night, the three people settled down beside the flickering flames and began passing around the bottle of rye. Then Longarm was finally able to satisfy his curiosity.
“How in blazes did you find out about the Brazos Devil and the bounty Thorp put on it?” he asked. “I thought you said the two of you had been up in Montana all summer.”
“We were,” Catamount Jack replied. “But ever’ fall we come down here and pay a visit to my sister over in Austin. She’s a widow lady, you know, and don’t have no family but us.”
“And you saw the notice Thorp put in the Austin paper,” Longarm guessed.
“Actually, I did,” Lucy said. “Pa ain’t much of a hand for readin’, but he made sure I knew how. I can even cipher a mite.”
Catamount Jack lifted the bottle to his lips and took a long swig. Then, after wiping the back of his hand across his mouth, he handed the rye to Longarm and said, “When I was naught but a boy, back in the last days of the Shinin’ Times, I knew men who couldn’t read a word—but they could recite whole chunks of the Bible and practic’ly ever’ word that Shakespeare fella ever wrote. When those old boys went to spoutin’ passages, though, I always wondered … how did I know they was gettin’ it right? I swore then that if I ever had any young’uns, I’d see to it that they could read the words for theirselves, rather than havin’ to listen to somebody else recite ‘em.” He smiled fondly at the young woman. “Well, Lucy’s the onliest child I was ever blessed with, seem’ as how her mama died when Lucy was just a bitty little babe, but I always done the best by her I knew how. She can read an’ do her numbers, like she said, and she can run all day like an Apache, shoot better’n nine out o’ ten men, drink most fellas under the table, and rassle an alligator single-handed. Yes, sir, I’m mighty proud of her.”
“Hush, Pa,” Lucy said, and Longarm thought she was actually blushing—or maybe it was just the firelight that made her look that way. “You’re borin’ poor Custis to death.”
“No, that’s fine,” Longarm said. He took a little nip from the bottle. “A father’s got a right to be proud of his daughter.” He grinned and handed the bottle back to Catamount Jack.
The level of rye in the bottle dropped considerably before the big man lowered it again. “You know much about this here Brazos Devil, Custis?” he asked.
The grin disappeared from Longarm’s face as he said, “Enough to be a mite worried about being out here after dark.”
Catamount Jack gave a braying bark of laughter. “A big fella like you, a lawman and all, and you’re scared of some critter skulkin’ around in the dark?”
“According to what I’ve been told, the Brazos Devil is suspected of killing four men. Ripping them apart with its bare hands or paws or whatever, in fact. But the real reason Thorp offered that bounty is because he thinks the thing might have carried off his wife.”
“Why in the world would a critter do that?” Lucy asked. “You figure the Brazos Devil wanted to lay with the woman?”
Longarm wasn’t surprised by the blunt nature of Lucy’s question. He was convinced she was probably pretty well versed in the ways of the world. Likely she hadn’t been shielded from much while she was growing up. Nobody would ever mistake Lucy Vermilion for a hothouse flower.
“I don’t know if the Brazos Devil had anything to do with Mrs. Thorp’s disappearance or not,” he replied honestly. “There’s a chance that an outlaw I brought in and one I had to kill a couple of days ago might be to blame for it. But somebody killed at least three men in a mighty bloody fashion quite a while before Mrs. Thorp ever vanished. Somebody—or something.”
“Saw me a critter like that once,” said Catamount Jack, his voice more slurred now by the rye. Longarm hadn’t drunk much from the bottle, and Lucy hadn’t touched it at all, he realized now. Catamount Jack went on. “Sasquatch, some o’ the tribes call it up yonder in the Northwest. Ugly critter. Never heard tell of ‘em hurtin’ nobody, though. Injuns say the critters are more scared o’ people than people are o’ them.” He lifted the bottle for another drink, swaying a little as he did so. He was sitting cross-legged, so that kept him from toppling over, but Longarm could tell he was getting quite drunk.
“This fella Thorp,” Lucy said, “what’s he done about findin’ the Brazos Devil ‘sides postin’ a bounty?”
“He and his ranch hands have searched all over his spread and on the other side of the river,” Longarm said. “The marshal deputized some men and led a posse out too. They never found hide nor hair of the varmint.” Longarm hesitated, then went on. “Thorp’s brought in some fancy Englishman, a big-game hunter. They’re going out after the Devil tomorrow. I’m supposed to go with them.”
The last of the rye gurgled out of the bottle and down Catamount Jack’s throat. “Ahhhh!” he said as he lowered the empty bottle. “Well, we sure don’t want no damned Englisher gettin’ to the critter ‘fore we do. We’ll just have to beat ‘em to the punch. We’ll ride west an hour before sunup, daughter.”
“All right, Pa,” Lucy said.
As drunk as Catamount Jack was, Longarm doubted if the man would even be capable of consciousness an hour before dawn, let alone going in search of the Brazos Devil. In fact, Catamount Jack was swaying back and forth even more now, and he suddenly slumped over on his side. Almost instantly, loud snores began to issue from his mouth.
At the same time, Longarm thought he heard some shouting coming from the town, which was about five hundred yards distant. He wasn’t sure about that, however, and besides, Mal Burley was in town. If there was trouble, it was the business of the local law to handle it. Longarm felt that he’d done his share for the night.
He inclined his head toward the slumbering Catamount Jack and asked, “Does he do this very often?”
“Now and again,” admitted Lucy. “But don’t you worry, Custis, he’ll be sharp as a tack come morning. Nobody bounces back from a drunk as fast as my pa.”
“You sound like you’re a little proud of him too.”
“Well, why shouldn’t I be?” she asked sharply. “He’s taken mighty good care of me. Maybe he never raised me the way most folks think a gal ought to be raised, but I always done just fine. And we’ve been happy. Ain’t that worth somethin’?”
Longarm nodded solemnly and said, “Yes, ma’am, Miss Vermilion, it is. It surely is.”
“You can call me Lucy.” She stood up and went to one of the packs they had unloaded from the mules. As she bent over it, Longarm couldn’t help but notice the way the tight buckskin pants hugged her hips and thighs. She took a buffalo robe from the pack and came back to the fire. “Pull his feet around so they’re not so close to the flames,” she told Longarm.
He did as she requested, and she spread the robe over the sleeping form of her father. As she straightened and put her hands on her hips, she smiled down fondly at him. “He’ll be all right just like that.” Then she looked at Longarm and said, “You about ready to give me some lovin’, Custis?”
He blinked in surprise, but managed to recover before he begged her pardon and asked her to repeat the question. Nodding toward Catamount Jack, he said, “In case you ain’t noticed, Lucy, your daddy’s sleeping right there.”
“Hell, I know that. We’ll go off in the trees a ways so we won’t bother him. Anyway, Pa wouldn’t care. I can tell he likes you, and he’s a mighty good judge of what a fella’s really like. Pa knows too that sometimes a body’s just got to have some lovin’.” She smiled down at Longarm and held out her hand toward him. “Come on, Custis. Don’t make me hogtie you. ‘Less, o’ course, that’s the sort o’ thing you like.”
Longarm growled, shook his head, and reached up to take her hand. He came to his feet in one lithe movement and pulled her into his arms. The evening had been much more eventful than he had thought it would be, and obviously it wasn’t over yet.
“Reckon I’d better just show you what I like,” he said.
They found an even smaller glade about seventy-five yards from the clearing where Catamount Jack slumbered peacefully. Longarm was a mite doubtful about leaving the older man there alone when a monster was supposed to be prowling the countryside, but Lucy assured him her father would wake up if the mules began raising a ruckus. And knowing mules the way he did, Longarm was sure no wild beast, not even one that was half-man, could come anywhere around without the mules pitching a fit.
There was only a tiny patch of moonlight in the glade, but it was enough for Longarm to watch appreciatively as Lucy pulled the buckskin shirt over her head and dropped it on the ground. Her breasts were gentle mounds crowned with dark, surprisingly large nipples. She took off her boots and slipped her buckskin trousers down around her hips, leaving herself naked. “The night air’s cold,” she said softly. “You’ll have to keep me warm, Custis.”
Longarm had brought along two more buffalo robes that Lucy had taken from the packs. He spread one of them on the ground. The other one they could pull over them. He had to shed his clothes first, though, so he hung his hat on a nearby bush and took off his coat.
“Let me,” Lucy said, stepping closer to him. She reached out for the buttons of his vest and shirt.
Just looking at her while she was dressed, a fella might have thought it had been a while since she had gotten seriously acquainted with some soap and water. Now, though, divested of the smelly buckskins, she smelled clean and sweet, and Longarm wanted to plunge his face into her blond hair and breathe deeply of its fragrance.
He settled for standing there and looking at her as she commenced to undress him. She quickly removed his vest and shirt. Then her fingers moved to the buttons of his trousers. He was already hard and ready, and she made a little noise in her throat as she ran her palm over his groin, feeling the length and heft of him.
“My, oh, my, Custis,” she said in a half-whisper. “I was right about you. I figured you for a big man.”
“Was it my ears or my feet that gave it away?” he asked.
Lucy laughed. “Shoot, I don’t put any stock in those old stories. I look in a man’s eyes. I liked what I saw in yours, Custis, and I’m not just talking about this.” She gave him another quick squeeze as she finished unbuttoning his pants.
Longarm gave her a hand, and it didn’t take them long to get his trousers and boots off him. That left him in his summer-weight long underwear; autumn wasn’t far enough advanced to switch to the heavier undergarments yet. Lucy peeled them off him, letting his erect shaft spring free. She reached for it with both hands this time, trapping it in her soft, warm grip.
Longarm’s hips instinctively flexed forward as Lucy wrapped her fingers around him. She sank down to the buffalo robe, still holding on to him. Longarm had no choice but to go with her.
As if he would have rather been anywhere else at this moment!
The night air was chilly, as she had said, but Longarm didn’t really notice it. The heat from Lucy was more than enough to warm him. She drew him down on the robe beside her, then released him to reach for the other robe. As she spread it over them, she twisted around so that her face was pressed against his belly. Her tongue licked out into the mat of hair that covered most of the front of his torso, tracing a wet, white-hot trail across his stomach and abdomen to his groin. The top of her blond head bumped teasingly against his erection.
It was damned dark underneath that buffalo robe, but Longarm could smell the musk of her core as it moistened in anticipation. He reached out, touched the smooth flesh of her thighs. They parted, allowing him to run his fingertips over the even softer inner surfaces, moving closer and closer to the center of her. He felt her breath against his shaft, and her lips closed over the tip of the iron-hard rod at the same time as his fingers found the wet, fiery velvet of her slit. He slid two fingers into her, her muscles gripping them and pulling them deeper.
What she was doing to him with her lips and tongue was more than a solo on the French horn; it was a whole damned symphony. Longarm groaned as she opened her mouth even wider and took in more of him. She cupped his sac with one hand and rolled the tender little orbs back and forth, then used a fingertip to trace the little ridge of flesh beyond it. Longarm wanted to repay the oral favor she was bestowing on him. He leaned closer to her, parted her lower lips with his fingers, and began kissing and licking her, throwing in an occasional thrust into her with his tongue that rapidly became maddening to her. Lucy’s hips pumped back and forth, and he could feel her hot breath coming more quickly on his shaft as she laved it with her tongue.
He wasn’t sure how long the two of them drove each other crazy that way, but a fella couldn’t go on like that all night. Finally, when he knew he couldn’t stand much more, he reached for her shoulders and pulled her around so that they were facing each other again, even though they couldn’t see each other in the dark. Longarm felt a sharp sensation of loss when she took her mouth away from his groin, but it was worth it when she began kissing him. Her legs straddled him, and neither one of them had to reach around and tuck him into her. It went in as natural as you please, as if it was meant to be there. Lucy settled back, filling herself with him, and she gasped against his mouth as the tip of his shaft butted against the very end of her passage. He was as deep in her as anyone could possibly go.
Her hips began to pump again. His organ slid in and out of her, and though she had been wet to start with, in a few moments she was well and truly drenched. She was breathing rapidly, and Longarm’s pulse was pounding a mile a minute too. He lifted his head and found one of her nipples with his mouth. The nub of flesh was extremely erect. Longarm sucked it between his lips and ran his tongue along the corona of pebbled flesh surrounding it. Lucy gave a soft little cry.
She grabbed his shoulders as if she was holding on for dear life when her climax gripped her a moment later. Maybe she was afraid that otherwise the power of it would wash her away. Her spasming set Longarm off, and he lifted his hips from the buffalo robe to drive himself all the way into her again. Shudder after shudder shook him as he emptied himself into her in scalding bursts. Seconds drew out into minutes, minutes into hours, hours into days.
“The little death,” Longarm had heard it called. It would sure as hell do until the real thing came along.
He slumped back after his final convulsion had seized him. Every muscle in his body—well, nearly every muscle—was limp. Lucy seemed to be pretty much the same way. She had collapsed on his chest, and he could feel her heart thudding against him. She took in great breaths of air. Longarm knew how she felt. It seemed like a month since he’d had any air in his lungs.
After a few minutes, Longarm was able to speak again. “Reckon we’re gonna live?” he asked.
“I … I don’t know. I reckon I could … die happy … right about now … ‘cept for one thing.”
“What’s that?”
“We wouldn’t be able to … do it again.”
Longarm laughed. He stroked his hand down the smooth line of her back to the swell of her hips, then caressed her bottom, kneading the firm globes. She snuggled against him.
“I’m sure glad I met you, Custis Long.”
“So’m I.”
“You’re better’n any ol’ Brazos Devil.”
That comment brought Longarm back at least part of the way to reality. And as it did, something bothered him, some nagging little annoyance that he couldn’t quite grasp.
Before he could think about it anymore, Lucy bent her head and started tonguing his nipples, which was more than a little distracting. Longarm couldn’t bring himself to ask her to stop just so he could think about things for a while, so he told himself to worry about it later. For the time being, he was content to enjoy what she was doing to him. He reveled in the languorous contentment that washed over him.
Then it all went away when he realized what he had heard earlier. He had little or no conscious memory of it now, but while they had been making love, a part of his brain that stayed alert had taken note of a particular noise in the night. Obviously, the sound hadn’t represented an immediate danger; otherwise that facility of his—a sixth sense, he supposed you could call it for lack of a better term—would have warned him, no matter what he was doing. But still, it had been filed away in his brain, and now he recalled it.
The rapid hoofbeats of a galloping horse, heading west out of Cottonwood Springs.
Who would ride out of the settlement in the middle of the night, especially going hell-for-leather like that, with practically the entire countryside afraid of the Brazos Devil? Longarm knew he wasn’t going to be satisfied until he found out the answer to that question.
“It ain’t like I want to do this,” he said to Lucy as he took hold of her head and tilted it up toward him, “but I got to get back to town.”
“But Custis-” she began.
He kissed her, finding her lips with his in the dark. “Like it or not, we both have other reasons for being in this part of the country, Lucy, so we’d best get on about them. Maybe I’ll see you tomorrow, since we’ll all be scouting around in the same area looking for that critter.”
“All right,” Lucy said grudgingly. “But this better not be the only time you and me get to have some fun on a buffalo robe.”
“I think I can promise,” said Longarm, “that it sure won’t.”
Chapter 10
Catamount Jack was still sleeping undisturbed; Longarm could tell that by the loud snores issuing from the old mountain man’s mouth. He left Lucy at the campsite with a warning not to let the fire burn down too far during the night, then walked briskly back toward Cottonwood Springs.
He wished he had brought one of the horses out here. He could have covered the distance to town much more quickly if he had. As it was, it took him several minutes to reach the town, and the time seemed longer than it really was. Longarm had never thought of himself as the nervous type, but tonight he kept hearing noises that made him look over his shoulder. He had never known himself to be so spooked, especially not by the notion of a critter that might not even exist.
He found the town in an uproar. Groups of men stood around in front of the buildings, talking loudly. Longarm heard the words “prisoner” and “jail” as he walked past some of the men, and he stopped to grasp the arm of one of the townies.
“What’s going on?” he demanded. “What’s got everybody in such a state?”
The man pulled loose from Longarm’s grip, then looked more closely at him in the light that spilled through the windows of a nearby building. “You’re that federal marshal, aren’t you?” he asked.
“That’s right,” Longarm said.
“And you haven’t heard about what happened?”
Longarm reined in his impatience. “If I’d heard, I wouldn’t be asking,” he said reasonably.
“I guess not.” The man paused, obviously enjoying the dramatics of the moment, then said, “Your prisoner broke out of jail tonight.”
Instantly, Longarm remembered the distant shouting he had heard while he was at the campsite outside of town. He recalled as well the hoofbeats of a galloping horse that had sounded a little later. That could have been Mitch Rainey fleeing Cottonwood Springs on a stolen horse, he thought.
“Where’s Marshal Burley?” he asked tautly.
“Still down at the jail,” the citizen replied with a nod of his head in that direction. “I hear tell Doc Carson’s down there with him. The marshal got hurt somehow.”
Longarm hoped the injury wasn’t serious. He wasn’t overly fond of Mal Burley, but he would never wish ill to a fellow lawman, as long as the star-packer was of the honest persuasion. Longarm thanked the townie for the information, then turned and headed for the jail as fast as his long-legged stride would take him.
Burley was seated behind the desk when Longarm walked into the office. Doc Carson stood beside the local lawman, probing with those delicate fingers at the back of Burley’s head. Burley winced and said, “Hell, Doc, watch what you’re doing. It feels like Rainey just about caved in my skull back there.”
“I think you’ll be fine, Mal,” Carson said. “You’ve got a knot on your head the size of a goose egg, but other than that you seem to be all right. There’s no sign of any brain fever.”
Burley looked up and saw Longarm. A guilty scowl creased his face. “Hello, Long,” he said. “I guess you’ve heard about what happened.”
“Not enough,” snapped Longarm. “How’d Rainey manage to get out of here?” Now that he knew Burley wasn’t badly injured, Longarm wasn’t in much of a mood to be sympathetic.
Burley grimaced again and said bluntly, “He played me for a fool. He started screaming and carrying on about how the Brazos Devil was right outside his window and was trying to get him. I unlocked the door and ran into the cell, thinking I might get a shot at the varmint, and then Rainey jumped me.”
Longarm’s features hardened, and trenches appeared in his cheeks. “You fell for that?”
“I said he played me for a fool, all right?” Burley stood up and came around the desk. He continued angrily, “Rainey put on a good act. He seemed just as crazy scared as you said he was out there by the river.”
Longarm sighed heavily. It looked like he was going to have to give Burley the benefit of the doubt. “Maybe I would have done the same thing you did,” he said—although he knew damned good and well that he probably wouldn’t have. “What happened after Rainey jumped you?”
“He banged my head against the wall and gave me this,” Burley said as he reached up to gingerly touch the lump on the back of his head. “I was knocked out for a minute or two. Not long, but long enough for Rainey to get my gun and lock me in the cell. I started yelling, but it was several more minutes before anybody came along to see what was wrong.”
“And in the meantime, Rainey had stolen a horse and lit a shuck out of town,” Longarm guessed.
Burley nodded. “That’s what happened, all right. He grabbed one of the horses that was tied up in front of the saloon and headed out along the Fort Griffin road.”
So more than likely that had been Rainey he had heard making his getaway, Longarm thought bitterly. If he had just been more alert …
No, under the circumstances, he had done pretty good just to hear the hoofbeats, he told himself more reasonably. The whole blasted world could come to an end and most men wouldn’t notice at all if they were buried up to the roots in Lucy Vermilion’s sweet snatch, the way he had been.
“Moon’ll be down in a little while,” Longarm said, musing half to himself. “Wouldn’t be able to do much tracking tonight …”
“It’d be best to wait until morning,” Burley said. “I don’t think you’d be able to find any trace of him in the dark. You’d just be wasting your time.”
Longarm had to agree with him. It was frustrating, but the smart thing to do was to wait for daylight. “I was supposed to ride tomorrow with Thorp and that Englishman. Reckon you could go out there in the morning and tell ‘em I’m busy with my own work, Marshal?”
Burley nodded. “I can do that. But you’re liable to meet up with them yourself. Rainey’ll probably hide out somewhere along the Brazos, since he knows that part of the country so well. Mr. Thorp and Lord Beechmuir might flush him out before they do the monster.”
That was something to consider, Longarm thought. But in the morning, he would start by trying to track Rainey along the Fort Griffin road. There wasn’t much traffic on that trail these days, and as long as there was no strong wind or rain, he thought he might be able to find the tracks left by Rainey when he fled Cottonwood Springs. It was worth a try, anyway.
“Maybe I’ll run into them,” he said noncommittally, but that was as far as he went.
“Rainey’s a fool,” Burley said. “I’d have taken my chances in jail, rather than going back out there.”
“What do you mean?”
“The only weapon he has is my Colt, with five bullets in the cylinder.” Burley shook his head. “If Rainey meets up with the Brazos Devil, that’s not going to be nearly enough.”
Longarm finally got to sleep that night, much later than he had originally intended, and despite his weariness he was awake and dressed an hour before sunup the next morning. Instead of his tweed suit, today he wore jeans and a denim jacket over a plain butternut work shirt, so that he looked more like a cowboy. His boots, Stetson, and the cross-draw rig that carried his Colt were the same as always. He tucked a handful of cheroots into the pocket of his shirt before he went downstairs for a quick breakfast in the hotel dining room. He was one of the first customers in the place, since most of the hotel’s guests weren’t such early risers.
Longarm wouldn’t have been either if he didn’t have work to do. He washed down a plate of flapjacks, eggs, and steak with several cups of strong black coffee, and he felt alert and fairly human when he went down to the livery stable to saddle up the Appaloosa. The red glow in the eastern sky was growing as dawn approached.
He wondered if Catamount Jack and Lucy were still camped outside of town, but when he rode by the clearing just as the sun was peeking up over the horizon, he saw that the place was empty. Dismounting and bending down to check the ashes of the fire, he found them barely warm. Catamount Jack had said the night before that he wanted to ride out before sunup, and despite the monumental drunk on which the old man had embarked, it appeared he had met his goal this morning. So Longarm returned to the road and scanned it for hoofprints in the growing light.
Only one set of tracks looked fresh enough to have been made the night before. The scare that the Brazos Devil had thrown into the countryside was going to come in handy now. If the Fort Griffin road had been carrying its normal amount of horse and wagon traffic, Longarm wouldn’t have been able to track Rainey at all. This way, at least he had a chance.
He rode west as the sun climbed higher in the sky behind him. The morning was cool, and heavy dew sparkled on the grass alongside the road. Longarm heard a few birds, but other than that, the only sound was the clopping of the Appaloosa’s hooves on the wide trail. Longarm’s eyes were constantly moving, scanning the terrain around him.
For half an hour, he followed the tracks he believed had been left by the fugitive outlaw. Then, the thing that Longarm had worried about happened. The trail swung to the north, leaving the road. Longarm reined in and studied the tracks. It appeared that Rainey was angling toward the river. He probably meant to cross the Brazos and hole up in the even more rugged country on the far side. Longarm sighed. He was a decent tracker, but he knew Rainey’s trail would not be easy to follow.
“Well, sitting here won’t get us any closer to the fella who used to ride you, old son,” Longarm said aloud to the Appaloosa. He heeled the spotted horse into a walk and left the road, heading north himself.
He was able to follow Rainey’s trail for a couple of miles, but then the tracks led over a long, rocky ridge, disappearing on the hard surface. Nor did they reappear on the far side of the ridge. Rainey had used this natural feature to his advantage, and Longarm knew the only way to pick up the trail would be to ride back and forth along both sides of the ridge and hope he could spot fresh tracks. That would be a time-consuming task, and Rainey already had a big lead on him.
The other way he could proceed, crossing the ridge and continuing toward the river in hopes of picking up the trail farther on, was a big gamble, Longarm knew. But it might be his only chance of actually catching up to Rainey.
He urged the Appaloosa into a trot that carried it up and over the ridge.
Less than an hour later, he came within sight of the Brazos, catching a glimpse of it through the fold between two hills. So far he hadn’t seen hide nor hair of Mitch Rainey, and Longarm’s disgust was growing. It looked like he was in for another long, frustrating search, like the first one that had culminated in his near-fatal encounter with Rainey and the late Jimmy Lloyd. Not to mention that he still had the Brazos Devil and the disappearance of Emmaline Thorp to occupy his mind. He hadn’t seen Rainey, but he sure hadn’t seen any sort of monster either.
Longarm rode toward the river, maintaining his sharp-eyed alertness. Still, he had no warning when what sounded like an angry bee suddenly buzzed past his ear.
Instinct took over and sent him diving out of the saddle. He had heard way too many bullets coming close to his head over the years not to recognize the sound now. Since he hadn’t gone out to the Rocking T to ride with Thorp and Lord Beechmuir as planned, he still didn’t have a long gun, but the Colt was already in his hand when he hit the ground, for all the good it would do him. He rolled over a couple of times and powered into another dive that took him into a thick stand of trees. The Appaloosa scampered off several yards, evidently untouched by the shot but startled by his rider’s abrupt reaction to it.
Longarm crouched behind the too-narrow trunk of a live oak and gritted his teeth against the curses that welled up his throat. That shot had come from a long way off, he knew, because he was vaguely aware that he had heard the sound of the rifle while he was already throwing himself out of the saddle. For a long-distance shot, it had come damned close to hitting him. Of course, it was possible it had been an accident, that whoever had fired the high-powered weapon hadn’t been aiming at him at all. As far as he knew, Mitch Rainey didn’t even have a rifle.
Of course, Rainey could have stolen one from a farm or ranch, Longarm thought. But it was more likely that someone else he knew to be in this part of the country had pulled the trigger. John Booth, Lord Beechmuir, had been bragging just the night before about how powerful his Markham & Halliday elephant gun was, and Longarm knew too that Catamount Jack packed a Sharps, which was fully capable of throwing a slug that far.
But why would either of those men, experienced hunters that they were, shoot at him? Longarm couldn’t answer that question.
There had only been the one shot, and then silence had descended over the countryside again. Longarm wondered if it was safe to venture out. One thing was certain—he couldn’t squat here in these trees all day.
He stood up and moved out of the thicket, calling softly to the Appaloosa as he did so. The horse had started cropping contentedly at the grass, and Longarm was able to catch him without any trouble. Longarm holstered his gun and swung up into the saddle. He twisted his head around, trying to figure out where the shot had come from. There was a wooded hill about six hundred yards away that would have made a good vantage point for the rifleman. Longarm squinted at it and wished he had the pair of field glasses he always carried in his saddlebags. Like all the rest of his gear, they had vanished with the gray gelding.
He thought he saw movement on the hill, but it was too far away to be sure of what he was seeing… or even if he was just imagining it. Still, Longarm pointed the Appaloosa in that direction and heeled it into a trot.
He covered the distance quickly, but by the time he reached the hillside, there was no longer anyone there. However, he found the prints of several horses—six or seven of them, in fact. That had to be Thorp’s party, Longarm decided, although it was slightly larger than he had expected it to be. He followed the tracks around the shoulder of the hill.
Within fifteen minutes, he came within sight of them. There were seven people in the group running across a meadow in front of him: Benjamin Thorp and two of his ranch hands, Lord Beechmuir, the two servants—and Lady Beechmuir. Longarm hadn’t expected to see Helene Booth out here, but there was no mistaking the bright red hair underneath a yellow hat with a tall feather on it. The dress Helene wore was the same shade of yellow. Nobody was going to mistake her for a monster, Longarm thought—and that was a good thing under the circumstances.
He hailed them, and they came to a halt in the middle of the pasture. Longarm rode up to them and lifted a hand in greeting. “Howdy, folks,” he said.
“Hello, Marshal,” Thorp said. “I didn’t think you were coming with us today. Mal Burley rode out to the ranch early this morning and told us about your prisoner escaping.”
“Well, it looks like our paths crossed anyway, like I halfway expected they might. ‘Pears that Rainey came in this direction when he lit out from the jail in Cottonwood Springs.”
Lord Beechmuir was wearing another one of those Wild West show costumes with a fringed and beaded jacket and tight leggings. His hat today was dark brown. He said to Longarm, “We’ve seen no sign of your fugitive, Marshal.”
That was going to be Longarm’s next question. Since Booth had already answered it, he asked another one. “What about the Brazos Devil?”
Thorp sighed. “No sign of him … or of my wife.”
“It’s only been part of a day, old boy,” Booth said. “Don’t give up hope.”
“Oh, I’m not,” Thorp said with a shake of his head. “I’ll never give up hope.”
Longarm thought the declaration sounded a little hollow. Thorp was a man grasping at straws now, and they all knew it. Longarm said, “I might as well ride along with you folks for a while, but there’s one more thing I want to know first. Did any of you shoot at anything a little while ago?”
“I’m afraid that was me, Marshal Long,” Helene said. “I thought I saw the creature. The shot was a long one, but I took it anyway.”
Longarm looked directly at her and said, “That was me you were shooting at, ma’am.”
Helene lifted a hand to her mouth and exclaimed, “Oh, my God! Are you all right, Marshal?”
Lord Beechmuir asked anxiously, “You weren’t hit, were you?”
Longarm shook his head. “No harm done,” he assured them. “But if you don’t mind me saying so, your ladyship, that was a hell of a shot. You almost parted my hair for me at nearly six hundred yards.”
Helene’s face was pale, washed out. She shook her head and said, “I wouldn’t … I never meant to …”
“It’s all right, ma’am,” Longarm said quickly. “We all make mistakes.”
Booth looked at his wife but spoke to Longarm. “I already made it quite plain to Lady Beechmuir that she should not take any more shots without letting the rest of us know about it first. I promise you, Marshal, we were almost as startled as you.”
“You don’t have to be mean about it, John,” Helene snapped. “I said I was sorry, and I’m sure Marshal Long knows that I meant no harm.”
Lord Beechmuir said, “Well, I’m not sure why you decided to come along today anyway. I expected you to stay at Benjamin’s ranch house.”
“I’ve accompanied you on some of your other expeditions.”
“Not when I was going after a creature like the Brazos Devil,” Booth protested.
“Is that so?” Helene shot back at him. “I suppose it was safer when you were hunting that rogue elephant-“
“I said there was no harm done,” Longarm cut in. “No point in fussing about it.”
“Very well,” Lord Beechmuir said stiffly. “Damn sportin’ of you, Marshal. I might not be so forgivin’ if it was me that my darlin’ wife took a shot at.”
Helene looked as if she wanted to say something else, but she fumed in silence. Longarm moved his horse alongside Thorp’s, and the group started riding toward the Brazos again.
So it had been Lady Beechmuir who had fired that shot, Longarm reflected. Accidentally, of course.
But he remembered the way he had turned aside her advances the night before, and he recalled as well that old saying about the fury of a woman scorned. Could be the Brazos Devil wasn’t the only dangerous creature running around out here.
Chapter 11
They crossed the river a little before midday. Thorp led the way across the sandy streambed, warning the others to follow him closely so as to avoid the patches of quicksand. So far there had been no sign of the Brazos Devil, Emmaline Thorp, or Mitch Rainey. It was as if the rugged, wooded hills had swallowed up all three of them.
When the sun was directly overhead, Thorp called a halt. They were at the top of a grassy knoll with a good view of the countryside around them. As everyone dismounted, Randamar Ghote unwrapped a large bundle strapped onto his horse behind his saddle, revealing a wicker basket. Inside the basket were plates, glasses, a bottle of champagne, and several bowls of food. The silent Sikh, Absalom Singh, took a contraption from the pack on his horse that proved to be a folding table, and when it was set up, Singh brought out three folding stools as well. Longarm watched the servants setting up the meal with an amused look on his face.
“Not much like gnawing jerky and hardtack in the saddle, is it?” he asked Thorp.
The rancher shook his head. “Lord and Lady Beechmuir are accustomed to a certain level of comfort, no matter where they are.”
Longarm could imagine the two servants carting around all this gear and setting it up in the middle of some African jungle. Booth and his wife seemed to take it all for granted. They sat down on the stools as Ghote spread the meal on the table, and Lord Beechmuir said, “Please join us, Benjamin. My apologies, Marshal Long, but we only have one extra seat. You’re certainly welcome to share in our repast, however.”
“Much obliged,” Longarm said. He ambled over to the table and looked down at the food. It was simple fare—chicken, potatoes, corn on the cob, hunks of bread. But it was being served on fine china and washed down by champagne sipped from crystal glasses, here in the middle of nowhere. Longarm settled for a couple of drumsticks and a thick slice of bread. He sat down with his back against the trunk of a tree and stretched his legs out in front of him as he ate. He had brought supplies for his own lunch, but since Thorp’s party seemed to have more than enough, he didn’t mind joining them.
Lord and Lady Beechmuir chatted and laughed as if they were in some London drawing room while they ate. Thorp looked a little uncomfortable as he sat at the folding table with them. He might be a successful businessman now, but somewhere inside him was the frontiersman who had founded the Rocking T ranch before he ever became a banker, and had lived there in a rough stone house surrounded by cowboys. Longarm could tell that putting on all these airs bothered Thorp, but he was willing to tolerate almost anything if it might help his chances of finding his wife.
When the meal was over, Singh and Ghote cleaned up quickly and efficiently while Thorp and Lord Beechmuir smoked cigars. Longarm fired up one of his own cheroots and considered joining them, but he noticed Helene Booth slipping off into a growth of trees farther down the hill. She was just going to take care of some personal business, Longarm figured, but he still felt a twinge of worry. Privacy was all right, but with an escaped prisoner roaming these hills—to say nothing of a possible monster—Longarm decided somebody ought to at least stay within earshot of the lady. He strolled down the slope toward the oaks where she had disappeared.
Longarm hesitated when he entered the edge of the trees. He didn’t want to embarrass Helene by stumbling onto something he shouldn’t be seeing. He thought about Making plenty of noise as he proceeded, scuffing his boots through the fallen leaves, maybe even whistling a few bars of that cavalry song about the big black charger. His lips were pursed to do just that when he suddenly heard low voices somewhere ahead of him in the trees.
A frown creased Longarm’s forehead. One of the voices belonged to Helene; he was fairly sure of that. The other one he couldn’t place. Low and silky, it belonged to a man. Longarm didn’t recall seeing any of the other gents in the party following Helene into the trees. Maybe someone had come down here first to wait for her. No longer as worried about violating anyone’s privacy, Longarm gave in to his curiosity and cat-footed forward.
He crouched behind a screen of brush as he spotted movement up ahead. Peering through the leafy undergrowth, he saw a flash of yellow and knew he was seeing Helene’s gown. Longarm leaned forward and carefully moved aside a branch to give him a better view.
She stood there in a tiny clearing talking to Randamar Ghote. As Longarm watched, the little Indian servant reached inside his tunic and brought out a small bottle. “Your medicine, milady,” he murmured as he handed the bottle to Helene.
She lifted it to her mouth and took a delicate sip, then shuddered and gave the bottle back to Ghote. “Thank you, Randamar,” she said fervently. “I simply do not know what I would do without you to help me.”
“It is my pleasure, milady,” Ghote purred as he put away the bottle of medicine. Longarm’s frown deepened. He wasn’t sure how Ghote had managed to get down here in this grove of trees without being noticed, but he had already figured out how good Ghote was about sneaking around. The fella reminded Longarm of a Comanche during the time of the stalking moon: always around when you least expected him. This business about the medicine bothered Longarm too. What sort of illness ailed Lady Beechmuir? he wondered. She had certainly seemed healthy enough when she was trying to seduce him the night before.
He didn’t have time to ponder the questions, because Helene and Ghote were leaving now, slipping out of the trees in somewhat different directions. Ghote would circle back to the camp around the hill, Longarm figured. That was probably how he had reached the trees in the first place. Longarm let them get a head start, then straightened to follow Lady Beechmuir.