Six Ways from Sunday, page 25
I let it go at that.
Arnold, he lifted them guns out of the little punk’s holsters and led him off. I doubted that Swamp Creek would ever see that one again. I sort of liked Arnold, even if he’d rearranged my carcass a few times. I thought Arnold would make a good house pet for Carboy. But Arnold, he’d take care of the little killer now. That’s what his life would come to.
I sat down in the grass and cleaned my swamp-gummed revolver best I could, taking the thing apart and wiping it down. I’d need new rounds, since I didn’t trust any in the chambers. But maybe I wouldn’t need the gun now that Swamp Creek was some changed.
People was still staring into that swamp, watching bubbles come up where that railroad car went under. I guessed they’d talk about that for the next few years. The teamsters with twenty yoke of oxen stared, too. They wasn’t going to get their flatbed back; it was down there under the Pullman. But they stared anyway, making sense of what happened and maybe feeling a little bad about the big rope that failed. But they wasn’t talking much, and pretty soon their straw boss, he lines ’em out on the road to Butte, and they’re gone.
I watched Lugar board his tired horse and ride away, sort of in a hurry. I guess he was thinkin’ that he didn’t have Scruples around to protect him from a noose anymore.
There was a few nags in the pens up where Scruples kept his outfit, and I thought they’d need some caring. I also thought that if there was some guns lying around up there, I’d take them to pay me for the ones Scruples lifted off me. But when I wandered through the bunkhouse, I saw it’d been stripped clean by the punks that went to Suicide Gulch. But them horses were there for the picking, so I picked one. I’d sell him off and buy my own gun and get the one I was wearing back to Celia. And while I thought about it, I’d nab another nag for her. They owed her.
Celia Argo and Cletus Carboy, they was out of town and probably hadn’t got word, so I got ahold of Critter and rode out there. It sure was a pleasant day, with the whole world just grinnin’ at me.
I got there about the time Carboy was taking tea, and made a mess of excuses so I wouldn’t have to swallow that stuff.
“Darjeeling,” Carboy said.
“I don’t care what it is, it ain’t as good as coffee.”
But there was a plate of raspberry tarts sitting there, and I thought I’d munch on a few while I told him and Celia what happened.
“Well, sir, Scruples is no more,” I began. “He sank into the swamp with the Pullman Palace Car.”
That sure got their attention. I never had a better audience. So I just told the story like it happened, while Carboy’s eyebrows went up and down and Celia bounced in her chair as fast as Carboy’s eyebrows was bouncing. But I finally got it all told, though I didn’t talk much about trying to save Scruples. I wasn’t sure how they’d take that. But that was the first thing Carboy wanted to talk about.
“You tried to get him out?”
“Well, sir, I was trying to get him out for a proper hanging.”
Carboy stared at me. “That was a good thing. And a brave thing to do.”
“Well, it was a bad moment, when he was in their banging on the ceiling, and I was trying to tell him to open a window before them windows disappeared. But that’s the last we heard from him. He’s in there somewhere, and gone now.”
“Tell me again about Lugar. He came riding up on a lathered horse?”
“Yes, sir, carrying a big manila envelope. I can’t see as how he went to Butte. It’s too far.”
“Lugar didn’t go as far as Butte, Cotton. He hardly got five miles out of Swamp Creek.”
I sure was listening.
“I got word just an hour ago from a messenger. Beal Z. Burt was expecting trouble, and stuffed his portfolio with worthless papers in a manila envelope, including the unused letters of credit. Sure enough, north of Swamp Creek, before midnight, a masked highwayman waylaid him and demanded that portfolio, which Burt was only to happy to get rid of. The highwayman made a swift search of the carriage, using a torch, and then let Burt go. That highwayman was no doubt Lugar, and those papers are what Scruples stuffed in the safe when the rope broke.”
“Scruples was tryin’ to get all them titles to Swamp Creek back?”
“He was indeed, and thought he’d end up with the district back in his hands and half a million dollars, too. Ah, greed. It does inspire mad designs, doesn’t it?”
I nodded. There was all too much greed around, and I thought I’d enjoy some of it myself. But my greed, it was for a herd of shorthorns, not a pile of ore.
“Where’s Lugar now?” Carboy asked.
“About the time he saw there was no more paycheck, he got on his nag and got out, maybe thinking that would keep his neck from bein’ stretched. I suppose he’s up at Suicide Gulch by now. That’s fixing to be the next hellhole.”
So that was how it spun out. I got to thinking of all them dead. Amelia Trouville, who tried to go straight, Armand Argo, who wouldn’t sell out, all them owners like Aggie Cork, people who got in the way like Billy Blew, all that death for greed. I sure thought I’d stick with livestock and get away from gold and silver the rest of my life.
I seen Celia sitting there sipping that Darjeeling, so I handed her Argo’s revolver and belt and she settled it at her feet. “I got a new one on my saddle,” I said. “I got it from the hardware store. But thanks for the loan of this. I cleaned it up pretty good, but you might have a smith take another look.”
She stared uncertainly at it. “That sounds like you’re saying good-bye, Cotton.”
“I am. This mining stuff’s not for me.”
“It’s not for me either. I’m going back to New Orleans.”
I stared real close at her and she stared real close at me, and a lot went through us just then. But there was no changing anything. We were sayin’ good-bye, whatever the language.
“I’ve agreed to buy the Fat Tuesday,” Carboy said. “We’ll get the mines and mill going soon, and Celia will get her inheritance.”
I nodded.
“There’s room for you in my business, Cotton,” Carboy said. “Managing the mill. I need a man who’d stay right on top, and learn the business.”
I was afraid he would be coming to that, and it made me twitchy. “That’s mighty kind, Mr. Carboy, but I got other plans,” I said.
He didn’t ask what they were, and I didn’t say, because I didn’t know either.
Turn the page for an exciting preview of
SIDEWINDERS: CUTTHROAT CANYON
by William W. Johnstone
with J. A. Johnstone
Coming in June 2009
Wherever Pinnacle Books are sold.
The wise man avoids trouble, so as to grow old with grace and dignity.
—Sir Harry Fulton
Nobody ever accused us of bein’ smart.
—Scratch Morton
Chapter One
Scratch Morton dug an elbow into Bo Creel’s ribs, nodded toward the building they were passing, and said, “That’s new since the last time we were here, ain’t it?”
As Bo looked at the building, a nearly naked woman leaned out a second-story window and called to them, “Hey, boys, come on inside and pay me a visit.”
Bo ticked a finger against the brim of his black, flat-crowned hat, said politely, “Ma’am,” then used his other hand to grasp his trail partner’s arm and drag him on past the whorehouse’s entrance.
“You’d have to pay, all right, like the lady said,” he told Scratch, “and we’re a mite low on funds right now.”
“Well, then, let’s find a saloon and a poker game,” Scratch suggested. “There should be plenty of both in El Paso.”
Bo didn’t doubt that. The border town was famous for its vices. That was the main reason Scratch had insisted on stopping here. They had been on the trail for a long time, and Scratch had a powerful hankering for whiskey and women, not necessarily in that order. They had come home to Texas, and Scratch was of a mind to celebrate.
For most of the past two score years, the two drifters had been somewhere else other than the state where they were born. Of course, Texas hadn’t been a state when Bo Creel and Scratch Morton entered the world. It was still part of Mexico then. They had been youngsters when the revolution came along, and after that they’d been citizens of the Republic of Texas for a while.
By the time Texas entered the Union in 1845, Bo and Scratch had pulled up stakes and gone on the drift, due to Scratch’s fiddle-footed nature and Bo’s desire to put the tragedy of losing his wife and family to sickness behind him. They had been back to the Lone Star State a few times since then, but mostly they’d been elsewhere, seeing what was on the other side of the next hill.
The long years showed in their tanned, weathered faces, as well as in Scratch’s shock of silver hair and the strands of gray shot through Bo’s dark brown hair, but not in their rangy, muscular bodies that still moved with the easy grace of younger men.
As befitting his deeply held belief that he was God’s gift to women, Scratch was something of a dandy, sporting a big, cream-colored Stetson, a fringed buckskin jacket over a white shirt, and tan whipcord pants tucked into high-topped brown boots. The elaborately tooled leather gunbelt strapped around his hips supported a pair of holstered Remington revolvers with long barrels and ivory grips. People had accused him in the past of looking like a Wild West Show cowboy, and he took that as a compliment.
Bo, on the other hand, had been mistaken for a preacher more than once with his sober black suit and vest and hat. His gunbelt and holster were as plain as could be, and so was the lone .45 he carried. Not many preachers, though, had strong, long-fingered hands that could handle a gun and a deck of cards with equal deftness.
Having lived through the chaos of the Runaway Scrape and the Battle of San Jacinto, Bo and Scratch both claimed to want nothing but peace and quiet. Somehow, though, those things had a habit of avoiding them. It seemed that despite their best efforts, wherever they went, trouble soon followed.
Bo was determined that things would be different here in El Paso, since they were back on Texas soil. They would replenish their funds, have a few good meals, sleep under a roof instead of the stars, stock up on supplies, then ride on to wherever the trail took them next.
It was a good plan, but it required money. Bo set his eye on the Birdcage Saloon in the next block as a likely source of those funds.
He recalled the Birdcage from previous visits to the border town. It was run by a big German named August Strittmayer who insisted that all the games of chance there be conducted in an honest fashion. Bo was sure some of the professional gamblers who played at the Birdcage skirted the edge of honesty from time to time, but by and large, Strittmayer’s influence kept the games clean.
“You can have a beer at the bar in Strittmayer’s place while I see if there’s an empty chair at any of the tables,” he suggested to Scratch.
“Now you’re talkin’,” Scratch agreed with a grin. “The scenery’s plumb nice in there, too.”
Bo knew what Scratch was referring to. On a raised platform on one side of the room sat the big cage that gave the place its name. Instead of a bird perching on the swing that hung inside the cage, one of the saloon girls was always there, in the next thing to her birthday suit. The girls took turns rocking back and forth on that swing. They might not sing like birds, but their plumage was mighty nice.
When Bo and Scratch pushed through the batwings and went inside, they saw that the saloon was doing its usual brisk business. Thirsty cowboys filled most of the places at the bar and occupied all but a few of the tables. A group of men gathered around the birdcage in the corner, calling out lewd comments to the girl on the swing.
Strittmayer had laid down the law where those girls were concerned: The saloon’s bouncers would deal quickly and harshly with any man who so much as set foot inside the cage. Strittmayer couldn’t stop the comments, though, and the girls who worked the cage soon learned to ignore them and continue to wear a placid smile.
The air was full of the usual saloon smells—whiskey, tobacco, sweat, and piss—and the sounds—loud talk, raucous laughter, tinny piano music, the click of a roulette wheel, the whisper of cards being shuffled and dealt. Bo nodded toward the bar and told Scratch, “Go grab a beer.”
“I can handle that job,” Scratch said.
Bo spotted a dealer he knew at one of the baize-covered tables where poker games were going on. The man wore the elaborate waistcoat and frilly shirt of a professional tinhorn. Close acquaintances knew him as Three-Toed Johnny because of an accident with an ax while splitting some firewood one frosty morning. He was an honest dealer, at least most of the time. Bo hadn’t seen him for a couple of years. The last place they had run into each other was Wichita.
The hand was over as Bo came up to the table, and Johnny was raking in the pot. No surprise there. One of the players said in a tone of disgust, “I’m busted. Guess I’m out.” He scraped back his chair and stood up.
Johnny stopped him and held out a chip. “No man leaves my table without enough money for a drink, my friend,” he said.
The man hesitated, then said, “Thanks,” and took the chip. He headed for the bar to cash it in and get that drink.
Bo said, “Some people say that’s what got Bill Hickok killed. He busted Jack McCall at cards, then tossed him a mercy chip like that the day before McCall came back into the Number Ten and shot him.”
Three-Toed Johnny looked up and grinned. “Bo Creel! I didn’t see you come in.”
Bo sort of doubted that. Johnny didn’t miss much.
“It’s good to see you again, amigo,” the gambler went on.
Bo gestured toward the empty chair. “You have room for another player?”
“Most assuredly. Sit down.”
“Wait just a damned minute,” a man on the other side of the table said. He was dressed in an expensive suit, but the big Stetson pushed back on his head, the seamed face of a man who spent most of his life outdoors, and the calluses on his hands all told Bo that he was a cattleman. The suit and the big ring on one of his fingers said he was probably a pretty successful one. So did the arrogant tone of his voice.
“Is there a problem, Mr. Churchill?” Johnny asked. Bo could tell that the gambler was keeping his own voice deceptively mild.
By using the hombre’s name, Johnny had also identified him for Bo. The upset man was Little Ed Churchill, the owner of one of the largest ranches in West Texas. Little Ed wasn’t little at all, but his pa Big Ed had been even bigger, Bo recalled, hence the name.
“This fella’s a friend of yours,” Churchill said as he jerked a hand toward Bo. “You said as much yourself just now.”
“And that’s a problem because…?”
“How do the rest of us know that you and him aren’t about to run some sort of tomfoolery on us?”
Johnny’s eyes hardened. “You mean you’re afraid we’ll cheat you?” he asked, and his soft tone was really deceptive now. Bo knew how angry Johnny was.
Bo wasn’t too happy about being called a cheater himself.
“I’ve seen you play, Fontana,” Churchill said. “You win a lot.”
“It’s my job to win. But I do it by honest means.”
So Johnny was using the last name Fontana now, Bo thought. Johnny had had half a dozen different last names at least. Bo wasn’t sure Johnny even remembered what name he’d been born with.
“To tell you the truth,” Johnny went on, “I don’t need to cheat to beat you, Churchill. All I have to do is take advantage of your natural recklessness.”
One of the other players rested both hands on the table in plain sight and said, “I don’t like the way this conversation is going. I came here for a friendly game, gentlemen, not a display of bravado. And certainly not for gunplay.”
“Shut the hell up, Davidson,” Churchill snapped.
The man called Davidson paled and sat up straighter. He was in his thirties, well dressed, with tightly curled brown hair and a mustache that curled up on the tips. As Davidson moved forward a little in his chair, Bo caught a glimpse of a gun holstered in a shoulder rig under the man’s left arm. Despite his town suit, Davidson looked tough enough to use the iron if he had to.
“I can go find another game,” Bo suggested. He didn’t want to sit in on this particular one badly enough to cause a shootout. “I just thought I’d say hello to an old friend.”
“There’s no need for that, Bo,” Johnny said. He gave Churchill a flat, level stare and went on. “Bo Creel is an honest man, and so am I. If you doubt either of those things, Churchill, maybe it’s you who had better find another game.”
“I won’t be stampeded, damn it.” Churchill nodded toward the empty chair. “Sit down, Creel. But remember that I’ll be watching you.” He looked at Johnny. “Both of you.”
“It’s going to be a distinct pleasure taking your money,” Johnny drawled.
“Shut up and deal the cards.”
Johnny shut up and dealt.
Chapter Two
Bo wasn’t sure what would have happened if he or Johnny had won the first hand after he sat down. Little Ed Churchill might have been more convinced than ever that he was being cheated.
The man called Davidson was the one who raked in that pot, however. In fact, judging by the way what had been a fairly small pile of chips in front of Davidson when Bo sat down began to grow after that, the man’s luck appeared to have changed for the better.
Davidson won three out of the next five hands, with Bo taking one and Johnny the other. Bo understood now what Johnny meant about Churchill being reckless. The man was a plunger when he had a decent hand and a poor bluffer when he didn’t. Bo wasn’t surprised that Churchill lost a considerable amount of money in a short period of time.
The cattleman’s face was red to start with, and it flushed even more as he continued to lose. Bo felt trouble building. If not for the fact that he and Scratch needed money, he would have just as soon gotten up from the table and walked away.











