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Savage Guns

Page 25

by William W. Johnstone


  Smoke did not overtly stare at the young gunman, but even though it appeared that he was uninterested in his surroundings, he was maintaining a close watch. Because of that, he was ready when the young man finally made his move.

  “Draw, Jensen!” the young man shouted, turning away from the bar as he made a grab for his pistol.

  “I already have,” Smoke replied calmly.

  The young man had his pistol only half drawn when he realized that he was staring down the barrel of a gun, the pistol already in Smoke’s hand.

  “What the—how did you do that?” the young man asked, taking his hand off his pistol, then raising both hands. “Don’t shoot, don’t shoot!” he begged.

  By now, all conversation throughout the saloon had stilled, the card game had stopped, and everyone was paying attention to the drama that was playing out before them.

  “Pull your gun out, very slowly, using only your thumb and forefinger,” Smoke ordered.

  “What are you goin’ to do, mister?” the young man asked. “Are you goin’ to kill me?”

  “Why not? You were going to kill me, weren’t you?”

  “Yeah, I reckon I was,” the young man answered.

  “Drop your pistol in there,” Smoke said, pointing to a nearby spittoon.

  “In the spittoon? No, I won’t do that,” the young man replied.

  “Oh, I think you will,” Smoke said. He thumbed back the hammer, and the deadly double click of the sear engaging the cylinder sounded exceptionally loud in the now-quiet saloon.

  “All right, all right,” the young man said. Stepping over to the spittoon, he made a face, then dropped the pistol into it. It caused the brown liquid to splash out onto the floor.

  Smoke holstered his pistol.

  “Louis,” he called.

  “Yes, Smoke.”

  “Give the young man a new beer. On me.”

  “M-make it whiskey,” the young man said.

  Louis poured a shot and gave it to the would-be gunman. With a shaking hand, the young man lifted the glass to his lips, then tossed it down.

  “What’s your name?” Smoke asked.

  “The name’s Clark,” the young man answered. “Emmett Clark.”

  “Why did you want to kill me, Emmett Clark?”

  “It’s a matter of honor,” Clark answered.

  “Honor? You think it is honorable to kill someone?”

  “If you call them out and do it face-to-face,” Clark said. “And if you’re payin’ someone back for somethin’ they done to you.”

  “Boy, I’ve never done anything to you,” Smoke said. “I’ve never even heard of you.”

  “Not to me, you ain’t. But you done it to my kin. You kilt my pa. I was only fourteen when you kilt him, but I taught myself how to shoot so’s I could get things all square.”

  “What was your pa’s name?”

  “Clark, same as mine. Rob Clark. He was a banker in Etna, and you shot and kilt him when you was holdin’ up the bank. You do remember that, don’t you?”

  “Yes, I remember that bank robbery. But I didn’t have anything to do with it, or with shooting your father.”

  “Don’t tell me that, mister. You was found guilty of killin’ him. You was found guilty and sentenced to hang. I wanted to watch you hang, but my ma wouldn’t have nothin’ to do with that. She went back to live with my grandparents in Kansas City, and I didn’t have no choice but to go back with her. It was a long time afore I found out that you didn’t actually hang. You escaped.”

  “Yes. I escaped, and I proved my innocence,” Smoke said.*

  “Ha! Proved your innocence? You expect me to believe that?”

  “You should believe it, son, because it’s true,” Sheriff Carson interjected. Stepping into the saloon a moment earlier, Monte Carson had stood just inside the door as a silent witness to the interplay between Smoke and Clark. “I got the wire that said Smoke had been completely cleared. He was set up by the folks who actually did rob the bank and kill your pa. I’ve still got the wire down in my office if you need to be convinced.”

  “I’m sorry about your father, boy,” Smoke said. “But as the sheriff said, I didn’t have a thing to do with it. It was someone else who killed him.”

  Clark was quiet for a long moment. “Where are they?” he asked. “The ones that killed my pa, I mean. Where are they now?”

  “They’re dead,” Smoke said.

  “How do you know they are dead?”

  “Because I killed them.”

  “Damn,” Clark said. He pinched the bridge of his nose for a moment, then grabbed a towel from one of the bar hooks, got down on his knees, and fished out his pistol. Everyone watched him warily as he began drying it and his hands. Then, grasping his revolver by the barrel, he held it out toward Sheriff Carson.

  “I reckon you’ll be wantin’ to put me in jail now,” he said.

  Carson looked beyond the boy toward Smoke. Almost imperceptibly, Smoke shook his head.

  “Why would I be wanting to put you in jail?” Carson asked.

  “I don’t know. Attempted murder, I guess.”

  “From what I can put together, there wasn’t that much attempting to it, was there?” Sheriff Carson asked. “I’ll bet you didn’t even get your pistol out of the holster.”

  Inexplicably, Clark laughed, then shook his head. “No, sir, Sheriff, I reckon you’ve got me there,” he said. “Mr. Jensen sort of put a stop to it before it ever got started.”

  “What do you think, Smoke? Should I put him in jail?” Carson asked.

  “Clark, you said you were a man of honor,” Smoke said to the young man. “Is that true?”

  Clark nodded pointedly. “I ain’t got no family now. My ma died last year. Never had no brothers. I ain’t got hardly no money either. I reckon the only thing I got that is worth anything is my honor, so, yes, sir, I would say I am a man of honor.”

  “Then I’m going to hold you to that honor, Clark,” Smoke said. “I’m going to let you ride on out of here, trusting that you aren’t going to being lying in wait somewhere, aiming to shoot me.”

  “You got my word on that, Mr. Jensen. I’m satisfied that you didn’t have anything to do with killing my pa. Makes sense to me anyway, now that I think about it. If you were guilty, there’d be paper out on you, and though I’ve looked, I haven’t seen any.”

  “Let him go, Sheriff,” Smoke said.

  “Go on, boy,” Sheriff Carson said. “But I’d appreciate it if you would leave town.”

  “Yes, sir,” Clark said. “I really have no reason for staying now anyway.” He made a motion toward returning his pistol to his holster, then looked at the sheriff as if asking for permission.

  Sheriff Carson nodded that it would be all right.

  “Clark, have you ever used that gun?” Smoke asked.

  “Just to shoot at varmints and such,” Clark replied. “I’ve never used it against a man.”

  “Do you plan to?”

  “For the last few years, all I’ve thought about was finding you, and killing you. And I didn’t even figure that would be wrong, seeing as how you had been sentenced to hang but escaped. I don’t have any plans to use it against a man, but I figure I could if it ever come to that.”

  “Are you good with it?”

  “Yes, sir,” Clark answered. “I’m damn good with it.”

  “There will always be someone better,” Smoke said. “Remember that.”

  Clark nodded. “Yes, sir. Well, I reckon you just proved that to me, didn’t you?”

  Smoke and the others in the saloon watched as the young man walked out through the batwing doors. A moment later, they heard the sound of hoofbeats as he rode away. Louis Longmont was standing at the window watching, and he called back to the sheriff.

  “He’s gone,” Louis said.

  Not until then was the saloon reanimated as everyone began to talk at once.

  “I must say, Smoke, you seemed awfully easy on him,” Sheriff Carson said.
<
br />   “I reckon I was,” Smoke said. “But then I look at him, and I see myself when I was on the blood trail after the ones who killed folks that were close to me.”

  “You comin’ back to the game, Smoke?” Doc Colton called from the poker table.

  Smoke shook his head. “No, I expect I’d better get on back out to the ranch. I have been in town long enough.”

  “What he’s saying is that he doesn’t want Miss Sally to come into town, grab him by the ear, and lead him home,” David Tobin said, and the others laughed.

  “Yeah, well, if you ever had your ear grabbed by Sally, you would understand why,” Smoke said with a good-natured smile, and again the others laughed.

  Smoke went outside to the hitching rail, untied his horse, then swung into the saddle. He looked in the direction young Clark had taken and saw him now, a long way out of town, growing smaller as the distance between them opened.

  Smoke’s horse, Seven, whickered as Smoke approached him. Smoke squeezed his ear.

  “You about ready to go back home, are you, boy?” Smoke said as untied the reins from the hitching rail. Seven dipped his head a couple of times, and Smoke laughed.

  “I should have never built that new stall for you. You like it too much. You’re going to get so lazy you never want to leave it.”

  Smoke swung into the saddle, then started out of town, the hollow clump of Seven’s hooves echoing back from the buildings that fronted the street. It was five miles to Sugarloaf, and because Seven seemed anxious to run, Smoke decided to give him his head.

  TWO

  At Smoke Jensen was leaving Big Rock, back at his ranch, Sugarloaf, his wife, Sally was sitting on a flat rock, high on an escarpment that guarded the north end of the ranch, protecting it from the icy blasts of winter. Sally had discovered this point of vigil, which she called Eagle Watch, shortly after she and Smoke were married and moved here into the High Country, to start their lives together.

  Reached by a circuitous and often hidden trail, Eagle Watch was covered with a mixture of pine and deciduous trees that were green all year, while also providing a painter’s palette of color in the spring when the crabapple and plum trees bloomed, and again in the fall when the aspen and maple leaves changed. In addition, the meadow itself was blanketed with wildflowers of every hue and description.

  Sally had come up here in her first week at the ranch to write a letter to her father back in Vermont, to try and give him an idea of what she felt about her new home:

  Smoke and I make our debut here in this wonderful place where the snowy mountains will look down upon us in the hottest summer day as well as in the winter’s cold, here where in the not too distant past the wild beasts and wilder Indians held undisturbed possession—where now surges the advancing wave of enterprise and civilization, and where soon, we proudly hope, will be erected a great and powerful state, another empire in the sisterhood of empires.

  It was very much like Sally to express her thoughts in such a poetic fashion. She was a young woman of education and passion, sensitive to the rugged beauty of the home she shared with her husband, and filled with unbridled enthusiasm for their future. The letter had been written some years earlier, and since that time, Colorado had become a state. But though dated, the letter still remained appropriate to the way Sally felt about this place.

  From here, Sally could see the house Smoke had built for them, a large two-story edifice, white, with a porch that ran all the way across the front. It had turrets at each of the front corners, the windows of which now shined gold in the reflected sunlight. Also in the compound were several other structures, including the bunkhouse, cook’s shack, barn, granary, and other outbuildings. She could also see much of the thousands of acres that made up Sugarloaf Ranch.

  Abandoning her contemplation of the ranch, she turned her attention to the road that ran from Sugarloaf into Big Rock. There, she saw a plume of dust, then, just ahead of the plume, a galloping Appaloosa. She smiled at the sight—Smoke was coming home at a gallop.

  Mounting her own horse, Sally started back down the trail toward the ranch compound. Though the trail down was too steep to allow a gallop, her horse was sure-footed and nimble enough to traverse the distance rather quickly, thus allowing her to reach the house before Smoke. Dismounting, she climbed up onto the wide porch so she could watch his arrival.

  The road, which on the state and county maps was called Jensen Pike, ran parallel with a long fence, before it turned in through a gate that had the name of the ranch fashioned from wrought-iron letters in the arch above. But, as Sally knew he would, Smoke did not come through the gate. Instead, he left the road, then urging Seven into a mighty jump, sailed over the fence almost as if on wings. After successfully negotiating the fence, he galloped into the compound before pulling the horse to a stop and leaping down from the saddle.

  “Seven, you are the greatest horse in the world!” Smoke shouted, patting the hard-breathing animal on its forehead.

  Sally laughed. “You said that to the other three horses you named Seven, and the two you named Drifter.”

  “They were the greatest horses in the world too,” Smoke said.

  “Don’t be silly. There can only be one greatest,” Sally reminded him.

  Smoke held up his finger and waved it back and forth. “No, that’s the schoolteacher in you talking,” he said. “If you love horses, you know there can be as many greatest horses as you want.”

  Again, Sally laughed. “All right,” she said. “I guess I can’t argue with you on that. How was your trip to town? Did anything interesting happen?”

  “Not really.”

  Sally arched her eyebrows. “Not really? That means something actually.”

  “Tell me, woman, when I think something, do words just appear on my forehead for you to read my thoughts?” Smoke teased.

  “Yes,” Sally said. “Now tell me what happened.”

  Smoke told Sally of his confrontation with Emmet Clark, finishing with the fact that he’d let Clark ride away.

  “Oh, Smoke, do you think that was smart?” Sally asked.

  “I don’t know if it was smart,” Smoke said. “You are the smart one of the family. But I think it was right. I believe him when he said that he is a man of honor. And I respect honor.”

  “That’s because you are a man of honor,” Sally said. “Take care of Seven and wash up. I’ll have dinner ready soon.”

  Esmeralda County, Nevada

  A brilliant streak of lightning lit up the night sky and in its flash, Bobby Lee Cabot could see the four men who were with him, their ponchos pulled about them, scrunched down in their saddles. It was raining hard, and Bobby Lee readjusted his own poncho as he waited with the others alongside a railroad water tank. Under the frequent flashes of lightning, the steel tracks of the Nevada Central Railroad glistened in the rain.

  “What if the train don’t come?” Conklin asked.

  “The train comes ever’ night,” Dodd answered. “What makes you think it won’t come tonight?” Frank Dodd was the leader of the group. Dodd was just under six feet tall with broad shoulders and powerful arms. In his middle forties, he had spent more than half his life in prison. In a prison fight, another inmate had cut off half of his left eyelid, as well as a piece of his upper lip, leaving him permanently scarred. That same encounter had left the man who scarred him permanently dead.

  “What if this here train don’t have no money on it?” Conklin asked.

  “What if I just put my boot up your ass for askin’ so damn many dumb questions?” Dodd replied irritably.

  “I’m just askin’ is all.”

  “Well, don’t ask.”

  The five men were waiting alongside the track halfway between Lone City and Cloverdale, Nevada. They were here, in the middle of the night in the middle of a rainstorm, because their plan was to rob the train when it stopped for water. Actually, it was only the plan of the other four. Unbeknownst to the others, Bobby Lee was a railroad detective with the West
ern Capital Security Agency. He had worked his way into the gang in order to find a way to bring them to justice.

  Shortly before departing on this train robbery expedition, Bobby Lee sent a letter to Herman Wallace, the sheriff of Esmeralda County, notifying him of the gang’s intentions. In the letter, he asked Sheriff Wallace to be riding in the express car with enough deputies to end the train robbing spree of Frank Dodd, Walter Conklin, Wayland Morris, and Jules Stillwater.

  That would go well for Bobby Lee, who had spent six months tracking them, then getting himself into position to stop the bandits. He was sure that the railroad company would give him a bonus for his part, but it wasn’t the bonus that motivated him. It was the satisfaction of taking out a gang of robbers who had been a thorn in the side of the railroad for the better part of two years.

  The rain stopped and some of the clouds rolled away, revealing a full moon, which illuminated the area almost as bright as day.

  “This ain’t good,” Conklin said. “Moon bright like it is, they’re goin’ to be able to identify us.”

  “You think they ain’t goin’ to know who we are?” Dodd asked.

  They heard the train whistle in the distance.

  “All right, boys, get ready. It’ll be here soon,” Dodd said.

  They waited a moment longer until they could hear the puffing of the steam engine as the train worked its way up the long grade, approaching the water tank. Now the great head lamp was in view, but as the moon was bright, the lamp was projecting no visible beam of light. When the train rounded a curve, it exposed its entire length so they could see all five cars behind it, every window of each passenger car showing light. As the train grew closer to the water tower, it began braking.

  “Wait until it comes to a complete stop,” Dodd ordered.

  With a squeal of brakes, the train stopped. Then the relief valve began opening and closing, each cycle emitting a loud puffing sound. The fireman left the engine, then climbed up onto the tender and reached up for the water spout.

  “All right, they ain’t payin’ no attention to us now,” Dodd said. “Let’s ease on down there.”

 

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