Sathow's Sinners

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Sathow's Sinners Page 11

by Marcus Galloway


  “I only answer to one call, I assure you,” Frank said in a good-natured manner. He then held his hands about a foot apart. “The knife in question is about this long and was purchased by—”

  “I haven’t sold a custom blade in years.”

  “Then it could have been stolen,” Pete said. “It had your mark on it, so I know it’s yours.”

  “You don’t know anything,” Caster said.

  Storming over to one of the workbenches, Pete grabbed the trigger guard of a rifle that was laying in pieces. He turned it around and quickly grinned while pointing to a small design of two sideways Vs pointed in opposite directions overlaying each other that had been stamped into the iron. “This mark right here!” Pete said. “You’re the only one who stamps such a thing into his weapons. Not only that, but this man would’ve passed through here on his way south from up north of here where he broke out of prison.”

  Although he was still riled up, Caster didn’t quite know what to make of Frank. He didn’t have that problem when he looked back over to Pete, though. “I want you to leave. Both of you.”

  Pete now stood at a long table where an array of drills was displayed beneath several saws hanging from pegs on the wall. Letting his fingers drift from one drill to another, he appeared to be seriously contemplating which was best for a job before he selected one and threw it through the closest window. The move was so swift and so catastrophic to the pane of glass he’d targeted that both Frank and Caster nearly jumped out of their skins when the crash filled the formerly immaculate shop.

  “What is the meaning of this?” Caster fumed.

  “It’s about that damn knife!” Pete roared. “You may not have a problem lying in front of this here priest, but I’m not gonna stand here and take it from you! I just came across that knife and it was from someone who sure as hell hasn’t been holding on to it for years!”

  In all the times that Frank had worked with Pete, he’d never seen him move as quickly as he did on this day. Pete grabbed another one of those drills and was poised to bore a hole into some random part of Caster’s anatomy when he was stopped by a frantic voice.

  “No!” the weapon smith shrieked. “Listen to me! Please!”

  “Go on and talk,” Pete said.

  “I was telling the truth before. I haven’t sold one of those blades for some time.” Turning to Frank with what seemed to be very genuine sincerity in his eyes, Caster added, “After so many lives were ended with those blades, I swore to my God above that I would not sell another one. You must believe me, Father.”

  Frank rarely let himself be addressed on such formal terms, but Caster spoke the title with such reverence that refusing him would have been a sin in itself. Nodding quietly, Frank let Pete’s strategy unfold.

  “I’ve kept those knives here,” Caster continued. “I can show you.”

  “Not all of ’em are here,” Pete said. “I’ve seen it and there’s no mistaking one of them blades. Just tell me about the one that’s missing before I get agitated.”

  “It was stolen from me.”

  Pete allowed himself to ease back into his normal speaking voice as he said, “Now we’re getting somewhere.”

  When Caster looked his way, Frank gave him another nod and said, “Go ahead. It’s all right.”

  Those words often had a soothing effect on folks. For Caster, they were more. They were a balm that alleviated whatever pain he’d been feeling from a wound that so clearly festered within his soul.

  “A man came through town,” Caster said. “He arrived at night, more than a week or two ago now. To be honest, I have tried to forget him since he left. He was a large man. Muscular. Unruly hair. His face was scarred. Burnt, I think. His whiskers only grew in irregular patches.”

  Pete nodded. “Sounds like the man we’re after. He have crazy eyes?”

  “No.”

  Now it was Pete who glanced over to Frank. Quickly recovering his commanding demeanor, the tracker asked, “Are you sure about that? His eyes are what most folks remember about him.”

  “He wasn’t a normal killer,” Caster told him. “I have seen more than my share throughout the years. But he didn’t strike me as crazy. He spoke calmly and knew exactly what he wanted.”

  “Which was one of those fine knives?”

  “No, no! He was poking around in my stock when he found those knives. He took a liking to one of them and took it from me. It would have been more trouble than it was worth to try and stop him so I let him walk off with it. That’s all there is to it. I swear to God.”

  “So what else did he talk about?”

  “You asked about the knife,” Caster said. “I told you about the knife.”

  Pete started nodding again. “I did, Caster. And now I’m asking you about the rest.”

  Turning toward Frank, Caster reached out with one hand as if he’d suddenly found himself sinking in a pool of black water. “I can’t. Just . . .”

  “Don’t talk to him!” Pete roared. “You’ll talk to me! Because no preacher and no Lord above,” he said while selecting one of the smaller gauge drills and holding it up for all to see, “can help you if you don’t.”

  Now that Pete’s demeanor had changed, so did Caster’s. “The two of you can’t tell me what to do in my own shop,” he said through gritted teeth while reaching for a pistol stashed beneath the flap of his dark gray vest. “Not even Sathow’s own priest!”

  Without pause and without sparing a moment to try and convince the man in front of him of his wrongdoing, Frank drew his own weapon and steeled himself to end that man’s life.

  Like any other predator, this one knew when he’d awakened the wrong prey. “Easy, Father,” Caster said.

  “Don’t call me that.”

  “All right.” Looking to Pete, Caster asked, “Can’t you tell him I won’t shoot?”

  Pete stepped up to Caster, turned him around and took the pistol from him. The drill was still in his other hand and he jabbed its tip against Caster’s belly while saying, “If I gotta tell you one more time not to talk to him . . .”

  Snapping his eyes to Pete, Caster disregarded Frank altogether. He was shaken and confused when he said, “I don’t know everything Casey had planned. He just came to me to ask some advice.”

  “So you know who was paying you the visit?”

  “Yes. I’ve met Casey Pescaterro once before, and I’ve dealt with some of his men over the years. All of those men are either dead or locked away. This most recent time, Casey only came to me with one other man that I’ve never seen before.”

  “Who was this other man?”

  “I don’t know.” Feeling the drill twist against his gut, Caster squirmed and rose to his tiptoes in an attempt to put any sort of distance between himself and the tool he knew so very well. “I swear on my eyes, he never gave me his name. He was an older gentleman, though. Tall. Lean.”

  “And he was in Pescaterro’s gang?”

  “Actually, I got the impression that Pescaterro was in his gang.”

  Frank didn’t like the sound of that one bit and knew Pete was feeling the same cold discomfort in the pit of his stomach at the notion of someone being able to rein in Dog Ear enough to give him orders.

  “So the knife was just stolen on a lark,” Pete continued. “What business brought them here in the first place?”

  “They had an order to pick up. They were headed south from here. I don’t know where.”

  “And here I thought you were retired.”

  “I was,” Caster insisted. “But the money for this was too much for me to resist. After something like this, I could maybe retire for certain very soon.”

  “Very soon, huh?” Pete mused. “Isn’t that what you were sayin’ about a year or three ago?”

  Knowing there was no way to talk himself out of that one, Caster stopped trying to
plead his case. “If I tell you everything, these men will find out. This fellow who placed the order knows a great many things. It is how he has gotten as far as he is.”

  “You don’t even know the man’s name,” Frank pointed out.

  “He will kill anyone who crosses him,” Caster said. “That is all I need to know.”

  Tossing away the drill, Pete grabbed Caster with both hands and dragged him over to a shorter, rectangular workbench. “Well it ain’t enough for me,” he said fiercely. He lifted the German up onto the table, slammed his shoulders against the clean surface and grabbed a saw hanging from a peg on the table’s edge and lowered the jagged teeth of the saw across Caster’s neck. “You came this far,” he said. “Might as well finish the story. Otherwise I’m gonna have to cut you short.”

  That was one of the few jokes Frank had ever heard Pete tell. It was also one of the best.

  Caster didn’t find it nearly as amusing. Sweat poured down his face, which had suddenly gone fish-belly white. “The order was for mounted Gatling guns and a specially modified cannon.”

  “Are you serious?” Frank asked as he moved over to the table so he could look directly down into Caster’s eyes.

  The weapon smith pressed himself against the table as if he thought he could shove all the way down to the floor. He seemed to be looking at his Maker when he said, “I’m telling the truth.”

  “Go on with it then.”

  “He also wanted mounted armor plates.”

  “Mounted onto what?” Pete asked.

  More than happy to look away from Frank, Caster said, “The armor is essentially made from steel plates attached to hooks that can be hung from railings, the side of a wagon or even windowsills.”

  “What about the rest of the order?”

  Caster nodded. “He wanted one of my special order safes and a few crates of rifles and such.”

  “Men don’t come to you just for rifles. What was the safe for?”

  “What’s any safe for?”

  Not knowing much about safes, Pete went back to more familiar territory. “How was the cannon supposed to be modified?”

  “He wanted something that could inflict as much damage as possible. I had already been working on something along those lines. I call it a flame spout.”

  “What the hell is that?” Pete asked through a perplexed scowl.

  “Well,” Caster said uncomfortably, “I’ve been putting it together as something of a curiosity and the stranger seemed very interested in it. Quite simple really. It’s similar in design to hand pumps used by fire departments in New York City and Europe. Instead of water being pumped, kerosene is used. There are some other precautions to take when dealing with a combustible like that. Once you make those considerations, all that’s needed is an ignition source that will not set fire to the kerosene tanks. It was an unusual project, but I managed to fill it in time for delivery.”

  “Which is when?” Since Pete only got a bewildered grimace from Caster, he placed the saw across Caster’s chest and started dragging it just hard enough to rip his vest and shirt.

  “It’s already happened!” Caster yelped. “That’s why those men stopped by and were here for so long. Pescaterro and that stranger I told you about came with a wagon to collect the order.”

  “How long ago was the order placed?”

  “A few months. I needed time to figure out how I would complete my flame spout and then build it along with the armor plates.”

  Frank surprised both of the other men by pressing the barrel of his .38 beneath the German’s left eye. “Why?” he snarled. “Why would you make weapons like this?”

  “I just do what I’m asked!” Caster insisted.

  “If you were asked to execute a family or burn a schoolhouse full of children, would you?”

  “I— That’s not the same.”

  “Isn’t it? You must know those weapons will be used to inflict pain, death and suffering!”

  “I wouldn’t take part in killing anyone. I’m just a craftsman. I make tools. I don’t use them. Please forgive me, Father. I’m trying to be a better man. I would never—”

  “Shut your mouth,” Frank said in a strained voice. Holstering the pistol as if he’d forgotten that he’d drawn it in the first place, he whispered, “Just . . . be quiet.”

  Frank pulled in a long breath and let it out. Keeping his hand on the grip of the .38 to push it as far down into its holster as possible, he put his back to the sunny side of the workshop and headed for the door.

  Once outside, it took a few moments for the scent of the air or the sound of the nearby water to register on his weary senses. All of the natural wonders were still there, but it took Frank a bit longer to recognize them. He walked around the building until he could see the river as well as hear it. The wind had calmed somewhat but with some concentration, Frank was able to feel its touch on his cheek.

  Birds sang lazily to each other from the branches of slowly swaying trees.

  Horses tied nearby let out a few huffing breaths and stomped their feet to fret at something or other.

  A door swung open and a set of boots crunched against the ground. When Frank felt a pair of eyes burning into his back, he turned around to check if anyone was staring at him. Although Pete was approaching, he was looking toward the street. Frank checked the door and saw the nervous weapons maker holding it open while staring at him. A second later, the door was quickly shut.

  “You doing all right, Preacher?” Pete asked.

  “Yeah. Did he have anything else to say?”

  “It started as a bunch of rattling on about Dog Ear and that stranger he was with. He thinks the two of them pulled together a small amount of men. Less than a dozen in all. You squeezed all the really good stuff out of him before you left. That was damn impressive, if I do say so myself.”

  “I lost my temper. That shouldn’t happen. Not anymore.”

  “You’re still a man, ain’t ya?”

  “Very much so,” Frank replied.

  “Then you got nothing to be sorry about. You didn’t let him walk all over you or try to preach to him. And, when you surprised both of us at the end there, you didn’t do any real damage. There might be some damage to Caster’s trousers, but it ain’t nothing a good wash can’t fix. Did that stranger Caster described sound familiar at all?”

  Grateful for something else to think about, Frank pondered that and then shook his head. “Not as such. I don’t know anyone who would—”

  “Who would what?” Pete asked. “Want to kill so many men in as quick a time as possible?”

  “No,” Frank said with a tired laugh. “I’ve known more men like that than I’ve known good souls who want nothing more than to tend to their field or bring their children up right. I’m talking about someone who would want to have something built that can spray fire and cause not just pain and death but . . . screaming agony. Have you ever seen someone burn?”

  “Yeah,” Pete replied. “Two men who went into a burning stable to try and pull out a couple of panicked horses. They made it to the door and then dropped. The flames were so bad . . .” He closed his eyes and quickly opened them again to focus on the slowly rippling river. “Me and the others trying to douse the blaze couldn’t get close enough to do anything. We just had to stand there holding those heavy, useless goddamn buckets of water and watch those men and horses melt down like candles.”

  “And not only did someone think up a way to spread that kind of misery,” Frank said, “but another man actually built it for him.”

  Pete put a hand on Frank’s shoulder. “If it makes you feel any better, we’re all workin’ to find those killers and they’re all bound for the noose when we do.”

  “How many more killers must be dealt with after that?” Frank wondered.

  “We’ll just chip away wherever we can. The way I
see it, if enough folks do their part, this filthy stink hole of a world may have a chance after all.”

  Frank nodded, but not enthusiastically. For now, it was the best he could manage.

  18

  Frank and Pete left later that same day. Because Nagle was such a small, tight-knit community, it didn’t take much for them to be convinced that there was a gang of killers lurking about somewhere. After eating a quick lunch and stocking up on supplies, they put Nagle behind them.

  There was a trading post which was roughly halfway between Nagle and the mining camp where they were supposed to meet up with Nate and Deaugrey. Having arrived slightly ahead of schedule, Frank found some other folks in need of a good conversation. Apart from the trading post, there was also a small platform and ticketing office used by several local stagecoach companies. Waiting on the platform were a family of four on their way to Nebraska and a man traveling on his own who was headed all the way to San Francisco. It did Frank a world of good to speak with them and, when Pete sauntered up to the platform, he went unnoticed for several minutes. Finally, Frank excused himself so he could stand by the burly tracker.

  “You seem to be in better spirits,” Pete said.

  Frank smiled and clasped the lapels of his black jacket. “I do, indeed! It feels nice to be among people who regard a man in my profession as a comfort instead of as a threat to their tainted souls. No offense meant, of course.”

  “You think I got a tainted soul?”

  After a short but uncomfortable silence, Frank asked, “Did you find anything in regards to Nate or Deaugrey?”

  “Not a damn thing.” Pete’s words carried just far enough to catch the attention of a mother traveling with her two young boys. She was a pleasant woman with curly blond hair and a round face who quickly escorted her sons away from the source of the foul language to which they’d just been subjected. Pete tipped his hat to them and shrugged apologetically to the tall bespectacled man who walked over to accompany the woman and children.

  “Did you check for a message?” Frank asked. “There’s a telegraph desk. That’s why Nate chose this spot to meet.”

 

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