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Riding For The Brand: Sage Country Book Three

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by Dan Arnold




  RIDING FOR THE BRAND

  Sage Country

  Book Three

  By DAN ARNOLD

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters and incidents are a work of the author’s imagination or are used fictionally. Any resemblance or reference to any actual locales, events or persons, living or dead is entirely fictional.

  COPYRIGHT © 2013

  DAN ARNOLD

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  Cover design by Dan Arnold

  Photo credit © Dan Arnold

  Books by Dan Arnold/Daniel Roland Banks

  Fiction

  Contemporary Detective

  Angels & Imperfections Special Agent The Ticking Clock

  Western

  Bear Creek Alta Vista Riding For The Brand

  Non Fiction

  Gunshot wounds leave puckered scars

  if you live long enough for them to heal.

  RIDING FOR THE BRAND

  Sage Country

  Book Three

  By DAN ARNOLD

  Much like that of the samurai who has pledged loyalty and service to his lord, the term “Riding for the brand”, refers to a commitment, a responsibility and a sense of belonging.

  Simply stated, to ride for the brand means to be loyal and faithful to the outfit you represent.

  It is a code of honor.

  Life in Bear Creek ~ Politics as usual

  1.

  My bullet wounds were healing nicely. At least the physical wounds were. I’d regained most of my strength and range of motion, but I was reliving some of the recent events in my dreams. Not really reliving them, but some distorted dream version of those events filled with dread and anxiety. I would wake Lora as I thrashed about, or even cried out in my sleep Sometimes I’d wake up reaching for my gun, or covered in a cold sweat.

  Lora would hold me and soothe me like a small child, until I went back to sleep.

  “This is no way for a man, let alone a lawman, to act. What’s the matter with me?” I thought. “I’ve been shot before, and didn’t have these problems. Maybe I’m no good anymore.”

  After a couple of weeks of misery, I finally admitted those thoughts to Lora. We were sitting on the porch, watching the kids playing in the yard.

  “John, from what you’ve told me, your nightmares aren’t really about you. You’re concerned for our safety, me, Sarah and Jacob. You’re feeling overwhelmed and vulnerable. It’s not surprising. That horrible man walked into our bedroom and caught you naked and unarmed. You nearly died trying to protect me and the children. Anyone would be shaken up. I think about it too…sometimes.”

  I took a deep breath.

  “Maybe, but what am I going to do about it?”

  “Time heals all wounds,” she quoted.

  “Well, I reckon so, but how much time? I don’t even want to leave the house. I’m afraid to be away from you and the children. At the same time, I need to get back to work. I know people are starting to talk.”

  “People have been talking about you since the first day you came to Bear Creek. Some people love you, some people hate you, and some people don’t care one way or the other, but everybody talks. Those that hate you will try to take advantage of this situation and use it against you. They don’t matter.

  You matter. You matter to me and everyone in Alta Vista County. You matter to the children. Forget about the haters and focus on who you are, and what you do best.”

  “What I do best, is law enforcement.”

  Lora smiled and batted her eyes at me.

  “Well, that’s one of the things…”

  I laughed.

  It was the first time I could remember laughing, since being shot.

  “I got a letter today from Mildred. She and Bud are coming back to Bear Creek, the end of next week,” Lora said, changing the subject.

  Bud was the pastor of our church and Mildred was his wife. They’d been gone for more than a month, called back east for a family emergency.

  “That’s good news. It will help get some things back to normal.”

  Lora was studying me.

  “Do you remember when we were first engaged?” She asked.

  “Of course, we’re still newlyweds.”

  “Do you remember how I almost called off the engagement?”

  “Yep, it worried me some, at the time.”

  “Do you remember why?”

  I nodded slowly. I was beginning to get her drift.

  “You were afraid something would happen to me, and you would be left alone.”

  “Do you remember what you told me?”

  “I said fear and faith couldn’t co-exist, I said they were like oil and water…”

  Lora cupped my face in her hands and locked her eyes on mine.

  “You were right, John. Faith and fear are complete opposites. I choose faith. I choose to believe God knows what He’s doing. I have faith in Him, and I have faith in you.” She kissed me. “And that’s why I believe you’re going to be just fine.”

  She stood up and smoothed out her dress. “Now, let’s go play with the children.”

  It was true. Lora and I really were newlyweds. We were newlyweds with children.

  Just before we were married, I found two kids, Jacob and Sarah, hiding in the livery stable. Sarah was four and Jacob was six. They’d walked barefoot, more than fifteen miles to Bear Creek, all alone. When I found them they’d been hiding in the barn at the livery stable for more than a week. Lora insisted they come live with us. At first they couldn’t or wouldn’t speak, but Lora had them eating out of her hand within days. We learned both of their parents were dead. Someone had killed their father, and their mother died of some sickness not long after.

  We played with a wagon wheel rim and a stick for a while. Sarah was becoming more coordinated with the toy and could keep it up and moving now, but she still ran over things with it, or tripped on her skirts and used the opportunity to seek solace in the arms of Lora. Eventually, Lora went in to see about supper with Sarah following along right behind her.

  I sat on the fence with Jacob, watching the carriage horses grazing in the pasture.

  “Did you have horses at your place?” I asked.

  Jacob nodded his head vigorously.

  “Sure, my pa had a big old brown horse with a white face. His name was Shongaloo. Pa rode him most of the time. We had a couple of giant horses to plow and pull the big wagon. We had a big wagon and a buckboard. We had other horses for the ranch too.”

  He and Sarah were becoming much more comfortable talking about their parents now. It had been a process over the weeks, but they were getting a little more open every day.

  “I know you told me you had a milk cow. Did you have any other cattle?”

  Jacob nodded again.

  “A whole bunch, I don’t know how many. My pa called it a herd. There was a big roundup every year where all the ranches caught all the cows on the range and counted them. Sometimes, other cowboys would help my dad round them up and do branding and such. I got to go out to the roundup a couple of times with Sarah and our Ma. It was noisy and messy but kind of fun. Burning hair stinks.”

  He was starting to look a little wistful, so I changed the subject.

  “Do you think I should bring Dusty down here from the livery stable?” I was referring to my buckskin horse.

  Jacob just shrugged.

  “I think he likes living at the livery stable. It’s pretty close to the courthouse, so I still see him every day, but I would rather have him here.”

  “If he was here, could I ride on him sometimes?” Jacob asked.

  “I expect so.”
/>   “Well then, you’d probably better bring him on down here, huh?”

  “You might be right, Jacob.” I said, giving his hair a scrub with my hand. “You told me you lived near Yellow Butte. How close was it?”

  “What do you mean?” He asked.

  “I mean, could you see it from your house?”

  “Course,” he responded. He made a face indicating he had some concern about my intellect.

  “You said you’d been up on the butte with your dad. Did it take a long time to get up there?”

  He shrugged.

  I tried a different approach.

  “When you were up on Yellow Butte, could you see your house from way up there?

  “Yep, right down below us. I was going to chunk a rock, but my pa said not to.”

  Now I had a much better idea about where they’d lived. I had the beginning of a plan forming in my mind.

  “You know, we could play some baseball till supper time,” I suggested.

  Jacob smacked me on the leg as he jumped down from the fence.

  “Tag, you’re it” he called, racing away.

  ***

  Down at the edge of Bear Creek, Lora and the children were having a fun time. From my vantage point in the dappled shade under a cottonwood tree, I was watching them splash water at each other, laughing and playing. I was delighted by their joy.

  Looking toward the nearby hilltop, I saw a lone Comanche sitting on his pony. I wasn’t disturbed seeing him, because I was pretty sure he was my friend, Yellow Horse. If it was Yellow Horse, I’d be glad to see him. With the sun behind him, I couldn’t clearly distinguish his face. Other men on horseback began to appear at the top of the hill, riding up from the far side. I felt uneasy.

  There was something dark and menacing about these men whose shadows stretched out before them as they started riding down toward us.

  Lora and the children had become silent. When I glanced toward them, they were looking up the hill at the approaching men on horseback. Those riders began to trot, then gallop down the hill.

  They were close enough now I recognized them, but it couldn’t be. These charging horsemen were all men I’d killed!

  I called out to Lora, trying to warn her. She and the children were walking back toward where I was now standing out in the open meadow.

  The riders were barreling down on them. I reached for my gun, but found myself standing in my long johns−undressed and unarmed. I felt frozen in place as the dead riders overtook Lora and the children.

  2.

  The next morning, we were all having breakfast in the Bon Ton Café, Tom, Becky, Jacob, Sarah, Lora and I.

  I was thinking about what a short time ago I’d come into this city feeling all alone in the world. Now, I had a new wife, sort of a readymade family, and good friends. I was glad to be alive, and all too aware of how close I’d recently come to being dead.

  “Are you OK, John?” Becky asked me.

  “Oh, yes. I’m fine, just day dreaming, I expect.”

  “That’s not surprising; I reckon you’re entitled to be a little pre-occupied, John. It’s been less than a month since you were shot.” Tom said.

  Tom is the Chief of Police in Bear Creek. Becky is his wife. They’re expecting their first child.

  Lora was watching me, looking a little worried.

  “He hasn’t been able to sleep very well. He has terrible nightmares, but he insists on getting back to work. He can’t wait to get back in harness.” She said.

  “Crime rests for no man,” I observed.

  “John Everett Sage, you have more than enough deputies to manage the duties of the Sheriff’s Department for at least another couple of weeks.” Lora scolded.

  I shook my head. “No, we’re a little short staffed, what with Ed being up at North fork, and Bob having quit to find greener pastures.”

  “Lora is right. You should take another couple of weeks to recuperate, Tom said, and then he lowered his voice. “Besides, it might not be a bad idea for you to be out of the limelight for a little while longer. Certain people are pretty upset about the shootout up in North Fork. There’s talk you’re just too uncivilized and dangerous to be the Sheriff of the county. All this attention in the press is not good for the city of Bear Creek.”

  “Is that how you feel?”

  “Of course not, but that’s not the point. John, there are people already looking to find a candidate to run against you. Some pretty influential people are saying it’s time for a new Sheriff, right now. The sooner all this dies down the better…”

  “Excuse me, Sheriff…?”

  I nearly jumped. I hadn’t even noticed the well-dressed man’s approach.

  It worried me some. People don’t usually walk up on me without me seeing them coming.

  “…My name is William Bartholomew Masterson. You may have heard of me. My friends call me ‘Bat’. I’ve been a lawman myself. These days I’m a writer and sports promoter in Denver, and I was wondering if you would do an interview with me. You know, for the newspapers? I can get you the cover of the Police Gazette, and with my connections in New York City, I can get your story published all over the world.” The man was rather energetic in his manner, and he had a big, toothy grin on his face.

  Since the shooting, Bear Creek was full of newspaper people, tourists, people attracted to celebrity, and those intending to make a buck from all the excitement.

  I’d even heard some low life types were selling fake replicas of items that may or may not have belonged to the famous outlaws who were killed up at North Fork.

  Still, I was surprised Bat Masterson would bother with the story of the events. Masterson was well known as a man who always found his way to the most personally profitable enterprise, even if it was not entirely legal.

  I intended to inform him I had no interest in having anything to do with the Police Gazette, a magazine arguably the most lurid publication in the country. It was typical Masterson would be involved with a publication of such low standards. He’d been regaled in the magazine as a great sportsman and gambler.

  Still, out of courtesy, Tom and I both stood up to shake hands with the man.

  “How do you do, Mr. Masterson? Of course we’ve heard of you. May I present my wife Lora, and the children, Jacob and Sarah. This is the Chief of Police here in Bear Creek, Tom Smith and his wife, Becky.”

  “I’m pleased to meet all of you. As I said, my friends call me Bat. I hope we’ll all be friends.”

  He was a bit overdressed for a Saturday morning at the Bon Ton. He wore the latest and most stylish, dark grey suit, with a matching waistcoat, a white shirt with a celluloid collar, and a neck tie. His walking stick was his most notable affectation.

  While he appeared to be freshly shaved, Masterson had a bushy mustache he was training to curl up on the ends.

  He appeared to be a few years younger than me, and a little thicker through the waist. In keeping with the local ordinance, no handgun was clearly in evidence.

  “If you gentlemen will excuse us, I promised the children we would go shopping today, and now would seem like a good time.” Lora said, as she stood and began to organize the children.

  “I’ll go with you, Lora. I’ve been meaning to have a look at the latest Sears Roebuck and Company catalogue. I’ll bet I can make any item of children’s clothing they sell, and do it right here in Bear Creek.” Becky chimed in.

  Both ladies were avoiding any acknowledgment of Mr. Masterson.

  After we said our goodbyes to the ladies, I invited Mr. Masterson to join us for coffee.

  “Again, please call me Bat. I hope I didn’t say something offensive to the ladies.”

  He’d asked, so, I got straight to the point.

  “Yes, you did offend them, Mr. Masterson. The National Police Gazette is not a magazine suitable for women and children. Nor is the subject you wish to discuss.”

  To my surprise, he chuckled at my response.

  “No, it certainly isn’t. Dick Fox
is a friend of mine, but his magazine is disreputable, and I’m quite sure he’s already in the process of publishing a sensationalized story of the events up there. Come on, John, I was kidding about wanting to interview you for that particular periodical. It was meant to be a joke. You might be aware of how my own reputation was besmirched in his sordid rag.”

  “I believe it established your reputation.”

  “Exactly, and it is largely the reason I am no longer in law enforcement. I’m afraid the same thing may well happen to you.”

  “…How’s that?”

  “A man’s reputation is almost completely out of his control. I fear you will be presented as a gunslinger, and a mad killer with a badge. Once that image is made public, it will make it quite hard for you to change it.”

  I nodded. I’d already had far too much experience with the effects of such stories.

  “This is bad, John. You really should get out of the public eye, for a while.” Tom observed.

  “I’m afraid it will not be sufficient to avoid the issue.” Bat said.

  “What else can I do?”

  “I’ve had a look around North Fork, and talked to some of the people involved on the occasion in question. I also read Tommy Turner’s affidavit of the events, which I’m told you filed for record in the courthouse. A brilliant move on your part, by the way. My point is this; you need to fight fire with fire. Let me tell the world the way it really happened. I have some notoriety, I really can get the story published in reputable newspapers, and it will be circulated all over the world. When the Police Gazette comes out with their story, it will immediately be seen as an obvious distortion of the facts.”

  I shook my head.

  “Bat, the facts have already been published in newspapers all over the country. The truth is out there.”

  “Is it? That’s why I’m here. The story has been told, but not by you. It seems you’ve refused to comment, and you’re avoiding the press. I just want to give you the chance to tell the story, in your own words.”

 

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