by Jon Sharpe
“No,” she said, her eyes darting left and right. “You promise you won’t tell?”
“I promise,” Fargo said. “And I’m a man who keeps my word.”
She grasped his hand and let him pull her up behind him. “It’s very high,” she said.
Her added weight wouldn’t make any difference to the horse on a trip as short as this. The Ovaro had been through far more difficult challenges. “Wrap your arms around my waist,” he said. “If you’ve never ridden a horse, I want you to have the full experience. ”
“What . . . what do you mean?” she asked, grasping him tightly.
Fargo laughed and put his heels to the horse. The Ovaro responded by leaping into a smooth canter, and turning to take one more run at the open field. “Come on, boy,” he called. “Show her what it is to ride!”
Given his head, the Ovaro ran as though he knew he’d be in a stall for a while. Behind Fargo, the girl squealed in delight and held on even tighter. The trees flashed by on either side, blurs of green leaves and the ruddy brown of bark. They reached the end, and Fargo turned him around, heading him back across the field once more.
“Is it always like this?” she called over his shoulder.
“Like what?” he asked.
“Like . . . flying,” she said. “So free.”
“Always,” Fargo said. “Unless someone’s chasing you. Then it’s a little more tense.”
“I’ve been chased before,” she said into his back. “I don’t mind that none.”
“Were any of them shooting at you, too?” Fargo said, slowing the horse as they found the lane that led back to the city.
She giggled. “No. Why would anyone shoot at me? I ain’t nothing but a whore. Not worth the cost of a bullet.”
Fargo laughed deeply. “You’re mistaken,” he said. “I suspect there are plenty of men in the world who would willingly spend the cost of a whole lot of bullets for your company.”
“I don’t know nothing about that,” she said. “Miz Hamilton saves my money for me.”
He pulled the horse up sharply, felt her weight lean into him, warm and small. “She what?” he asked.
“Miz Hamilton,” the girl repeated. “She saves my money for me. She does for all the girls. We just get ourselves an ‘allowance.’ ”
“How much?” Fargo asked.
“A dollar a week,” the girl said, her voice filled with pride. “I save as much as I can.”
A normal working girl got a dollar a turn. A beauty like this, maybe as much as ten, Fargo thought. He sincerely doubted Miss Hamilton was saving these girls’ earnings. Most likely, she was pocketing the money herself. “I see,” he said, his voice tight. “What’s your name?”
“Fleur,” she said. “I guess it means ‘flower.’ That’s what Miz Hamilton says.”
Fargo shook his head, half turning in the saddle so he could make eye contact. “No,” he said. “What’s your real name?”
“Ain’t nobody called me that since my mama died,” she said. “But my folks named me Mary.”
“All right,” he said. “Mary it is, then. At least as far as I’m concerned.”
He got the Ovaro moving again, keeping his thoughts to himself. Obviously Parker and Hattie had themselves quite a business going. He wondered about this other fellow, Beares, and thought that looking him up before the big poker game would be a good idea.
Whenever he was in strange country—and there was no doubt that New Orleans was such a place—Fargo liked to know the truth of the land and the people in it. There were always good people in such a place, and bad ones, too. The only question in his mind was who was who, and how to protect himself and those who couldn’t protect themselves.
Feeling the warm embrace of Mary in the saddle behind him, Fargo wondered how long she’d been working for Hattie Hamilton and how many other secrets were being kept behind the walls of the Blue Emporium.
If he were to make a guess, Fargo knew the answer would be a whole lot.
And where there was money and power and secrets, there was always death coming.
In his world, no matter where he was, it just worked out that way.
4
They reached the outskirts of the city and Mary insisted that he let her walk the rest of the way, so he pulled the Ovaro to a halt and gently let her down. Along the way, she’d given him good instructions for reaching both the Blue Emporium and the Bayou Hotel, plus a good livery where he could put his horse and tack at a reasonable price.
“Tell the man that Fleur sent you,” she said. “He will take good care of you and your horse. He’ll treat you like family.”
“And you’re sure you’ll be all right?” Fargo asked, eyeing the rough-looking surge of humanity that crowded the streets.
“I’ll be fine,” she said. “Thank you for letting me ride. I won’t be forgetting it anytime soon.”
“Just keep yourself safe,” Fargo said. He tipped his hat to her and rode in the direction she’d told him, feeling like a damn fool. What kind of a man left a beautiful woman like that—even if she was a whore—to walk alone in a city like this? Still, there was nowhere he could really take her, even if she wanted to go.
Despite his misgivings about Hattie and Parker, Mary said that the madam took decent care of the girls. They were fed well, and each had a private room to themselves, and two bathrooms they shared. The customers were usually nice and the Blue Emporium employed several very large, tough men to keep anyone who got rowdy in line. “I got to earn a living somehow,” she’d said. “Not too many folks in this city will give work to a girl like me, less it be on her back.”
Knowing she spoke the truth didn’t make it sting any less. A beautiful woman like that should be cared for, not doing God knows what for a lousy dollar a week. Fargo sighed to himself. If half his instincts about Parker turned out to be true, Mary could prove to be an even more dangerous distraction than Hattie Hamilton.
A woman who knew her own sexual prowess was attractive to a man like him, but there was something even more beguiling in the somehow preserved innocence of a girl like Mary. She’d warned him to pretend he’d never met her if he happened to see her at the Blue Emporium. If it meant keeping her safe, then he’d play along.
The livery she’d sent him to was several blocks from the bordello and the hotel, and as he turned down the street it was on, he saw a large crowd gathered. Everyone was shouting and yelling, and money was changing hands as people bet on whatever event was going on. He urged the Ovaro through the crowd, stepping him up onto a muddied boardwalk at one point, to try to make his way past the mob.
When the crowd finally parted enough to let him through, Fargo pulled up the horse in surprise. Three men were brawling in the middle of the street, though what it really looked like was two men beating the living hell out of one. The two men were older than the third, and each outweighed the younger man by a solid fifty pounds. Given that there was betting going on, he wondered how the young man—really no more than a kid—had gotten himself into this mess.
He leaned down and tapped one of the spectators, a gray-bearded man with a top hat, on the shoulder. “Excuse me,” he said, trying to make himself heard. “What’s going on here?”
“That young feller is Tommy Anderson Jr. His old man is Tom Anderson—the mayor of Storyville. He comes over this way now and again, has a few beers, talks with folks. A good kid.” The man shook his head. “Guess today those two roughing him up kept pushing him, mouthing off about his dad, till the boy couldn’t take it no more. It all wound up out here with this crowd betting on the outcome.”
The boy, Fargo saw, was giving a pretty good accounting for himself, but for every punch he threw, the other two men landed three or four. It wouldn’t be long until they’d pounded him senseless, maybe even killed him. Believing that coincidences happened for a reason, Fargo made a quick decision. “Hey, mister, ” he said, swinging down out of the saddle. “Hold my horse for five dollars?”
“S
ure,” the man said, watching with interest as Fargo unbuckled his gunbelt and put it in a saddlebag. “Just be careful in there. Those two men beating on Tommy have got friends in the crowd and none of them play by the rules.”
Fargo grinned. “Neither do I,” he said.
He started shoving people out of the way, breaking through the crowd just as Tommy went down to his knees. One of the men was shouting at him. “Get up, boy. You ain’t gotten half the ass beating you’re due.”
Stepping into the circle, Fargo said, “I think he’s probably had enough, mister. Why don’t you and your partner there just move along now?”
“Who the hell are you?” one of the men demanded. “We got us a fight going here.”
Fargo chuckled. “This isn’t a fight. Two against one and you men outweigh him by a good fifty pounds each. That’s not a fight.” He let the grin slide off his face, and his eyes turned serious. “On the other hand, if you don’t end this right now, you will have a fight. The boy has had enough. It’s over.”
“Go to hell, mister,” the man said. He was heavyset and dark haired, with about three or four days of dark stubble on his cheeks. Other than a swelling beneath one eye, he didn’t look too much the worse for wear. “Mind your own damn business or we’ll give you a taste of the same.”
“I was hoping you’d say that,” Fargo said, striding forward. “It makes everything a lot easier to explain.”
The other one—a blond-haired, broad-shouldered man missing one of his front teeth—didn’t bother talking. He simply lunged forward, attempting to take Fargo off guard.
Stepping sideways, Fargo brought up his boot and caught the man square in the stomach. The air went out of him with a heavy whomp. As he started to go down, Fargo spun and planted a heavy punch right behind the man’s ear. He dropped like a sack of oats and didn’t get up again.
“That about evens the odds,” he said, looking at the other man. “Now, I’m going to ask you one more time to move along.”
The man started to say something, but that was all the time Tommy Anderson gave him. In the lull, he’d gotten a chance to catch his breath and get a second wind. He hit the unsuspecting man from behind, driving him to the ground.
Fargo stepped back to watch, wanting to make sure that the other man wasn’t going to get up and rejoin the fray. As he’d suspected, one-on-one, the kid was a pretty decent fighter. He watched as the two men squared off, and Tommy snapped several sharp jabs into the man’s face, stinging him. He tried to keep his hands up to defend himself, but when that didn’t work, he charged Tommy with the roar of a wounded bear.
But Tommy was faster, and sidestepped the rush, snapping out several more punches that staggered his opponent. In another minute, the fight was over, the larger man splayed out on the ground, holding his head and moaning about his missing teeth.
Tommy moved over to where Fargo was standing and nodded. “Thanks, mister,” he said. “You saved me for sure.”
Fargo peered at the crowd and noticed several of the onlookers were headed their way. “Best save your thanks for later and brace yourself, boy,” he said. “Looks like these other fellers want in on the action.”
“Damn,” he muttered. “I’m already dog tired.”
“No time to be tired,” Fargo said. He took several steps away from Tommy, making sure he had room to move freely. Two of the men moved toward him, while the third started toward Tommy.
“You shoulda minded your own business, mister,” one of them said. “Guess you need a lesson in how this town works.”
“I suspect you’re about to get an education yourself, ” Fargo replied.
Just then a shotgun boomed and everyone stopped in their tracks. “That’s enough!” a voice shouted.
“Ah, hell, Deputy, we were only—” one of the men began.
“Fixing to get your ass kicked,” the deputy replied before stepping out of the crowd. “Buck, the man you were about to tangle with is Skye Fargo, unless my memory has completely gone to hell.” He spat into the dirt of the street. “We’d have been picking your sorry carcass up with a shovel.”
Fargo grinned, recognizing the man. John H. D. Timmons had been a deputy sheriff in a two-horse Kansas town the Trailsman had passed through some years ago. A local cattleman was causing no end of misery to the town folk and with Fargo’s help, things had been set to rights. “Hello, H.D.,” he said. “Been a while.”
The deputy crossed the space between them, shifting his scattergun to his left hand and holding out his right. “Fargo,” he said, grinning. “You’ve probably been in town less than a day and already you’ve found trouble.”
“It usually finds me,” Fargo said. “I don’t have to look for it too hard.” Both men laughed, then Fargo added, “No, just saw the ruckus and what looked to be a pretty unfair fight under way.” He nodded at Tommy. “The boy was on the losing end of a bad situation.”
H.D. leaned close and said, “You don’t know the half of it.” His voice was too quiet to be heard by anyone but Fargo himself. “This city is worse than anything I ever saw or heard tell of out west. Meet me over at the sheriff’s office at five and I’ll fill you in.”
Before Fargo could reply, H.D. turned and looked over the crowd of roughs. “Show’s over, folks,” he barked. “Move on before I move you along the hard way.” He raised his shotgun for emphasis.
The crowd began to disperse, but even still, Fargo saw money changing hands, though whether it was from some new wager on his presence or the outcome of the previous fight, he didn’t know. Glancing back at him, H.D. said, “Can you see Tommy home, Fargo? I’d just as soon not have to break up any more of these today.”
Fargo nodded. “Yeah, I’ll get him there.” He turned his attention to the sandy-haired young man in front of him. “How far are we going, boy?”
“The name’s Tommy,” he said. “Tommy Anderson. I prefer that over ‘boy,’ though you sure wouldn’t know it from what my dad calls me.”
Fargo smiled. It seemed to him that almost every young man went through a period where everyone called him “boy,” and all that boy wanted to be was a man. “All right,” he said. “Tommy it is, until you prove otherwise. I’m Skye Fargo.”
Tommy nodded. “Mr. Fargo, thanks again for your help. I bit off more than I could chew, and then some.”
“Best thing to do in a case like that is spit ’er back out,” Fargo said. “Otherwise, you end up choking on the gristle. How far are we going to get you home?”
“Not far,” Tommy said. “My father’s saloon is over on Basin Street, just down a couple of blocks. He’ll be there.”
“Okay,” he said. “Let me just get my horse stabled . . .” He turned to look where he’d asked the man to hold his horse and felt his heart sink. The man—and his Ovaro—were gone.
“Goddamn,” Fargo cursed. “That sonofabitch stole my horse!”
“You asked a stranger to hold your horse?” Tommy asked, his voice incredulous. “In New Orleans?”
“I offered him five dollars,” Fargo said.
Tommy laughed, then spat into the dirt. There was still a little blood in his spit. “Mr. Fargo, your horse and gear would be worth far more than five dollars to even the meanest horse trader in town.”
“Yeah, but . . .” Fargo’s voice trailed off. He was the Trailsman. He’d find the man—and his horse and gear—if he had to track them all the way to hell itself.
“Tell you what,” Tommy said. “You helped me. Now I’ll help you. It’s the least I can do.”
“What do you mean?” Fargo asked.
“Let’s get over to my father’s place and I’ll tell you,” Tommy said. “I’ll bet you that five dollars we can have your horse and your gear, every last bit of it, back before sundown.”
Fargo looked at the young man and saw he was completely serious. He stuck out a hand and as they shook, he said, “Done. And along the way, you can explain to me just what kind of vipers’ nest I’ve landed myself in. This city s
mells bad and is more dangerous than Dodge, Wichita and Cheyenne combined.”
Tommy laughed again. “The West may be rough, Mr. Fargo, but I guarantee you that it’s got nothing on the city of New Orleans, least of all this area of town. The locals call it Storyville.”
“Storyville? How come?”
“Because of all the places in the city, the best stories come from here. They aren’t usually appropriate for kiddies, though.”
“I reckon not,” Fargo said, his eyes traveling over the rough buildings and dark alleyways filled with trash.
“The West must be better than this place,” Tommy said. “At least out there, the bad guys eventually get caught and hung. Here in town we have another name for them.”
They started down the street, Fargo’s eyes constantly moving for sign of his horse. “Oh, yeah?” he muttered. “What do you call them?”
“Citizens,” Tommy said. “The fine citizens of Storyville. And most of them would steal your teeth while you were getting a shave if they thought they could do it.”
“What a nice place,” Fargo said.
Tommy pointed. “That way,” he said. “And no, sir. It’s not a nice place at all.”
“Then why stay?” he asked. “You’re old enough to make your own way in the world.”
“True enough,” Tommy said. “But out there, I’d be a nobody. Here, at least, I’m kind of a somebody.”
“How’s that?”
“My father is Tom Anderson, the mayor of Storyville, ” he said, grinning proudly.
The name meant nothing to Fargo and it must have showed. He shrugged noncommittally.
Tommy just laughed. “Lots of people around here would like to run Storyville, Mr. Fargo. Lots of folks think they do—or will—if they play their cards right. But the real power in this part of the city is my father. ” He pointed to a corner building with the words ANDERSON’S ANNEX printed in bold on the sign. “You’ll see in a minute.”
Suddenly, Fargo understood just why Parker and Beares were at odds. Why this whole wretched place felt so tense. Everyone was gearing up for a fight to see who was going to run this part of the city—and get the money and power that came with it.