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Evil Breed

Page 2

by Charles G. West


  Bringing his mind back to the present, he turned to look again at Annie Crowder. The child’s efforts to shoot him tickled him. “Yessir, not bad. Hell, I believe you’ve got enough sand to make it.”

  She could still hear him laughing as he led her father’s horse along the far edge of the garden.

  Chapter 2

  Sheriff Sam Hewitt looked up from his plate when the lone rider leading a horse passed in front of the window. Though he only caught sight of him out of the corner of his eye, there was no mistaking the massive figure of the despised bounty hunter Slocum. Sheriff Hewitt took supper in the hotel dining room every night. Slocum knew that, so Hewitt knew the surly bounty hunter would turn around and come back to the hotel when he found the jail locked. Might as well go on down there, he thought, pushing his plate away. Seeing him takes my appetite, anyway.

  Slocum was already back in the saddle when he saw the sheriff walking from the hotel. He dismounted again, stepped back up on the walkway, and waited by the office door. “Evenin’, Sheriff,” Slocum said as Hewitt approached.

  “Slocum,” Hewitt acknowledged. He stopped and stood on the walkway, working a toothpick around in his mouth as he gazed at the stiffened corpse draped across the extra horse. “I reckon that would be Crowder,” he stated.

  “Yep, that’s him,” Slocum replied, grinning. “That’s all five of ’em,” he reminded the sheriff. There was no love lost between the two men, and Slocum knew it. For that reason he enjoyed Hewitt’s irritation when he brought a man in dead. The notice said “Dead or Alive,” so Slocum figured, why bother with nursemaiding them?

  Hewitt stepped down from the walk to take a closer look at the corpse, which exhibited a great deal of trauma as a result of being dragged over a quarter mile of rough prairie and through a rocky creek. He didn’t make any comment at once, taking his time to determine if the body was indeed that of Grady Crowder. Crowder was not well known around town, and Hewitt did not put it past Slocum to substitute any corpse and claim it was Crowder. When he decided it was probably the fifth member of the gang of would-be bank robbers, he finally spoke. “What in hell happened to him? Half the skin’s scraped off him.”

  “He put up a fight,” Slocum replied casually.

  Hewitt stared at the huge man for a few seconds, considering his reply. “He did, huh?” He pulled the blood-encrusted shirt away from Grady’s back. “Shot him in the back, just like two of the others you brought in,” he said accusingly.

  “He run,” was Slocum’s simple explanation.

  “He ran,” Hewitt repeated, disgusted, “and you just happened to shoot him in the back.”

  Slocum’s grin returned. “Like I said, he run. If he’da run backward, men I reckon I’da shot him in the chest.”

  Hewitt shook his head, perplexed. He didn’t like bounty hunters in general, and Slocum was the worst of mem. But mere was nothing he could do but apply for the reward money for the obstinate brute. “All right, dammit. I’ll accept the body, and you’ll get your blood money.”

  “Thank you kindly,” Slocum said with a touch of sarcasm.

  “You know, if you were the sheriff here, there wouldn’t be no need to have a jail. All we’d need is the graveyard.”

  Slocum laughed. “I’ll be back for my money in a week or two.” He untied Grady’s body and slid it off on his shoulder. “‘Scuse me, Sheriff,” he said as he stepped up on the walk in front of Hewitt. With effortless strength, he carried the body over and deposited it beside the office door. With a satisfied grin for the sheriff, he proceeded to mount up and turned to leave.

  “What about that horse?” Hewitt asked, indicating Grady Crowder’s chestnut and knowing what the answer would be.

  “That’s my horse,” Slocum replied. “Grady musta sold his.” He gave the gray his heels, leaving the sheriff to grumble alone as he led Grady’s chestnut mare behind him.

  * * *

  True to his word, Slocum showed up before two weeks had passed. Sheriff Hewitt looked up from his desk when the light from the doorway was suddenly blocked out as the hulking man stepped inside. Hewitt reached in his desk drawer and took out an envelope. He tossed it on the desk, and Slocum quickly snatched it up. The crooked grin that Hewitt had come to despise appeared immediately as Slocum tore into the envelope and started counting the money.

  “It’s all there,” Hewitt growled, making no attempt to hide the contempt he felt.

  “Why, I’m sure it is,” Slocum retorted, enjoying Hewitt’s discomfort. “I just like to count it.” When he finished counting, he flashed his grin again and said, “Come on down to the saloon with me, and I’ll buy you a drink.”

  “Thanks just the same,” Hewitt replied dryly. He remained seated at his desk while Slocum stuffed the envelope inside the waistband of his trousers and turned toward the door. The sheriff was tempted to hold his tongue and let the contemptible bully walk out. However, he had promised to deliver a message to Slocum, so he stopped him before he closed the door. “I’ve got a message for you from over at the fort,” he called out.

  His hand on the doorknob, Slocum paused. “Is that a fact?” Suspicious at once, he quickly thought back over his movements during the past few months. He couldn’t think of any point at which he might have done anything to rile the military’s anger. Still cautious, he asked, “What in hell’s the army want with me?”

  “They might have a job for you.” He wrote a name on a piece of paper and slid it across his desk. “Go see mis captain in the adjutant’s office.”

  Slocum picked up the piece of paper and stared stupidly at it. “You know, Sheriff, I ain’t never took the time to learn to read. Ain’t never needed to.”

  Hewitt favored him with a tired expression, then said, “Captain Boyd.”

  “Captain Boyd.” Slocum repeated the name, then looked up at Hewitt. “Where do I find him? I ain’t spent much time at Fort Lincoln.”

  “Hell, I don’t know,” Hewitt replied impatiently. Slocum’s visit had already extended far beyond the sheriff’s tolerance. “He’s with the infantry detachment up on the bluff, is all I can tell you. You fancy yourself a tracker. You find him.”

  Slocum’s grin slowly crept back into place. “That I will, Sheriff. Much obliged.”

  * * *

  Captain Thomas Boyd glanced up at the young private standing in the door. “Sir, there’s somebody out here says you wanted to see him.”

  “Who is it?” Boyd asked. He couldn’t recall recently ordering anyone to report to him.

  “Civilian, sir—looks like a scout or something—says his name’s Slocum.”

  “Slocum.” Boyd pronounced the name slowly, not recalling immediately. Then he remembered his conversation with the sheriff in Bismarck, and the sheriff’s description of the bounty hunter. “Slocum,” he repeated. “Big, nasty-looking fellow?” The private grinned and nodded his head. “Send him in,” Boyd said.

  In spite of Sheriff Hewitt’s description of the man, Captain Boyd was still taken aback by the appearance of the brute who crossed his threshold on that morning. Boyd was taller than average. Still the bounty hunter towered over him, with shoulders as wide as the doorway and arms like hams that threatened to split the sleeves of his woolsey shirt. It was the face that caused a man to draw a sudden breath, however. In describing the man to a fellow officer afterward, Boyd likened that face to an artist’s rendering of evil in its purest form. Coarse black hair forced its way from under a flat-crowned hat, the broad brim of which drooped low over his face and the back of his neck. His face was covered by a heavy beard, except for a long, jagged scar on the left side where no beard would grow. At once repelled by the man’s ghastly appearance, Boyd realized that this just might be the perfect candidate for the job he had in mind.

  “I’m Captain Boyd,” he said, starting to extend his hand, then deciding against it. Slocum noticed, but couldn’t care less. “Sheriff Hewitt tells me you might be the man I need to do a job for the army. I need a good tracker.�


  “That so?” Slocum replied, showing no interest. “What about all them redskin scouts you got hanging around here? Ain’t they supposed to be good trackers?”

  “They are,” Boyd said. “But I expect most of them will be going on an expedition to the Black Hills with the post commander in a couple of weeks. Besides, this job isn’t suited for an Indian scout. It may take some time, and you may have to hunt him in towns and forts, as well as in the hills. An Indian scout couldn’t very well do that, and it’s too far to send a cavalry patrol out looking for him.”

  “Who are you looking for?” Slocum asked, only mildly interested. He had just cashed in on a big payday, and he felt no urgency to take to the wilds again.

  “A fugitive. James Ryman Culver is his name.”

  “What did he do?”

  “He murdered an officer in the United States Army.” Boyd had been there when Lieutenant Ebersole shot at young Jim Culver on his father’s farm in Virginia, then paid for his bad aim with his life. Perhaps it was more self-defense than murder, but Boyd felt justified in calling it the latter. The army could not tolerate the killing of an officer by a civilian. He went on to give Slocum a description of Jim Culver and where he had last been seen.

  “Hell, there’s a lot of fellers that look like that.”

  “He’ll be the only one carrying one of those new Winchester seventy-threes with his initials, J.R.C., carved in the stock. He rides a big bay Morgan with a white star on its face, and he calls it Toby.” Boyd paused to try to remember anything else that would help identify Jim Culver. “He’s pretty handy with a rawhide whip. He used it on an officer in Fredericksburg, so he’s probably carrying it on his saddle.

  “He fled Virginia and came west. The last report we had was from Fort Laramie. He showed up with a young woman at the sutler’s store just before winter set in. They said he left Laramie to go over South Pass with a man carrying a wagonload of supplies to a little settlement called Canyon Creek.” He paused to judge Slocum’s interest, but the passive giant’s expression offered no clue. “I’m authorized to pay you five dollars a day, but you’ll have to stand the cost of all your supplies and ammunition.”

  Slocum’s only response was a slight narrowing of his eyes as he added up the possible total in his mind. He preferred to work on his own time and collect a lump sum, but this wasn’t a bad deal when he realized the length of time a job like that would require. Maybe it might be the start of some regular work for the army. “That’s five dollars a day, starting from the day I leave here?” Slocum asked.

  “That’s right.”

  “Fort Laramie’s a hell of a piece from here—take me close to two weeks to get there to even start lookin’ for this feller.”

  “More like a week and a half, but I don’t care if you have to follow him to Oregon. I want this man brought to trial.”

  “There’s a heap of Injuns between here and there that would love to catch a lone white man traveling across that country.”

  “Granted,” Boyd replied. “That’s why I sent for you. Sheriff Hewitt said you traveled in Indian territory all the time.”

  “All right,” Slocum decided. “I’ll get him for you.”

  “Good. We’ve got a deal. But I’ve been told a little about your reputation. I want you to understand one thing for certain. I want him brought back alive. It’s important that we try this man for murder. Folks have to know they can’t kill an officer of the U.S. Army and get away with it.”

  This caused Slocum to cock his head back a notch. “Alive?” he exclaimed. “What if he puts up a fight? What if I have to kill him?”

  “No deal, that’s what.” The captain was adamant. “You don’t get paid for a dead man. Wounded, if you’ve got no choice, but the army doesn’t want to try a corpse. If you get the job done in a month’s time, you’ll receive a two-hundred-dollar bonus.”

  This raised his interest considerably, but the insistence that Culver had to be alive didn’t sit well with Slocum. He never thought much of bothering with a prisoner. It was just a lot more efficient to shoot the son of a bitch and carry the meat home—just like any other kind of hunting. He was almost of a mind to turn the deal down, but decided the potential for additional jobs for the army might be worth the extra trouble. “All right then,” he said. “I’m gonna need me a night in town first. I’ll set out for Fort Laramie tomorrow morning.”

  Chapter 3

  Far west of Fort Lincoln, beyond South Pass and the southern slopes of the Wind River Mountains, Jim Culver stood on a massive outcropping of rock and looked toward the southern end of a valley. Long and narrow, the valley extended far beyond his eyesight. The settlement below him had been named Canyon Creek by the handful of immigrants who had first discovered the upper part of the valley. They were good people, these settlers who had built cabins and cleared land for crops. Hardworking and proper Christians, they asked for nothing more than to be allowed to live in peace, working the land. It was a quality Jim applauded, but knew was not ingrained in his soul. Like his brother Clay, Jim was hard put to stay in one place for very long.

  Unaware that anyone back east still had reason to look for him, he decided that it was time to see what was on the far side of the mountains that surrounded Canyon Creek. There were some things that troubled his mind, and he needed room to sort out his feelings. The past few months had been some of the best of his life. He had to admit that. Getting reacquainted with his older brother, Clay, was well worth the time spent helping him build a new cabin for Katie Mashburn. They had built it about one hundred yards from the ashes of the original cabin, a little closer to the river. It was a sight bigger than the one Katie’s father and late husband had built. Lettie Henderson, the young girl whom Jim had met on the trail west from St. Louis, had decided to stay on in Canyon Creek after the winter instead of returning to St. Louis, and Katie had invited her to move in with her. It had been a decision that pleased Jim, although he was reluctant to admit it, even to himself.

  As soon as the cabin had been completed, Clay had left. He had obligated himself to scout for the army at Fort Laramie, and was already late in reporting. Jim had taken on the responsibility of helping Katie and Lettie move in and get settled. He had plenty of help from Luke Kendall, a young half-breed boy Katie had more or less adopted. Now that they were situated comfortably, Jim felt free to go in search of his medicine, as Clay had expressed it. And that could best be found in the high mountains, where a man was a notch closer to his maker.

  Once he admitted it to himself, he realized the biggest thing that troubled his mind was what to do about Lettie Henderson. No more than a slip of a girl, she had taken over a sizable portion of his mind. There was no denying he had feelings for her, but he wasn’t really sure what they meant. He wouldn’t admit to being sweet on her. It was just that whenever she was away from him, he always seemed to catch himself wondering when she was coming back. She had feelings for him, too. There was little doubt of that. A shiver ran the length of Jim’s spine when he thought of comments Clay had made. That little gal’s already got a rope on you. She’s just giving you plenty of slack right now. When she’s ready, she’ll start drawing you in. Jim was sure he wasn’t cut out to be a farmer. And it bothered him that he couldn’t help worrying about those two women alone in the cabin, trying to work that little farm. They had Luke there to help them now, but how long would he stay? Hell, he’s half Shoshoni. How the hell is Katie gonna make a farmer outta him?

  Jim guessed he must have the same blood coursing through his veins as Clay. For, like his brother, he needed solitude to examine his feelings, and maybe sort out a path for his life to follow. Being around people, especially Lettie, clouded his thinking. Even as a boy, back home in Virginia, he had been more at peace in the woods.

  Thinking of Virginia, he knew he could never be satisfied going back there after seeing the Rockies. His father’s health had been failing when Jim left, leaving Jim’s two brothers to do the brunt of the work. They
were capable. He was confident of their ability to take care of the farm. And after that incident with the soldiers by the Rapidan River, it might not be wise to ever return to his boyhood home anyway.

  It had been self-defense, pure and simple. That hotheaded lieutenant had taken a shot at him. Jim had had little choice-but to shoot back. It had just been bad luck for the lieutenant that Jim usually hit what he aimed at, even in a split second, as that had been. The captain knew his officer had fired first. There were four more soldiers as well as the sheriff who had witnessed the killing. Still, Jim had decided not to risk hanging around to see what a military court might decide on the issue. Surely, he felt, the whole incident would have been forgotten after this much time had passed. He sure as hell wasn’t the first man to leave his past in the east and head west with a clean slate.

  Now he couldn’t help but feel he was running again, only this time he was running from himself. With the completion of the cabin, the talk had turned to planting this field and that one—what crops to try on that piece above the old homeplace, whether or not the garden could be extended to take in one corner of the old cornfield. He admitted that he had probably panicked, but he had to get away from such talk. He could feel the noose tightening around his neck, and he couldn’t forget the worried look in Lettie’s eyes when he had ridden out that morning. He couldn’t help but wonder if it had been a coincidence that she had put on a dress that morning, instead of the shirt and pants she had been wearing to work on the cabin. There was no doubt that the transformation had had the proper effect on him, for she had implanted an image in his mind that he was not likely to forget. He wanted to leave and he wanted to stay. He knew he had to get away to think things out.

  Now, as he put a foot in the stirrup and climbed aboard Toby, he tried to put those thoughts out of his mind. As he crossed over the first ridge, it didn’t take long before the excitement of seeing country he had never seen before took hold of him. For the rest of that day and most of the next, he pushed deeper and deeper into the rugged mountains.

 

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