New Mexico Madman (9781101612644)
Page 18
Fargo nodded. But his failure to turn and face the other men squarely finally alerted Alcott. “It’s a trap!” he shouted. “That’s Fargo!”
“Now!” Fargo shouted, giving Kathleen a hard push to safety when she failed to move fast enough.
It was over quicker than Booger could swallow a biscuit. Two rifles and a handgun opened up with sustained ferocity, and Alcott and the man siding him went down without firing a shot. Lomax dropped the dagger and was clawing his sidearm out when one of Fargo’s bullets punched into his forehead, knocking him out from under his hat. The man beside him broke into a panicked run, but Booger’s big-bore North & Savage cut him down.
Fargo never took chances with possum players. He took the Henry from Ashton and pumped a finishing shot into each man’s head—even a second bullet for Lomax.
“Catfish, I oughter baste your bacon!” Booger growled when Fargo walked back to join the others. “How’s come you didn’t say word one about the gun in that Bible?”
“Because I was deliberately making the Undertaker think I only suspected Ashton. You can’t give a killer like that the slightest clue. And if you woulda known, the way you hated him already, you would likely have killed him before we learned where the trap was set. And I wasn’t about to let Lomax get away.”
Kathleen looked like a woman who had just harrowed hell. “Is it over, Skye?” she said in a wondering tone. “Is it really over?”
“It’s over, lady. The sick bastard is dead as a Paiute grave—Christ!”
Luckily Fargo was just in time to catch her when America’s Sweetheart fainted dead away.
* * *
The Bella Union was packed beyond capacity for the opening of To Love No Other starring America’s Sweetheart, Kathleen Barton. “Her finest performance to date!” a noted critic would rave the next day in the Santa Fe New Mexican. “Her impassioned soliloquy, in the final act, on the fragility of life did not seem like ‘acting’ at all—rather, it seemed to emanate from the heart of one who had crossed to ‘Death’s other kingdom’ and somehow managed to return against all odds.”
But the famous actress, claiming a headache, had foregone the usual gathering of actors and theater luminaries that usually followed a premier. Earlier that day she had sent personal invitations to the five individuals who had recently accompanied her on a ten-day ascent into hell; she requested their presence in her lavish suite of rooms at the famous Dorsey House in the heart of Santa Fe.
The finest liquors and food delicacies had been laid out on long tables in her drawing room. The attending porter gawked in sheer amazement when a buckskin-clad frontiersman, accompanied by a man the size of the Comstock Lode, entered the suite.
“Ha-ho, ha-ho!” Booger bellowed out, seizing a Cornish hen and devouring half of it in one bite. He glowered at Malachi Feldman. “A good thing there’s plenty of victuals, you little pop-eyed freak, for I’m still sorely tempted to eat you.”
Ashton met Fargo’s eyes and both men grinned. Shortly after their safe arrival in Santa Fe, Fargo had apologized to Ashton for his suspicion of him during the journey from El Paso. Fargo’s contrition, however, hadn’t prevented him from cleaning out Ashton at poker earlier that day.
Kathleen, demure and lovely in a pinch-waisted gown that left her slim shoulders bare and lifted her breasts provocatively, turned to Trixie. “Miss Belle, have you taken your position at the, ah, thirst parlor?”
“Yes, I start singing tomorrow at La Paloma on Palace Avenue.”
“Fine, but if I have my way, that truly fine voice of yours won’t be wasted in some smelly saloon. I’ve arranged for you to audition for Mr. John Lofton, director of the Bella Union. With just a bit of study I’m convinced you can become a fine operatic singer. And then you can indeed ‘paddle your own canoe.’”
Booger, who was searching in vain for a bottle of whiskey fit for a man, looked almost as surprised and grateful as Trixie. “Why, Your Haughtiness, what a fine—”
“And you, Mr. McTeague,” Kathleen cut him off in a scolding tone. “You are undoubtedly the most disgusting pig I have ever met. The stench blowing off you could stop the Armada. You are a stain upon the code of chivalry and an affront to decent women everywhere.”
Booger’s eyes suddenly misted. “Aww, muffin, I ain’t got the words to answer that fine praise.”
“You are also,” she added, “strong, fearless and indomitable. I shall never—God help me—forget you. As promised, these ‘frillies’ are for you.”
She plucked a small carton off the table and handed it to him. Then she stretched up—way up—on tiptoes and kissed the man-mountain on his wind-cracked lips. Fargo and Ashton goggled as if a dog had just recited Shakespeare.
“As for you, Trailsman,” she said, turning that achingly beautiful face toward Fargo, “I’ll be staying right here for the next six weeks. I shall be absolutely heartbroken if you don’t stop by to . . . visit before you ride off on your next, no-doubt reckless escapade.”
“That goes double for me, Skye,” Trixie put in, fluttering her lashes. “I’m staying at the Alameda.”
Fargo touched the brim of his hat to both women. He opened his mouth to reply to this embarrassment of riches, but Booger beat him to it.
“Yes, we know, catfish: ‘With me it’s always the lady’s choice.’”
“Pah!” Fargo shot back, and the room erupted in laughter.
LOOKING FORWARD!
The following is the opening
section of the next novel in the exciting
Trailsman series from Signet:
TRAILSMAN #377
BOUNTY HUNT
A town deep in the Rockies, 1861—where outlaws ruled the roost, and life came cheap.
Skye Fargo wasn’t expecting trouble. He’d been riding for days to reach the town of Meridian, and once he was over a high pass he’d have only six or seven miles to go.
It was midmorning when he reached the top of Bald Peak and the cleft that would take him from one side of the range to the other.
That high up, the air was cool, even in the summer. A hawk circled over the timber and a raven eyed him from a roost in a tree.
The pass was a cleft with high walls, wide enough for a wagon. It was like riding through a tunnel without a roof.
Out of habit, Fargo rode with his hand on his Colt.
This was wild country. The Shadow Mountains, as they were called, were the haunt of hostiles and outlaws. The unwary paid for being careless with their lives.
Fargo had lived too long on the raw edge to let his guard down. So it was that as he came to the end of the pass, he drew rein to scan the slopes below.
A big man, wide at the shoulders and narrow at the hips, Fargo wore buckskins and a white hat nearly brown from the dust of many miles. His eyes were as blue as a high-country lake. His face was flint-hard, and uncommonly pleasing to the female eye. One look at him and most folks realized he wasn’t the sort of hombre you tangled with if you were in your right mind.
But someone decided to.
Fargo glimpsed a flash of light near a cluster of giant rock slabs. He’d seen similar flashes before—the gleam of sunlight off metal. Hunching forward, Fargo used his spurs. The Ovaro exploded into motion just as a shot cracked and a leaden bee buzzed his ear. Drawing the Colt, Fargo fired at the slabs even as he reined sharply to the right.
He needed to hunt cover. Except for scattered boulders, the ground was open to the tree line, making it easy to pick a rider off. Or so the bushwhacker no doubt hoped.
Bent low over his saddle horn, Fargo galloped hard.
He worried the shooter would try to bring down the Ovaro. To prevent that he fired twice more to make the man hunt cover.
A large boulder loomed. It wasn’t big enough to shield the Ovaro but Fargo put it between him and th
e rifleman to make it harder for the man to hit them.
His best hope was to reach a line of pines that came within a few hundred feet of the crest. He nearly got a cramp in his neck from looking over his shoulder for another flash of sunlight. Strangely, there wasn’t any. There had just been that one shot.
Then Fargo saw why.
A man on a sorrel had broken from the cluster of slabs and was making for the forest.
Maybe his own shots had come too close for comfort, Fargo realized. Or it could be the killer figured to reach the woods first and cut him off.
Like hell, Fargo vowed. The Ovaro was second to no other horse when it came to speed and stamina. He’d pitted the stallion against the fine mounts of the Comanche and the Sioux and in races with whites, and the Ovaro nearly always proved their better.
Pebbles clattering from under the stallion’s flying hooves, Fargo made it to the pines without being shot. Once in among them, he raced down the slope, flying for more than fifty yards before common sense warned him to haul on the reins and give a listen.
The mountain had gone quiet. The bushwhacker could be anywhere.
Quietly, quickly, Fargo replaced the spent cartridges in the Colt. He added a sixth although he normally left the chamber under the hammer empty.
Shadow dappled the woodland. For that matter, much of the range was darker than usual. It was why people called them the Shadow Mountains.
Fargo gigged the stallion. He was alert for movement of any kind. Once, a hint of motion made him raise the Colt but it was only a jay taking wing.
What spooked it? Fargo wondered. Reining behind a spruce, he climbed down. He twirled the Colt into his holster, shucked his Henry rifle from the saddle scabbard and worked the lever to feed a round into the chamber.
Tucked at the knees, Fargo worked around the spruce and over to a fir. He hunkered and studied the shadows near where the jay had been. Just when he was about convinced he must be mistaken, a head and a hat poked from behind a trunk and scoured the woods in his direction.
Fargo froze. The man had a fair idea where he was but didn’t know for sure. He watched as the head swung from side to side and then disappeared. At that distance he couldn’t tell much other than the man had a beard a lot bushier than his own.
Fargo waited. With any luck the killer would come to him. It depended on how much the man wanted him dead.
Apparently a lot, because it wasn’t a minute later that Fargo spied a figure flitting from tree to tree.
Inwardly, Fargo smiled. Slowly raising the Henry, he pressed the stock to his shoulder, his cheek to the brass, and sighted down the barrel. All he needed was a clear shot.
The man didn’t give it to him. Whoever he was, the killer was always on the move and never showed more than a small part of himself.
Fargo decided to go for the chest. He saw the man dart behind an evergreen. Shifting slightly, he fixed his sights on the other side. Sure enough, the man reappeared. Fargo held his breath, and fired.
The Henry boomed and bucked and the figure plunged to the ground.
Fargo didn’t go rushing down. He stalked through the vegetation until he spied a pair of legs jutting from behind a log. They were toes-up and weren’t moving.
Suspicious of a trick, Fargo eased onto his belly and snaked to the log. Taking off his hat, he slowly raised his head high enough to see over.
The bushwhacker was flat on his back. Tall and lean, he had dark eyes wide in shock. His clothes were store bought and not in good condition, and his hat was pinned under his head and partially flattened. In the middle of his shirt was a spreading scarlet stain. His chest rose and fell in labored breaths, and each time he breathed out, scarlet bubbled. Pink froth rimmed his thin lips.
Jamming his own hat back on, Fargo stood and trained the Henry on his would-be killer. He stepped over the log, kicked the man’s Spencer well out of reach, and snatched a Remington from a holster and tossed it after the rifle.
The man glared the whole while.
Stepping back, Fargo cradled the Henry. “What were you after? Money?”
The bushwhacker went on glaring.
“Stupid son of a bitch,” Fargo said. “I’ve got barely ten dollars in my poke.”
The man tried to speak but all that came out were puffs of breath. Gritting his blood-flecked teeth, he tried again, gasping, “Not . . . money.”
“What then? My horse?” Fargo looked around. The killer’s sorrel was down the slope a ways, tied to a tree.
“You’ve already got one.”
“Not . . . horse,” the man gasped.
“You tried to blow out my wick for the hell of it?” Fargo had met some who would. Human wolves with no more conscience than a rock.
“You,” the bearded man said. “Kill . . . you.”
Fargo’s brow puckered in puzzlement. “You were waiting for me?”
A crafty gleam came into those beady eyes.
“Hold on,” Fargo said, looking the man up and down. “I’ve never seen you before. Why in hell would you want to kill me?”
The man didn’t answer.
Fargo was at a loss. No one knew he was coming to Meridian. Not even the person who sent for him, since he’d never answered her letter. “Who are you?”
The man glared.
“I’ll make a deal,” Fargo said. “Tell me what I want to know and I’ll bury you. Don’t, and I’ll leave you for the coyotes and the buzzards.” Some men wouldn’t care one way or the other but he had nothing else to bargain with.
“Clemens,” the man got out. “Handle . . . is Clemens.”
“I’ll ask you again. Why ambush me?”
“Stop . . . you,” Clemens said.
“Stop me from what?” Fargo asked, and even as he did, it hit him. “To stop me from reaching town? From talking to her?”
“You do,” Clemens gasped, “you die.”
“Are you the reason she sent for me?”
Clemens snorted, or tried to. Crimson drops dribbled from his nose and more blood frothed his mouth. “Others will get you. He’ll get you.”
“Who?”
Closing his eyes, Clemens shuddered. His breathing became shallow and his face paled before Fargo’s eyes. The man wasn’t long for this world.
Fargo went through his pockets. He found twenty-two dollars in coins and a few bills, a folding knife, and a pocket watch that didn’t work. It told him nothing.
Fargo retrieved the sorrel. He untied it and brought it over and looped the reins around a broken branch on the log. Then he rummaged through the saddlebags. There were spare clothes, as worn as those Clemens had on, spare socks with holes in them, cartridges, some coffee and a coffeepot, a tin cup and a fork and a fire steel and flint for starting a fire.
Turning to his would-be assassin, Fargo squatted and poked him.
Clemens opened his eyes.
“Last chance to tell me who is behind this.”
“Go . . . to . . . hell.”
“I’ll find out anyway,” Fargo said. “I’m going on to Meridian.” Odds were, whoever didn’t want him there would make themselves known.
“Tried to . . . help . . . pard,” Clemens managed to get out as more blood oozed.
“I still need a name.”
Clemens didn’t answer.
Standing, Fargo aimed his Colt at the center of Clemens’s forehead. “Reckon I’ll put you out of your misery, then.”
For the first time fear showed in the other’s eyes.
“You said . . . you’d wait . . . and bury me.”
“I said I’d bury you,” Fargo agreed. “I never said I’d wait around for you to die.”
“Bastard.”
“Nice meeting you, too.” Fargo stroked the trigger.
&nbs
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