They’d just finished eating the delicious canned blackberry pie Maggie said she’d made from berries Tully and Brianna had picked the previous summer when Delilah heard a bird twittering outside.
The sound, one she’d heard only one other time, drew her interest until she missed a question Brianna asked her.
Her father gave her a nudge and she looked at him for an explanation. “Brianna asked if you’d like to join her for tea tomorrow.”
“Oh, yes, please. That would be lovely,” Delilah said, shooting a smile to the beautiful woman. “I apologize for my distracted state. I heard a bird outside and was trying to distinguish the type.”
“Are you interested in birds?” Sammy asked, leaning her elbows on the table only a moment before Brianna gently pushed them off.
“Don’t get her started,” Ross said with a laugh. “Delilah loves birds, and she’s a good hand at drawing them, too.”
“By all means, go investigate our yard,” Ian said, offering her an encouraging smile.
“Are you sure you don’t mind?” Delilah asked, already rising out of her chair.
“Go on.” Ian grinned at Sammy. “Perhaps the wee lassie would like to accompany you.”
“Sure I would!” Sammy jumped out of her chair, grabbed Delilah’s hand, and led her out the back door. “What are we looking for?” the child asked in a loud voice as they walked past an outdoor dining set and across the greening grass.
Delilah stopped and bent down, speaking softly. “Hear the song he’s singing?”
The bird warbled and trilled.
Sammy grinned as the bird finished his song.
“We’ll have to be quiet and still to see if the little fellow singing will appear.” Delilah motioned to a bench in a patch of fading sunshine.
She and Sammy sat together, looking around the yard, waiting.
The bird called again, sharing his melodic tune with those prepared to listen. Sammy’s head turned from left to right, trying to locate his whereabouts.
“There, in the branches of the pine tree,” Delilah whispered, pointing to a tree at the far end of the yard where a red bird sat on a low branch.
“It sounds like he’s clearing his throat, then singing a tune,” Sammy said in a hushed voice.
Delilah grinned. “It does sound like that.”
“What kind of bird is it?”
Delilah studied the chipper bird as he ran through his tune again. “It’s a white-winged crossbill. They wander in flocks year-round, searching for food. The males are red with black bars on their wings while the females are brown and yellow.”
“Can we get closer to him?” Sammy asked, leaning against Delilah.
“We can try, but you’ll have to be quiet,” she cautioned the little girl.
Sammy nodded and slipped off the bench, taking Delilah’s outstretched hand. Together, they slowly edged their way closer to the tree.
Delilah stopped when they were still several feet away from the pine. She hunkered down and whispered to Sammy. “See how his beak crosses over. That’s so he can dig seeds out of conifer cones, like pine cones. I had no idea there were crossbills in Oregon.”
“We got all kinds of birds around here. If you want, I can show you a nest of eggs I found in the park this morning. Dad said he wasn’t sure what kind of bird they belonged to, but they kind of look like robin’s eggs.” Sammy glanced up with interest at the little red bird. “He sure has a funny beak. I didn’t even know pine cones have seeds. Can you plant them?”
Delilah cast one last look at the crossbill before she led Sammy back to the house. If nothing else, perhaps Baker City would provide her with ample opportunities to pursue her work of studying and cataloging birds.
Chapter Seven
Dugan looked up as the door to the sheriff’s office opened and one of the boys who ran errands around town raced inside.
“What’s wrong, Jimmy?” Dugan rose from his desk and stepped toward the boy as he gasped for a breath.
“Gilded Spur. Gunshots.” The boy sucked in gulps of air between each word.
“Thanks, Jimmy.” Dugan tossed him a coin then took off running in the direction of the town’s most elite and expensive brothel. Located on Resort Street, the Gilded Spur was one of several brothels in what many in town referred to as the red-light district due to the red lamps prominently displayed in parlor windows when they were open for business.
Dugan raced between wagons and buggies all hurrying to get to the opera house for the performance that evening of Macbeth. Seth had practically crowed when he’d informed Dugan he’d be escorting Miss Robbins to the performance.
In spite of the fact Seth was his best friend, Dugan wanted to haul off and punch him in the nose. The reason why he felt that way left him more than a little rattled. Even though he wouldn’t admit it to anyone, especially Seth, Dugan was quite taken with Delilah Robbins. If he hadn’t been scheduled to work this evening, he would have asked her to accompany him, but since he had to work, he hadn’t given it a thought. At least until Seth bragged about Delilah agreeing to go with him.
Rather than dwell on his friend’s interest in the girl they both obviously liked, Dugan cleared his thoughts and lengthened his stride. He’d just turned the corner when another gunshot rang out followed by screams from inside the brothel across the street.
Dugan ran between two wagons in the street as he drew his pistol and then took the steps to the brothel two at a time. The door stood open, so he cautiously moved inside into the midst of chaos. Patrons plowed down the stairs and made for the door. Some of the men hadn’t taken time to dress, carrying their clothes with them as they hastened outside.
Working girls cowered in a corner of the parlor as a man stood in front of them, brandishing a gun while muttering what sounded like nonsense and gibberish.
Dugan didn’t recognize the man, but the crazed look in his eye was one he’d seen before. For the safety of all involved, Dugan remained in the shadows of the room, unseen. He crept up behind the assailant and used a cast iron bookend from a nearby table to knock the man over the head.
When the shooter slumped to the floor, the girls all hastened over to where one of their own lay at the bottom of the stairs. A bright crimson stain from a gunshot wound tainted the pale yellow fabric of her chemise.
“He shot Bertha in the office and Jenny upstairs then threatened to kill the rest of us,” said a soiled dove named Missy as she turned to look at Dugan.
He bent down and searched for a pulse, but it was clear Jenny hadn’t survived either the fall down the stairs or the shot to the chest.
When the girls gave him a hopeful look, he shook his head. “I’m sorry.”
Those that hadn’t already been crying broke into tears.
Dugan took out a pair of handcuffs and fastened them on the man he’d clonked on the head then rushed down the narrow hall to the office. Zed Thomas owned the Gilded Spur, but he’d gone to Seattle to open a second location. He’d left the business in the capable hands of a retired working girl with a head for business.
He stepped into the office and sighed. Bertha Beetle’s sightless stare confirmed the gunman had quickly ended her life with a bullet to her heart.
Dugan returned to the girls who had gathered around Jenny. “Was anyone else injured?”
“One of our customers tried to wrestle the gun away from him and took a bullet in the leg. He’s still upstairs.” A girl Dugan thought went by the name of Trixie spoke.
Dugan nodded at her and carefully edged around Jenny’s body before he rushed upstairs. A man Dugan was taken aback to see in a brothel sat propped against a door in the hallway and tried to staunch the blood flowing from his leg with a spotless white handkerchief.
“Surprised to see you here, Mr. Mayor.”
The man glared at Dugan. “I’d prefer my presence at this establishment remain unknown, Deputy Durfey. “
“Not my place to say anything. I am a little curious, though, how you’re g
onna explain the bullet wound to your wife. Why aren’t you at the opera house this evening?”
“I’ll come up with some plausible reason for the shooting. I’m not at the opera house because I can’t abide such nonsense, even if it is good for the town. My wife went with her sister and two of her cousins,” the mayor said. The ashen tone of his skin paled as he spoke.
Dugan reached out and yanked off the mayor’s necktie then tied it above the wound on his leg in an effort to slow the flow of blood.
“Can you walk?” Dugan asked, reaching out a hand and helping the man to his feet.
“I’ll do my best,” the mayor said, leaning heavily on Dugan.
Dugan leaned over the railing and looked down at the girls still seated on the landing. “Do any of you know who the shooter is?”
“No. Not really,” Missy said, dabbing at her tears with the hem of the bright orange shawl she wore. “He’s been in a few times this week, and seemed quite taken with Jenny. I think he’s new to the area. Came to mine. Said his name was Elmer Muldoon.”
“Okay. Did any of you see him pull the trigger?”
Three of the girls raised their hands, Missy included. She glared toward the open exterior door. “A few of our customers witnessed it, too. If you can get the cowards to come back, they could confirm he shot Bertha in the office then charged upstairs. He grabbed Jenny by the arm then shot her.”
“I’m going to take your customer up here to see Doc, then I’ll be back for Elmer. If you have something to tie his feet with, do that so he doesn’t try to get away before I return.”
Missy and Trixie nodded, clearly taking charge of things.
“Come on, Mr. Mayor, let’s get you to Doc’s office.” Dugan helped the man down a set of steps most people didn’t even know existed at the brothel and out a side door. The doctor’s office was only four blocks away. With darkness rapidly descending around them, Dugan delivered the mayor undetected. The doctor didn’t answer, but Dugan opened the door anyway, leaving the mayor in the waiting room.
“I’ll go round up the doc. He’s probably at the play along with half the county,” Dugan said and then hustled outside. He happened to catch Jimmy passing by and sent the boy to see if the doctor was at the opera house.
“Make sure the doctor knows he’s urgently needed at his office,” Dugan said, giving Jimmy another coin.
“Thanks, Deputy. I’ll take care of it,” Jimmy said, taking off at a run down the street.
With the mayor settled, Dugan returned to the brothel. When he stepped inside, Elmer Muldoon had been trussed up like a turkey using several sets of silk stockings to tie his hands and feet to the big upright piano in the parlor.
The sight of the stockings holding the man captive would have made him smile if two people hadn’t died. Dugan worked the knots free and lifted the shooter to his feet. “I’ll haul him to the jail then send Godfrey Williams over to see to Jenny and Bertha. Just don’t move either of them until Mr. Williams gets here.”
“We won’t, Deputy Durfey,” Missy said. She picked up Jenny’s hand and held it then glanced back at Dugan as he dragged the man toward the door. “May we at least cover her with a blanket?”
“Of course,” Dugan said, propping Elmer against the wall. He placed one shoulder against the man’s stomach and hoisted him up like a sack of feed, letting his head and feet dangle.
Elmer Muldoon wasn’t much bigger than the girls he’d just terrorized in the brothel. Dugan wasn’t even winded by the time he reached the sheriff’s office. He toed open the door and then pulled open the heavy door to the jail cells. He dumped Elmer on a cot in the farthest cell from the jail door and locked the cell. He then locked the door that led to the cells and the sheriff’s office door before he ran through the darkness to the undertaker’s place.
He pounded on the door, but there wasn’t a light on and all remained quiet. “Godfrey! It’s Dugan Durfey. Open up! Godfrey!” He pounded twice more and waited. A flash of memory trickled through his mind. He’d seen Godfrey and his wife among those heading toward the opera house earlier. He should have had Jimmy look for him when he went for the doctor.
Dugan spun around and ran off in the direction of the opera house. He hated to disturb the undertaker when he was enjoying an evening out with his wife, but two dead bodies at the Gilded Spur trumped a performance of an excellent Shakespearean play.
He’d just opened the door at the opera house to step inside when people began leaving. He couldn’t have timed it better than to arrive the moment the performance ended. Rather than wade through the milling crowds, Dugan stepped onto a table near the door and scanned the faces to locate Godfrey Williams.
However, the person who caught his eye was Delilah Robbins as she laughed at something Seth said. The woman looked so beautiful she nearly stole his breath away. Dark hair was swept up high on her head with a burgundy silk rose fastened in the gleaming curls. She wore a navy satin gown, topped with an airy burgundy overlay and accented with a gold belt and trim. Delilah looked like the jewels the rich colors brought to mind.
Seth was decked out in his best suit and had even combed his hair.
Dugan might have chuckled at his friend’s slicked down locks if he hadn’t been so irritated with him for accompanying Delilah. He had more pressing matters at hand, anyway, than mooning over a girl he barely knew.
With one more glance at the enthralling vision she made, he shifted his focus to finding Godfrey. He spied the undertaker escorting his wife out of the theater into the lobby. Although it would have been easy enough to shout across the crowd, Dugan resisted the urge and jumped off the table. Without jostling the play attendees, he crossed the lobby in purposeful strides and quickly caught up with Mr. Williams.
“I apologize for interrupting your evening, Mr. and Mrs. Williams,” Dugan said, tipping his hat to Mrs. Williams then turning his attention to Godfrey. “We are in immediate need of your services.”
Godfrey didn’t blink, didn’t hesitate. He just nodded his head. “Where?”
“The Gilded Spur.”
Mrs. Williams sucked in an astonished gasp and pressed her gloved hand to the lace at her throat.
Godfrey patted her on the back. “How many?”
“Two.”
“I’ll be there directly,” Godfrey said, hastily directing his wife toward the door.
Dugan followed and found himself outside next to Seth and Delilah. “Evening, Miss Robbins. You look like a splendid rare jewel in that gown.”
She blushed slightly, but graced him with a smile. “Thank you, Deputy Durfey. Are you working this evening?”
“I am, and I best get back to it.”
“What’s going on, Dug?” Seth asked, scowling at him.
“I’ll fill you in tomorrow. You go on and enjoy your evening.” It pained Dugan to see Seth take a step closer to Delilah and cup her elbow with his hand, but he hid it well.
“Do you need help?” Seth glanced around, as though he expected to see gunslingers shooting their way down the street.
“No. I had to fetch Godfrey.”
Seth’s scowl deepened. “Who for?”
“I’ll give you the details tomorrow.” Dugan didn’t think Delilah needed to be privy to a discussion about the death of two women from the most elite cathouse in town.
However, Seth didn’t seem to pick up on his subtle hints. “Just tell me where it happened.”
“Gilded Spur. Now, you best see Miss Robbins home before her pa comes after you with a loaded shotgun.” Dugan worked up a smile and tipped his hat to Delilah. “Have a pleasant evening, Miss Robbins.”
He turned and walked off, but not before he heard Delilah ask, “What’s a Gilded Spur?”
In spite of himself, he grinned, wondering how his friend would delicately explain the nature of the business to Delilah. It served Seth right for not waiting until tomorrow to get the particulars.
Dugan returned to the house of ill repute and waited for Godfrey. After hel
ping the man load the bodies in his wagon, he headed back to the sheriff’s office.
A loud keening made the hair on the back of his neck stand on end as he unlocked the door. The unholy, unsettling noise came from the jail cells. Dugan took a deep breath and unlocked the door to the jail and the noise increased ten-fold.
Elmer Muldoon wailed with an unearthly sound and clawed at his face, even with the handcuffs obstructing him. Blood dripped onto the floor and Dugan had no idea what to do to stop the man who was obviously out of his mind.
“That’s enough of that!” Dugan shouted as he approached the cell, hoping it would at least startle the man enough to draw his attention.
Elmer snapped his mouth shut and dropped his hands then fixed his wild gaze on Dugan. “No more. I won’t do your dirty work for you no more! You hear me! Get away from me, Hugh!” the man shouted, scrambling away from Dugan and curling into a ball in the cot. “Leave me alone, you devil! Leave me be!”
Dugan had no idea if the man was talking to him or voices in his head. The way Elmer was carrying on, Dugan worried he’d inflict grave harm on himself. Even if the man had just killed two girls at the Gilded Spur, he didn’t cotton to the idea of Elmer killing himself, especially on his watch.
Uncertain what to do to calm the hysterical, demented man, Dugan hunkered down and lowered his voice to a soothing tone he used when working with frightened animals and humans.
“It’s okay, Elmer. Don’t worry. Everything is gonna be okay. Just take a deep breath and calm down.”
Elmer remained curled into a ball, rocking himself back and forth on the cot. He held his hands over his head, as though he expected a beating. “Leave me alone, Hugh. Get away!”
“Hugh?” Dugan asked. “Who’s Hugh?”
“You. You’re Hugh Allen, my boss, but I ain’t gonna do no more killing for you. No more! You hear me!” Elmer glanced at Dugan then returned to wailing and clawing at his face.
Lightning and Lawmen (Baker City Brides Book 5) Page 8