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CONTENTS
About the Book
Copyright
One – Wild Night
Two – Mission to the Pecos
Three – Red Raiders
Four – West of the Pecos
Five – The Gun
Six – Assassin
Seven – The Train
Eight – The Pegleg
Nine – The Attack
Ten – A Battle Well Fought
About the Author Page
Piccadilly Publishing Page
The Bannerman Series Page
Governor Dukes aimed to open up the border country to white settlement as a way to stop Mexico from trying to annex the Lone Star State. But to do so, he first had to give the Kiowa Indians a place to live. The Kiowas wanted the lush Pecos Valley. But the cattlemen in that region didn’t take kindly to handing over such fine grazing land to the Indians, any more than the miners intended to let them have free run of the gold-rich hills. So they set about doing everything they could to prevent the Governor’s top Enforcer, Yancey Bannerman, from fetching Red Dog to Austin to discuss terms.
In the meantime, Yancey’s partner, Johnny Cato, was trying to track down a stolen Gatling gun. Somewhere along the corpse-littered trail their paths would cross, and then they’d be in for the fight of their lives against a cold-blooded killer known as … Edge!
One – Wild Night
The nightlife of Austin, Texas, in the late 1870s, was nothing to get excited about. There were hotels of varying quality that served dinner, sometimes of dubious quality, in surroundings that ranged from romantic and sedate, right down to the downright bawdy and sleazy. There was one first-class restaurant in Palma Plaza that imported opera singers from the eastern states and, once, from as far away as England, but it was frequented mainly by the Austin high society and given a wide berth by the majority of Austinites looking for an evening’s entertainment.
There were the saloons along Front Street, and some of the ‘social set’ often wound up the night by visiting this area. It was normally frequented by cowboys and trailsmen, the lonely riders from the deserts and mountains, sometimes men with the law only a step or two behind. In this area, it was practically guaranteed that there would be at least one brawl each night in any one saloon. Occasionally, there was violence in the form of a gunfight and if some of the ‘social set’ were witnesses, then this was a topic of conversation until such time as another more worthy incident overtook it.
Between these two extremes of opera singers and gunfighters, there were any number of reasonably clean cafes and hotels with dining rooms that also provided entertainment in the form of jugglers, illusionists, a chorus line, and vaudeville acts that were popular back east. In the summer evenings, the Lone Star Brass Band would play the old Confederate war songs in the latticed bandstand at the south corner of Houston Park. Usually they played until about eight o’clock, sometimes stretching it till almost nine, when the light was good enough. It was a reasonable time to finish and allowed the listeners then to move on to the rest of the evening, usually starting with dinner and more entertainment at one of the hotels that had a ‘show’ advertised.
On that late June evening in 1878, this is what Yancey Bannerman and Kate Dukes figured on doing. They had been listening to the Lone Star Band’s music for the best part of an hour and now, as the band gathered up its instruments and music sheets in the stand, Yancey handed Kate down from the trestle seats, steadied her as she reached ground level, perhaps keeping his hands on her slim waist a little longer than he needed to. Kate was aware of this and smiled up into his tanned, lean face, with the gray eyes startlingly pale against his skin in the evening glow.
“Which show do you fancy?” Yancey asked in his deep voice. “The ‘Chinese Master Illusionist’ who catches bullets between his teeth, or the ‘Acrobatic Troupe from Albania’ ... wherever that is ...” He sorted through the handbills he held. “Or maybe you’d like to see the Bearded Lady and the Twin-Headed Dwarf ... Or the Siamese Twins joined at the hip ...?”
Kate wrinkled her nose. “Not with my dinner, thank you! I think the acrobatic troupe. And Albania is a country in southern Europe, for your information.”
Yancey grinned. “Come to think of it, my maternal grandmother came from there.”
“Oh, you!” Kate smiled good-naturedly, taking his arm. They walked along the street, smelling the flowers from the botanical section of the park ... an innovation of her father’s. Lester Dukes was governor of Texas, and he was determined that Austin was going to be a worthy capital and that Texas itself would be the greatest state in the union by the time his rule came to an end. Which could be at any time, for Dukes had a heart ailment that required constant care and his workload was ably guided by Kate’s hand with some help from Dr. Boles who constantly despaired at the pace the governor set himself. Dukes insisted that if he was going to die, then he would die in a way of his choosing: he couldn’t think of a better way than going down fighting to make Texas a mighty state ...
“It’s good to have an evening off,” Kate said suddenly. “My first in six weeks. I think I appreciate the break more than if I had regular times to relax, Yancey.”
“Maybe. But I sure would appreciate you having more time to yourself.”
She laughed briefly. “Why? You’re hardly ever here yourself ... Father’s always sending you off on some assignment that takes you out of Austin for weeks at a time. Look at that last one that took you to the Indian Territory … You were gone over two months—” i
“In the company of a young blonde woman all the way from Sweden,” he teased.
“I think Anya Johansen was more interested in finding the killers of her parents than any romantic notions you may have had.”
“Mmmmm ...” Yancey said enigmatically, then grinned widely when he saw the sudden uncertainty on her face. He laughed outright and she punched him lightly on the arm.
“Seriously, though, Yancey,” she said. “I don’t want you ever to feel that you’re ... tied to me ... I mean, you know my situation. I promised mother on her deathbed that I’d care for pa for the rest of his life, or mine. I’m bound by that vow. It wouldn’t be fair to expect ... well, any man to feel—obligated to me.”
“You hear me complaining?”
She looked up at him as they walked along, smiled faintly and tightened her grip on his arm. After they had gone another half block they turned into Shoal Greek Boulevard—a grandiose name for a log-cobbled walkway along the banks of the narrow but picturesque creek cutting through the center of town, Kate asked, “Is Johnny Cato joining us tonight?”
Yancey shook his head. “He likes the ladies, but not with beards or two heads ... No. He’ll be prowling the saloon area tonight.”
She looked up at him. “You’re more at home there, too, aren’t you, Yancey? I mean, I have no complaints. You know how to behave wherever you are. Oh, that sounds stuffy. What I mean is, your manners are impeccable, either in the dining room of the Golden Pheasant or the back room of the Long Branch ...”
Yancey raised his eyebrows. “And what d’you know about the back room of the Long Branch?”
“I know they have gambling there. Girls, too, I suppose. But what I was trying to say is, you really prefer the company of trailsmen and cowboys to politicians and businessmen, don’t you?”
Yancey shrugged. “I find folks a mite more real on the workaday level. One reason why I never took a legal adviser’s job in my father’s business empire, even though I’m a qualified attorney. I guess I was meant to be more at ease with a gun in my hand than a pen.”
“Yes,” she said quietly. “You thrive on danger.”
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Yancey figured he didn’t need to reply to that, because it was true sure enough. It was one reason why he had taken on the job of enforcer and special agent for Governor Dukes. Another reason, of course, was Kate Dukes herself.
He figured that was something else that didn’t need to be explained.
They turned into Kingsbury Street, opposite the wilderness that would one day be known as Peace Park, and strolled on towards La Piedrose Hotel and the dinner-show. Yancey figured it should be a quiet, pleasant evening ...
Johnny Cato intended to have a quiet night, too. He felt like a few drinks and a good meal, and was then prepared to let the night bring whatever it would ... as long as it included a woman somewhere along the line. She didn’t necessarily have to be handsome—though he didn’t want any mule faced hag—but she did need to have an exciting figure and a certain willingness to display it at the appropriate place and time. While it wasn’t absolutely mandatory that she be single, Cato preferred it: he had had encounters with irate husbands before and, at thirty-five, he figured he was getting a little too old for the gymnastics required to escape by leaping out of second floor windows or from roof to roof.
It was through such an incident that he had first met Yancey Bannerman, in some godforsaken Mexican hellhole called Los Moros ... Seemed a long time ago now, though it couldn’t have been more than six months. ii
As he leaned on the bar in the Sundown Saloon and sipped at his drink, he thought that he and Yancey made a good team. They sure didn’t look like a pair of hellbusters when they got around together, Yancey being head and shoulders over Cato who only stood five-eight with his high heel riding boots on. And Cato tended to dress neater than Yancey who favored the easy-going clothes of the trail rider. He figured they most likely looked an ill-assorted pair but they’d been through some scrapes together that would have turned an ordinary man’s hair snow white.
He moved his left arm experimentally, as he thought of one such incident, wincing a little at the stab of pain along the nerves that ran up into his neck. He was lucky to have that arm still attached to his shoulder so the pain was something he could live with. An outlaw’s blade had taken him there, way out in the badlands of the Indian Territory, and if Yancey hadn’t forced the pace back to a sawbones on the Red River in northern Texas, he would have lost the arm, for sure. Yancey and that Swedish girl had bullied him all the way, dragged him, literally, over miles of hostile, barren country when he was delirious with fever, raging, almost insane ... Yes, he owed that arm to Yancey ...
“Well, hell almighty!” a rough voice said behind him. “If it ain’t Colt Cato himself.”
Cato turned slowly, already reasoning that the owner of the voice had to come from up Wyoming way. For, only in Laramie had he been known as ‘Colt’ Cato ... a nickname earned because of his prowess at converting percussion Colt pistols to cartridge-firing ones, in his trade as a gunsmith. Cato dropped his right hand casually to the butt of the big, heavy-looking gun resting against his thigh in its fat holster. It was a twin-barreled gun known as the Manstopper, firing eight .45 caliber cartridges, with the lower barrel also firing a twelve-gauge shot shell. What Cato lacked in height and size was more than compensated for by the huge gun and his expertise in using it.
He recognized the man now: Jethro Kidd, a wild-living renegade who had run a lawless bunch up in Wyoming Territory and had tried once to steal a case of Colt Peacemakers from Cato’s gun shop. Cato had caught him and put his mark on him: he had nicked the man’s ears with bullets, cutting small crescents out of each one, just above the lobes. He had told Kidd that if he ever caught him stealing again he would put a bullet through each of his hands. He had never seen Kidd from that day until now, and the man still wore Cato’s brand on each ear.
The brand didn’t add to Kidd’s looks for he was a horse-faced man with bushy eyebrows and lank hair that was thin on top and allowed a glimpse of a scurfy scalp. He sported a gold eyetooth on the left side and word was that he had taken it from the mouth of a rich Mormon he had murdered along a lonely trail up in Utah. Cato didn’t know whether it was true or not but, when he faced Kidd now and saw the two hard eyed, gun hung men either side of him, he figured he could be in bad trouble ...
“Howdy, Jethro,” Cato said neutrally, alert but leaning his elbows on the bar edge in a casual manner.
Kidd stared at him soberly for a long minute and a couple of other patrons, thinking they read the trouble signs, moved further along the bar. Then, abruptly, Kidd grinned and stepped forward to the bar, signaling the barkeep.
“Set up four redeyes, for me and my pards,” he ordered.
“I’m no pard of yours, Jethro,” Cato said quietly.
Kidd shrugged, still grinning, though his eyes were flinty now. “No, guess we never were too friendly, Colt ... Meet a couple of compadres of mine ... Big one with the moustache is known as Arnie, other feller with the hare-lip we call Hackamore, Hack for short. He’s the best hoss thief north of the Rio.”
The man didn’t seem to mind being openly branded as a horse thief and nodded affably enough to Cato, reaching past him to pick up his glass of redeye and toss it down his throat in one motion. He was reaching for the bottle when Cato picked up the drink Kidd had ordered for him and held it out towards Hack.
“Have mine ... I don’t drink with Jethro Kidd.”
Now, in those days that kind of thing was a straight insult and, as luck would have it, there was a lull in the conversation at the bar just as Cato spoke. The three-fingered piano player had stopped belting his tinny instrument long enough to gulp down his mug of beer, and the painted girl who had been screeching the words of ‘Dixie’ stopped to lubricate her vocal chords with some whisky straight from a bottle. Conversation and gambling talk seemed to fade away so that Cato’s words dropped into the center of this pool of sudden silence and the ripples they made spread clear to the walls.
Men were moving instantly: chairs scraped back, glasses fell to the floor and smashed, the barkeep snatched bottles from the counter, and men stepped away to leave Cato and the three hardcases alone. Cato was mildly surprised, for he hadn’t said the words in a fighting tone and, in truth, didn’t want to fight Kidd, but he didn’t want to drink with the man either. It looked like he couldn’t do one without the other and Kidd didn’t seem to mind. He gave Cato a crooked grin as he straightened and motioned for Arnie and Hack to move aside. Leaning his left elbow on the bar, he moved close to Cato now. The smaller man still held the glass of redeye. Kidd nodded to it.
“Colt, you’re gonna drink that if I have to pour it down your throat ... which I hope I do have to do!”
Cato said nothing and didn’t move.
“You made it easy, Colt,” Kidd went on in a conversational tone. “A mite too easy, but I ain’t complainin’ ... When I recognized you, both my ears began to kind of twitch, you know? Just on these here crescent scars ... I had to quit LarArnie with a lawman’s lead kickin’ dust around my feet, and I’ve covered a lot of territory since but I ain’t never forgot what you did to me, Colt ...”
“At the time you had a choice: my brand, or the law,” Cato reminded him.
Kidd’s affability faded and he straightened, towering over Cato. “Drink that redeye, you son of a bitch!”
Cato looked him steadily in the eye and deliberately upended the glass, pouring out the whisky.
Kidd reacted instantly, catching Cato unawares, even though he was prepared for some kind of attack from the horse-faced man. Kidd’s fist slammed him on the side of the head and the man leapt forward and rammed a knee hard into Cato’s midriff, crushing him back against the bar. Cato felt the zinc edge of the counter grind into his back and the breath gusted from him, bright lights bursting in front of his eyes. As he doubled up, that knee slammed into his forehead and lifted him bodily off his feet. He arched backwards and fell half across the bar. Kidd grabbed Cato’s legs and heaved, yanking him clear off the bar. He smashed into the floor and the back of his hea
d rapped the brass foot rail. Consciousness began to whirl away from Cato and his body jerked with the impact of a heavy boot in the ribs. He felt himself falling into oblivion, fighting it, knowing it would be fatal, that Kidd would stomp him to a pulp ... but he was too weak to fight back and though he tried to get up, he no more than lifted his head away from the brass rail. Kidd kicked him again and Cato lay there, doubled up, bleeding, thinking this was a hell of a way to die: on the filthy floor of a saloon, under the boots of a two-bit outlaw ...
He gasped as icy-cold water smashed into him like a solid wall and he shook his head, hands squeezing it from his eyes. Another cascade of water hit him and he clawed at his face, blinking, the scene gradually coming into focus. He couldn’t believe it when he looked up and saw he was still on the floor of the saloon and Jethro Kidd and Arnie were standing over him, holding dripping, but now empty, wooden pails. They’d sluiced water over him, to bring him back to consciousness ...
And Johnny Cato knew that his ordeal was far from over.
Kidd was going to exact his revenge to the limit. He didn’t want Cato passing out too swiftly, and escaping all the pain he had planned for the ex-gunsmith who had scarred him for life. He aimed to chop Cato to pieces slowly and methodically, inflicting as much agony and injury as possible. Maybe he’d kill Cato then, or maybe he’d let him linger on as a cripple. Either way, Cato knew that hell stretched before him ...
If Cato’s size looked like contributing to his downfall, Kidd and his pards were in for a shock; there was one thing they hadn’t considered. Cato might be smaller than Kidd, and at a disadvantage as far as weight and height and reach were concerned, but his smaller figure and tight muscles gave him an agility that tipped the odds more in his favor.
Having swiftly figured what he was in for, Johnny Cato did not waste any more time. He brought up both legs in a wide arc, kicking the heavy wooden pail from Arnie’s hands and into Kidd. The horse-faced man staggered to the side and Cato bounced to his feet, had to reach out fast to steady himself against the bar, but came around with beautiful timing to hook an elbow into Arnie’s throat as the man rushed him. He fell back, gagging, stumbling into Hack who was trying to get close.
Bannerman the Enforcer 17 Page 1