High Country Horror (11 page)

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Authors: Jon Sharpe

BOOK: High Country Horror
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Over half an hour of cautious riding brought Fargo to the bottom. Drawing rein, he scanned the canyon. A quarter of a mile across at its widest, it was bordered on the north by ocher sandstone cliffs that reared hundreds of feet high. Bends in both directions prevented him from seeing how long it was. He reined to the west. High walls towered and the canyon narrowed until it was barely wide enough for a wagon.
Suddenly Fargo heard what he took to be the clank and rattle of pots and pans. Puzzled, he put his hand on his Colt. The next moment he rounded a bend and came face-to-face with a man, who was as surprised to see him as he was to discover the source of the clanking.
It was a prospector: a bewhiskered, wizened gent in worn clothes and a hat with holes in it, leading a burro heaped with tools and grub. He was carrying an old Sharps rifle with tacks in the stock, an Indian trademark. “Where the blazes did you come from?” he blurted, and started to raise the Sharps.
A flick of Fargo’s hand and the Colt was out and the hammer thumbed back. “I wouldn’t,” he said.
The prospector blinked. “Hold on, there, sonny. I wouldn’t really shoot you.”
“I’d shoot you,” Fargo said. “Set that buffalo gun of yours down and do it as slow as molasses.”
“And get dirt on it?”
Fargo thought that hilarious, given the man was caked with dust from his tattered hat to his scuffed boots.
“Can’t I just lean it against my leg?”
“Flat at your feet.”
“You’re a mean one,” the prospector complained but he did as Fargo wanted. “There. I hope you’re happy. You can put away that hogleg now.”
Fargo kept it trained on him. “Who are you?”
“Folks call me Badger, on account I’m always digging in the ground. Been roaming this highland for going on ten years now.” Badger smiled, showing more gaps than teeth. “Ask anyone and they’ll tell you I’m as friendly as can be.”
“How did you get down here?”
Badger pumped his arms up and down and did a good imitation of a crow.
“Caw! Caw!” Cackling, he said, “I flapped my wings and flew.”
“I’d really like to know.”
Pointing back the way he came, Badger said, “I walked here. How else? You ask damn fool questions.”
“Seen anyone?”
“Besides you?” Badger shook his head. “Not in a coon’s age. I fight shy of people. Haven’t set foot in a town in nigh on half a year and wouldn’t know where any was.”
Fargo bobbed his head to the south. “There’s one called Haven half a day’s walk.”
Badger’s eyes crinkled at the rim. “So that’s where.”
“Where what?”
“I figured one must be close.” Badger scratched under an arm and sniffed his fingers. “Where are you bound, anyhow?”
“I’m hunting a man who had a young woman with him. Maybe you’ve seen them?”
“I just told you I fight shy of folks,” Badger said. “What do they look like?”
“I don’t know.”
“You’re hunting for them and you don’t know who you’re hunting? Mister, folks say I’m touched in the head but you have me beat.” Badger stooped to pick up his Sharps. “If you don’t mind I’ll be on my way.”
Fargo reined aside. The ore hound smiled and tugged on the lead rope. The burro was almost past the Ovaro when splash of color caused Fargo to rein in close to it. “Hold it,” he commanded.
“What now?” Badger said.
Fargo bent and snatched the object that had caught his attention: a blue bonnet, hanging by its straps from a pick handle. “Where did you get this?”
“I don’t remember,” Badger said. “I’ve had it quite a spell.”
Fargo didn’t believe him. The fabric was new. The bonnet hadn’t been worn more than a few times. And he recalled someone saying that Myrtle Spencer had been wearing a blue dress when she disappeared. He sniffed it and caught the lingering scent of perfume. “I want the truth.”
“Who do you think you are?” Badger bristled. A wild gleam came into his eyes and he lunged and grabbed the bonnet from Fargo’s hand and held it close to his chest. “This is mine, you hear me! Mine, mine, mine!”
“Where did you get it?” Fargo asked again.
“I don’t remember.” Badger unbuttoned two of the buttons on his shirt and stuffed the bonnet under it.
“Yes, you do.”
Badger picked up the lead rope to the burrow and glared. “I don’t think I like you. I don’t think I like you even a little bit.”
Fargo exercised patience. “The woman who wore that has gone missing. I’m looking for her.”
“She’s one of those you don’t know how they look?” Badger shook his head. “If you don’t know, how would I?”
“It’s important,” Fargo persisted. “The man who took her might have killed her.”
Badger gazed back the way he had come and a shudder shook him. “The skin man,” he said.
“The what?”
“The skin man. He likes to run his hands over it.”
“Who does?”
Badger glanced around and crooked a finger at Fargo and said in a whisper, “I’ve seen what he does. I’m sneaky when I need to be and I snuck right up and I saw.”
“Saw what?”
“What I shouldn’t have. It’s why I stay away from towns. I’ve always known. From when I was young, and my uncle.”
“You’re not making any damn sense.”
“I am to me,” Badger said, and tittered. “You would savvy if you were me but you’re not so you don’t. Stay away from them, mister. They’re rotten apples, all of them. Oh, they look all shiny on the outside but they’re rotten as sin on the inside.”
“Who is?”
“What have we been talking about? People.” Badger tugged on the rope and started down the canyon, the burro plodding doggedly behind.
Fargo reined the Ovaro next to him. “I mean it. I need to know about that bonnet.”
“What bonnet?”
“The one you stuck in your shirt.”
Badger put his hand on the bulge and his mouth split in his mostly toothless grin. “I never had me a bonnet before. I could have taken the dress but he’d be bound to notice it was missing, it being so new and all.”
“Who would? The skin man?”
“The beast.”
“Why do you call him that?”
Badger stopped and looked up. “We’re all beasts but he’s one of the worst. He ever finds out I know, there’s no telling what he’ll do.”
“The people in Haven call him the Ghoul.”
“Do they, now? Well, it fits.” Badger motioned as if shooing him away. “Now leave me be. Maybe I’ll visit that town you mentioned. I am low on tobacco and I can’t do without.” He tugged and hiked away, muttering under his breath.
Fargo almost climbed down to stop him. But it might do little good; the ore hound’s mind wandered all over the place. A better idea was to backtrack and see where Badger came from. He could always catch up later and press the old goat for answers.
Fargo reined around. The burro’s tracks paralleled the horse prints he had been following. Presently the canyon floor widened and the sandstone gave way to forested slopes. Another quarter of a mile, and the tracks diverged. Fargo came to a stop. The horse prints bore to the northeast; the burro’s tracks to the northwest. How could that be, he asked himself, if the old prospector had been spying on the Ghoul? He reined to the northeast, through dense woodland that was strangely silent. He didn’t hear birds or squirrels. Not even the buzz of a locust.
Reaching down, Fargo shucked the Henry. Animals never went quiet without cause. A prowling meat-eater would do it, or it could be something—or someone—else.
The trail led into tall pines. Needles carpeted the ground inches thick and the prints were harder to make out. Fargo came to a small clearing.
The prints ended in the middle. Past that spot, the needles were unbroken. He drew rein and climbed down. It seemed impossible. A horse couldn’t vanish into thin air. But it could
seem
to if the man had used the Comanche trick of wrapping its hooves in swaths of fur.
“No doubt about it,” Fargo said out loud. “You’re clever as hell.”
A horse was heavy enough that even with fur over its hooves it left impressions in dust and soft soil. But on a thick layer of pine needles it left precious few and the needles would smooth out after a little while just as if the horse never stepped on them.
Fargo refused to give up. Faint signs went off to the north and so did he, walking and leading the Ovaro. It was slow going. Several times he lost the trail and had to rove about to find it again.
The pines gave way to ground made up of near solid rock.
Fargo swore. Beyond the rock reared a series of cliffs that no horse could climb. He gazed at the high rims and caught the gleam of sunlight on metal. Instantly, he spun and vaulted into the saddle. Lead spanged off the rock where he had been standing even as the thunder of the shot crashed and echoed. Fargo raced for the woods. Another boom, and a slug whizzed past the stallion’s head. He reined right and then left, zigzagging to make the Ovaro harder to hit. Then he was under cover and drawing rein. Leaping down, he darted to the edge of the trees and hunkered behind a bole. The gleam high up was gone. He waited, hoping the shooter would show himself, but no such luck.
“Damn.”
By now the sun was low in the western sky. Fargo had a choice. Stay there all night and seek a way up or around in the morning, or go back to Haven and return at dawn after a good night’s sleep—or a night of making love to his landlady.
It really wasn’t any choice at all.
12
Night had fallen by the time Fargo reached Haven. He was surprised to find clusters of people the length of the main street talking in hushed tones.
When he rode past they fell silent and stared. He wondered if another woman had gone missing.
The boardinghouse was quiet. A lamp glowed in the parlor. Helsa was on the settee, knitting, and on seeing him she rose and came over and put her hand on his chest.
“Finally, you’re back. Where have you been?”
“I was playing cat and mouse with the Ghoul,” Fargo informed her. “Any chance of getting something to eat after I wash up?”
“The Ghoul?” Helsa said. “How can that be when Marshal Tibbit has him behind bars?”
Fargo didn’t wait for an explanation. He turned and hurried out. More than a dozen townsmen were gathered in front of the jail and he had to shoulder through them. He overheard a few comments.
“... wait for the circuit judge ...”
“... we should try him ourselves ...”
“Try him, hell. He’s guilty as sin. We should take the son of a bitch out and string him up.”
The door was barred on the inside. Fargo knocked, and when no one came, he knocked louder.
“Who is it?” Marshal Tibbit asked.
Fargo told him. The bar grated and the door was flung wide and Tibbit pulled him inside and slammed the door shut.
“Thank God. I can use some help.” Tibbit replaced the bar and went to his desk and wearily sank into his chair. “You saw them out there?”
Fargo nodded.
“A while ago they demanded I turn him over to them but I refused.” Tibbit removed his hat and ran his sleeve across his perspiring brow. “They want to lynch him but I’ll be damned if they will.”
“Him?” Fargo said. The cell was shrouded in shadow and the figure on the cot in the corner had his back to them.
“I caught the killer,” Marshal Tibbit said proudly. “He rode into town and made the biggest mistake he could.” Tibbit opened a drawer and took out a blue bonnet and placed it on his desk. “The fool waved this around at the saloon for all to see. It belongs to Myrtle Spencer.”
Fargo went to the bars. “Hello, Badger.”
The prospector rolled over and bared his toothless grin. “Well, look who it is. Did you find the skin man?”
“He took shots at me.”
“And you’re still breathing? He’s a good shot. I saw him drop a buck once at pretty near two hundred yards.”
Tibbit came over. “You know this man?”
“We’ve met,” Fargo said.
“He won’t tell me his real name. Claims he took the bonnet from a pile of clothes but he won’t say where the pile was or anything about Myrtle.”
“He’s not the Ghoul,” Fargo said.
“I have my doubts,” Tibbit said. “But he had the bonnet and he wouldn’t or couldn’t explain how he got it so I had to arrest him. Word has spread. You saw them out there. They’ve pretty much made up their minds and want to hang him.”
“Your good citizens sure are fond of rope.”
“Can you blame them? Five of their own, missing. Four of them women, no less.” Tibbit nodded at the prospector. “Maybe he’s not the Ghoul but he’s a handy scapegoat.”
Badger got up and stepped to the bars. “I didn’t do anything but take that bonnet. They can’t hang a man for that.”
“I’ll protect you,” Tibbit said.
Just then there was loud pounding on the door and voices were raised in anger.
“Open up, Marshal!”
“We want him!”
“We’re not leaving until you hand him over!”
Tibbit hitched at his pants and put his hand on his revolver. “Go away!” he yelled. “Disperse to your homes and leave this to the law.”
“We’ll break the door down if we have to!” a man warned. “Or get some powder and blow it open!”
“Did you hear that?” Tibbit asked in amazement. “People I have known for years.” He gnawed on his lip. “I’ve never faced a mob before. What would you suggest I do?”
Fargo stepped to the gun cabinet. He opened it and took down an English-made shotgun. A drawer under the cabinet contained shells. He loaded both barrels and went to the front door. “When I say, open it quick.”
“You’re not fixing to blow them to kingdom come, are you?”
“That depends on them.”
“Moments like these, I wish I was back selling ladies’ corsets.” Tibbit removed the bar.
“Now,” Fargo said.
The lawman gulped.
The crowd had swollen to twenty or better and were pressed close under the overhang. When the door swung open those nearest to it turned. “What the hell?” a man blurted.

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