Shadow of the Hangman (25 page)

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Authors: J. A. Johnstone

BOOK: Shadow of the Hangman
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Chapter Forty-seven
When the morning light woke Jacob O'Brien, he sat up with a start, the mission bells ringing in his ears.
Even as the remnants of the dream faded, his heart still pounded and his mouth was dry. He glanced around him wildly, reestablished where he was in reality, and then he remembered . . . the dream returning piece by piece, as though he looked into a kaleidoscope and saw the fragments come together to form pictures in his mind . . .
 
 
The mission's walls were the color of sand, and behind it stood a green apple tree. The monk with blue eyes who stood at the open oak doors, said, “Jacob, it is harvest time. Help us pick the apples.”
The monk handed him a basket. “When all the green apples are gathered, you may leave.”
Jacob took the basket and picked the apples. But the more fruit he took from the tree, the more green apples grew to take their place.
“My basket is full,” Jacob told the monk, “but there are more apples on the tree.”
“You have many baskets to fill,” the monk said, “many green apples to pick. You must stay here at the mission until your work is done.”
“But how long will that be?” Jacob said.
“After the winter, after the spring, after the summer until autumn and the next harvest comes,” the monk said.
“I'm a prisoner here!” Jacob said.
“No, my son,” the monk said, “you are a tormented soul that needs rest and light in your darkness.”
 
 
Jacob remembered no more because he woke up at that point, as the mission bells rang. He smiled and flexed his supple gun hand. It was not bells ringing he'd heard in his sleep, but the sound of a hammer on an anvil.
He arose from the creaking iron cot, stretched the kinks out of his back, and stepped outside the rear of the barn to where the old-timer had a blacksmith shop. The man had been shaping a horseshoe on the anvil horn, but now he stopped and looked at Jacob.
“You like green apples, sonny?” he said.
“Talking in my sleep, huh?” Jacob said.
“Yeah, about monks an' missions an' green apple trees.”
“Sorry.”
The oldster shrugged. “Ain't nothing to me, but most gents that sleep here talk about whiskey and whores, though I've had a couple that had conversations with their mothers.” He nodded toward the front of the barn. “Coffee in the office.”
“Two bits?”
“No, I provide hot coffee as a courtesy to my guests.”
“You're all heart,” Jacob said, smiling, taking the sting out of the remark.
“I know. That's why I ain't gettin' any richer.” The old man tonged the cooling horseshoe and plunged it into the cherry-red glow of the forge. Jacob left him to it and went after coffee.
For the first time in months, he was able to build and light a cigarette without his useless fingers spilling tobacco down his front. His hand felt good. Now would it be fast enough to match Caldwell's speed on the draw?
Time will tell, Jacob thought.
He buckled on his gunbelt and stood with his shoulder against the frame of the open barn door, drinking coffee with one hand and smoking with the other.
The sun was only now lifting above the San Mateo Mountains, but McGowan had already come to life. Businessmen in broadcloth and housewives wearing bonnets, wicker baskets on their arms, trod the boardwalks while a few slugabed merchants hurried to open awnings and unlock doors. The sporting crowd, late sleepers, was nowhere to be seen, and the saloons were as yet not open for business.
Jacob was drinking his third cup of weak coffee when Luke Caldwell rode into town.
 
 
Stepping out from the angled shadow of the barn, Jacob saw people on the boardwalks stop to watch their new lawman ride down the middle of the street. Caldwell sat upright in the saddle, his face grim as befitted the town marshal who expected a hero's welcome. He led a mustang pony, a man draped across its back, his wrists and ankles tied together under the animal's belly.
From what Jacob could see the dead man was a small towhead, thin and dressed only in pants and a faded red shirt, his feet bare.
“What happened, Marshal?” a man on the boardwalk said.
“He drew down on me,” Caldwell said.
Jacob figured that a man desperate enough to steal two dollars and a silver-backed comb was unlikely to own a belt gun. If any of the onlookers thought the same, they didn't let it show.
Caldwell reined up, and the mustang stopped behind him, its ugly head hanging. “He tried to dry-gulch me,” Caldwell said. “Then, when I attempted to arrest him, he pulled a gun on me.”
“You were quite right, Marshal,” a storekeeper with a florid face and white apron said. “Mathias Knowles was a damned nuisance.”
“You kill a man in this town for being a nuisance?”
Jacob had stepped onto the boardwalk, and he stood watching Caldwell, his hand close to his holstered Colt.
The Texan's face registered alarm, then anger, and finally mild amusement. “Howdy, Jacob,” he said.
Jacob nodded. “Luke.”
“What are you doing here?” Caldwell said, as though talking to an old friend.
“Passing through. I've got a job to do, and then I'm riding.”
Caldwell's eyes hardened, then he looked over to the growing crowd. “One of you men get Abe Clay,” he said. “He's got a burying to do.”
“Where's his gun, Luke?” Jacob said.
“What the hell are you talking about?” Caldwell said.
“You claim he drew down on you. Where's his gun?”
A few people muttered to one another, and a couple of men nodded, as though they expected an answer.
“Hell, I don't know,” Caldwell said. “I forgot to pick it up.”
“What kind of gun was it?” Jacob said, pushing it.
“I don't know. A man draws down on you, you don't take time to see what kind of revolver he's got in his hand.” He looked to the crowd again. “Ain't that right, folks?”
“That's right, Marshal,” the florid man said.
“After you shot him, did he drop his gun?” Jacob asked, enjoying himself.
But Caldwell, his face furious, knew he was being railroaded and didn't answer. He was saved from further questions by the appearance of the undertaker, who glanced at the ragged corpse and said glumly, “City rates?”
“Speak to the mayor,” Caldwell said.
Abe Clay nodded. “City rates.”
As Clay took the mustang in tow, Caldwell threw a single, vicious glance at Jacob, then rode down the street and dismounted outside the marshal's office.
After Caldwell vanished inside the adobe building, the florid storekeeper said to Jacob, “What are you, mister? A troublemaker?”
“I sure am,” Jacob said. “You want me to make some?”
The man looked into Jacob's eyes and didn't like what he read there. Muttering to himself, he walked into his store and slammed the door behind him.
Jacob stood for a while, watching the marshal's office. He'd opened the ball. How would Caldwell respond?
Whitey Morehead answered that question.
He found Jacob in the Oxtail, a saloon and dancehall that had a tuned piano and a tolerant bartender.
“Been looking fer you all over, Jake,” Morehead said. He was a short, wiry man with hair so blond it looked white. He wore a deputy's star on his vest, but no belt gun.
Jacob had taken the precaution of turning the piano to face the door. He watched Morehead's hands but continued to play.
“What do you need, Whitey?” he said.
“Me? Nothing. But Luke wants to buy you a drink at the Lone Star tonight. He says around seven if that's convenient.”
“Why would Caldwell want to buy me a drink?” Jacob said.
Morehead shrugged. “Hell, I don't know. Maybe he likes you.”
“I heard you were in Yuma doing twenty to life, Whitey,” Jacob said.
“You heard wrong, Jake.” He took a couple of steps closer to the piano. “What the hell is that tune?”
“Chopin.”
“Never heard of him.”
“No, Whitey, you wouldn't,” Jacob said. “And a word of advice—if you take a step closer you'll have to skin the hogleg you got shoved into the back of your pants.”
“I came peaceful,” Morehead said.
“You're a snake, Whitey, and just as low-down.”
“That's a hell of a thing to say to a man, Jake. I've got friends in this town.”
“I know. Caldwell's one of them, and with friends like him, who needs enemies, huh?”
Jacob continued to play as Morehead said, “Bob Lambert's in town. He's a deputy like me.”
“And he's an even meaner and lower-down snake than you, Whitey.” Jacob shook his head. “You're in some mighty bad company.”
“Damn you, Jake, do you accept Luke's invitation or no?” Morehead said.
“Tell him I'll be there.”
The gunman smiled. “I'm looking forward to it, Jake.”
“Crawl out of here, Whitey,” Jacob said.
 
 
After Morehead left, the bartender stepped to the piano, a towel over his shoulder and a worried expression on his heroically mustached face.
“Mister,” he said to Jacob, “you don't know me and I don't know you, so here's a word of advice I'd give to my own son—get on your horse and ride, and don't come back to McGowan again.”
Jacob looked up from the piano keyboard. “Who is it?”
“All three of them. Caldwell's fast, so is Whitey, but Bob Lambert is pure pizen. When you get an invite like that, they mean to kill you. It's happened before.”
“I know about Lambert,” Jacob said. “Uses a crossdraw pretty well. He killed Steve Lupton up in the Nations six month ago, and nobody, including me, considered Lupton a bargain. Whitey's a snake. When bullets start flying there's no saying which way he'll wriggle.”
“Well, anyway, now you know.”
“I guess I do.”
The bartender stood listening for a while, then said, “I've always liked Chopin's Nocturne in G Minor. It departs from his usual ternary form, and I find that refreshing.”
Jacob shook his head and smiled. “Is there anything western men haven't done or don't know?”
“If you mean collectively, the answer is, damned little,” the bartender said.
The railroad clock on the wall chimed six, and suddenly Jacob was on a high lonesome, and the black dog that was his depression crouched in a corner, waiting.
Chapter Forty-eight
A gunfight is a sudden thing, but Jacob O'Brien had time to think about it. In an hour he'd face three fast guns, two of them with whom he had no quarrel.
Bob Lambert worked both sides of the law. He'd been a shotgun guard for Wells Fargo and had done a couple of hellfire stints as a boomtown lawman. Some said he'd ridden with Jesse and Frank and them, but for sure, and until recently, he'd hired out his gun as a range detective up Montana way. Whitey Morehead would kill anybody if the pay was enough, and he'd always been on the wrong side. He'd spent time in Yuma Territorial Prison, and Jacob reckoned he'd only been enjoying the outdoors for a few months.
Both men were professional gunfighters, and their services didn't come cheap. Luke Caldwell must have big plans for McGowan if he'd hired those two.
Jacob finished playing and closed the lid on the piano. His gun hand felt good, and it would have to be.
“You're not taking my advice, huh?” the bartender said.
“Seems like,” Jacob said.
“Then have a drink on me; take the edge off.”
The bartender passed a glass to Jacob and poured a shot. “You hungry?” he said. “I got some cheese and green apples.”
“Green apples?” Jacob repeated, surprised.
“They're tart, but folks like them with a piece of Stilton.”
“No, I guess I'll pass,” Jacob said.
“Maybe that's best,” the bartender said. “Green apples can give a man a bellyache.”
“There's a mission where green apples grow,” Jacob said.
“Is that a fact?”
“Uh-huh. There's a tree full of them behind the mission. And there's a blue-eyed monk in a brown robe, and he looks after the tree.”
“Now where would that be?”
“I don't know.”
The bartender was silent, staring into Jacob's eyes. Then he said, “Drink your whiskey, piano player. It's almost time.”
 
 
Jacob O'Brien's spurs rang on the boardwalk as he walked in the direction of the Oxtail saloon. Night shadowed the town, and a warm breeze from the south carried the cinder and timber smell of the Malpais lava beds. Ahead of Jacob a sudden gust lifted a scrap of newspaper from the street. It hung in the air for what seemed an eternity, then fluttered back to earth like a stricken dove.
Jacob stepped into the Oxtail.
 
 
The night was young, but the sporting crowd was out in force, gamblers, whores, loungers, and a few miners and cowboys rubbing shoulders with big-bellied men in broadcloth.
Jacob smiled to himself. It seemed that the word had gotten around that a man would die in the saloon that night, and folks wanted to see the action.
A piano man had been tickling the ivories, but the music strayed to a stop when Jacob stepped to the bar. The crowd that had been laughing and noisy when he'd entered now fell silent and cleared a space to give him room. Jacob glanced at the faces of the people around him. A few showed sympathy, even concern, but most revealed a feral anticipation of what was to come. This promised to be a big night in McGowan, and the excited crowd didn't want to miss a single moment of it.
“What can I get you, mister?” the bartender said. He used a dirty towel to describe a beer-streaked circle in the mahogany in front of Jacob.
“Luke Caldwell,” Jacob said. “But I guess he already knows I'm here.”
The mirror behind the bar provided Jacob with a view of the crowd. He watched it part, like a wave breaking over a rock, as Caldwell pushed his way through. Whitey Morehead and Bob Lambert followed in his wake, grinning their arrogance.
“Right on time, Jake,” Caldwell said. “Must be that good Irish breeding of your'n.”
Jake turned and smiled. “What would a mongrel like you know about breeding, Caldwell?”
Morehead and Lambert flanked the Texan and saw the sudden fury in his face. They moved aside a couple of feet and cleared room for their gun hands. Behind them, the crowd shuffled away from the line of fire, and a saloon girl giggled in nervous anticipation.
Caldwell was on the prod, but he refused to be baited; he was prepared to let the pre-gunfight ritual run its course.
Jacob tried for an edge, anything to get the Texan rattled.
“Still worshipping the dark forces, Luke, or have you given up on that after what happened to Dora DeClare?” he said.
“Nah, I never held with that hell, Jake,” Caldwell said. “And Dora, well she was a hack for rent, any man's ride. Besides that, she was crazy.”
Jacob made no answer, and Caldwell let the silence stretch taut before he said, “You said some hard words to me out in the street, Jake.”
“I reckon I did,” Jacob said. “You killed an unarmed man, like the lowdown, dirty yellow dog you are.”
Fighting talk. But Caldwell again let it slide.
“I'm going to buy you a drink and then I'm arresting you,” he said.
“On what charge?”
“I'll come up with something.”
“You think I'll let you and those two coyotes with you take me into your jail?” Jacob said. “What are the chances I'd come out alive?”
“About the same chance as you've got right here and now if you don't come along quiet.”
“Morehead, Lambert, I've got no quarrel with you,” Jacob said. “You can step away from this.”
“Go to hell,” Lambert said. And Whitey Morehead grinned.
Jacob nodded. “You two were notified.” He met Caldwell's eyes. “The sand has run through the glass, Luke. My talking is done.”
And he drew.
 
 
Jacob fired at Lambert first, figuring he was the fastest of the three. He saw Whitey hesitate, not liking this, and switched to Caldwell. Jacob and the Texan fired at the same time. Caldwell took the hit, staggered, and fired again; his bullet tore into Jacob's waist an inch above his empty holster. Lambert was sprawled on the sawdust, out of it, but Whitey decided to make his play. Jacob's bullet hit Whitey in the chest and clipped a half moon from the little man's tobacco tag. Sudden blood erupted from Whitey's mouth. His eyes wide with shock and disbelief, he raised onto his toes, then fell, dead when he hit the floor. A bullet burned across Jacob's right bicep. He saw Caldwell, his gun up, back to the far wall of the saloon, blood on his shoulder, and he fired at the Texan. The bullet hit the trigger guard of Caldwell's Colt, ranged downward, and clipped off his pinkie finger before it slammed into the revolver butt. The big .45 round, now jagged and misshapen, caromed into Caldwell's right kneecap and splintered bone. Caldwell screamed, hit the floor, and the Colt dropped from his hand.
“Two and a half seconds, folks,” a man in broadcloth yelled, holding up a gold watch for all to see. He grinned, and a front tooth made from the same metal as his watch gleamed. “Three men down in two and a half seconds.”
This announcement drew a few cheers from the sporting crowd, but most of the onlookers stood in stunned silence, gun smoke drifting thick, pungent, and gray around them in the roaring silence.
Jacob ignored the crowd. He stepped around Lambert's body and walked to Caldwell, his chiming spurs knelling an elegy.
“Pick up the Colt, Caldwell,” he said. “Get back to your work.”
“Damn you, O'Brien, my gun hand's all shot to pieces,” the Texan wailed, his eyes scared.
“Pick it up,” Jacob said again, holstering his own revolver.
“I have no chance with you,” Caldwell said.
“I'm giving you the same chance you gave me in the cave, remember?”
“And you didn't pick it up,” Caldwell said.
“I tried, and so will you.”
Caldwell looked around him and spread his arms wide. Blood dripped from the stump of his finger. “I have friends here. Step forward and help me.”
No one moved. The saloon girl giggled again, and a man told her, “Shut up.”
Caldwell glanced up at Jacob. “Damn you to hell,” he said.
He dived for his gun, and Jacob shot him in the head.
Caldwell died with his face in the sawdust.
 
 
After he took time to reload from his cartridge belt, Jacob glanced around the silent saloon and then stepped to the door. To the man with the gold tooth and watch, he said, “Add another half-second.”
Then he opened the door and walked into the bone-white glow of the moonlit street.

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