Spurr thought Drago's lone, shining eye would pop out of its socket as he watched the girl walk around the fire and hand him the cup. “Be careful,” Spurr warned Greta. “That's a catamount, that one. Best not linger around him. Wouldn't doubt it a bit if he used you to get to me.”
“Are you really a killer, Mr. Drago?” Greta asked when she'd settled back down with her whiskey, huddling low in her coat against the penetrating mountain chill. “You don't look like one.”
“I only kill when someone needs killin'.” Drago spat the words at Spurr. “Mostly, I'm a train and bank robber. Oh, we'd hold up a stage now an' then when times was tough an' the girls expensive”âhe chuckled devilishlyâ“but mostly we hit trains and Wells Fargo boxes loaded with gold or silver. Once we stole trinkets off a rich man from New York City, one o' them robber barons, and sold 'em down in Mexico. That dinero got me through two whole years down there, cavortin' along the coast of the Cortez Ocean with purty Mexican damsels.”
“Sounds like you've had quite a life, Mr. Drago.”
“Call me Boomer.”
“That's just one of his names. He's had many, Miss Greta.” Spurr finished the whiskey in his cup and smacked his lips together. If he'd tasted better tanglefoot, he couldn't remember when it had been, though being low on his own tarantula juice and this far out in the high and rocky probably had something to do with it.
Drago sipped the whiskey, sloshed the liquid around in his mouth, and shook his head as he let it slide down his throat. “Say, that's some good coffin varnish there. I do thank you, Miss Greta.”
“The pleasure's mine, Boomer. I'm just glad to be here. I couldn't have spent another winter in Diamond Fire. Most of the good folksâif there is such a thingâleave before the first snow hits. That leaves the dregs . . . and we pleasure girls. I've been in some nasty camps, but Diamond Fire is in a bucket all its own.”
“I'll vouch for that,” Spurr said. “Say, where you headed for, Miss Greta? Cheyenne, did you say?”
“Oh, I don't know.” The girl sipped from her cup and wrapped her arms around her knees, giving a little shiver against the chill. “Just out of the mountains for the winter. Out of the mining camps for good. I knew a man in Cheyenne, a few years ago. He was married, but he said he loved me. I heard recently that his wife died . . .”
She looked down, her eyes sheepish, sad. “Not too many options for a girl of my profession.”
She sipped her whiskey.
Spurr felt sorry for her. He'd known many women who'd gone into “the trade,” as it was called, because they'd run out of other options. Most were orphans or young widows without families to help ease their journey through life.
The frontier was a tough place for girls without families, for women without men. They'd whore for a while, but then they'd become pregnant or too early they'd lose their looks or their health. Most died before they hit thirty.
Greta threw the last of her drink back and set the cup on a rock by the fire. “Well, if you'll excuse me, gentlemen. I think I'll prepare for bed. I'm a mite on the sleepy side.”
When Greta had risen on her long legs and walked away through the dark trees, Drago turned to Spurr, his eye sharp. “You an' me gotta talk, partner. We gotta talk before it's too late.”
“I know, I know,” Spurr said. “Your ole gang's comin' for you.”
“They is.” Drago blinked. “And you'll rue this night you didn't listen to me, old man.”
Spurr gave a wry snort and threw the last of his whiskey back. Lowering the cup from his lips, he looked at Boomer once more. The old outlaw still had his lone eye aimed at him, dark as a pistol maw.
A cold finger of doubt pressed against Spurr's lower back. He considered it for a time, disregarded it.
He should know better than to listen to anything Boomer Drago told him. The man was a liar. Always had been, always would be.
“Well, Boomer, time to tend nature,” Spurr said, rising with a grunt and tossing his cup down against his saddlebags. “Then we're gonna throw down for a good night's sleep, get an early jump on the morrow.”
SEVENTEEN
Spurr woke with a start. It was dawn, the sky lightening, the trees relieved in shadow against it. Birds chirped in the branches.
The birds weren't what had awakened Spurr. He blinked as he rose on his elbows.
He looked toward where Greta lay on his right, and his weak ticker heaved and coughed when he saw a pair of legs standing between him and the girl. The man wore high-topped brown boots, blue denims stuffed down inside the wells. Copper spurs dully reflected the dawn light. Spurr trailed his eyes up the man's long legs and dirty cream duster just as the man turned his head to look at Spurr over his shoulder.
The man wore a week's growth of ginger beard. He stretched his lips back from large, white teeth, and his brown eyes flashed delightedly. As he half turned toward Spurr, the old lawman saw the smoking, long-barreled revolver in the man's hand. Beyond the end of the barrel, Greta was stretched out on her back, her head tipped to one side, mouth slack.
There was a quarter-sized hole in the girl's forehead. Blood dribbled out of it and trickled across the smooth skin toward her ear. Her half-open, accusing eyes stared past the gunman toward Spurr as if asking the old lawman why he hadn't done anything to save her.
Then Spurr saw that it was not Greta lying there in the mussed blankets with the bullet hole in her forehead. It was Kansas City Jane as she'd looked that morning she'd lain dead on the boardwalk across from the bank.
The gunman laughed as he swung quickly around toward Spurr. “Worthless old man!” he shouted, clicking the revolver's hammer back and bringing the big pistol to bear on Spurr.
“No!” Spurr shouted, reaching for the Starr .44 holstered beside him.
A girl screamed. Spurr froze, and then he was not staring at the unshaven gunman but at a willowy blonde in a pink cotton dress and fur moccasins standing beside the fire from which sparks were rising. Greta had one branch in her hand as she stumbled backward, a blanket draped across her slender shoulders, her wide eyes bright with fear.
“Spurr!”
Drago sat against the tree to the girl's right, glaring at Spurr, his blanket pulled up around his knees.
“Holster that hogleg, you old coot!” Boomer admonished him. “You're dreamin'!”
Spurr looked at the gun in his hand. It was cocked and aimed at Greta's chest.
Horrified, he tipped up the barrel and depressed the hammer, easing it down against the firing pin. He lowered the gun to his lap, looked to his right. Only Greta's saddle, canteen, and carpetbag were there, a whiskey bottle standing beside the bag.
Kansas City Jane was nowhere to be seen.
“Old and used up,” carped Boomer. “And he's the ramrod. Lord help us all!”
Greta swallowed as she stared down at Spurr. Her eyes lost their fear. She glanced at the branch in her hand, tossed it into the fire she'd been building, and dropped to a knee beside Spurr. She placed a hand on his forearm resting with the gun across the blanket twisted on his lap.
“You all right, Spurr?”
Spurr looked back at her. Her eyes were genuinely concerned. It warmed him. It also made him feel worse about scaring her. Old and used up. Maybe both Boomer and Henry Brackett were right. His heart was heavy; his shoulders felt weighed down by a blacksmith anvil.
“I'm sorry, Greta.” That's all he could think of to say. He looked again at the pistol in his lap. The gnarled, brown hand with knotted, bulging veins could not be his hand. Not Spurr Morgan's hand. But it was. And with that old claw he'd almost killed this girl. His second one this month.
“It's all right,” Greta said with a tender smile, squeezing his forearm and then rising. “I'm gonna get coffee boiling and then I'll make breakfast. I brought some canned meat from town, and six pickled eggs.”
“I got bacon in these bags here,” Spurr said numbly.
“We'll have a feast then!”
Greta picked up the coffeepot and swung around to start down the slope toward the creek for water.
Spurr looked at Drago. Boomer cursed and gave a caustic shake of his head. “Doomed . . . that's what me an' that poor girl are.”
*Â *Â *
Despite the dream, Spurr didn't feel doomed. Not any longer. The girl's presence had helped him shake the anvil from his shoulders. Greta didn't seem to believe they were doomed, either.
The autumn day was clear, the sky blue, the sun warm, the air cool. The breeze smelled like cinnamon and pine. In the canyons that the trio rode along, there was the added moist, loamy, green smell of the creeks.
Spurr kept a sharp eye on their back trail, and he kept his eyes and ears skinned on the land around them, his rifle resting across his saddlebows as he rode. But he saw no sign that his party was being stalked.
He hadn't felt any instinctual uneasiness since he'd sensed Greta on their trail out from Diamond Fire. He doubted very much that there was any truth to Boomer's storyâto
either
of Boomer's storiesâthough the old outlaw continued to make a good show of looking worried as he cast frequent dark glances along their back trail and gave ominous sighs.
Boomer Drago was a shrewd nut, and a tireless oneâSpurr would give him that.
Spurr enjoyed his time on the trail, knowing it would be his last as a federal lawman. Probably one of his last, period.
He found himself paying close attention to the familiar but somehow magical detailsâthe clomps of the horses' hooves, the mounts' snorts and nickers, the rattling of the bits in their teeth. The smell of the horses themselves and the leather of the tack. The chuckle of the creeks tumbling over their rocky beds in the deep, fir-studded canyons.
The smell of coffee and wood smoke. The crunch of pine needles under the soft soles of his moccasins.
The girl was an added bonus to this trip. While Kansas City Jane still haunted the old lawman, he found himself able to appreciate Greta's own, singular beauty. The way she smiled and the way the light danced in her long eyes, and how her eyes crossed slightly when she joked and teased, which was often.
She was a girl who'd lived a hard life, and it had taken its toll on herâSpurr could sense that in her frequent though short-lived, brooding silences. But she took full advantage of the buoyancy of happiness, stretching it out, savoring it, making it last.
Spurr figured it was a quality in women who'd had it rough. That's how his old friend, Abilene, had been, as well. She loved to joke and horse around, but her quiet times were quiet, indeedâand gloomy. Hell, he supposed that's how he himself was, though he certainly didn't claim to have had as harsh a life as a frontier percentage girl.
The three travelers camped that night along another canyon. Greta cooked beans and beef and boiled the coffee extra strong, adding several shots of bourbon to the pot. Even Drago lightened up after several cups of the spiced coffee, and Spurr felt good, bedding now near the girl with a full belly and a light head, after he'd taken a scout around the camp to make sure they were alone.
Nothing but the owls and coyotes and the little burrowing creatures that made faint scuttling sounds all night. Occasionally, Spurr heard the brief squeal of a rabbit likely being pulled out of its den by a stalking wildcat.
The next morning, after he'd taken another slow, careful scout around the canyon, Spurr was doubly sure that Drago had been spinning yarns about his old gang. There was no smell of campfire smoke on the air and no sign of movement anywhere along their back trail. What's more, there was a noticeable lack of hair-prickling tension beneath the collar of the old lawman's hickory shirt, under his mackinaw.
When Spurr returned to the camp, where Drago and Greta were packing gear and rigging the horses, Drago with his hands and ankles still cuffed, Spurr saw and heard the old outlaw laughing and joking around with the girl. Drago had apparently decided to forget his ruse about his old gang. He was having too much fun trying to impress Greta with his lies about old outlaw escapades to continue to look dark and gloomy, as though he feared for his life.
In the afternoon, they followed a windy, twisting ridgeline down out of the Medicine Bow Mountains and set up camp at the base of Cameron Pass, which was a natural bridge between the Medicine Bows and the Mummy Range just south. They made camp early, as it was dark here between ridges, and now they only had about a three-day ride to the Union Pacific line.
When Spurr had tended the horses and staked them all to a long picket line, he rigged up a fishing line with string and a palming needle, using a steel-cut button from a woman's dress as a lure, and hauled in three nice-sized red-throated trout.
Greta fried the trout and made corncakes from Spurr's stores, and they ate and drank well that night, Spurr and Greta sitting up close to the fire, Boomer trussed up as usual and tied to a nearby aspen bole. Spurr wasn't taking any chances with the old outlaw, not only because he wanted to see Boomer brought to justice, but because he didn't want to bung up this last assignment and put an extra bee in Henry Brackett's bonnet.
That night, Spurr was skinning a buffalo in his sleep, as he and Boomer Drago had once done in the old days just before the war had broken out between the states and they'd both headed east to fight for the Union. (Spurr had seen no good reason for one man to own another, but he'd mostly joined the federals because as a native Kansan he'd wanted to help keep the Union intact.)
Working on the buffalo, flies buzzing around his head in the hot, humid Kansas air, Spurr cut the skin down the inside of each leg, grunting as he sawed the sharp blade of the skinning knife against the bull's tough hide. He was cutting a strip around the beast's thick neck, trying to work fast because the captain of the crew, pugnacious Old Billy Kramer, would be coming fast with the wagon, when someone rammed a boot toe into his ribs.
It was either Drago or Jack Crawfordâprobably Drago stumbling around Spurr as he ineptly worked on his own buff near his partner's. “Goddamnit, Boomer,” Spurr snarled, “you couldn't hit the ground if you
fell
!”
He opened his eyes and found himself sitting straight up in his bedroll. Someone moved to his right, and he felt the hard point of another boot rammed into the same place in his ribs.
Spurr cursed and grabbed his rib cage as he flopped on his side and looked up.
A tall, round-faced, green-eyed man in a black opera hat and long leather duster stood in inky silhouette against the lilac dawn sky. The man's blond-bearded head and his shoulders were massive, making him appear short though he was at least six feet tall.
He stared down at Spurr, smiling with satisfaction. He had a big, stag-gripped Colt Navy in his right, black-gloved hand, and, half-turned away from Spurr, he was aiming the pistol at Spurr's face.
He spoke through his yellow, brown-crusted teeth. “Just lay there, old man, or I'll kill you now.”
Spurr looked around the man's leg clad in patched broadcloth, and he heard himself wheeze a horrified gasp. Greta was sitting up in her own bedroll six feet away from Spurr. Two men were standing around her while another man in a battered bowler hat and red vest under an open, shaggy wolf coat, knelt behind her. He held one hand over her mouth. With his other hand he pressed a cocked pistol against Greta's left temple.
Greta stared wide-eyed at Spurr, her face smooth and floury pale above the man's brown hand. Her chest rose and fell sharply as she breathed, terrified.
“Ah, shitâoh, hell!” Boomer Drago yelled about ten feet to Spurr's left, sitting tied against the aspen. Two more men stood around Drago, and one was just then withdrawing the boot he'd slammed into the old outlaw's rib cage, waking him.
“Goddamnit, Spurr!” Drago shouted, leaning forward and sideways over his battered ribs. “What'd I tell ya?”
“Spurr,” said the big man standing over the old marshal, narrowing his cunning green eyes. “Old Spurr Morgan. I thought you'd been turned under a long time ago.”
Spurr cursed against the lingering agony in his side and stared at the man holding Greta. “You let her go, goddamn your worthless hide!”
He glanced to his right, where he'd coiled his pistol.
The big man standing over him said, “Quiet Ed's got the Starr. Your Winchester, too.”
Spurr followed his glance to the big man with Indian features standing a ways back in the trees, Spurr's Starr wedged behind the cartridge belt wrapped around the outside of his blanket coat.
The big Indian held two rifles on his shoulders. One was Spurr's Winchester. He was not looking at Spurr. He was staring down at Greta just as the man behind her removed his hand from her mouth, turned her head toward his, and kissed her.
Greta fought against him but he held her taut in his arms, kissing her.
“Let her go, goddamnit!” Spurr said as he bounded up and lunged forward off his stockingfeet, his blankets tumbling away. He'd intended on bulling into the big man before him, but he'd only taken his second step before the big man rammed his right knee up against Spurr's forehead.