Four

The old mule was sore-footed from the long ride, but Dee Hassard awarded her no sympathy. He kept a switch busy across her rump and cussed her every time she slowed her walk. He had traded Frank Moncrief’s other mule for an old saddle at Tarryall and had ridden down the South Platte toward Denver.

Now Denver was in sight below, and he was riding up to the rocky outcropping over Clear Creek where he had hidden the gold from the sale of the South Park Diamond Field. After he recovered Sam Cornelius’s Fairplay dust, he would board an eastbound and live it up for a couple of months before his earnings played out.

He wondered if anybody had found Frank Moncrief’s body yet. He had made a hearse of the sheriff’s buckboard and left it over a hill, out of sight of the road. Even if somebody had found Moncrief by now, there was still plenty of time to get away. The news could travel no faster than a gallop.

He stood in the stirrups and stretched his neck, for the gold was close and he was looking for the place. It was just over the ridge here somewhere, he recalled. As he approached the summit and spotted the rocky point, his eyes bulged. He shifted his reins to his left hand as he pulled back on them, putting his right palm on the grip of Frank Moncrief’s Colt.

A man was seated on the outcropping, his foot just inches from the hole in which the Fairplay gold lay hidden. The man had his hands inside some sort of box on a portable table. Nearby stood a fine white mule wearing a saddle. Between them and the man stood a tripod holding a black cube with a cloth hanging from it.

The man looked up, tossed his head, smiled. “Howdy,” he said, leaving his hands inside the box. His build was compact, like Hassard’s. He had sad eyes, wavy brown hair, and a full beard, well trimmed.

“Howdy, yourself,” Hassard said. He glanced down into the creek valley as he heard a faint line of song. A chorus was singing some hymn down there. He spotted the tents and wagons of a campground below, then glared at the stranger with his hands in the box. “What you got in there?”

“I’m washing a photographic plate,” the man said. “I just made a view of Clear Creek with Denver and the prairies beyond.”

Hassard nodded and took his hand off his gun grip. “What for?”

“It’s my job,” the man said, his beard revealing a smile. “I’m W. H. Jackson, head of the photographic division of the Hayden Survey. I’d get up and shake your hand if I could.”

“That’s all right,” Hassard said, getting down from his mule. He rubbed his rear end. “I saw you down below and got curious. Thought you were some kind of prospector or somethin’.”

The confidence man looked down on the campground of the hymn singers again, lingering over it this time. He recognized the tune: “Will the Circle Be Unbroken.” “Never saw a photograph bein’ made before,” he said.

“This is just the plate,” Jackson explained. “I’ll have to take it down to the studio to print photographs.”

Hassard shot a quick glance at the hole under the rock where he had stashed his gold. “What the hell is the Hayden Survey?”

“Government geological explorations,” the photographer said, “headed by Dr. Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden.”

“And you go around and make photographs of everything they explore?”

“Not everything. Just the points of interest.” Jackson removed his hands from the box. “Maybe you’ve seen some of my photographs from Colter’s Hell in the Yellowstone country.”

Hassard put his hand on his chin. “You mean the geysers and hot springs and all?”

“Yes.” He had opened the box and was removing a developed plate of glass.

Hassard stuck his thumbs under his gun belt and approached the photographer. “Now, tell me the truth, Jackson. Is that Yellowstone country for real? I can spot a hoax, you know, and them geysers don’t set right with me.”

“It’s real, all right,” Jackson said. “I brought the photographic evidence back to Congress. Why do you think they established the national park?” He put the exposed glass in a pan of fluid on a rock and wiped his fingers on his shirt.

“I figured it was some kind of government scam. What the hell do we need a national park for, anyhow?” He looked into the pan at the plate of glass, unable to see a picture in it. “I believe I’ve heard of this Hayden Survey before,” he said. “Were you all in Fairplay last summer?”

“We were,” Jackson said.

“I thought so. I was just there a few days ago. Folks are still talkin’ about you-all down there. Said you was on some wild-goose chase to photograph some mountain cross, or holy snowy cross, or some such thing.”

Jackson’s sad eyes twinkled as he looked up from his work. “We found it,” he said. “I was the first to photograph it.”

“But what is it?” Hassard demanded.

Jackson stood erect, pointed west. “It was just a legend until we located it. I had talked to a lot of people who knew of it, but none who had ever seen it. Then, as luck would have it, we ran into an old prospector up in the Sawatch who claimed he had seen it once. He was lost when he stumbled across it, then he found his way, like magic.”

“Stumbled across what?”

“The Mount of the Snowy Cross. The old man told us it was visible only from a few places above timberline. He said the best place to see it from was Notch Mountain, an easy landmark to recognize because of the notch in its summit. So I took the photographic division over the Great Divide at Tennessee Pass. There’s an old Indian trail that leads from there past the base of Notch Mountain. We had to leave the mules below and carry the camera and chemicals and plates on our backs. A couple of miles above timberline, we finally came over the summit of Notch Mountain, and there it was, standing across a high mountain basin.”

“There what was?” Hassard said.

“The snowy cross.”

“But what the hell is it?”

Jackson put his feet together, stood straight, and spread his arms. “It’s a huge cross formed by snow packed into natural crevices in the slope of a mountain peak. It stands a thousand feet tall.” He let his palms rise above his shoulders. “The arms lift upward to heaven like this, hundreds of feet wide. The top of the cross reaches the very peak of the Mount of the Snowy Cross. I just got a glimpse of it before clouds moved in and obliterated it.”

“I thought you said you got photographs of it.”

“We had to camp on Notch Mountain overnight,” Jackson said, letting his arms fall. “The next morning the clouds cleared long enough for me to make eight exposures. One of them was excellent. It was an extraordinary experience.”

Silence surrounded the rocky outcropping over the creek, and Hassard found the image of the snowy cross on his mind now even clearer than that of the gold hidden at the photographer’s feet. “I guess everybody knows about it now,” he said. “Like them geysers up in Colter’s Hell.”

Jackson shrugged as he moved his glass plate to another pan of fluid. “The photograph circulated fairly well in certain circles back east, but oddly enough, the Snowy Cross is still thought of as a legend out here.”

Hassard recognized a new tune in the valley below: “The Old Rugged Cross.” “Funny they should start singin’ that,” he said.

“Not really,” Jackson replied. “They do a lot of singing, and that’s one of their favorites. We’re camped not far down the creek from them, and I hear them singing several times a day.”

“Who are they?”

“Some bunch of religious fanatics who call themselves the Church of the Weeping Virgin.” Jackson took the glass plate from the pan of fluid and carried it to a box on the ground beside his pack mule. “Mind opening that lid for me?”

Hassard took the cover from the sturdy wooden box to reveal padded slots inside, most of them holding plates of glass. He held the lid as the photographer slid his negative into one of the empty slots. “The Church of the Weeping what?” The swindler’s interest rose. Hadn’t Frank Moncrief mentioned something about this?

Jackson motioned for Hassard to replace the lid on the box and took a fresh plate of treated glass from a holder near the camera. “Weeping Virgin. They seem like simple Christian folks, but their late founder was an eccentric who claimed the angel of the Virgin Mary spoke to him in dreams.”

Hassard chuckled. “What did the ol’ girl say?”

The photographer was installing the plate of glass in his boxlike camera. “According to this prophet—his name was Wyckoff—she instructed all faithful Christians to renounce materialism and give all their money to the church, which seems awful convenient for Wyckoff, since he controlled the church finances. Also, he claimed the Virgin Mary said to shun outsiders but embrace anybody who accepted their religion. Well, that’s what got them into trouble.”

“How’s that?”

“Wyckoff told his people they were going west to establish a new community in the wilderness. But before they did, they made a sweep across the southern states preaching and looking for converts. They let some black folks join.”

“Alongside of white folks?” Hassard said.

Jackson nodded. “And worse. One of the white ladies from up north decided she wanted to marry one of the black men from down south. This Reverend Wyckoff said the Virgin Mary had told him that one day all the races would be as one, and so he married this couple in their camp somewhere in Arkansas. They were mobbed by some local thugs, the newlywed couple and Wyckoff lynched.”

Hassard’s eyebrows raised. “Who’s leadin’ ’em now?”

“They’re waiting on a guide to take them into the mountains. A Reverend Carrol Moncrief. Maybe you’ve heard of him.” Jackson put his head under the black cloth hanging from his camera.

“Sure,” Hassard said, grinning. “He rides a circuit big as the territory. I met his brother down in Fairplay.” He turned to look again at the hole under the rocky outcropping where his gold lay hidden. “You gonna make some more pictures?”

“Yes,” Jackson said, coming out from under the hood. “The sun’s good right now. Say, how would you like to get into one of them?”

“A photograph?” The swindler’s smile broadened. It was something akin to becoming immortal, getting one’s picture made. “It won’t really steal my soul, will it?”

“Not unless your soul is very loose. Stand there on that boulder.” The photographer glanced up to judge the light. “Quick, before that cloud covers the sun.”

Hassard felt giddy as he stepped onto the boulder, the vast grasslands behind him. He held his coat back to reveal Frank Moncrief’s gun belt and Colt revolver, his own rust-speckled Smith & Wesson tucked under the cartridge belt.

“Look at the camera,” Jackson said.

Hassard raised one eyebrow. This was a little risky, he realized. He had heard of detectives using photographs to track people down. But Hassard made it a policy to change his appearance after every job, anyway. In that way, the photograph might actually help cover his trail. He heard the shutter open and close, felt the cloud shade him.

“What did you say your name was?” Jackson asked. “I try to identify my subjects when possible.”

“Hassard. Dee Hassard.” He heard the pilgrims strike up a new hymn in the valley below.

“And what is your profession?”

“Investments.”

Jackson left it at that. “You’re welcome to come down to the studio tomorrow and see a print.”

“Thanks all the same,” Hassard said, turning for his mule. “But I’ve got places to go. Good luck on your survey this summer.”

“We’re going down to the San Juans by way of Fairplay. Want me to pass anything along to anybody down there?”

Dee Hassard put his foot in the stirrup and climbed onto the weary mule. “I don’t have any friends there,” he said, smiling. “I was just passin’ through.” He touched his hat brim and reined his mount down the slope toward Denver.

He would have to come back later for the gold, but that didn’t matter right now. The money didn’t sway Dee Hassard the way the plotting did—all the risky conniving and the feeling of power he got when he made a slick escape, or even when he rescued a botched job like he had done in South Park.

And right now, he could feel an idea coming on. All those gullible Weeping Virgin idiots waiting for a new prophet down there in camp. He had never heard of the late Reverend Wyckoff, but he would have bet his entire diamond field haul that the good reverend was more confidence man than prophet.