by William W. Johnstone
with J. A. Johnstone
Chapter 1
The crackle of gunfire drifted to the ears of the two young men riding across the prairie and made them sit up straighter in their saddles as they reined their mounts to a halt.
“Now that sounds interestin’,” Matt Bodine drawled. He was somewhere between twenty-five and thirty years of age, a handsome, muscular young man with dark brown hair under his pushed-back Stetson. Even when he was mounted, it was easy to tell that he was tall and rangy, though the width of his shoulders indicated that there was plenty of power packed into his form.
The rider next to him was about the same age and almost could have been cut from the same cloth. His hair was darker, as black as a raven’s wing, as were his eyes, black to Bodine’s blue. His deeply tanned skin bore a faint coppery hue that Matt’s did not. His cheekbones were slightly more prominent. And he carried only one walnut-butted Colt holstered on his hip, compared to the pair of six-guns sported by Matt Bodine. His name was Sam August Webster Two Wolves. His father had been Medicine Horse, a Cheyenne chief; his mother a white woman Medicine Horse had met, fallen in love with, and married while being educated at an Eastern school.
Most importantly, Sam Two Wolves was blood brother to Matt Bodine. They were Onihomahan—Friends of the Wolf. Brothers of the Wolf, some said.
Brothers of the gun, definitely.
Sam grunted and jerked a thumb over his right shoulder. “We could turn around and ride the other way, you know,” he pointed out.
A grin stretched across Matt’s rugged face. “Yeah, we could,” he agreed, “but you don’t really want to, do you?”
“You’d never let me hear the end of it if we did, now would you?”
“Probably not,” Matt said. He dug his boot heels into the flanks of his mean-eyed gray stallion and sent the animal leaping forward into a gallop. Sam was only an instant behind him on a big paint horse.
They raced toward a tree-dotted ridge. The shooting came from the other side of the rise. The flat reports of numerous handguns were interspersed with the sharper whipcracks of at least a couple of rifles. From the sound of things, a small-scale war was going on up ahead.
Matt Bodine and Sam Two Wolves knew about war. Though they were too young to have participated in the great struggle between the Blue and the Gray, they had instead witnessed and on occasion taken part in the bloody clash between red men and white. They had been there, watching from a nearby hill overlooking the stream called the Greasy Grass by the Indians and the Little Big Horn by the whites, as a large detachment of the Seventh Cavalry under Colonel George Armstrong Custer had been wiped out by an army of warriors gathered from the various Plains tribes. Sam’s father, Medicine Horse, had died in that battle, riding with an empty rifle up the slope toward the hilltop where Custer had rallied his troops for the final battle. He had counted coup on the notorious Yellowhair himself before falling with a fatal wound. The smells of blood and gun smoke and tragedy had been thick in the air that day.
Bodine and Two Wolves had smelled gun smoke again many times, in battles of their own. They were well-to-do; each owned a profitable ranch in Wyoming. But those ranches were run by others, because restlessness ruled the natures of these two young men. They were fiddle-footed, as folks said, always on the drift, not looking for trouble but not running from it either. When the Good Lord made them, He had included not an ounce of back-up.
So now they rushed toward the gunfire rather than away from it, as more prudent souls might have done.
Nobody had ever accused these two young hellions of being prudent.
They surged up the ridge and topped the crest. The slope fell away in front of them, down to a level plain crossed from right to left by a stagecoach road. A vehicle careened along that road, but it wasn’t one of the red-and-yellow Concord coaches. It was a wagon with a squarish canvas cover over the back, rather than the rounded, arching Conestoga sort of wagon that had carried thousands of pioneers from the East to new homes in the West. Dust boiled up from the hooves of the six-horse team pulling the wagon, as well as from the rapidly turning wheels. Gray smoke spurted from under the canvas cover at the back of the vehicle—powder smoke.
Nearly a dozen men on horseback gave chase to the wagon, firing after it with revolvers as they galloped along the road. Matt and Sam had no idea who was inside the wagon or why the men were chasing it. But as they reined in for a second at the top of the ridge and their keen eyes took in the scene, they exchanged a glance and each knew that the other had seen the same thing.
The person driving the wagon, hunched over on the seat and sawing at the reins, was a woman. Long, curly red hair streamed out behind her head.
Any gents who would sling lead at a woman were bad hombres in the blood brothers’ book. Matt yanked his Winchester from its saddle sheath and sent his stallion plunging down the slope. Sam followed suit.
Matt guided his horse with his knees as he worked the rifle’s lever, jacking a round into the chamber. Smoothly, he brought the Winchester to his shoulder. The hurricane deck of a galloping horse wasn’t the best platform for accurate shooting, but Matt Bodine wasn’t an average marksman. The rifle kicked hard against his shoulder as he fired.
A hat leaped off the head of one of the men giving chase to the wagon. Startled, the rider hauled back on the reins so hard that his mount’s hooves skidded on the dirt of the road. The horse reared up violently. With a yell, the rider went out of the saddle and crashed to the ground.
While that was going on, Sam opened fire too, and his first shot creased the arm of another man, who howled in pain as his gun flew out of suddenly nerveless fingers. Gripping the reins tightly with his other hand, he wheeled his horse and shouted, “Look out! Up on the ridge!”
Several of the gunmen slowed their pursuit of the wagon and turned to pepper the slope with bullets as Matt and Sam descended. As a slug whistled past his ear, Matt knew the men were shooting to kill, so he returned the favor. His Winchester cracked again, and one of the men was driven backward off his horse by the .44-40 round that smashed into his chest. Dust puffed up around him as he landed in a limp sprawl signifying death.
Sam growled as he felt the fiery kiss of a bullet that tore his shirt and scraped along his ribs. He levered his Winchester and fired again. One of the gunmen hunched over and sagged in his saddle, but he managed to drop his gun, grab the saddle horn, and stay mounted. His horse bolted, probably spooked by the sudden smell of blood.
Halfway down the slope, Matt veered his stallion to the left. Several of the horsebackers were still giving chase to the wagon and shooting at it, so Matt went after them while Sam continued dealing with the ones who had given up the pursuit and stopped to meet the new threat. In both cases, the odds were four to one against the blood brothers.
They had faced worse in their time. Much worse.
Matt slid the Winchester back in its sheath and leaned forward over his horse’s neck to urge the stallion on to greater speed. Cutting down the slope at an angle, he was able to intercept the riders. The pair of six-guns fairly leaped into his hands as he opened fire on the pursuers, raking their flank with deadly accurate shots. One man flew out of the saddle and another slewed sideways but was able to hang on.
Bullets plucked at the sleeves and the sides of Matt’s buckskin shirt, but with the cool fatalism of a born gunfighter, he ignored them. His time was up when it was up, and until then he was going to do everything he could to help that woman on the wagon and whoever was with her.
Another gunman threw up his arms and toppled off his horse as one of Matt’s bullets punched through his body. That left only one man, and he whirled his horse around to flee. Matt snapped a shot at him but missed. The rider leaped his horse over a gully, rode through some trees, and disappeared from sight. Matt let him go.
He had another problem to deal with now. The team pulling that wagon was out of control. The horses leaned against their harness and raced madly along the road, never slowing even when the trail curved. As Matt rode after the vehicle, he saw the wagon lean perilously to the side, almost to the point of tipping over before the wheels on the high side came back to earth with a crash. At this point, it was a toss-up what would happen first. The wagon would either roll over or an axle would crack, causing a wreck that way. Matt urged, “Come on, big fella!” as the stallion stretched out in a blinding run.
Concern for his blood brother flickered across Bodine’s mind, but he shoved that out of his thoughts. Sam would have to take care of himself. There weren’t very many hombres better at that than Sam August Webster Two Wolves.
The wagon was moving fast, but the big gray stallion was a magnificent animal with speed and sand to spare, much like the man who rode him. Matt drew closer and closer to the wagon. The dust billowing up from its wheels made it difficult for him to see into the vehicle, but he spotted some movement there, and then a second later the spurt of flame from a rifle muzzle. As the bullet whined high over his head, he shouted, “Damn it, hold your fire! I’m trying to help you!”
It was no use. Whoever was in the wagon couldn’t hear him over the thunder of hooves and the rattle of wheels. He leaned forward as more shots were fired. Luckily for him, the riflemen inside the wagon weren’t very accurate in their aim.
He was only a few yards behind the careening vehicle now. He guided the stallion to the left side of the trail so they could pass the wagon. As they drew even with the back of it, he glanced over and saw a woman crouched just inside the tailgate with a rifle in her hands. Matt ducked as she fired. He didn’t know where the bullet went, but neither he nor the stallion were hit, so that was all that mattered at the moment.
Then he was galloping alongside the wagon, the stallion running flat out. As they came up beside the driver’s seat, Matt saw why the team was even more out of control than it had been earlier. The redheaded woman was slumped to one side on the seat, either unconscious or dead. The reins had slipped out of her hands and fallen so that they now trailed loosely underneath the wagon. Matt knew he wouldn’t be able to reach them.
That left him without many options. He kept the stallion moving at a gallop until they were next to the left-hand leader. Then Matt kicked his feet out of the stirrups, hauled in a deep breath, and launched himself into the air.
That diving, daring leap carried him over the leader. As he landed on the horse’s back he grabbed for the harness. He felt himself starting to slip to the right. His momentum had taken him a little too far. His right boot hit the singletree, stopping him for the instant he needed to wrap his fingers around the horse’s harness. He held on for dear life, knowing that if he fell underneath the team, their hooves would pound and slash his body until it didn’t even resemble anything human.
As Matt got his balance and steadied himself, he pulled back as hard as he could on the harness. The horse responded, slowing down. The other members of the team did likewise, following the example of the leader. Gradually, Matt brought the horses to a halt. A breeze swirled the cloud of dust that rose around the wagon.
“Charity!” a woman’s voice screamed. “Oh, my God, Charity!”
Still sitting on the leader, Matt turned to look toward the wagon. He found himself staring down the twin bores of a double-barreled shotgun. A woman’s face glared at him over the weapon.
“Careful with that Greener, ma’am,” he warned her. “I mean you no harm, and it might go off.”
Another woman leaned from the back of the wagon over the unconscious driver. Matt could see now that the redhead’s chest was rising and falling. As the woman ministering to her lifted her into a sitting position, Matt saw a slightly bloody lump on the side of her forehead. She had taken a hard lick from something and probably been knocked out by it. Matt figured one of the violent bounces taken by the wagon had thrown her to the side and cracked her head against one of the supports holding up the canvas cover over the back of the vehicle.
Meanwhile, the woman with the shotgun was still pointing it at him. With the wagon team now under control, standing there with their heads down and their sides heaving, he let go of the harness and raised his hands to shoulder level where they were in plain sight.
“Who are you?” the woman demanded.
“Name’s Matt Bodine. My brother and I saw those hombres chasing you and figured you could use a hand.” He leaned a little to the side, trying to look past the wagon in hopes of seeing what had happened to Sam and the men he had been trading lead with. No more shots rang out, and Matt felt a surge of relief go through him as he spotted Sam jogging the paint up the road toward them.
Another female voice called from the back of the wagon, “Here comes another one! Lydia, what should we do?”
Lydia, who appeared to be the gal with the Greener, said, “Hold your fire.” She asked Matt, “Is that your brother?”
Matt nodded. “Yep. Blood brother actually. We don’t have the same ma and pa, although some folks say you can’t tell it to look at us.”
“What about the men who were chasing us?”
Matt saw at least half-a-dozen bodies littering the trail. A similar number of riderless horses had drifted off the road and were now cropping at the grass alongside it.
“I don’t think the ones who are still alive will be bothering you anymore,” he said. “Looks like they all took off for the tall and uncut.”
The redhead let out a moan and shook her head, then winced as the movement obviously hurt. She was coming back to her senses. Her eyelids fluttered as she leaned against the woman who was bracing her up. When her eyes opened and looked around in confusion, Matt saw that they were a vivid shade of green.
“What . . . what happened?” she said. “Did they get us?”
“No,” Lydia told her. She nodded toward Bodine. “This fella and a friend of his ran them off and evidently killed some of them.”
“Oh.” Gingerly, the redhead lifted a hand to the lump on her head. She winced again as she touched it. “What happened to me?”
Matt said, “If I had to guess, I’d say you bumped your head on one of those bad bounces hard enough to knock yourself out. Are you wounded anywhere else?”
She looked down at herself for a moment and then shook her head. “I don’t think so.”
Sam reached the wagon and grinned at the sight of Matt sitting on the draft horse. “Changed mounts, did you?” he asked. Without waiting for Matt to respond, he turned toward the seat and politely took his hat off, holding it over his chest. “Ladies.”
Lydia relaxed a little and said, “Ain’t you the cultured one?”
“I try, but it’s difficult sometimes when my trail partner is such an unlettered lout.” Sam settled his hat back on his head.
“Wait a minute,” Matt protested. “This lout, as you put it, is the one who saved these ladies’ bacon. And I’m not all that unlettered. I’ve been to school too, you know.”
“Ignore him,” Sam said to the women. “Are any of you wounded? Do you need medical attention? I think there’s a town not too far from here.”
“There is,” the redhead said. Bodine recalled that one of the other women had called her Charity. “It’s called Buffalo Flat. That’s where we’re headed.” She turned her head and went on, “Anybody hurt back there?”
A chorus of female voices answered her, all assuring her that their owners were all right. Matt frowned. Were these women traveling alone? he wondered. It was unusual to find a group of ladies out here on the frontier without at least one man accompanying them.
That appeared to be the case, though. One of the women asked, “Can we get out and stretch our legs, Charity? I mean, our limbs?”
The redhead nodded. “I guess so. But we can’t stop for long. I want to make it to Buffalo Flat by nightfall.”
Matt and Sam could only sit and watch in amazement as half a dozen of the prettiest gals they had seen in a long time climbed out of the wagon and stood there looking around, blinking against the sunlight and the dust and the thin haze of gun smoke that still hung in the air.
Chapter 2
“All I’m sayin’,” Scratch Morton declared, “is that I didn’t know she was married.”
“How old are you, Scratch?” Bo Creel asked.
“Huh? What do you mean, how old am I? You know how old I am. We been friends since we met durin’ the Runaway Scrape!”
Bo nodded solemnly. “That’s right. So I know good and well that you’re old enough to know better. What did you think that ring on her finger meant anyway?”
Scratch grinned and said, “Well, I didn’t rightly see no ring. It was dark in the room!”
Bo just sighed and shook his head. “You’re lucky you didn’t get yourself tarred and feathered. Or worse yet, both of us!”
Scratch threw back his head and laughed. “I swear, it might’ve been worth it. That gal surely was enthusiastic.”
“Worth it to you maybe. Not to me. I’m too old for such foolishness.”
Scratch leaned over in the saddle and slapped his friend on the back as they rode along a trail that twisted between brush-and cactus-covered hills. “A man’s never too old for a little foolishness until he’s dead! And my blood’s still pumpin’ just fine, thank you.”
Bo didn’t say anything. He had learned a long time ago that it was a waste of breath trying to talk sense into Scratch Morton’s head.
But then, he reminded himself, if Scratch had been blessed with an overabundance of sense, he probably never would have jumped in front of that Mexican soldier at San Jacinto and Bo never would have lived through that sunny April day in 1836. He would have gotten a Mexican bayonet in the back instead.
That was the first time Scratch saved Bo’s life. It wouldn’t be the last. Of course, Bo had repaid the favor more than a few times over the years. The long, violent years . . .
The Morton family and the Creel family had come to Texas in the days before the revolution, when it was still part of Mexico and Stephen F. Austin had been continuing his father Moses’s dream of founding a colony of Americans there. The families had settled in different places, the Mortons not far from San Antonio and the Creels near Victoria. So the two strapping boys, barely in their teens, hadn’t met until their folks had been fleeing across Texas, away from the invading army of the dictator Santa Anna. The Runaway Scrape, that flight was called, and it had been a time of terror and panic among many of the American settlers who had taken to calling themselves Texicans. If not for a small but gallant band of defenders who had stalled Santa Anna at a little mission just outside of San Antonio de Bexar, the dictator’s army might have swept every American clean out of Texas.
As it was, though, the brave men holed up in the Alamo had occupied Santa Anna long enough for Sam Houston to gather an army of his own. Bo’s father had gone off to join that army, as had Scratch’s pa. And the two youngsters, who had become fast friends almost at first sight, had hatched a plan between them to follow their fathers off to war. That damned Santy Anny wasn’t gonna run roughshod over no Texicans, no, sir!
But the Alamo had fallen after its defenders fought to the last man and were all put to the sword, and the prisoners at Goliad had been massacred in a bloody slaughter, and things looked bad for the folks who had really wanted nothing except to be left alone to live their lives. Houston’s army kept retreating until they reached a wide, grassy plain between Buffalo Bayou and the San Jacinto River. It was there the battle was finally joined.
By that time Bo and Scratch, carrying old muzzle-loading muskets, had slipped away from their families and run off to join the army. Their fathers didn’t like it, but there wasn’t much they could do about it except promise to blister the boys’ britches once the war was over . . . assuming, of course, that any of them lived through it.
So Bo and Scratch had been among that long line of men advancing on the Mexican camp, where the invaders dozed at their siesta. They had shouted “Remember the Alamo!” and “Remember Goliad!” like all the other Texicans as the guns began to roar and the men rushed forward to meet their destiny. And during that battle Scratch had saved Bo’s life, cementing a friendship that had lasted more than forty years so far.
After the revolution, in the newly founded Republic of Texas, they had tried to settle down. Bo had even gotten married, and he and his wife had a couple of fine young’uns. But then the fever came through the area, taking the two little ones and then Bo’s wife. Scratch had been there for him then too, helping him dig each grave in turn, and somehow he got Bo through the awful days when grief and blind rage at God had threatened to consume him. When Bo finally came out of that dark, dark valley in his life and Scratch had suggested that they get out of Texas for a while, the idea sounded good to Bo.
They’d been on the drift pretty much ever since.
They didn’t need much money, just enough for some supplies and ammunition, so they only worked when they had to. They had cowboyed, gambled, driven freight wagons, packed shotguns as stagecoach guards, scouted now and then for the army, and even worn a lawman’s star from time to time, although Scratch was a mite uncomfortable with being that respectable. It went against the grain. Any job was all right as long as it was honest . . . and Scratch had been known not to worry about that too much, under the right circumstances.
And despite their best intentions—Bo’s best intentions anyway—they seemed to run into trouble on a regular basis. As Scratch put it, “I get antsy when too much time goes by without anybody shootin’ at us.”
Here lately, though, they had hit a peaceful stretch as they made their ambling way through Colorado. The only recent bump in the trail had been Scratch’s dalliance with a married woman in a town about twenty miles behind them. Bo had managed to get them out of there a couple of jumps ahead of the woman’s angry husband. Scratch had always had an eye for the ladies, and even though he claimed he hadn’t known the gal was married, Bo had his doubts about that.
“Maybe you should hunt up a game in the next town we come to,” Scratch suggested. “Our poke’s gettin’ a mite empty.”
“We could look for a real job.”
Scratch made a face. “You’d turn your back on your God-given talents like that?”
“What about your God-given talents?”
Scratch sighed and said, “Bein’ handsome and charmin’ don’t pay as well as it used to.”
He was handsome, or at least most of the ladies they met seemed to think so. He had a shock of silver hair under his cream-colored Stetson, and his rugged face was usually creased in a friendly grin. He wore a buckskin jacket and whipcord trousers tucked into high-topped, moccasin-style boots. His clothes, his saddle, and his gun rig were all old and well-used, but he took good care of them.
In contrast to his somewhat dandified trail partner, Bo looked as sober as a judge or a parson in a black hat and dusty black suit. He usually had a string tie knotted around his neck. Despite looking like a preacher, Bo was by far the better poker player, and if they needed to run up a stake in a hurry, he could be counted on to do it at some green-topped table in any cow-town saloon. Scratch’s emotions ran too close to the surface for him to be much good at cards.
Bo took his hat off and ran his fingers through his brown hair, which despite his age was still thick and only lightly touched with gray. The midday sun was hot, and he was starting to think that they ought to find a nice shady spot on some creek bank to rest a while and maybe eat some lunch. He tugged his hat back down and was about to suggest that when the sound of a shot suddenly broke the still air.
The shot was followed right away by several more. Scratch reined his horse to a stop and said, “What’s that?”
“You know what it is as well as I do,” Bo replied. “Trouble.”
“Yeah, for somebody.” Scratch turned to look at him as the shooting continued. “Reckon we ought to go see what it’s about?”
Bo hesitated only a second before nodding. “Somebody might need our help.”
“Yeah, you just can’t resist the smell of powder smoke!” Scratch said with a grin as he jabbed his heels into his horse’s flanks.
The two men sent their mounts along the trail at a fast run. The shots were only a couple of hundred yards away, and it didn’t take them long to reach the spot. As the Texans rounded a bend in the trail, they saw gray smoke drifting up from a cluster of boulders.
About a hundred yards away on the trail sat a buckboard with a couple of horses hitched to it. The horses moved around skittishly but didn’t run. From behind a rock next to the trail, a handgun barked. Whoever had fired it ducked back down as a slug ricocheted off the top of the rock.
Bo and Scratch brought their horses to a stop. “Bushwhackers in those boulders,” Bo said.
“Yeah, and the poor bastard who was drivin’ that buckboard had to jump for cover when they opened up on him,” Scratch concluded. “Problem is, that rock ain’t hardly big enough. They’ll drill him sooner or later.”
With his face set in stern, angry lines, Bo reached for a Henry rifle in a sheath strapped to his saddle. “I don’t like bushwhackers,” he said.
“Neither do I,” Scratch agreed as he pulled his own Henry.
From where they were, they couldn’t see the men hidden among the boulders, but that didn’t matter. Both Texans lifted their rifles and opened fire anyway, sending several fast shots into the rocks. The slugs ricocheted crazily. At this point, Bo and Scratch didn’t care if they hit anybody or not. They just wanted to flush the bushwhackers out of hiding and make the varmints run.
The bushwhackers emerged from the boulders, all right, four men on horseback. But instead of fleeing, they charged toward the two old-timers, blazing away as they came.
“Uh-oh,” Scratch muttered. “Looks like we put a burr under their saddles good an’ proper.”
Bo ducked as a bullet sizzled through the air above his head. “They’re not happy!” he called. “Split up!”
Bo went to the left, Scratch to the right. The rifle in Bo’s hands spoke again. One of the bushwhackers was jolted as the slug smashed into his right shoulder. He peeled off from the others, clutching at his wounded arm.
The others came on, still firing, and Bo and Scratch responded in kind. They didn’t know what was behind the drygulch attempt on the driver of the buckboard or who these gunmen were, but the conflict had been boiled down to an elemental level now.
Those bastards were trying to kill Bo and Scratch, and the Texans were going to do their damnedest to keep that from happening.
Two of the men galloped at Scratch while the other remaining gunman came after Bo. Scratch stuck his rifle back in its sheath, and then his hands flashed to the pair of revolvers he wore belted around his hips. They were ivory-handled, long-barreled Remingtons, and even though Scratch liked them mostly because of the way they looked, they were fine guns and he was handy with them. He swung his horse around and charged right into the faces of the men who had been attacking him. The Remingtons spouted smoke and flame as he alternated shots from them.
The .36-caliber slugs tore into the two startled gunmen and drove them backward out of their saddles. One man flopped lifelessly to the ground. The other landed, rolled, and tried to get up. He had hung on to his gun somehow, and as he struggled to lift it for another shot, Scratch blasted a bullet through his head.
On the other side of the trail, Bo left his saddle and dropped to one knee, still holding the Henry. Coolly, he lifted the rifle to his shoulder even though he heard the wind-rip of bullets on both sides of his head. He settled the Henry’s sights on the chest of the remaining gunman and pulled the trigger. The man flew out of the saddle, spun through the air, and slammed face-first into the ground. He didn’t move again.
Bo got to his feet and looked around to see how Scratch was doing. He wasn’t surprised to see his fellow Texan trotting toward him, still on horseback. Scratch had holstered one gun and was reloading the other weapon. Bo looked past him and saw the two horses with empty saddles and the pair of motionless forms on the ground.
“Looks like we got ’em all,” Scratch said as he rode up.
“Except the one who lit a shuck after I drilled him in the shoulder,” Bo said. “He’s liable to go back where he came from and tell whoever hired them about what happened to the others.”
“How do you know somebody hired them?”
Bo grimaced. “Four against one, and they had to hide to do that. That tells me they were in it for the money. A man fighting for himself or something he believes in does it out in the open.”
“Yeah, I reckon.” Scratch finished loading the gun and slid it back into leather. “Want to go see if the hombre with the buckboard is all right?”
“I thought we would.” Bo’s horse hadn’t gone far. He walked over to it and caught the reins, then swung up into the saddle and joined Scratch. Together they rode toward the buckboard.
When they were about fifty feet away, Bo saw the barrel of a six-gun thrust over the top of the rock where the driver had taken cover. “Hold your fire,” Bo called. “We’re friends.”
“Yeah,” Scratch added. “You can tell by the way we ventilated those sons o’ bitches who were tryin’ to ventilate you.”
As Bo reined in, he looked at the buckboard and saw that several crates and bags had been piled onto the back of it and then partially covered with canvas. If he had to guess, he would say that was a load of supplies bound for a ranch or a mine or some place like that.
The gun sticking over the rock hadn’t moved. Bo began to worry that the driver had been wounded and might even be lying back there dead. He gripped his saddle horn and got ready to dismount. “I’d better go have a look,” he told Scratch.
“Stay right where you are!” a high, clear voice called out, and Bo and Scratch both stared as the gun finally moved. The person holding it stood up and regarded them with blue eyes that were narrowed in suspicion. A vagrant breeze stirred the beautiful woman’s long blond hair as she watched them warily over the barrel of the revolver.