Going by the mass of dark clouds that spread across the sky from over the Antelope Hills, there might be a storm during the night. Even if the storm did not break, rain was sure to fall.
Waxahachie Smith hated rainy weather.
No matter how carefully Smith wrapped himself in his yellow oilskin ‘fish’, the water always found a way through to run down his neck. Worse than that, rain invariably made his trigger-fingers ache like hell. Which was mighty strange. His trigger-fingers must have long since rotted into nothing at the place where he had left them on the banks of the Rio Grande.
Give that crazy son-of-a-bitch Doc Gratz his full and rightful due, though. He had taken off the fingers as neat as a man could ask for, leaving sufficient skin to fold as pads over the places where they had been. Once the original pain of the removal had ceased, the stumps only troubled Smith when it rained. No fancy Eastern sawbones, working in a real hospital with all the latest surgical aids, could have done a better job.
It had almost been a pity to kill Doc Gratz.
In fact, some folks came right out and claimed that Smith had acted a mite ungrateful by killing him. Any qualified doctor ought to be within his rights to amputate injured fingers, toes, arms or legs, if doing so would save his patient’s life. While agreeing in principle, Smith had still put sawdust in the doctor’s beard and made wolf-bait of him.
At the time that the amputations had been carried out, Smith’s forefingers were in no way endangering his health or life. It was just that they could squeeze a Colt’s trigger too well for the Fuentes brothers’ peace of mind. So perhaps in one way the removal of his fingers could be called necessary. By causing it to be done, the brothers had hoped to save their lives. When all they had wanted was to take over the Texas border town of Flamingo. Smith and his Colt stood between them and the citizens. Everybody had known that sooner or later a showdown must come. Most had guessed which way it would go—against the Fuentes boys.
Rich and unscrupulous, the brothers might have had Smith bushwhacked; but killing a Texas Ranger—which he had been at the time—ranked as real bad medicine. So they had arranged for his food to be drugged one night. When he had regained consciousness, no forefingers remained to press a trigger. Yet when it rained, even though four years had passed since the operation, the missing digits still throbbed painfully.
So Smith hated rain, for it brought back memories he would rather forget.
Moving at an easy pace between Smith’s long legs as he posted to its trot, i the line-backed bayo-lobo gelding suddenly snorted and tossed its head. The man made no attempt to reach for a weapon, knowing that his mount’s actions did not warn of impending danger. Rather it had smelled its own kind ahead, their scent being carried over the next ridge by the same wind which spread the clouds.
Damn those clouds, with their threat of rain to bring torment to his non-existent fingers. Smith much preferred to work in the heat, dust and sweat of New Mexico or Arizona, where the average rainfall was low. If the request from Wyoming had been less urgent, or the advance payment smaller, he might have ignored it. Trouble was, like a fool he had accepted the money. His reputation would suffer if he failed to show up at Widow’s Creek and find out what the prospective employer had to offer.
Topping the ridge, Smith found that he had read the gelding’s signal correctly and there was no cause for alarm. Going by the cluster of whipsaw-plank buildings and the type of horses roaming aimlessly in the two large pole corrals, he had arrived at Gilpin’s stagecoach way station. Not a surprising discovery, nor a remarkable piece of cross-country navigation, seeing that he had been following the stagecoach trail from the time he had left the railroad at Laramie. Even before he nudged the gelding with his heels, he felt its pace quicken. Most likely it had scented grain and fresh hay, so knew that the end of its day’s work was in sight. So he guided it down the slope in the direction of the largest of the buildings.
Attending to his chores in the big combined stable and barn, old Dad Derham listened to the approaching horse with an attitude of anticipation. Always a student of his fellow men, he found that the somewhat menial post as hostler on a way station presented many opportunities to carry out his studies. Trouble being that each passing year saw a growing difficulty in forming accurate conclusions.
Time was a feller could tell, near enough, where a stranger hailed from and how he earned his living by his clothing and horse rigging. There had been few enough types of work then and most of them required specialized forms of dress. With the development and expansion of the cattle industry, cowhands tended to mingle styles in a mighty confusing manner. Then there was all the nesters, farmers and other settling folks coming from back East. The Good Lord alone knew how you pegged them down to their home range by what they wore.
The hooves stopped and leather creaked as weight was transferred from it to the ground. Stepping out of the empty stall he had just finished cleaning, Derham watched Smith lead the gelding through the big double doors. A grunt of satisfaction left the old timer. No mistaking this traveler’s place of origin. Most conservative and State-proud of all cowhands, a Texan invariably clung to the traditional fashions of his home range.
Not, Derham admitted, that the stranger was a cowhand. Which raised the question of what he might be.
Six foot two in height, lean and whang-leather tough looking as a steer fed on greasewood, the stranger wore a low-crowned, wide-brimmed, black J. B. Stetson hat as Texas as the Lone Star flag and ‘Remember the Alamo!’. Framed with neatly trimmed reddish-brown sideburns, the face sheltered by the hat was too rugged to be termed handsome. Tanned by long exposure to the sun, it had hard, grim lines and cold, watchful brown eyes. That was the face of a man who had suffered.
Under his buttoned-up wolf skin jacket, he wore a neatly knotted black string tie and grey flannel shirt. Coming from beneath the jacket, which concealed whatever kind of gunbelt he might be wearing, Levi’s pants legs ended tucked into flat-heeled brown Wellington half-boots. ii Brown leather gloves covered his hands. Not the heavy gauntlets a man from the thorn-brush or cold-weather countries might wear, but lighter and more flexible. Gamblers often sported such gloves, to keep their hands soft for manipulating a deck of cards. The man was not a professional gambler. That tanned face had not been gained sitting all night at a card table and sleeping most of the day.
Maybe his mount would supply a clue.
By its conformation and size, the gelding would be better suited to long travelling than for the fast twirling, rapid footwork needed when working cattle. The wide two-ear bridle sported fancy-stitched leatherwork and the shanks of the curb bit took the form of plump, shapely feminine buttocks and legs. Although functional in design, the low-horned, double-girthed saddle had decorative carving on its fork, cantle, skirt, upper-flank skirt and fenders; rosaderos, iii the man would call the latter. The horn’s embossed top and the conchas which held the saddle-strings had the dull, solid glint of silver. On the left side of the saddle, pointing to the rear, the butt of a rifle showed from its boot. A bulky bedroll and yellow fish hung behind the cantle, but no coiled rope dangled from the fork. That kind of rig had been born in Texas, where a feller tied fast his rope and figured to hang on to anything he caught in its loop.
For all that, taken with the low-heeled footwear, the absence of a coiled rope on the saddle revealed that the stranger did not earn his living handling cattle.
Unfortunately, it did not help Derham place the stranger. Not entirely, anyway. By removing one possibility, it opened up another. The man walked with an economy of motion, silent and somehow seeming as graceful as a cat. There was an alert air about him, such as a man with many enemies always showed. Derham had never seen a gun fighter who did not. Seeing how he carried his gun might have furnished information, but the jacket prevented that. If he had enemies, he clearly did not expect to come across them around the way station. The buttons would have been unfastened, allowing uninterrupted access to his revolver, if he did.
By the time Derham had drawn that conclusion, the newcomer had almost reached him. Satisfying his curiosity about the other could only be done indirectly. So the old hostler elected to try a conventional opening to a conversation which might prove instructive.
‘Looks like—’ Derham began amiably.
‘Yeah,’ Smith interrupted. The last thing he wanted was to be reminded about the state of the weather. ‘Can I put up my horse in here?’
‘Use that empty stall,’ Derham answered stiffly. Age ought to carry certain privileges and command some respect. His tone showed that he resented the curt response. Tut him in, happen it suits you.’
Just how it happened, Derham could not say; but his last words had been addressed to the stranger’s back. Footsteps thudded outside, coming towards the barn. In a swift, silent movement, Smith had dropped the gelding’s reins and moved to face the open double doors. He stood so that he could look across the back of his horse at whoever entered. While looking, he began to peel off his gloves.
Being wise in such matters, Derham realized that the stranger’s actions had not been made as a further snub to him. They were merely the kind of precautions, like removing the gloves, that a gun fighter would take.
The young men strolled into the barn as if they owned it. Tall, bulky, they wore a hybrid mixture of town and range clothes, with Colts in low-hanging, tied-down holsters. Going by their swaggering attitudes, they considered themselves to be important citizens.
‘Hey, you. Hostler there,’ called the taller of the pair. ‘Try “hostling” some and get our hosses ready.’
‘Right sharp, too,’ the second new arrival went on, darting a challenging look Smith’s way. ‘We ain’t got all day.’
‘I’m tending to this gent,’ Derham objected.
‘He don’t mind waiting,’ declared the first speaker.
Smith’s cold, unfriendly eyes studied the pair and he assessed their quality like a rancher picking culls out of a herd.
They did not need much deep thought to classify them. No matter where one rode west of the Mississippi River, their kind could be found. Small-town loafers, would-be hard-cases, reared on tales of the old-time gun fighters and desperate to prove themselves in that same magic-handed category. Given the right conditions, they could be as dangerous as a stick-teased diamond back rattlesnake. Let them take an inch of liberty with you and they would grab for a mile. Wanting no trouble with them, Smith acted accordingly.
‘I do mind waiting,’ he stated, dropping the gloves into his jacket’s side pockets and stepping clear of the horse.
‘Yeah?’ grunted the taller hard case. ‘Well, he’ll get ’round to you when he’s through with us.’
‘’Cepting I don’t figure on waiting that long,’ Smith replied. ‘I’ll be needing grain, water and hay, mister.’
Watching the by-play, Derham felt uneasy and a mite disappointed. He had decided that the newcomer was a gun fighter and felt that the other was trying to spoil his summation. Instead of unbuttoning his jacket, the man had thrust his hands deep into its pockets. Glancing down, the old timer failed to detect any bulge that would hint that either pocket held a weapon. A man ought not to go up against Billy and Angus McCobb unless he was full ready to protect himself.
Taking in Smith’s posture, Billy McCobb flashed a knowing wink at his smaller, younger brother. Like Derham, Billy had looked carefully for signs of the stranger holding a gun concealed in one pocket. Billy felt sure there was not. Maybe that feller figured to look hard and ornery, but he missed impressing Billy by a good country mile. He needed teaching a lesson in Sweetwater County manners, which the brothers would be right pleasured to give him.
‘I’m saying the hostler sees to us first,’ Billy announced, advancing slightly ahead and to the right of Angus. ‘So you can just set back and wait on your betters, feller.’
‘Counting there was any such,’ Smith drawled, keeping his hands in his pockets. ‘I don’t see any of ’em around.’
‘Maybe you need something to open your eyes!’ Billy barked. ‘Like a crack ’tween ’em with a Colt’s barrel.’
‘You’d have to take it out afore you could do that,’ Smith pointed out.
‘Which’s easy enough done!’ Billy snapped, right hand dropping towards the holstered revolver as he strode into range for carrying out the threat.
Smith moved while Billy was declaring his intentions. Unlike the young hard case, who had telegraphed every move, the Texan gave no hint of what he meant to do. Leaving his hands where they were, Smith bent his right knee slightly. Up swung his left leg until its knee almost touched his chest and the foot was vertical to the ground. All in the same flashing motion, the foot stamped foot. The sole of Smith’s boot caught Billy on the chest and shoved hard. Taken by surprise, Billy staggered by his brother and landed on his rump with a solid thud.
From delivering the attack, Smith dropped the boot to the floor and used it as a pivot. Seeing the Texan apparently turning away, Angus lunged at him. If the younger brother believed that he was coming unexpectedly, he received rapid disillusionment. Balancing on his left leg, Smith swung his right around and stabbed it rearwards. It rammed with speed, accuracy and considerable force against Angus’ solar plexus. Letting out a croaking yelp of pain, Angus changed his advance into a retreat. Stumbling backwards, he tripped over Billy’s feet and fell on top of his brother. They subsided in a heap, to Derham’s undisguised delight.
Foul language billowed up from the McCobb boys as they rolled apart. Still seated on the hard-packed dirt floor, they directed their thoughts to wiping out the insult piled upon their family’s honor. With hands grabbing towards holsters, they turned angry eyes in search of their assailant. Doing so proved to be one of the few sensible acts in two otherwise mis-spent lives.
From heaving Angus after Billy, Smith brought his left leg down in the first of three strides which carried him to his horse’s near flank. His hands, stripped of their gloves, left the pockets. The right flashed forward to close around the wrist of the rifle’s butt. At the same moment, the left slapped the gelding on the rump. Snaking its head aside, to avoid stepping on the trailing reins, the horse walked into the empty stall. By doing so, it drew the boot away from the rifle. As soon as the barrel cleared leather, Smith spun on his heel in the brothers’ direction. Swinging the rifle around, he caught its fore grip in his left palm. He halted with his weapon dangling before him in both fists.
Admiration and satisfaction flickered on Derham’s seamed old features as he watched Smith hand the McCobb boys their needings. Every move had clearly been planned in advance and carried out with commendable precision. Putting his hands in his pockets had been smart, not foolish, lulling the brothers into a sense of false security. Derham had never seen a feller who could handle his feet in such a fancy, effective manner.
Glancing at the rifle, the hostler felt puzzled. At first sight it looked like an old Henry, with the barrel-long tubular magazine completely exposed. Its excellent condition suggested that it had been made long after Oliver Winchester stopped production on the Henry in favor of the more advanced models. Closer observation showed that it lacked the usual Winchester’s lever and had a fore grip, shortened to a piece of wood just large enough to be grasped by its user’s left hand. Derham might have noticed other things, but the McCobbs’ behavior attracted his attention.
‘Get the—!’ Billy was saying.
‘If you try to pull those guns,’ Smith put in and the rifle’s muzzle tilted into line between the brothers, ready to turn either way, ‘I’ll kill you both.’
There was no bombast in the words, only a plain statement of fact. With a cold, chilling sensation, Billy realized that he had gone in when the water ran high over the willows. A quick glimpse of his brother’s face told him that Angus shared his sentiments. Taking their hands away from the guns, they came slowly to their feet. Still the rifle remained pointing in their direction. The situation called for tact, not muscle.
‘You’d best tell him who we are, old man,’ Billy ordered, trying to retain his habitual tough tone.
‘They’re Sheriff McCobb’s nephews, mister,’ Derham introduced.
‘Deputies!’ Billy corrected coldly. ‘Nephews’ did not carry a sufficiently impressive connotation at that moment. Turning what he hoped to be an officially threatening eye on Smith, he continued, ‘And we’re on law business, stranger.’
‘Which nobody’s stopping you doing,’ Smith pointed out. ‘I’ll take the water and grain for starters, friend.’
‘That’s im—imp—im—!’ Angus spluttered, trying to remember an imposing legal term he had heard used by his uncle.
‘Impeding an officer in the right and lawful execution of his sworn duty’s what you mean,’ Smith supplied. ‘And, afore you tell me I’m doing that, you pair’s near on been guilty of felonious assault on a law-abiding citizen, threatening behavior and malabusement of civic authority as covered in Amendment Eleven, Twenty-Three, Sixty-One of the Constitution.’
Although the rifle had turned away from them while Smith was speaking, the brothers refrained from further hostilities. They were impressed by his quick and thorough command of legal phraseology. Whatever that ‘malabusement of civic authority’ might be, it sounded important—and liable to make bad trouble for lawmen caught doing it. The brothers eyed Smith with renewed interest and some concern, wondering who the hell he might be. He knew the law and handled that rifle real good. Maybe he was a peace officer in transit between jobs. Or, worse still, he might be a U.S. marshal touring Wyoming Territory to find out how it stacked up for State-hood.
Whoever the stranger might be, he exhibited no concern over what the brothers might do next, nor for their uncle’s, the sheriff’s, possible wrath. If he should be a U.S. marshal, he packed a whole heap more political say-so than any sheriff and Uncle Horace would not want him riled. It might be smarter to let the matter drop, cut their losses and depart before worse happened to them.
‘Come on, Angus,’ Billy snapped, sounding briskly and artificially efficient as he made his second wise decision in one day; a record which he would probably never again equal. ‘Let’s get moving, we don’t have time to waste here.’
‘We sure don’t,’ the younger McCobb agreed. ‘Unc— The sheriff’s counting on us to see the stage comes in safe.’
Having convinced themselves—if nobody else—that they were withdrawing from the unpleasantness by their own choice, the brothers slouched across to the inverted V-shaped wooden burro erected along the left side wall. They collected their saddles, went to and entered their horses’ stalls.
‘You can lend them a hand,’ the Texan told Derham. ‘If you’re so minded.’
‘I ain’t,’ answered the old timer. ‘Boss’d charge my time to the county if I did. Which, being a tax-paying citizen, I ain’t fixing to see my hard-earned money wasted a-pampering the sheriff’s shirt-tail kin. What can I get for you?’
‘Nothing,’ grinned Smith and joined the gelding in the stall. ‘But the horse here can use some grain, hay and water.’
Cackling appreciatively, Derham ambled away. Smith slid the rifle back into its boot, removed his jacket and hung it over the dividing wall. At the other end of the line of stalls, the McCobbs kept up a too-loud conversation and acted as if they had intended doing their own saddling from the beginning. Clearly they had no intention of making more trouble. The gist of their conversation—designed, Smith guessed, to mollify him—was that any owlhoot stupid enough to try robbing a stagecoach under their protection would rapidly and permanently learn the error of his ways. While Smith harbored considerable doubts on that subject, he kept his comments to himself.
Derham had been sufficiently impressed by Smith to overlook the other’s earlier brusque conduct. So he took a bucket and filled it with fresh-pumped water, then mixed a meal in a new feedbag. By the time he returned, carrying the bucket in one hand and bag in the other, the McCobbs were leading their horses from the barn.
Going towards the stall where Smith stood rubbing the gelding’s back with a fist-full of straw, the hostler satisfied some more of his curiosity and gave himself another puzzle. Removing the jacket had exposed Smith’s calfskin vest. It also presented the old timer with the first view of his gunbelt. As when Smith had faced the McCobbs with hands in pockets, Derham felt a sense of anticlimax. The belt was higher on Smith’s waist than favored by real fast men. Carrying a Colt Civilian Model Peacemaker with its staghorn butt reversed, an excellently-made, contour-fitting Missouri Skintite-style holster rode at an extreme forward tilt just behind his right hip.
In all Derham’s experience, which stretched back over more years than he cared to consider, he had never seen a gun carried in such a manner. Other details about Smith’s armament might have struck the hostler, but he became aware of something which drove all thoughts on it from his head.
Dropping the straw, Smith walked by the saddle which hung on the wall near his jacket. Derham was holding out the feed-bag and the Texan reached over the gate to take it from him. Idly the hostler glanced down as the transfer was being made. Then his eyes swiveled from Smith’s extended right hand to the tanned face and back in what would eventually become known as a double-take.
Where the three sections of the first digit should be, only a small, puckered pad of flesh remained. Derham decided that must be the reason for the stranger’s unconventional method of toting the Colt, he drew it cross-hand with his left.
Thinking back to the newcomer’s first unsociable response—and forgetting that Smith had been wearing gloves—Derham decided that he had expected some comment about his injury. A man who had suffered such a loss would not want reminding of it. So the hostler relinquished the feedbag and schooled his face into an expression which he hoped would register disinterested, unseeing nonchalance.
All Derham’s ability as a poker-player was needed a moment later. Taking hold of the feedbag’s strap with his left hand, ready to fix it on the gelding’s head, the stranger showed that it too had lost its trigger-finger. Only by a considerable effort did the old hostler hold down an exclamation of surprise.
‘I’ll get you some hay,’ Derham offered, setting down the bucket.
Straightening up, he stared at the Texan. Memory came to the old timer, of stories which he had previously discounted as newspaper lies, about a man who had lost both trigger-fingers and yet still followed the trade of hired gun fighter.
Could the stranger be that man?
Certainly the loss of the two fingers did not greatly handicap him. He had removed his gelding’s saddle and bridle quickly enough. Come to that, he had displayed considerable speed in producing the rifle from its boot. No wonder that the McCobb boys had suspected nothing. The way that long Texan handled the rifle, he might have had two extra fingers a hand instead of one less.
Derham suddenly became aware that he was staring at the stranger; showing all too much interest when dealing with a man who might earn his keep by selling his gun-savvy.
‘Thanks,’ the Texan said, showing no annoyance at the scrutiny. ‘And you’re figuring right. I’m Waxahachie Smith.’