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Western epic
from William W. and J. A. Johnstone . . .
 
THE SCAVENGERS
A DEATH & TEXAS WESTERN
 
 
EVERYTHING IS BIGGER IN TEXAS.
EVEN DEATH.
Cullen McCabe has always been a risk-taker.
But sometimes, taking a risk means
taking a bullet—unless you kill first . . .
 
Cullen McCabe knew he’d make a lot of enemies when he agreed to be a special agent for the Texas governor. But now that he’s managed to keep the peace in the hopeless town of New Hope, he’s hoping he can go home and get back to business as usual.
 
No such luck.
 
There’s a trio of troubles waiting for him there—three gun-toting avengers by the name of Tice. This hardcase family of bullies and prairie rats blame McCabe for taking down one of their kin and stealing their horses. They want revenge, and they want it quick . . .
 
McCabe wants something, too. He wants to finish the job he started—and pick off the rest of these scavengers....
 
 
Look for THE SCAVENGERS on sale in April 2020,
from Pinnacle books.

CHAPTER ONE
“Look who’s comin’ in again,” Alma Brown whispered softly to Gracie Wright when the cook walked past her on her way back to the kitchen. Gracie paused and looked toward the front door. It was the second time this week that Jesse Tice had come in the dining room next to the hotel, appropriately named The Two Forks Kitchen. He had become a regular visitor to the dining room ever since his youngest son was killed there some weeks before. Usually, he came in only once a week. “Wonder what’s so special about this week?” Alma whispered. They were never happy to see the old man, because he made their other customers uncomfortable as he hovered over his coffee, a constant scowl on his unshaven face, while he watched the front door and each customer who walked in. Coffee was the only thing he ever bought. Everyone in town knew his real purpose in haunting the dining room was the chance to see the man who had killed his son. Cullen McCabe was the man he sought. But McCabe was a bigger mystery than Jesse Tice to the people of Two Forks. Everyone knew Jesse as a cattle rustler and horse thief whose three sons were hell-raisers and troublemakers. Cullen McCabe, on the other hand, was a quiet man, seen only occasionally in town, and seeming to have no family or friends.
Alma’s boss, Porter Johnson, owner of Two Forks Kitchen, had talked to Sheriff Woods about Tice’s search for vengeance against McCabe. Johnson was not concerned about the fate of either Tice or McCabe. His complaint was the fact that Jesse used his dining room as his base for surveillance, hoping McCabe would return. “Doggone it, Calvin,” he had complained to the sheriff. “I’m runnin’ a dinin’ room, not a damn saloon. Folks come in here to eat, not to see some dirty-lookin’ old man waitin’ to shoot somebody.”
Sheriff Woods had been unable to give Johnson much satisfaction when he responded to his complaint. “I hear what you’re sayin’, Porter,” he had replied. “I reckon you just have to tell Tice you don’t wanna serve him. That’s up to you to serve who you want to and who you don’t. I can’t tell folks where they can go and where they can’t. As far as that shootin’ in here, I told him right from the start that that fellow, McCabe didn’t have no choice. Sonny started the fight and tried to shoot McCabe in the back, but he just wasn’t quick enough. I told Jesse I didn’t want any more killin’ in this town, so I’d have to arrest him if he shot McCabe.”
Looking at the old man now as he paused to scan the dining room before taking a seat near the door, Alma commented. “One of us might have to tell the ol’ buzzard we don’t want him in here. I don’t think Porter wants to get started with him. He’s probably afraid he’d start shootin’ the place up.”
“Maybe we oughta hope McCabe comes back to see us,” Gracie said. “Let him take care of Jesse Tice. He took care of Sonny proper enough.”
“Meanwhile, I’ll go wait on him and take his order for one nickel cup of coffee,” Alma said. She walked over to the small table close to the front door. “Are you wantin’ breakfast?” She asked, knowing he didn’t.
“No, I don’t want no breakfast,” he snarled. “I done et breakfast. Bring me a cup of coffee.” She turned and went to get it. He watched her for a few moments before bringing his attention back to the room now only half-filled with diners. He didn’t see anyone who might be the man who killed his son. The major problem Tice had was the fact that he had never actually seen Cullen McCabe up close. When he and his two sons had gone after McCabe, he had circled around them, stolen their horses, and left them on foot. Still, he felt that if he did see him, he would somehow know it was him. When the sheriff tried to talk him out of seeking vengeance for the death of his son, Jesse was tempted to tell him that McCabe was a horse thief. He thought that would justify his reason for wanting to shoot him, but he was too proud to admit how his horses happened to get stolen. Every time he thought about the night he and his two sons had to walk twenty-five miles back home, it made him bite his lower lip in angry frustration. When Alma returned with his coffee, he gulped it down, having decided there was no use to linger there. It was already getting late for breakfast, so he thought he might as well go back to join Samson and Joe, who were keeping a watch for McCabe in the River House Saloon.
* * *
It had been several days since he had returned to his cabin on the Brazos River after completing his last assignment from the governor’s office. The long hard job in the little town of New Hope had turned out to the governor’s satisfaction, and Cullen figured it would be a while before he was summoned for the next job. For that reason, he hadn’t bothered to check in with the telegraph office at Two Forks to see if he had a wire from Austin. He needed to do a little work on his cabin, so he had waited before checking with Leon Armstrong at the telegraph office. When he was not on assignment for the governor, he usually checked by the telegraph office at least once a week for any messages, and it had not been quite a week since he got back. Halfway hoping there might be a message, he pulled up before the telegraph office and stepped down from the big bay gelding. He casually tossed the reins across the hitching rail, knowing Jake wouldn’t wander, anyway.
Leon Armstrong looked up when Cullen walked in and gave him a cheerful greeting. “How ya doin’, Mr. McCabe? I got a telegram here for you. Figured you’d be showin’ up pretty soon.”
“Howdy, Mr. Armstrong,” Cullen returned. “Has it been here long?”
“Came in two days ago,” Armstrong said as he retrieved the telegram from a drawer under the counter. “Looks like you’re fixin’ to travel again.”
Cullen took only a moment to read the short message from Austin. “Looks that way,” he said to Armstrong and folded the message before putting it in his pocket. “Much obliged,” he said and turned to leave. It seemed kind of awkward that Armstrong always knew Cullen’s plans before he did, but since he was the telegraph operator, there wasn’t any way to avoid it.
“See you next time,” Armstrong said as Cullen went out the door. As curious as he was about the mysterious telegrams the big quiet man received from the governor’s office in Austin, he was reluctant to ask him what manner of business he was engaged in. And after the altercation between McCabe and Sonny Tice, he was even more timid about asking. For the most part, McCabe had very little contact with anyone in Two Forks except for him and Ronald Thornton at the general store. He had an occasional meal at Two Forks Kitchen and made a call on the blacksmith on rare occasions perhaps, but that was about all.
Cullen responded to Leon’s farewell with a flip of his hand as he went out the door. All the wire said was that he should come into the capital. That’s all they ever said, but it always meant he was about to be sent out on another assignment. So, his next stop would be Thornton’s General Merchandise to add to his supplies. As was his usual practice, he had brought his packhorse with him when he rode into town, in the event there was a telegram waiting. Austin was north of Two Forks, while his cabin was south of the town. So, by bringing the packhorse with him, there was no need to return to his cabin. Taking Jake’s reins, he led the big bay and the sorrel packhorse up the street to Thornton’s.
* * *
Jesse Tice and his two sons came out of the saloon and stood for a while on the short length of boardwalk in front. Looking up and down the street, hoping to catch sight of the man who shot his youngest, Jesse figured it another wasted day. Both Samson and Joe were content to participate in the search for the man called Cullen McCabe as long as their watching post was always the saloon. There was not a great deal of gray matter between the ears of either Joe or Samson and what there was seemed easily diluted by alcohol. Neither son carried the same driven desire their father had to avenge their brother. They generally figured that Sonny was bound to run into somebody he couldn’t outdraw in a gunfight and the results would be the same. “How ’bout it, Pa?” Samson asked. “We ’bout ready to go on back to the house?”
“Hold on,” Jesse said, something having caught his attention at the far end of the street. At that moment, Graham Price, the blacksmith, walked out of the saloon, heading back to his forge. Jesse stepped in front of Price. “Say,” he asked, “who’s the big feller leadin’ them horses to the general store?” He pointed to Thornton’s.
Price paused only long enough to say, “His name’s Cullen McCabe.” Having no more use for Jesse and his sons than most of the other citizens of Two Forks, he continued on toward his shop. Had he taken the time to look at the wide-eyed look of discovery on Jesse Tice’s face, he would have regretted identifying McCabe. As luck would have it, Jesse had asked one of the handful of people in Two Forks who knew McCabe’s name. As Price crossed to the other side of the street, he could hear the excited exchange of conversation behind him as the three Tice men realized their search had paid off.
Joe, Jesse’s youngest, now that Sonny was dead, ran to his horse to get his rifle, but Jesse stopped him. “Put it away, you damn fool! You’re too late, anyway, he’s done gone inside the store.”
“He’ll be comin’ back out,” Samson insisted, thinking the same as Joe. “And when he does, we can cut him down.”
“Ain’t I ever learnt you boys anythin’?” Jesse scolded. “And then what, after ever’body in the whole town seen you do it? Take to the hills with a sheriff’s posse after us?”
“Yeah, but he shot Sonny right there in the dinin’ room, and ever’body seen him do it,” Joe declared. “Sheriff didn’t arrest him for that.”
“Sonny called him out,” Jesse said. “There’s a difference. You pick him off when he don’t know you’re waitin’ for him—that’s murder, and they’d most likely hang you for it.”
Confused now, Samson asked, “Well, ain’t we gonna shoot him? Why we been hangin’ around here waitin’ for him to show up, if we ain’t gonna shoot him?”
“We’re gonna shoot him,” his father explained, impatiently. “But we’re gonna wait and follow him outta town where there ain’t no witnesses.”
“What if he ain’t plannin’ to leave anytime soon?” Joe complained. “I’d just as soon step up in front of him and tell him to go for his gun—see how fast he is when he don’t know it’s comin’. Then it would be a face-to-face shoot-out, and like you said, that ain’t murder. Hell, I’m as fast as Sonny ever was,” he claimed, his boast in part inspired by the whiskey he had just imbibed. He didn’t express it, but he was also thinking about gaining a reputation by gunning down the man who killed Sonny.
Jesse smirked in response to his son’s boastful claim. “You don’t know how fast McCabe is. You ain’t never seen him draw.” He had to admit that it would give him great pleasure to have the people of Two Forks see McCabe shot down by one of his boys.
“You ain’t seen me draw lately, neither,” Joe replied. “I know how fast Sonny was, and I know how fast I am. I’m ready to shoot this son of a bitch right now.”
“He is fast, Pa,” Samson said, curious to see if Joe could do it. “He ain’t lyin’.”
The prospect of seeing McCabe cut down before an audience of witnesses was too much for Jesse to pass up. Joe was right, he hadn’t seen how fast he was lately, and he knew both his boys practiced their fast draw on a daily basis. There had always been a competition between all three of his sons, ever since they were big enough to wear a gun. Sonny had been the first one to actually call a man out, though, and that hadn’t turned out very well. But the fact that Sonny’s death didn’t discourage Joe was enough to cause Jesse to wonder. “All right,” he finally conceded. “We’ll go talk to Mr. McCabe. He owes me for three horses he stole. We’ll see what he has to say for hisself about that. Then, if you think you can take him, that’ll be up to you. If you don’t, we’ll follow him out of town and shoot him down where nobody can see us do it.” They hurried toward Thornton’s store, concerned now that he might finish up his business and leave before they got there.
Inside the store, Cullen was in the process of paying Ronald Thornton for the supplies gathered on the counter when Jesse and his two sons walked in. He had never had a close look at the old man or his two boys, but he knew instinctively who they were, and he had a feeling this was not a chance encounter. He decided to treat it as such until he saw evidence backing up that feeling. He purposefully turned one side toward them while he gathered his purchases up close on the counter, so he could keep an eye on all three. Jesse took only a few steps inside before stopping to stand squarely in front of the door. His sons took a stance, one on each side of him. Thinking the entrance rather odd, Thornton said, “I’ll be with you in a minute, soon as I finish up here.”
“Ain’t no hurry,” Jesse said. “Our business is with Mr. McCabe there.”
Thornton was suddenly struck by the realization that something bad was about to happen. “Clara,” he said to his wife, “you’d best go on back in the storeroom and put that new material away.” When she reacted with an expression of confusion, he said, “Just go on back there.” Seeing he meant it, she quickly left the room.
Up to that point, McCabe had not reacted beyond pulling a twenty-pound sack of flour and a large slab of bacon over to the edge of the counter, preparing to carry them out to his packhorse. “What is your business with me?”
“Maybe it’s about them three horses of mine you stole without payin’ me for ’em,” Jesse snarled.
“I figured we were square on that count. I paid you the same price you paid for them,” Cullen said, guessing Jessie and his boys had most likely stolen them.
“I’m callin’ you out, McCabe,” Joe blurted, unable to contain himself any longer.
“That right?” McCabe asked calmly. “What for?”
“For killin’ my brother,” Joe said. “That’s what for.”
“Who’s your brother?” Cullen asked, purposefully trying to keep the young man’s mind occupied with something other than the actual act of pulling his weapon. He had faced his share of gunfighters in his time and it was fairly easy to read the wide-eyed nervousness in young Joe Tice’s face. The fact that his speech was slurred slightly also suggested that alcohol might be doing most of the talking. He understood the obligation the two brothers felt to avenge Sonny’s death, no matter the circumstances that caused him to be shot. There was a chance, however, that he could talk the boy out of a gunfight, so he decided to give it a try.
“You know who he was,” Joe responded to Cullen’s question. “Sonny Tice, you shot him down in the Two Forks Kitchen.”
“So, you’re Sonny’s brother, huh?” Cullen continued calmly. “Yeah, that was too bad about Sonny. I could see that he wasn’t very fast with a handgun. I think he knew it, too, ’cause he waited till I turned around and then he tried to shoot me in the back. He mighta got me, too, but somebody yelled to warn me, so I didn’t have any choice. I had to shoot him.” He could see that his calm rambling was confusing the young man. He had plainly expected to see a completely different response to his challenge to a face-off. “Yeah, I felt kinda bad about havin’ to shoot poor Sonny,” Cullen went on. “I’ve seen it before; young fellow thinks he’s fast with a gun and ain’t ever seen a man who’s a real gunslinger. You must figure you’re faster than Sonny was, but I don’t know about that. Judgin’ by the way you wear that .44 down so low on your leg, I don’t see how you could be. How many men have you ever pulled iron on?”
“That don’t make no difference,” Joe protested. “That’s my business.” He was plainly flustered by the big man’s casual attitude.
“That’s what I thought,” Cullen said. “This is the first time you’ve ever called anybody out. Well, we’ll try to make it as quick and painless as we can. Let’s take it outside this man’s store, though.” He pulled the sack of flour and the slab of bacon off the counter. “Here,” he said, “you can gimme a hand with these supplies. Grab that coffee and that twist of jerky—save me a trip back in here.”
Clearly confused by this time, Joe wasn’t sure what to do. Accustomed to being ordered around all his young life, he did as McCabe instructed, and picked up the sack of coffee and the beef jerky, then started to follow Cullen out the door. Caught in a state of confusion as well, Jesse finally realized that McCabe was talking Joe out of a face-off. “Hold on there! Put them damn sacks down,” he blurted and pulled his six-shooter when Cullen started to walk past him. It was not quick enough to avoid the heavy sack of flour that smacked against the side of his head, creating a great white cloud that covered him from head to toe when the sack burst open. With his other hand, Cullen slammed his ten-pound slab of bacon across Jesse’s gun hand, causing him to pull the trigger, putting a bullet hole in the slab of side meat. The hand that had held the flour sack now held a Colt .44, and Cullen rapped one swift time across the bridge of Jesse’s nose with it. Stunned, Jesse dropped like a rock.
His two sons stood paralyzed with the shock of seeing their father collapse and Cullen was quick to take advantage of it. “Unbuckle those gun belts, both of you.” With his .44 trained on them, they offered no resistance. After laying his slab of bacon on the bar, Cullen took both belts, then picked up Jesse’s gun. “Pick your pa up and get him out of here. Take him home and he’ll be all right,” he ordered, while covering them with his Colt. “There ain’t gonna be no killin’ here today. And if you’re smart, you’ll just forget about gettin’ even for your brother’s mistake. He made a play that didn’t work out for him. Don’t you make the same mistake.” Still numb with shock from the way the confrontation with McCabe turned upside down, Joe and Samson helped their father to his feet. Jesse, unsteady and confused by the blow to the bridge of his nose, staggered out the door with the support of his sons. They managed to get him up in the saddle, and he promptly fell forward to lie on his horse’s neck. Still covered with flour, he looked like a ghost lying there. Watching the process from the boardwalk in front of the store, Cullen said, “I’m gonna leave your weapons with the sheriff and tell him to let you have them back tomorrow.” There was no reply from either of the boys, and Jesse was still too groggy to respond. Cullen continued to watch them until they rode out the end of the street. It occurred to him then that he hadn’t taken their rifles from their saddles. I hope to hell they don’t think about that, he thought.
“I reckon you’re gonna need some more flour,” Thornton commented, standing in the doorway of the store. “Maybe some bacon, too.”
“Reckon so,” Cullen replied, “flour, anyway. The bacon looks okay. I’ll just cut that bullet hole out of it—might flavor it up a little bit.”
“I’ll tell you what,” Thornton said. “I won’t charge you for another sack of flour. That coulda been a bad situation back there, and I wanna thank you for preventing a gunfight in my store.”
“’Preciate it,” Cullen said. “Now, I expect I’d better get movin’. I’m takin’ the road outta here to Austin, and that’s the same road they just took to go home. If you don’t mind, you can get me another sack of flour and I’ll take these guns to the sheriff while you’re doin’ that.” He started walking down the street at once and called back over his shoulder, “Sorry ’bout the mess I made in your store.”
Still standing in the door, Thornton looked back inside. “Don’t worry about that,” he said, “Clara’s already sweeping it up.”
Sheriff Calvin Woods was just in the process of locking his office door as he hurried to investigate the shot he had heard several minutes before. Seeing Cullen approaching, he feared it was to report another killing in his town. When Cullen told him what had taken place, the sheriff also expressed his appreciation to him for avoiding a shoot-out with Jesse Tice and his sons. Cullen left the weapons with him, then returned to the store to tie all his purchases on his packhorse. Ronald Thornton stood outside and watched while he readied his horses to ride. When Cullen stepped up into the saddle, Thornton felt prompted to comment. “It looks like Jesse Tice ain’t gonna let it rest till he either gets you, or you cut him down.”
“It looks that way, doesn’t it?” Cullen replied. “I reckon killin’ a man’s son is a sure way to make him an enemy.” He wheeled the big bay away from the hitching rail and set out for Austin.
Thornton’s wife was waiting for him when he came back in the store. “Well, you don’t know any more about that man than you did before, do ya?” She shook her head impatiently. “You and Leon Armstrong are gonna have to get together to gossip over McCabe’s visit to town today, I suppose,” she said, referring to the many discussions the two had already had, trying to figure out the man’s business. “I’m not sure I like to see him come in the store,” she concluded as she pointed to a bullet hole in the floor. “It seems like everywhere he goes, somebody starts shootin’.”
“In all fairness, Hon,” Ronald pointed out, “it’s people shootin’ at him, and not the other way around.”
“I don’t care,” she said. “It like to scared me to death. I was sure one of us was gonna get killed, and right now I’ve gotta go to the house and change my drawers.”
Thinking it not smart to take another chance on a showdown with Jesse and his boys, Cullen nudged Jake into an easy lope as he set out on the road to Austin. He remembered all too well the day he was forced to shoot Sonny Tice. At the sheriff ’s urging, he had hurried out of town, only to find that the trail to the Tice ranch forked off the road to Austin a couple of miles north of Two Forks. He had managed to pass that trail before they found out he was heading to Austin. It was his intention to do the same today. As he rocked in the saddle to Jake’s easy gait, he kept a sharp eye on the road ahead of him. In a short while, he came to the trail leading off to the west and the Tice ranch. He rode past it with no incident, so he hoped that would be the end of it. Time would tell, he told himself, but he was not going to count on it. He had not only killed Jesse’s son, but what might be worse for a man like Jesse Tice was the fact that he had made a fool of him twice. There was also the matter of three horses Cullen had taken from the ambush site. There ain’t no doubt, he told himself, that old bastard has plenty of reason to come after me.

CHAPTER TWO
It was time to be thinking about some supper by the time he rode into the capitol city of Austin, but he decided it best to take care of his horses first. So, he rode past the capitol building to the stable at the end of the street, operated by a man he knew simply as Burnett. He stepped down from the saddle at the stable door. Having seen him ride up, Burnett walked out to meet him. “Mr. McCabe,” he greeted him. “You ain’t got no horses to sell this time,” he said, glancing past Cullen to see only the one packhorse.
“No, I reckon not,” Cullen answered. “Ain’t run across any lately. I’d like to leave these two with you overnight. And I’d like to sleep with ’em, if you don’t charge too much.”
“Sure,” Burnett said with a wide smile. “I reckon I charge a little bit less than the hotel does, unless you want clean sheets.” He chuckled in appreciation for his humor.
“I ’preciate it,” Cullen said. “Maybe you could recommend a good place to get some supper. Last time I was in town, I ate in the dinin’ room of that hotel near the capitol, and it wasn’t to my likin’.”
“You shoulda asked me last time,” Burnett said. “I woulda told you to go to Pot Luck. That’s a little restaurant run by Rose Bettis between here and the capitol building. That’s where I go when I take a notion I don’t wanna cook for myself, the Pot Luck Restaurant.”
“Restaurant,” Cullen repeated. “That sounds kinda fancy.” He thought of the place where Michael O’Brien had taken him to breakfast before and all the diners dressed up in suits and ties. Since Burnett said it was back the way he had just come, he commented. “Sounds like I shoulda noticed it on my way down here.”
Burnett laughed. “Nah, Pot Luck ain’t fancy. It’s anything but. It’s just a little place next to the hardware store. I ain’t surprised you didn’t notice it, but if you’re lookin’ for good food at a fair price, then that’s the place to go.”
“I’ll take your word for it,” Cullen said. He followed Burnett into the stables, leading his horses. He unloaded his packhorse and stacked his packs in the corner of a stall. After checking Jake’s and the sorrel’s hooves, and finding them in good shape, he asked Burnett what time he should be back before the stables were locked up for the night.
“You’ve got plenty of time,” Burnett assured him. “I don’t usually leave here till after seven o’clock. I ain’t got a wife to go home to, so I ain’t in any hurry to go home.” Cullen told him he would surely be back before then and started for the door. “Tell Rose I sent you,” Burnett called after him.
He found Pot Luck next to the hardware store, and he was not surprised that he had not noticed it when he rode past before. A tiny building crammed between the hardware store and a barbershop, the name POT LUCK RESTAURANT was painted on a four-foot length of flat board nailed over the door. A little bell over the top of the door announced his entry when he walked in and paused to look around the small room, half of which was taken up by the kitchen. A long table with a bench on each side and a chair at each end, occupied the other half of the room. A man and a woman, the only customers, were seated at the far end of the table. They both stopped eating to stare at the man who appeared to fill the doorway completely. A short, rather chubby woman standing at the stove, whom he assumed to be Rose, turned to greet him when she heard the doorbell. She paused a moment when she saw him before she brushed a stray strand of dull red hair from her forehead and said, “Welcome. Come on in.” She watched him as he hesitated, still looking the place over. “Since you ain’t ever been in before, and you ain’t, ’cause I’d remember you, I’ll tell you how I operate. I don’t have no menus. I just cook one thing. It ain’t the same thing every night, but I just cook one supper—just like your mama cooked for you. Tonight, I’m servin’ lamb stew with butterbeans and biscuits, and you won’t find any better stew anywhere else in town. So you decide whether you wanna eat with me or not.” She waited then for his reaction.
“I don’t recollect if I’ve ever had lamb before, but I reckon this is a good time to try it,” he decided.
“If you don’t like it, you don’t have to pay for it,” Rose said. “’Course, that’s if you don’t eat it.”
“Fair enough,” he said.
“Set yourself down and I’ll bring you some coffee, if that’s what you want.” He nodded and she suggested, “You’d best set in the chair at the end, big as you are.” He took his hat off, offered a polite nod to the couple at the other end of the table, then sat down in the chair.
The lamb stew was as good as she had claimed it would be, and the serving was ample for a man his size. The coffee was fresh and hot and she brought extra biscuits. The price was more than fair at fifty cents, considering prices for most everything were higher in a town the size of Austin. When he was finished and paying her, he asked, “Are you open for breakfast?” She was, she said, opening at six o’clock. “Then I reckon I’ll see you in the mornin’,” he said. “By the way,” he thought to say as he opened the door, “Burnett, down at the stable, sent me here to eat.”
* * *
The night passed peacefully enough as he slept in the stall with Jake, who snorted him awake at about half past five when the big bay heard Burnett open the stable doors. Knowing Michael O’Brien usually came into his office at eight, he decided he would buy himself some breakfast at Pot Luck before he saddled up for the day. He was sure he would prefer eating breakfast with Rose than going to breakfast with O’Brien at the Capitol Diner, where all the customers were dressed up like lawyers. As it turned out, Burnett went to breakfast with him and they took their time drinking coffee afterward. It was a rare occasion for Cullen, but he had to kill a lot of time before O’Brien would be in. Rose’s breakfast was as good as her supper had been, so Cullen knew where he would be eating every time he came to Austin in the future. And that would depend upon whether or not he still had a job as special agent for the governor. He still could not know for sure how long the arrangement would last. Granted, he had received nothing but satisfied responses so far, but knowing it to be an unusual position with no formal contract, it could end at any time.
After leaving Pot Luck, he went back to the stable, loaded his packhorse, and rode back to the capitol building. He was still a little early for O’Brien, but Benny Thacker, O’Brien’s secretary, was in the office, so he took a seat in the outer office and waited. He refused the offer of a cup of coffee from Benny, since he had drunk what seemed like a gallon of it at Pot Luck. He sat there for about fifteen minutes, conscious of the frequent glances from O’Brien’s elfin secretary. He wondered why the shy little man seemed to be so intimidated by him. Then he recalled the last time he had been in the office. He had walked in just as Benny was coming out and they accidentally collided, the result of which nearly knocked Benny to the floor. Further thoughts were interrupted when O’Brien walked in the door. He started to give Benny some instructions but turned to discover Cullen sitting just inside the door when Benny pointed to him. “Cullen McCabe!” O’Brien exclaimed. “Just the man I wanna see. Have you been here long?” Before Cullen could answer, he asked, “Have you had your breakfast?” He hurried over and extended his hand. When Cullen shook it, and said that he had already eaten, O’Brien said, “Benny could have at least gotten you a cup of coffee while you waited.”
“He offered one,” Cullen said, “but I’ve had more than I needed this mornin’. Thanks just the same.” Impatient now, he was anxious to get down to business. “Have you got a job for me?”
“Yes, sir, I sure do,” O’Brien answered. “But first, let me tell you Governor Hubbard is well pleased with the success of this arrangement.” He winked and said, “You did a helluva job in New Hope. He’s started claiming that the creation of your job was his idea, even though it was mine right from the start. Nobody had even thought about appointing a special agent, who reports only to the governor until I suggested it.” Without a pause, he went right into the reason for his summons. “This is a special assignment the governor wants you to investigate this time. So let’s go on in and I’ll let Governor Hubbard explain the job.”
Cullen followed O’Brien into the governor’s office and the governor got up from his desk and walked around it to shake hands with Cullen. “Cullen McCabe,” Hubbard greeted him just as O’Brien had. “I’m glad to see you,” he said. “I was afraid my wire hadn’t reached you.” He smiled warmly. “I’m glad to see you got it.” He motioned Cullen to a seat on a sofa, while he sat down in an armchair facing him. “The job I’ve called you in for is one of special personal interest to me.” He paused then to interrupt himself. “You’re doing one helluva job, by the way,” he said, then continued without waiting for Cullen to respond. “This is a slightly different situation than the problems you’ve handled up to now. We’ve got a little situation about a hundred and twenty five miles northwest of here between a couple of towns on Walnut Creek.”
“Where’s that?” Cullen interrupted, not having heard of it.
“Walnut Creek is a healthy creek that runs through the Walnut Valley. It’s a branch of the Colorado River. I’m sending you to a little town on the west side of that creek, called Ravenwood. It was named for a man who owns many acres of land next to the creek, Judge Harvey Raven. He gave the land for the town to the county officials, along with about one hundred acres for county government business. Of course, the idea was to make Ravenwood the county seat. The problem, though, was that there was already a town of sorts on the east side of the creek, where a lot of settlers had farms and homes. They didn’t like it much when the county took Raven’s offer. Next thing you know, they started having trouble about the water rights. One thing led to another, and pretty soon there were some shots exchanged between the folks that built up Ravenwood and those that wanted the town left on the east side of the creek. So the east side folks created their own town and called it East City.”
The governor rambled at length about the troubles between the two towns, a characteristic Cullen assumed common to all politicians, but he wondered what it had to do with him. “What, exactly, is it you want me to do?” He asked when Hubbard paused for breath.
“I’m getting to that,” Hubbard said. “The problem lies in East City. It’s become a town of saloons, brothels, and gambling halls. The mayor contacted my office. East City’s crime is spilling over to the other side of the creek, so the folks in Ravenwood partitioned my office for help, also. I sent a delegation up there to meet with the city officials. They concluded that the town was justified in their complaints, but they couldn’t recommend any plan of action to improve the situation. We sent a company of Rangers up there to maintain the peace. They set up a camp and stayed for three days. And for three days everything was peaceful. As soon as they left, East City went back to business as usual.”
“Ain’t there any law in the towns?” Cullen asked.
“Yes, there is,” the governor answered, “in both towns. Ravenwood has a sheriff and East City has a marshal and a deputy. The problem is, the East City marshal seems to be in control of the whole town, and is nothing more than an outlaw, himself. And the town has become a haven for every other outlaw on the run in Texas. As far as we know, the sheriff in Ravenwood is an honest man.”
“What do you expect me to do,” Cullen asked, “if the Rangers couldn’t fix the problem?”
The governor glanced at O’Brien and winked. “What you always do,” he answered then. “What you did in New Hope and Bonnie Creek, look into the situation and see if there’s anything you can do to improve it.”
Cullen shook his head and thought about all Hubbard had just told him. “I don’t know,” he said, not at all optimistic about reforming two towns. It sounded to him that the governor needed a negotiator, and that label didn’t fit him. The next best thing was to make one of the towns a permanent Ranger headquarters, and he was about to suggest that when O’Brien interrupted.
“Just ride up there and look the situation over,” O’Brien said. “We trust your eyes more than the Rangers. If nothing else, you can at least report back with a more detailed presentation of the facts.”
Cullen shrugged and shook his head again. “Well, I can do that, I reckon. It’s your money. I’ll see what I can do.”
“Good man,” Hubbard exclaimed with a grin. “I knew I could count on you. There’s a check for your expenses already in the bank. You can pick up your money today. Think you’ll be ready to leave in the morning?”
“I expect I’ll leave today, just as soon as I pick up my money at the bank,” Cullen said.
“Excellent!” Hubbard responded. “Come, I’ll show you where you’re going.” He walked over to the large state map on the wall and pointed to two small dots that looked to be in the very center of the state. Cullen stood for a few minutes studying the route he would take, noting the rivers and streams. When he was satisfied with the way he would start out, he turned and said he was ready to go. “It’s early yet,” the governor stated. “If you’ll need a little time to get ready to go, maybe you’d like to have dinner with me.”
“Thanks just the same,” Cullen responded, “but I’m ready to go now, soon as I pick up the money at the bank.” He didn’t think he’d be comfortable eating with the governor. He imagined it would be more awkward than it had been with O’Brien in the Capitol Diner. He shook hands with both of them and took his leave after they wished him a good trip.
O’Brien and the governor stood at the office doorway and watched Cullen until he reached the end of the hall and disappeared down the stairs. “Might be a waste of time sending him up there,” O’Brien commented.
“Maybe,” Hubbard said, “but I’ve got a lot of confidence in that man. Besides, it’s a helluva lot cheaper than sending a company of Rangers back there for who knows how long.”