At the east side of Doc Clayburn’s building, Lassiter, still keeping a gun trained on Sanlee, ordered him to dismount.
“Tie the horses,” Lassiter ordered brusquely.
Sanlee scowled, but obeyed. Then Lassiter forced him to walk very slowly, his hands raised shoulder high, around to the street and the front entrance to the medical office.
Aplump Mexican woman was sitting on a stool discussing some problem with the doctor. When Sanlee and Lassiter entered the office, a look of fear touched her plump dark face at sight of the drawn gun.
“We’re not going to hurt you, señora,” Lassiter said softly in Spanish. “Leave now, if you will. You can see the doctor later.”
She scurried out of the building, not looking back. Doc Clayburn, looking unutterably weary, sank to the stool so recently occupied by the woman. “What’s your next move, Lassiter? Kill us both?”
“I want you to write out the truth, Doc. You didn’t see me murder Buck Rooney. You weren’t anywhere near the spot where he was killed that day.”
“And if I refuse?”
Sanlee, who had been glaring at the doctor, now relaxed and a faint smile appeared on his bearded lips. Sweat showed through the coarse, reddish hair where his hat was tipped back. He started to lower his hands, but Lassiter jabbed him in the back with the gun barrel. He lifted them again.
“I think you’re a fair man, Doc,” Lassiter said. “An honest man. Sanlee has some hold over you. I don’t know what it is. You tell me.”
Sanlee gave a short laugh. “I offered Lassiter $10,000 to clear out. Can you figure him turnin’ it down, Doc? An’ now he’s got you to point the finger at him for killin’ Rooney. Maybe Lassiter don’t know it, but he’s already got one foot on the gallows’ steps.”
“You don’t have to be afraid of Sanlee,” Lassiter said patiently to Doc Clayburn. “Because after you tell the truth about Rooney, I figure to blow him outta his boots.”
“Back in New York a man was seeing my wife. I caught him. We shot it out. I was the lucky one and he was dead. But the man had powerful friends. I had to run.”
“Pick up a pen and write what you just told me—and the rest of it,” Lassiter said over Sanlee’s shoulder.
“Maybe I should go back to New York and face up to it after all these years.” Doc Clayburn gave Sanlee a tired smile. “What do you think, Brad?”
“Doc, you better not even think about it,” Sanlee said coldly. But there was an edge of worry in the voice. Lassiter carefully stepped around Sanlee so he could see the man’s eyes. There was a definite wariness in the gray depths. Lassiter smiled.
“Doc, will you tell the truth about Rooney?” Lassiter asked the man slumped on the stool. “If you shot that man in a fair fight . . .”
“I did.”
“Then your conscience is clear.”
“But there are others to consider—my daughter, my grandchildren.” Clayburn looked up. There were hollows under his eyes and his mouth sagged. “I can’t do it, Lassiter.”
“Don’t tell me I figured you wrong, Doc,” Lassiter said quietly.
“Lassiter, you’ve got a chance. Take it and get out.” Clayburn’s voice shook. “You can’t stand up against Diamond Eight. Nobody can. Brad Sanlee has got this county sewed up in his own private bag. Go ahead. You’ve got a weapon. Sanlee is unarmed. It’s your one chance.”
“You heard him, Lassiter,” Sanlee said with a laugh.
Lassiter said, “All right, if Doc won’t help me, then I’ve only got you. I can start on you, Sanlee, and work my way up till you shout the truth about Buck Rooney. Shout it loud enough so they can hear you all the way uptown!”
“What’d you mean when you said work your way up?” Sanlee demanded suspiciously, his tongue tip snaking through the beard to lick his lower lip.
“It means I’ll start at the kneecap. If a bullet there doesn’t loosen your tongue, then I’ll bust a hip bone. Next a couple of ribs. I think about then you’ll scream to high heaven that I didn’t have one damn thing to do with killin’ Buck Rooney.”
“You ain’t the kind to do that to a man,” Sanlee sneered. But it failed to carry to the gray eyes.
Lassiter stared hard at his captive, then finally gave a short laugh. “I reckon maybe you’re right, Sanlee. Doc, have you got a spare gun?”
Clayburn looked up with a frown. “I have, but . . .”
“Give it to Sanlee,” he said in a hard voice. “Then the two of us will step into the street. And only one of us will walk away.”
Clayburn thought about it for a moment, then got up from the stool and stumbled over to a desk. He reached for a drawer, which drew a warning from Lassiter. “Careful, Doc. Just open it real easy. No tricks.”
Clayburn nodded. His hand shook so that the drawer rattled when he opened it. Reaching in, he withdrew a .45-caliber gun with black grips, holding it by the barrel so the tall man with the cold blue eyes wouldn’t misjudge his intent. The weapon thumped against the desk top as he laid it down.
At that moment, riders suddenly appeared in the street in front of the building, the brown dust from their horses billowing against the clearing sky. Lassiter looked out to see Luis Herrera and his vaqueros dismounting. Herrera bounded into the doctor’s office, his white teeth gleaming under his mustache.
“Señora Aguilar, she tell me where you are, Lassiter!” Herrera said, referring to Doc Clayburn’s recent patient. Then Herrera looked at Sanlee, white-faced and standing with his hands lifted. “Ah, you have defanged the snake,” Herrera said in Spanish.
Five vaqueros, all the crew Box C had left, were staring at the tableau.
“My wife, she fetch us,” Herrera was explaining to Lassiter as he brandished a carbine.
A few minutes earlier, five Diamond Eight men had come boiling into town by the back way and flung themselves from their horses and charged into the store.
Isobel Hartney, who had been cold with worry over Lassiter’s fate, but knowing she was helpless to do anything about it, looked up to see Pinto George, Jeddy Quine, Pete Barkley, Joe Tige and Jake Semple come rushing through the store. Isobel had been showing new corsets to some of the ladies.
“We need guns!” Pinto George shouted at her.
“Just a minute, can’t you see I’m busy?” A faint hope for Lassiter’s safety flared in her. All along, she had told herself that Brad wouldn’t dare hang him. You didn’t arrest a man, then kill him as you were taking him to jail.
“We need guns now!” George yelled and moved toward a large glass showcase with a display of revolvers and rifles.
Isobel frowned but managed a show of indignation. The ladies looked frightened, suspecting the men were drunk.
“I refuse to be shouted at,” Isobel said firmly.
Pinto George screamed, “Goddamn Lassiter took our guns and dragged ’em in sand. They ain’t worth a damn till they’re cleaned. We ain’t got time for that. He’s down at Doc’s place. We seen him go in!”
He got behind the showcase and tried to slide open the wooden doors, but they were locked. “Gimme the key!”
“Get out of here!” Isobel cried. Her two white-faced clerks were huddled in fear and confusion.
Lassiter had outwitted the bunch of them. And as Isobel stood with Lassiter’s roguish image flashing through her consciousness, Pinto George seized some tinned tomatoes and used the heavy can to start smashing in the top of her showcase. Glass shattered and shards tinkled to the floor. The ladies at the corset counter were terrified.
Pinto George and the others reached into the maw at the top of the showcase, snatching up revolvers and rifles. On a shelf in back of the gun case were boxes of cartridges, which they feverishly tore open, loading the weapons, stuffing spare shells into their pockets.
“Let’s go get that son of a bitch!” Joe Tige yelled. He shuffled toward the door, bent over because of a bulky bandage that covered his chest.
Isobel Hartney emerged from her visions of Lassiter and rushed to the door ahead of Tige. She tried to block him. “Leave Lassiter alone!”
“He killed Rooney!”
“He didn’t!” she screamed.
Joe Tige laughed in her face. By then, Pinto George, Barkley, Quine and Semple had swarmed up. They shoved her out of the way and streamed into the middle of the dusty street. Frightened faces peered at them from windows up and down the block. Far down the street, four vaqueros from Box C were standing rigidly in front of Doc Clayburn’s building, which sat alone at the edge of Santos.