“Please don’t talk like that. You’re a professional, for goodness sakes.”
Longarm stared at her. Would he ever cease to be surprised by this girl?
Scowling his amazement, he said, “Just the other night you were callin’ me…”
She silenced him with a cold, admonishing stare. Looking around to make sure none of the other passengers was listening, she leaned forward to say just loudly enough for him to hear above the low roar of the coach car, its iron wheels clacking over the rail seams, “Would you please stop bringing that up? How was I supposed to know you and I would be working together? Imagine my horror!”
“Ah, come on,” Longarm said, digging a small, flat traveling flask from his coat pocket. “It ain’t all that bad. You’re obviously a hardworking agent. If you weren’t, there ain’t no way ole Allan would have you on his role.”
“God, do you have to speak in that fashion?”
“Like what? Hell, I didn’t even curse that time.”
“In that lowly, country manner, is what I meant. You are a deputy United States marshal, Marshal Long. A professional lawman. You should speak like a man worthy of his station.”
Longarm studied her, trying not to take offense. He knew few other men who didn’t speak like he did. Those who didn’t were overeducated twerps or bankers. One and the same. You could throw attorneys on the same pile. She must have been spawned by one of those, so he’d have to give her a little leeway. Besides, it was hard to take umbrage with one so sexy and downright, soul-searingly beautiful, even if she was fully aware of her assets.
“As I was sayin’,” Longarm said, trying to keep his impatience out of his voice, “you’re obviously a hardworking agent. Just like hardworking men, includin’ myself, you like to let your hair down once in a while. Nothin’ wrong with it.”
She drew a frustrated breath and returned her gaze to the soot-stained window.
Longarm flicked the top off the travel flask and held it out to her. “Here, have a snort o’ rye. Take the knot out of your panties.”
She scowled at him. “I don’t drink when I’m on the job.”
“You ain’t on the job. You’re on a train. Have a sip. Take the edge off.”
“No, thank you. Don’t you think we should perhaps discuss the case we’re on?”
Longarm took two swallows from the travel flask, exhaled a long, satisfied breath, shoved the cork back in the flask’s mouth, and returned it to his coat pocket. “Let’s do that, though we have a ways to go before we roll into New Mexico. We could see if this combination’s pullin’ a saloon car, have us a couple of snorts back there and play a round of Red Dog.”
“I neither drink nor gamble when I’m on the job.”
“Which reminds me—why’d they send you out on this one?” Longarm leaned back in his seat and hiked a boot on his knee. “I assume the Pinkerton ladies mostly work undercover, don’t they? I don’t see much need for ‘assuming a role’ here, as Pinkerton calls it.”
“True, that’s why Mr. Pinkerton originally began hiring female agents, but I do much more than assume roles, Marshal Long. I’m a detective, and I’m very good at it. As good as any of the men I know inside or outside of the service. Besides, I just happened to be the most indisposed agent closest to Denver at the time of the killings. That’s probably why they gave me the assignment.”
“I see no reason why you shouldn’t go ahead and call me Longarm, since we know each other better than most folks ever get around to.” He grinned.
She drew a deep breath and blinked her eyes, coolly tolerant. “Look, you mastodon. You must forget what happened back in Leadville. It certain will not be repeated. Not in the near future, not ever. We are two professionals working together, and that is all we are. So I will appreciate it if you’d respect me for the professional that I am and treat me accordingly. In exchange, I will do the same for you.”
Longarm plucked the flask out of his coat pocket again, giving a weary sigh. “Oh, all right. I reckon I’ll try to see it your way. There are five lawmen dead, after all.” As he popped the cork on the flask, he glanced at the well-filled corset of her traveling dress made of some shiny, spruce-green material. “But you’ll forgive me if it takes a while for me to forget two nights ago. That there was a tussle and a half!”
He tipped his head back, let the soothing rye wash down his throat, into his belly and deeper, into the regions where he’d been fighting a hard-on ever since he’d seen her again in Billy Vail’s office, of all places.
Haven’s cheeks reddened. She fought off the flush, however, and entwined her hands in her lap, beside the feathered green picture hat resting beside her supple left thigh. The manila folder containing the report rested against her opposite leg.
“Now, then, since our relationship has been clarified, let’s get down to brass tacks, shall we? I read a copy of the ranger’s report on my journey from Leadville, but it’s pretty thin, not to mention nearly illiterate. In your meeting with Marshal Vail, did he mention anything about the rangers having any suspicions as to who might have shot their men and the deputy marshals?”
“Billy didn’t say. But if it’s not in the report there, I reckon it’s a subject we’ll have to cover when we get to the ranger post in Broken Jaw. I know a few of the boys down there. They’re likely hell-bent on finding the men who shot their pards, and they’ll most likely want to be the ones who serve up the gun justice good and hot, but they’ll be as helpful as they can be.”
“If they had been able to serve up this gun justice, as you call it, they probably would have by now. Which means they must be pretty much in the dark about who killed those men.”
“Most likely.” Longarm sat back in his seat, tipped his hat brim down over his eyes. The rye had worked its magic on him. “Well, if you’ll forgive me, I reckon it’s time for a nap. We got a long pull ahead. Figured we’d ride horses from Belen. The train south of there is notoriously slow and the Southern Pacific west through Broken Jaw ain’t quite finished yet.”
He squinted one eye at her beneath his hat. “You can ride a horse, can’t you?”
“Of course I can ride. Just as well as you, Marshal Long.”
“Well, proof of that will be in the puddin’,” he said, chuckling ironically. “But I do apologize. This is the first time I’ve been paired up with a woman. I mean, professionally, of course.”
“Of course.” Haven rolled her eyes in disgust.
“Since I have my hoof in my mouth, anyway, I might as well go ahead and ask you if you have proper riding attire. That dress…while it does fit you dang nice…would be a little uncomfortable—”
“You worry about your own proper attire, Deputy,” she said crisply, “and I’ll worry about mine.”
“All right, all right.” Longarm pulled his hat down lower on his forehead. The improbability of their situation continued to amaze him, and he realized he was grinning again when he heard her say, “I realize this is all very amusing to you, Deputy Long, but I really must insist that you put the other night behind you. I know I have.”
He opened his left eye and was about to respond that he was dearly trying to do just that but held his tongue when he saw a group of men in dusty leather trail gear studying him and Agent Delacroix from their seats a few rows up from Longarm and on the left side of the aisle. Most of their attention was on the girl, of course, and they weren’t so much studying Haven as ogling her.
Speaking just loudly enough to be heard above the train’s irregular roar, he said, “Watch yourself.”
She’d immersed herself in the file but looked up at him curiously. He lifted his chin to indicate her admirers. She turned her head to follow his gaze, then turned back to him and gazed down once more at the open folder in her lap.