Longarm straightened, walked forward, holding his left hand out for balance while he fired with his right. Hayes whooped and hollered and fired from a similar posture, his bullets flying past Longarm to thunk into the wood piled in the tender car beyond.
The wind whipped Longarm’s hat from his head. Hayes had already lost his hat, and his thin, scraggly, greasy blond hair was blowing straight back behind his bald paint. He fired his pistols, squinting his eyes, grinning, his clothes flapping madly.
Longarm’s sixth bullet nicked Hayes’s left earlobe. The killer flinched. His smile instantly became a glare. Blood dripped from the ragged bottom of his earlobe and blew away in the wind.
Hayes moved toward Longarm taking heavy, lunging steps, continuing to fire until both his gun hammers clapped tinnily against the firing pins. The outlaw leader tossed both empty guns away with a savage snarl and slid a big bowie knife from a sheath strapped to his right thigh.
Longarm holstered his Colt and shoved his hand into his right vest pocket for the double-barreled derringer he kept there, attached by a gold-washed chain to a turnip-sized railroad watch residing in the opposite pocket. Hayes was on him before he could wrap his hand around the little popper. The lawman threw both his hands up, closing the left one around Hayes’s right wrist, stopping the point of the razor-edged knife about a foot away from his throat.
He dug the fingers of his right hand into Hayes’s neck, pressing his thumb hard against the man’s prominent Adam’s apple carpeted by a two- or three-day growth of prickly, sweat-greasy, dark-brown beard. Hayes snarled, gritting his chipped yellow teeth, eyes appearing about to pop out of his head.
Longarm was bigger and stronger. He pushed the outlaw’s knife hand back and then released the man’s throat only to slam his right fist twice and with all his power against the man’s jaw, knocking it loose from its mooring.
“Unnghawww!” the broken-jawed Hayes screamed, falling back away from Longarm, dropping the bowie, and clutching his face with both hands.
Now Longarm had him. He lunged toward him to deliver the final blow and throw him from the train when the coach car dropped sharply forward, behind Longarm. The sudden descent caused Longarm to lose his footing. He fell hard against the coach roof on his back and rolled to the left, clawing at the roof for purchase, to keep from rolling off. As he did, dread rippled through him.
The sudden drop told him that the runaway train was heading down the perilously steep backside of Horse Thief Pass toward Horse Thief Gorge.
Moving as fast as they were without brakes, they’d never make it across the one-hundred-yard bridge across the gorge in one piece. The barreling train would shatter the bridge and end up—train, bridge, the innocent passengers, as well as Longarm—in blood-basted, iron-entangled debris at the bottom of Horse Thief Gorge.
Chapter 3
Longarm managed to fling one hand over the ridge of corrugated tin running along the center top of the coach car and use it to keep himself from being hurled off the speeding train and having his skull and every other bone broken amongst the rocks lining the trail.
Now, to get control of the train before it hit the bridge…
He heard someone moaning and groaning, and saw Rio Hayes lying facedown over the tin ridge. The man was trying to gain his feet.
Something dark appeared on Longarm’s right, ahead of the train but moving toward Longarm fast. It was a tunnel carved into the side of the mountain.
Longarm, hunkered low atop the coach car, stared in awe—could he get this lucky?—as the dark tunnel mouth flew toward him and the day coach he lay prone upon, both boots dangling down over the side. The peak of the arching portal was only about four feet above the coach car roof.
Longarm looked at Rio Hayes and smiled.
Hayes had just gained his feet and grabbed another bowie knife from somewhere on his scruffy person, and had turned toward Longarm, a savage scowl that, coupled with his broken jaw hanging askew, made his entire face look horsey and crooked and even more demented than usual.
Hayes hadn’t seen the tunnel when Longarm had. But now he saw that gaping, black portal rushing toward him like a gigantic black bird from some hellish underworld intending to swoop him up in its stygian wings.
Hayes had about one second to widen his eyes in awe and dismay before the tunnel turned the world dark. About one eye wink later, following a clipped scream, Longarm heard a resounding, crunching thump!
Just like that, Rio Hayes was gone.
Turned to jelly against the side of the tunnel, over the black, arching entrance. There was a clattering to Longarm’s left, toward the train’s rear. He heard it beneath the raucous din of the train echoing deafeningly off the tunnel’s close, dark walls.
When the train caromed on out the tunnel’s other side and into the blindingly bright daylight, Longarm saw what appeared a ragged, bloody bag of bones jouncing along a roof several cars back. It skidded off to the car’s south side and slithered down over the roof and out of sight, leaving a wide smear of dark red blood behind it.
“Gone but not forgotten, Rio,” Longarm muttered through a grunt, heaving himself to his feet, “you son of a bitch.”
He stared forward, past the wood tender heaped with split pine and oak, to the black iron engine with its diamond-shaped stack spewing gray smoke that billowed in ghostly snakes behind. Beyond the smokestack, the rail bed was a thin swath of iron and rock leading arrow-straight through dark green walls of forest. It dropped perilously toward a distant, gray-blue fold in the dark ridges—a fold in which the broad, deep Horse Thief Gorge lay.
Longarm knew from having taken this line before that the grade soon got even steeper before bottoming out at the bridge over the gorge. Usually through here the engineer was clamping the brake shoes taut against all wheels, just creeping along, because he knew the bridge could only withstand a speed of less than twenty miles an hour. Any more than that, the force and pressure and vibration of the locomotive and trailing cars would rattle the whole thing apart.
As Longarm dropped quickly down the ladder to the vestibule, he judged they were traveling at least thirty miles an hour and were probably picking up an extra mile an hour with every few passing seconds. The wind rush over the train was enormous, blowing the lawman’s close-cropped, dark brown hair flat against his skull.
“How come we’re going so fast?” It was the girl the Mexican had been having his way with.
She was still naked and sitting with her back to the bloody front wall of the coach car, one arm crossed on her breasts. Having seen the other doxies inside the coach car, Longarm now realized this girl was likely with them. With her other hand, she was holding her blowing hair back from her face. She looked concerned but not horrified.
“That’s what I’m gonna find out!” Longarm yelled above the screeching and clattering of the wheels over the rail seams and the incessant whooshing of the wind.
He climbed up into the tender car and crawled over the neatly stacked wood, wincing at the sharp edges of the wood digging into his bare hands and scraping his knees. Ahead, he saw the fireman and the engineer both slumped inside the locomotive. The fireman lay on the floor across from the firebox that heated the boiler. The engineer was half standing, as though he were suspended by something.
Longarm continued crawling, glancing at the engineer and then out beyond the train to the gorge that he could see opening now before him, the bridge stretching a thin, silver-brown line across it. It was a mile away but it was coming up fast. The lawman knew enough about trains to know that even this narrow-gauge affair needed at least a hundred yards to stop after the brakes were fully applied, maybe more than that considering how fast the combination was barreling down a steep pass.