The very real prospect that he might have to head back to Denver with his tail between his legs and his hat in his hands to detail his failure at finding neither the killers nor the gold to Billy Vail sobered him right quick.
He couldn’t let that happen. He was the best lawdog in Billy’s stable, by God, and he wasn’t about to let the chief marshal down.
Remembering why he’d wanted to rise well before the sun—to follow whoever rode out of the ranch yard before first light, ostensibly to rendevous with someone else in the Double D’s conspiracy of killers—he quickly pulled on his socks and then gathered the rest of his clothes from where they hung from wall spikes.
He rinsed out his mouth with a mouthful of rye, which he swallowed because it was a sin to waste good Tom Moore. He donned his hat, adjusted the angle, and headed on out of the shack with his saddlebags draped over one shoulder, loaded Winchester resting on the other. He paused, adjusted his crotch with a wince. Vonda had chafed him good.
As he strode up past the main house toward the yard, he brushed his thumb across his right vest pocket. His double-barreled derringer was there, opposite the old, dented railroad watch to which it was attached with a gold-washed chain.
Out here, not knowing for certain sure that he had a target on his back, he’d needed every weapon close and ready.
The house was dark though a fire rose from a stone hearth over the kitchen. Longarm knew that the Mexican housekeeper was probably stoking the stove in preparation for breakfast and that she probably had coffee boiling. The thought made his stomach growl, but he ignored it. He didn’t have time for breakfast or even a cup of much-needed coffee.
He needed to find out who was riding out of the ranch yard this morning and follow him. The gent might just lead him to the man or men who’d killed the lawmen and even, possibly, to some answers concerning the fate of the stolen gold. It might just be that Stretch’s entire payroll was in on the killings, but Longarm needed some hard evidence before he started trying to arrest up to twenty curly wolves.
That Stretch was the “boss” mentioned by the two men he’d eavesdropped on last night, Longarm had little doubt. Mrs. Azrael might be in on it, too—she seemed rougher than a dry-wash floor bristling with coiled rattlers—but there was little doubt in Longarm’s mind that her son was the one in charge.
At the moment, whoever was due to ride out of the ranch yard was his first real lead to substantiation of his suspicions. He couldn’t let the man leave without shadowing him to see where he went and whom he visited. To make sure he didn’t miss him, he’d ride out first and keep an eye on the trail to the east, since east was where most of the mischief had been taking place.
“Sleep well?”
The female voice rose out of the shadows near the house’s west front corner. It stopped Longarm in his tracks, and he was about to drop his saddlebags and raise his Winchester, heart thudding, when he saw Haven’s slender, duster-clad figure walking gracefully toward him from his left. Her duster flaps were drawn back behind the handles of her matched LeMats, as though she was preparing to wield the savage blasters.
“Where’n the hell did you come from?” he asked through a growl. He didn’t like being spooked.
“Got up early, took a walk around. Never know what you’ll turn up if you keep your nose to the ground.” She stopped and stood with her boots spread wide, hands in her duster pockets. “I asked you if you slept well.”
“The cot was a little hard,” he said, wobbling his head around. “Got a stiff neck.”
“Maybe that’s from wrestling with the little catamount known as Vonda Azrael. You know—Stretch’s wife?”
Longarm glowered at her.
Haven said, “I saw her heading back to the house after midnight. Skipping.”
Longarm gave a sidelong look. “You were keeping an eye on me.”
“Not a chance. Couldn’t sleep. Needed a little air.”
Longarm felt genuinely chagrined. His shoulders slumped beneath the weight of his saddlebags, his rifle, and his guilt. “I thought she was you.”
She wrinkled her brows skeptically, as though he’d just told her that he and Stretch’s wife had spent their time together reading Bible verses.
“That’s a steel-tight, copper-riveted fact,” he insisted, keeping his voice down. “Only, when we was done—”
“Look, it doesn’t matter. Congratulations. Another conquest. I’d just hoped you were smarter than to get yourself involved with the woman of the man we’re most likely…” She stopped and looked around at the dark house and shadowy yard, as though to make sure they were alone. “Most likely after,” she finished.
Her tone burned him. Who the hell did she think she was? His boss?
“It was after hours. She threw herself at me.” Longarm continued around the house’s garden wall, heading for the main yard and the barn. “You stay here today. I’m headin’ out alone.”
“Do you think that’s wise?”
Longarm turned to her. “Lady, I always work alone. I shoulda come down here alone. Women are trouble. Always have been, always will be.”
“Only because you have a tendency to make us trouble.”
“I’d love to palaver, but…”
He started to turn away again, but she stopped him with: “What am I supposed to do?”
“What you do best, Agent Delacroix. Investigate. Watch your back, ’cause someone’s done etched a bull’s-eye on mine.” He continued striding toward the barn in which his horse was stabled. “Don’t wait up, hear?”
He continued on into the barn, where he found the hostler, a middle-aged man in suspenders, denim jacket, and floppy-brimmed black hat, forking hay to the stabled horses.
“You’re up early,” he muttered, giving Longarm the suspicious eye as he forked another bunch of hay from a pile beneath a door to the upper loft.
“Figured I’d give the roan a little run.”
“You think you’re gonna find that stolen gold,” the hostler said.
“Don’t you?”
The roan was enjoying breakfast, so Longarm decided to smoke a stogie and wait. The man wasn’t that old, but he had gnarled, arthritic fingers, which was why he’d likely been relegated to barn chores. “Nope. That gold ain’t there. If it ever was there, it’s gone by now.”
Longarm bit the end off his cigar. “How’re you so sure?”
“’Cause I ain’t an idjit. Santana didn’t have time to hide it that well. Them draws where the Apaches pinned him down done been scoured by every ranch hand who ever worked for the Double D. I for one have been out there…oh…a good fifty times or more. Every free day over the first couple of years after the holdup.”
The hostler chuckled as he scraped hay off his fork with a stall partition behind which two matched sorrels—likely buggy horses—ground their breakfast and snorted eagerly for more. Longarm’s roan was still munching oats from a trough and nudging the tin water vessel hanging from a nail, making tinny scraping sounds. The barn, in fact, was filled with the sounds of horses eating and switching their tails contentedly.
“If it was there, I’d have found it. Or one of the old desert rats who also scoured them draws.”
“I suppose you were going to turn it in for the reward money,” Longarm said, standing in the barn’s open doorway and looking out at the yard as he smoked. He smiled foxily over his shoulder at the hostler.
“Somethin’ like that,” the man said with another wry chuckle.
Longarm drew deep on his cigar and watched a couple of men stirring out front of the bunkhouse on his right. They were yawning and stretching. One was strapping his spurs on while another wrapped two holstered six-shooters around his waist.