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The next morning, Longarm arose at first light and got his horses saddled and ready to ride. Victoria was sleeping like a baby and he felt sorry to awaken her but there was little choice. Down in this country, the outlaw trail could run cold in a hurry, and Longarm still wasn’t entirely convinced that Bass wouldn’t cross the border into Mexico.

It was a hard twenty-five-mile ride down to the border town of Nogales, and both Longarm as well as Victoria were badly worn down by the dust and oppressive heat by the time they had boarded their horses and found a suitable hotel room. After a meal of beans, tortillas, and warm beer, they went to bed and slept until after dark. Then Longarm got up and prepared to go out hunting for Bass.

“You’re going to have to stay here,” he said. “These streets are no place for a decent woman.”

“But …”

“If I took you around to the places I’m going to visit,” Longarm interrupted, “I’d be fighting off crowds of men. No, Victoria, I insist.”

“But what if you run into Bass and are shot?”

“If I don’t come back tonight, come looking for me in the morning. Pay a couple of tough-looking men well to protect you and make your first stop at the undertaker’s. But don’t worry, I’ll find Hank Bass and he’s the one that will be getting his ticket punched for Boot Hill.”

“You sound so confident.”

“I guess I do,” Longarm admitted. “The fact of the matter is that I don’t allow myself to think about getting shot and killed. If I did … well, I just don’t.”

Victoria kissed him good-bye, and when Longarm got to the door, he said, “Keep this door locked. Under no circumstances allow anyone in but me. Is that understood?”

“Yes, of course.”

“And keep your gun handy.”

“I will,” she promised. “Please come back to me, Custis.”

“Count on it,” he vowed. “But if something should happen to me and-“

“It won’t!”

“But if it did. You go back to the livery and get the liveryman to saddle our horses. Then ride like hell back to where you came from and never look back.”

“I’m not sure that I could leave you behind.”

“Just do it!” Longarm ordered. “You promised you’d obey my orders if I let you come along. I expect you to keep your promise just as I’ve kept mine.”

“All right.”

Longarm left their hotel room and did not walk away from the door until he heard the distinct snap of the dead bolt in its lock. Satisfied, he headed out on the town. Nogales was just as wild and lawless on one side of the border as it was on the other. Longarm knew that he would be well advised to keep his hat pulled down low and his six-gun resting light in his holster. Above all, he needed to keep his United States marshal’s badge under cover.

Chapter 19

Longarm was in a deadly frame of mind as he prowled the American side of the border. He kept thinking about Jimmy Cox and how badly he’d been tortured before being killed. And about Victoria and how Hank Bass had fed her to his men like so much meat to dogs. One thing for sure, he would have no qualms about killing Bass on sight.

Saloons and cantinas lined the shabby streets of Nogales. Whores, drunks, gamblers, pimps, and all manner of degenerates prowled the dirty streets. Longarm kept his chin down when men saw him coming; they parted so that he could pass.

His routine was always the same. He would enter a saloon, order a whiskey, and take a sip. Then he’d lay a dollar down and tell the bartender, “I’m looking for Hank Bass. There’s twenty more of these if you can help me find him.”

No one could, until Longarm asked that same question at the Blanco Bar, one of the area’s most notorious watering holes known to be frequented by cutthroats, thieves, and murderers.

“What do you want to see that bastard for?” the bartender asked under his breath.

“I have a score to settle with him,” Longarm said, pretty sure this man’s hatred for Bass was genuine.

“So do I,” the bartender replied, “but I don’t have any urge to die. Do you?”

“I can handle my own business,” Longarm said. “Just point him out to me.”

“He’s with one of our whores,” the bartender said. “He went out the back door about ten minutes ago with a girl named Rita. He should be back soon enough.”

“How is he dressed?”

“Gray Stetson hat, black shirt, and boots. Haven’t you ever seen him before?”

“Yes, but the light is poor in here.”

“You’ll be able to smell the pig,” the bartender said with contempt. “He’ll also have a bottle of whiskey in his hand and Rita’s ass in the other.”

Longarm turned toward the back of the room. “That door?” he asked, pointing.

“Yes. Now move away from here so that if he plugs you first Bass don’t get the notion that I said anything. And try not to shoot the gawdamn place up, all right?”

“I generally hit what I aim for,” Longarm told the man.

“I sure as hell hope so. That bastard beat the hell out of me and cut off my ring finger. See that?”

Longarm studied the stub. “Why?”

“He liked the ring I was wearing! I wouldn’t give it to him so he sucker punched me and cut my damn finger off to get it!”

“Why didn’t you shoot him later?”

“He’s always had a lot of friends here before. But now he’s alone. Just step in behind Bass and drill him in the back. Do whatever it takes but don’t make a mistake.”

“I won’t,” Longarm promised as he moved off toward the back of the room.

Almost ten agonizingly slow minutes passed until Hank Bass charged back inside the saloon, dragging a Mexican girl in his wake. She was sobbing and her lower lip was running with blood. Longarm stepped in between the whore and the outlaw, drawing his gun.

“You’re under arrest, Bass. Don’t move or I’ll put a slug in you quicker than you can bat your eye.”

Bass was even bigger than Longarm, but hard living and heavy drinking had ruined his appearance. Even so, there was an animal-like quality about him that Longarm had seen in only the worst types of men.

“You’re a lawman?”

“Head for the front door under your own power, or be carried out by an undertaker,” Longarm said in a low, cold voice. “Your choice, Hank.”

“Hey!” Hank shouted. “This son of a bitch that is trying to arrest me is a United States marshal! Anyone in here like lawmen?”

Longarm realized his mistake at once. He should have pistol-whipped or even shot Hank Bass the moment he came through the back door. Now he was about to pay for his mistake.

“We’re going out back,” Longarm hissed, grabbing Bass by the shirt and dragging him toward the rear door. “Come on!”

But the outlaw wasn’t about to be pulled out into the rear alley. He struggled and would have broken free if Longarm hadn’t pistol-whipped him across the forehead so hard that his eyes crossed and his legs buckled.

“Stay back!” Longarm shouted as the mean-spirited crowd edged forward. “I mean it!”

Longarm wrapped his left arm right around Hank Bass’s neck and held off the crowd with his six-gun as he struggled out the back door. But no sooner was he outside than the crowd charged the door, and Longarm had no choice but to haul Bass up on his toes and open fire.

He didn’t know how many men fell under his gun, but it must have been several. Longarm did know that Bass took a fusillade of bullets to his chest and belly and was leaking like a sieve by the time he could drag him around the building and empty his pockets of whatever Spanish gold coins remained. There weren’t many, maybe twenty or so, but Longarm collected them as best he could in the darkness, then he sprinted off hearing shouts and more gunfire.

He wasted no more time and took no more chances. With a half dozen good lawmen, he might have stood a chance of cleaning out this festering hole of humanity. But by himself Longarm knew that he stood no chance at all. So he circled around to the front of the hotel, sprinted to their room, and pounded on the door.