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It was a district that didn’t like questions, any questions about anything, and didn’t like the people who asked them. Boag got strange looks from everyone because he was black, and hard looks from some when he asked how to find Felix Cielo and Don Pablo Ortiz; it took a long time and almost led to two shootings but in the end he got a vaquero drunk enough to direct him to Cielo’s place.

It was a fortified rancho built back in the days of almost daily Indian raids. It had everything but a moat. The walls of the hacienda were five feet thick and slitted with rifle ports; the house was built square around a courtyard and there was a water well in the center of the courtyard so that the Indians couldn’t lay siege to the place and kill anyone by thirst.

In that part of the world you measured the age of a town or a rancho by the size of its trees. Cielo’s establishment was out in the middle of a grass meadow several miles long and almost as wide; the house and its fortified outbuildings sat up on a knoll with command of sixty or seventy square miles of buffalo grass, and the trees around the hacienda threw enough shade to make it likely they had been planted by the grandfather of the present don even if he himself turned out to be a very old man.

There weren’t many cattle in sight, the grass hadn’t been grazed, and Boag saw only two men when he approached the house, both on horseback. They looked less like working vaqueros than like hardcase bodyguards. They converged toward the gateposts so that they had Boag bracketed between them when he arrived. They both had paired revolvers in crossbelted holsters, bandoleros across their shoulders and long rifles across the wide flat wooden horns of their saddles. The rifles weren’t exactly pointed at Boag.

He said he wished to see the don; he said he had been directed here by Almada of Caborca; he kept both hands empty on the pommel. He said it was a matter of business, there was gold bullion involved. He said he thought the don might be interested.

They didn’t say much of anything. They took him up to the house and one of them went inside. The other one kept his eyes on Boag and his rifle handy and managed to express the idea that he didn’t think it would be a very hard job to put a bullet through the third button of Boag’s shirt. Boag dismounted and stood in the shade because it was getting on for the noon hour and the sun was pretty damn hot even at this altitude.

Felix Cielo turned out to be not such a very old man but he might as well have been. He was what remained of an aristocratic horseman, now gone to seed. A thousand gallons of tequila showed in the red veins of his oversized nose. His hands were puffy and his big gut that hung out over his fancy leather belt was not concealed by the intricate woven vest he wore over his stained white shirt. He was somewhere on the sour side of forty and had the eyes of a man who had been kicked more than once and expected to be kicked again. Probably he was drinking up the last of his family fortune and making cheap deals with bandits to postpone bankruptcy.

Boag knew before he started talking that this wasn’t the kind of man Mr. Pickett would deal with. He cut it short, asked his questions and got his negative answers and in the end asked where he might look for Don Pablo Ortiz.

3

The wagon road trickled down into the valley. There was an old mine off the side of the road, slag piles and grey buildings and two tunnels that he could see, rusty railroad tracks coming out of both of them to abutments where the ore carts would be dumped. A rusty tilt cart on one of them. This wasn’t a mine that had been closed down out of fear; it was a place that was all used up, played out. The earth had been stripped of its goods and the mine had died an honest death.

That down yonder on the plain must be Don Pablo Ortiz’s outfit. It was bigger than the Cielo hacienda but it shared a lot of its qualities: the adobe Moorish shape, the location on a low knoll surrounded by open flats where you could see your attackers long before they got in shooting range, the fortress sense of the layout, and the quality of decay: there were no big crews of vaqueros out herding cattle and there were no cows to herd and the grass had not been eaten.

A windmill sprouted from the central courtyard of the house, looming tall above the place on its rickety wooden trestlework. There weren’t any big trees; the place was probably as old as Cielo’s but either someone had cut all the trees down for better visibility or no one had ever planted any. There were abundant oleanders ten feet high and even an orchard of pruned low apple trees beside one of the barns; there was plenty of greenery but none of it was high or thick. The dons here had wanted nothing that would interrupt their field of fire.

It was an impressive estate and it got more impressive as he approached. You came up at it from below; the knoll was higher than it had looked from the mountains. The hacienda lofted itself against the sky like a cliff. It wasn’t forbidding, it was imposing; it looked like the kind of mansion you would like to live in after you got very rich. From its eminence it commanded the world beneath it.

It threw long shadows; Boag had ridden more than forty miles since sunup to get here and it wasn’t far to nightfall. He reached the barn and rode up past the apple trees and wondered why nobody with a gun had come out to greet him; obviously they had watched him approach, he’d been in plain sight for an hour crossing the grass flats.

There was a semicircle of driveway up to the big oak gate cut into the hacienda’s front wall; there were twenty posts with iron rings in them for the convenience of guests. He tethered the horse to one of them and walked up to the oak gate. It was twelve or fourteen feet wide and at least ten feet tall, cut into halves like the doors of some great church. A small door was cut into one of the gates. Boag lifted the huge brass knocker and the small door opened before he could clap it.

The man was a very old vaquero with a pinfire revolver in his sash. He wore the kind of leather cuffs cattlemen wore to prevent rope-burns.

“Yes?”

“I wish to see the patron.

The old vaquero was uncertain. This was no gunslick bodyguard, Boag observed. An old retainer who’d spent forty years in the saddle chousing cows.

Cómo se llama?”

“I am called Boag. It is about gold bullion.”

The old vaquero hadn’t made any moves toward the pinfire in his sash. He just stood aside and let Boag walk into the courtyard. The wooden lattice of the windmill dominated the square; a second-story veranda ran around all four sides of it and in two of the corners there were steps going up. The veranda formed a covered gallery for the entrances to all the downstairs rooms; it was typically the kind of house where there was no connecting passage from room to room and you had to come out into the courtyard and down to the next doorway if you wanted to go from one room to another.

There was a profusion of carefully tended flowers in pots and boxes in the courtyard; a great deal of brilliant color and bees rushing around them.