The Killing Machine Read online

Page 2


  “I suppose I should say thank you, brother. But I’m not going to let you have the gun, Noah.”

  The waiter.

  When we were alone again, I said, “Make this easy for me, David.”

  He didn’t say anything.

  Then, “It’s my job, David.”

  “Ah, yes, your job. For President Grant. Good old Grant. I hear he drinks a touch. I hear he was quite courteous to General Lee when the South surrendered. That’s the only time he treated us with any respect. Or don’t you care how many of us died down there, Noah?”

  I stood up. “I’ll be there at sundown, David.”

  Chapter 2

  Whenever I needed to pick up a couple freelance helpers, the first place I checked was the local stage line. They generally steered me to shotgun riders who worked part-time or had the day off. Given all the bank and stagecoach gangs working this part of Montana Territory, the shotgun men had to be good. And not be afraid of a little violence if necessary.

  The Northeast Stage Line had a full house in back. Four coaches, everything from one of the new Concord models to an Abbott & Downing mudwagon to a pair of newly restored Deadwood stages that could carry eighteen passengers.

  There had been some bad accidents with stagecoaches lately, the coach owners saying they were due to bad roads and acts of nature, the editorial writers saying they were due to drunk drivers and overworked horses. They were probably both right. Every coach in this lot had a small sign stuck on its doors: A RECORD OF SAFETY.

  A man in a flat-crowned black hat, blue shirt, black trousers, and a small badge on the flap pocket of his shirt was talking to a youngster who was giving a muddy Concord a soapy wash with a bucket of water.

  “Excuse me,” I said.

  The deputy took a photograph of me with his eyes and filed it away for future reference. That’s a common trait in well-trained lawmen. He had a blandly handsome face and hard, dark eyes that made snap assessments of every human who walked or ran or crawled in front of their lenses. He didn’t dislike me, his gaze revealed, but only because he didn’t think I was worth bothering with.

  “Morning,” he said, “help you?”

  “I’m actually looking for the boss.”

  He put forth a hand that was even harder than his eyes. “Frank Clarion. I’m a day deputy in town here.”

  “Nice to meet you, Clarion. Can you point me to the boss?”

  “Right over there. And he’s not only the boss, he’s the owner.”

  “Tib Mason,” the boy chimed in, wiping sweat from his face with the sleeve of his black-and-white-checkered shirt. “That’s his name. He’s my uncle. Same as the marshal’s Mr. Clarion’s uncle.”

  Now, I’m not one of those people who believe that it’s necessarily a bad thing to hire your kin. I’ve known any number of father-son, uncle-nephew, cousin-cousin lawmen partnerships that work out just fine, even though most folks are automatically suspicious of them, suspecting nepotism and nothing more.

  But Clarion’s bland face tightened some when the kid mentioned that the marshal was Clarion’s uncle. He tried to make a joke of it. “Thanks for pointing that out, Merle.”

  Merle’s bright-blue eyes dulled. He realized then that he’d said a bad thing, and that Clarion was going to kick his ass, verbally if not physically, as soon as he got a chance.

  Having said the wrong thing many times in my own life, I tried to help the kid out a little. “I was a deputy once—and my uncle was the sheriff. Same setup as yours, Clarion. I imagine you get razzed about it sometimes as much as I did. But I did my best and got along just fine. And I’m sure that’s how it works for you.”

  The dark gaze showed me a little more charity. Maybe I wasn’t just another drifting saddlebum after all. Maybe I was a man of taste and discernment.

  “Yeah,” he said, and for an instant there he was almost likable, “they sure do like to kid you about working for your uncle.”

  Merle looked relieved. He went back to his washing with a smile on his freckled face.

  “Nice to meet you,” I said, and offered my hand to Clarion again.

  Tib Mason turned out to be a short, beefy man in a tall, white Stetson, working a horse inside a rope corral. I walked over and watched him finish up with the animal. The paint wasn’t much bigger than a colt. Mason kept everything gentle. He used his short whip only once, and then with obvious reluctance. When he saw me, he went up to the paint and stroked its neck several times, gentling it down. Then he walked over to me.

  “If you’re looking for Tib Mason,” he said, “you found him.”

  “You’re mighty nice to that paint.”

  “I like horses. We’ve got the best in the Territory on this line. And I personally tamed just about every one of them. And I didn’t get mean with any of them.” He took out his sack of Bull Durham, then his papers, and went to work. “So what can I do for you, mister?”

  “Need to hire a couple of men.”

  “For what?”

  I told him what I wanted him to know, which wasn’t much. I also showed him my badge.

  “They could get hurt.”

  “That’s why I’m paying them so well.”

  “This Ford character out to that ranch. Nobody around here has much time for him. He made it plain that he didn’t want anything to do with us. And we obliged him. We didn’t want nothing to do with him, either.” He got his cigarette lighted with a stick match and inhaled deeply. “He looks like he could be a tough sonofabitch.”

  “He is.”

  “You know him, do ya?”

  “He’s my brother.”

  He surprised me. He didn’t look startled. He just grinned. “That’d probably make you just as strange as he is.”

  “It probably would.”

  Another drag. “How come you didn’t go to the marshal and ask for some deputies?”

  “Local law isn’t always cooperative. We have to run the show and they resent that.”

  “You can’t blame ’em for that, can you?”

  “No, I can’t blame them. But on the other hand, I need to do things the way the Army wants them done. I don’t act on my own. I take orders.”

  He said, “How about me and a man named James Andrews? Full-blooded Cree. That kind of money, we’ll do it. Just don’t cheat him. He makes a bad enemy.”

  “Don’t we all.”

  He shrugged. “I suspect you do. And I suspect your brother does. But that doesn’t mean we’re all like you, thank God.”

  “You’ll go out to my brother’s with me?”

  “Sure. All those coaches you see over there—I owe the bank for every one of them. This should be some easy money for us.”

  I watched the paint before I spoke. He dug at the dirt with a long leg, as if he was going after buried treasure. He was young and strong. I almost hated to think of him spending his life on stage trails.

  “Me and the Cree’re good shots. And we’re used to taking orders. The customers are our bosses. Same with folks we hire out to. You won’t have any trouble with us. None at all.”

  “If he’s Cree, why’s his name James?”

  “He shook his Stetson’d head. “Missionaries gave it to him. That’s the name he prefers. I actually never heard him even say his Cree name.”

  “I’ll need a buckboard.”

  “That won’t be any trouble.”

  “And we’ll meet here just about five? Buckboard and shotguns?”

  “Fine by me, friend.” He nodded to the paint inside the rope corral. “Better get back to work. He’s getting restless.”

  I had supper just before four o’clock in a café that catered to townspeople of the merchant variety. You could deduce this from the headwear they wore, mostly homburgs. I was there for a steak and eggs. They were there for drinks.

  I wasn’t sure when or where he’d find me, but I knew he would. They come, of course, in different shapes, sizes, ages, dispositions. The canny ones choose a persona and pretty much stick to i
t. They can hide in the persona so that you can never guess their real thoughts or attitudes. Some strut like gunfighters; others kind of shuffle, trying to seem harmless; and some are crisp and curt, like bank managers who don’t plan to give you a loan.

  Then there is the grandfather school. When he came in the front door, several conversations paused, a couple of the waitresses froze in place momentarily, and the man you paid at the front counter put on a smile big enough to please a politician.

  He wore no hat. Wouldn’t want you to miss that head of long, pure white hair. Checkered shirt, somewhat wrinkled, the way a grandfather’s would be. An inexpensive leather vest. Cheap gray trousers of the kind laborers wear. He had blue, blue eyes and a youthful grin, and the left hand he raised to wave with—there was a hint of the papal wave in it—was twisted just slightly with arthritis.

  The badge he wore on the inexpensive vest was small. He wouldn’t, being a granddad, want to give the impression of vanity or undue pride.

  The corncob pipe was the nicest touch. No expensive briar for him. No, sir. Just a plain, ordinary, five-cent pipe, as befitted the good old trustworthy gramps that everybody knew and loved.

  After he shook a few hands, the blue, blue eyes narrowed and lost a bit of their friendliness. He was hunting somebody. He was hunting me.

  He fixed me with a gaze that would’ve made God tremble in his boots, and then he blessed the crowd with another sort of pope-like general wave (hell, he might have been absolving them of all their sins, the piss-elegant way he did it) and then he ambled over in my direction, pausing here and there for a few words with the men who worked hard at giving the impression that they were important, and probably were by town standards.

  When he finally reached me, he said, “You mind if I sit down? I hate to bother you, but these old feet of mine are killin’ me. And just about every table’s filled up.”

  There were four empty tables in plain sight. But I knew he was going to sit down here anyway and so did he.

  “Be happy for a little company,” I said.

  “Now that’s mighty nice of you, friend.”

  A serving woman with a wide waist and a face full of freckles appeared with a schooner of beer, setting it down in front of the town marshal as if she’d been chosen to serve royalty. What was interesting and impressive about her behavior was that she seemed taken with the marshal out of respect, not because of fear. Which was the general reaction. That was to his credit.

  When she left, he said, “Name’s Wickham. Charley Wickham. I’m the town marshal.”

  We shook hands. “You seem to have a lot of friends.”

  “I’m not a bully and I generally don’t hold grudges. I give a lot of second chances, and if I get the opportunity to help a good man in bad trouble, I generally do it. I’m not a prude and I’m not a busybody. They’ve elected me to four two-year terms, and I expect they’ll elect me a couple more times before I take my badge off this old vest of mine.”

  Now how the hell were you going to come back to that? There wasn’t any brag in it, he was just stating what he saw were facts, and I had no doubt they were. If I lived here, I’d vote for him five or six times.

  I hadn’t told him my name. He said, “Now, Mr. Ford, you know and I know that I’ve checked you out and know that you’re an investigator with the Army and that you’ve hired Tib Mason and James to go out to your brother’s place at sundown. Now the thing is, I can keep right on going with this cornball bumpkin bullshit or I can cut right to it and ask you why the hell you didn’t come to me before you looked up Tib. I could’ve gotten you a couple deputies and made it all legal.”

  “It is all legal, Marshal. I had a year of law school in Washington as part of my job. When Tib and James are with me, they’re legal associates of mine. As long as what we do is legal, anyway.”

  “Tib tells me you were afraid I might not cooperate. Hell, Ford, I cooperate with every kind of investigator who comes through here, and that includes the Pinkertons, who can really get on a fella’s nerves sometimes.”

  “Then I was wrong about you and I apologize.”

  He laughed. “I think we’re quite a bit alike, Ford.”

  “Oh? How would that be?”

  “You like to pretend to be all nice and reasonable and civil because you learned that that was the best way to hide what you’re really after. Once a fella gets everybody all riled up, he’s not gonna get his way except by force. And the only thing that force gets you eventually is dead. This town had four marshals in one year. You can find them up on the hill where the cemetery is. I had to apply three times for this job because they thought I was too quiet and gentle for it. I been marshal here for eight years now and in that time I’ve had to kill eighteen men, all of them white. But I didn’t pick those fights, they did. I’m not especially good with a gun and I consider myself a serious coward. Every time I’ve been forced to shoot somebody, I spend a good hour puking my guts up afterward. I’m still scared of how close I came to dyin’. But what kept me alive is the one thing that none of those eighteen men had. And that was a calm temperament. Just like yours.”

  My food came and he said, “I’m going to let you eat in peace, Ford. But I just wanted to say that I’d appreciate you stopping by my office tonight and telling me how it went out at your brother’s. I never have figured out what he’s doing in that barn of his. He’s got a Gatling gun that he fires a lot; his neighbors tell me that. But he’s never given me or any of mine the time of day. Now all of a sudden here’s this Army investigator who happens to be his brother going out there…”

  He stood up. “You’d be curious, too.”

  “I sure would,” I said, eager to start on my steak and eggs. “I’ll stop at your place soon as I get back in town.”

  “I’d sure appreciate that.” Then: “Tib and James.” He made a sound not unlike a giggle. “Them boys is a pair of wild cards, let me tell you. Really wild cards.”

  Then he started working his way toward the front door, laughs and handshakes and back slaps for those he’d missed before.

  Gramps.

  Sure.

  Chapter 3

  Tib Mason sat in back with the shotguns. James rode on the seat with me. Autumn night came quickly. Frost gleamed on the prairie; shadows danced in the broken moonlight of the woods. An owl’s cry followed us for some time.

  There were flashes in the forest, mostly moonlight, but it was more fun to pretend the way the youngest soldiers used to, that the flashes were kin—grandfathers and dead brothers and maybe even sweethearts—risen fresh from the land beyond to soothe and comfort the scared and worn young troops who could no longer even remember what they were fighting for.

  I hoped David had changed his mind. I suspected he didn’t want a confrontation any more than I did. Which didn’t mean, of course, that he wouldn’t get involved in one if he had to. I had to convince him that he’d be free to walk away if he just gave me this gun. Neither of us would be foolish enough to think this would make him give up the kind of life he led.

  Of course neither David nor others like him would have been able to even learn about new weapons if the government wasn’t so sloppy and corrupt.

  The leak would have been in Washington. There was a good reason that President Lincoln had turned over all spy and espionage operations during the Civil War to the Pinkertons. It was because the Army could rarely keep secrets. Gun merchants, foreign and domestic, preyed on the Army people in the nation’s capital. They used cash, sex, blackmail, whatever was required to pry secrets from the staffers back there. This didn’t mean that they had any specific advance word of experimental weaponry, not usually. No, the cash, sex, and blackmail were used to trawl though the staffer’s mind. He’d confide the number and nature of projects and they’d judge whether any of the projects sounded of interest to their sponsors. The men representing the gun manufacturers were mostly freelancers. If even one out of ten of the weapons proved desirable to their clients, a lot of money would
be made.

  The dusty road was pale gold. Road apples were heavy, thanks to stage traffic. Even with the railroad running full bore now, the stage in this part of the Territory was still used constantly. Every mile or so you’d see the lights of a tiny farmhouse. People had rushed here for gold. What didn’t get talked about as much was all the people from back East who came here for several acres of land and a chance of communities better suited to their liking than the ones they’d happily left behind.

  James said, “For my people, that is not a good sign.”

  I didn’t have to ask what he was talking about. The icon of the ominous owl cut across a lot of racial and cultural lines. I’d spent three months in the Ozarks. The poor whites there had a whole legend of owls worked up. Some owls were good and some evil. I’d seen granny medicine reliant on scalding an owl to death in a huge, boiling kettle over a fire sprinkled with the bone dust of a raven. The scalded and seared juices of the owl were supposed to cure the cancer that had opened crater-like scabs on the neck of an old man.

  “We’ll be all right.”

  “Tib said there could be trouble. Trouble between brothers is not good.”

  “I’m hoping there isn’t trouble, James.”

  Tonight he wore a dark headband to collect his long, gray-streaked hair. The buckskin shirt and trousers would keep him warm if there was a standoff in the long, cold night.

  From the bed of the buckboard, Tib said, “My old lady has a funny feeling about tonight. She didn’t want me to come.”

  “If you’d feel better about it,” I said, “you can drop off here. No questions asked, no hard feelings.”

  “You’re an easy cuss.”

  “Not really. But if you’re all spooked up, you’re not going to do me much good. Same with James and the owl. If you’re uneasy about this, James, I don’t want you along, either.”

  Tib laughed. “Hell, sounds like you’re tryin’ to get rid of us. You ain’t figured us out yet, Ford. We maybe don’t look like it, but we’re downright mercenary.”