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Lassiter Tough Page 15


  But Doane said, “Hold it, Pinto. I want Lassiter able to talk, at least for a while.”

  “Yeah,” George agreed. “The easy way is to make Lassiter talk about the money.”

  Doane gave Rooney another shove. The rancher took a few stumbling steps toward Lassiter.

  “Don’t forget our agreement, Doane,” Lassiter reminded heavily. “Rooney goes free.”

  Doane failed to reply. He holstered his gun and plucked the knife he had returned to his boot top. “Keep a gun on him, Pinto.”

  Gripping the knife, Doane came plodding toward Lassiter, brushing past Rooney, who looked on fearfully. “I ask you once again about the money,” Doane said ominously as he halted in front of Lassiter.

  “And I told you… .”

  Quick as a striking snake, the knife flashed out. The blade, glittering in the sunlight, flicked across Lassiter’s throat—not a deep cut, just through the skin. Blood ran down Lassiter’s neck and into his shirt. But his cold blue eyes never wavered.

  “Let Rooney ride away,” Lassiter said again.

  But he could see that Doane had no intention of honoring their agreement. Lassiter braced himself as Doane, baring large, yellow teeth, lifted his right arm slightly so that a wine-colored stain on the blade could clearly be seen. Doane held the weapon like a swordsman, which announced that he was an experienced knife fighter.

  Pinto George had eased off the pressure of the gun against Lassiter’s backbone but was still behind him. Lassiter felt cold sweat dampen his armpits but no fear showed on his face. One thing was for sure, he had no intention of standing still and allowing Doane to cut him a second time, which he was intending to do. Lassiter could read it in his narrowed eyes. It would be better to have his spine shattered by a bullet than to go out like a stuck hog, bleeding his life away into the sandy Texas soil.

  One moment was all it took for this to pass through his mind. And then he was doubling up, hurling himself at Doane’s knees. He felt the massive forearm brush across his shoulder blades, the knife came that close to cutting him again. Then the two of them were tumbling across the ground. The blade of the stained knife flashed like a diamond in the sun when it was jarred from Doane’s hand.

  Tension threw a barb of pain across the back of Lassiter’s neck as he braced for the slam of bullets from George’s gun. The man’s gun did explode, but not at Lassiter. Rooney had taken the opportunity when Lassiter and Doane were on the ground to leap and try to seize George’s gun. The force of two bullets in Buck Rooney’s chest hurled him against a mesquite. As he toppled to the ground, Lassiter was throwing himself behind the wrecked wagon. His outstretched hands broke his fall, but he came down as intended, near the rifle he had dropped in the sand. Although it might be fouled with sand and explode in his face, he had to take that chance.

  Doane, who had been knocked flat on his back, was just picking himself up. Pinto George raced around behind the upended wagon, his pale eyes reflecting rage at Lassiter’s trickery.

  Lassiter threw himself to one side, but knew he was too late. He felt a jarring shock in his left shoulder as George fired. But he managed to lift his rifle. He heard a gritty sound of sand on metal when he touched the trigger. Nothing happened. Although he knew the weapon was fouled with sand, he tried again. Still nothing. It was then that he became aware of George yelling something to Doane about riders coming. Then Lassiter was aware of a drum-roll of hoofbeats from the direction of Box C. Riders were coming at a dead run.

  Intent only on saving their own necks now, Doane and George leaped into the saddle. Doane was swearing at George, who answered, “Hell, you told me you wanted Lassiter alive!”

  “Not now I don’t.” And as Doane flashed by the spot where Lassiter had last been seen behind the wagon, he fired three quick shots. But Lassiter had withdrawn into a mesquite thicket. He heard the bullets make thunking sounds into wood.

  Hardly had George and Doane disappeared at the bend in the road before Luis Herrera and five Box C riders were drawing rein in a great cloud of dust.

  “We heard shots!” Herrera shouted when Lassiter stumbled from the brush where he had taken refuge. “We came as fast as we could.”

  The eyes of Herrera and of his riders widened when they saw the thin cut across Lassiter’s throat, the blood-soaked shirt, and a soggy wetness at the top of the left shoulder.

  Lassiter looked at the spot where he had last seen Joe Tige lying on the ground. But sometime in the interim the wounded man had somehow managed to stagger to his horse and ride away, unnoticed.

  Some of the men were already looking at Rooney, who lay crumpled beyond the wagon. Lassiter stumbled over and knelt beside Rooney. The man was still alive, but barely. His face and lips were bloodless and his eyes reflected pain and shock. Although Lassiter felt light in the head from the loss of blood, he managed to give Herrera a brief account of what had happened.

  “We’ll go after ’em,” Herrera said with an oath and turned for his horse.

  But Lassiter shook his head. “Let ’em go. For now.”

  Then he was giving orders. Somebody was to catch Rooney’s horse, which had wandered off down the road.

  Rooney’s eyes were open and there was even a faint smile on his pale lips. “You jumpin’ Doane saved our bacon,” he said in a voice so low that Lassiter had to bend down to hear him. Lassiter smiled encouragement but wondered just how much good he had done for Rooney by the bold move.

  It was evident that the rancher was in bad shape and might not even last the two miles to Box C. He didn’t. After half a mile, he nearly toppled from the saddle. Lassiter—riding on one side, Herrera on the other—saved him from the fall. But a quick examination showed there was no pulse. Rooney was dead.

  An enraged Lassiter helped tie the body over the back of the horse. Death of the neighbor at the hands of Diamond Eight men was almost too much.

  At the ranch, he cut around in back of the barn, hoping to avoid Millie until he could get cleaned up. But she happened to be in the yard and saw his shirt stained a deep red. A fist flew to her mouth. Then she stiffened in shock as she saw the body roped to the back of a sorrel.

  “Somebody’s dead,” she said in hushed tones. “Who is it?”

  “Rooney,” Lassiter answered.

  “Oh, my God.”

  Herrera had given Lassiter a hand down from the saddle. As soon as he stood shakily on solid ground, Millie, unmindful of the bloodied shirt, flung an arm around Lassiter’s waist.

  “You’re coming to the house,” she announced firmly, “where I can take care of you.”

  By then he was so tired, in such low spirits because of what had happened to Rooney, that he didn’t argue with her. While she tried to put him into one of the spare bedrooms, he chose instead the big sofa in the parlor. He sank down and stared blankly at the big stone fireplace. Millie had hurried to the kitchen to heat water, her pretty face taut with strain.

  Soon she had his shirt off, his long johns pulled to the waist and was sponging off the blood. Although the wound at his throat was superficial, she cringed when mentioning that a little more pressure on the knife and Lassiter would have been dead.

  What had caused the most blood loss was a gash at the top of the left shoulder where a bullet cut through the flesh. Fortunately, the slug had not lodged in the wound but continued on its way.

  As she applied bandages to the wounds, she asked him to tell her in detail just what had happened. When he finished relating the attack in the brush, he said, “My fault, damn it. Your brother got wind that I was goin’ to carry money home. But what he didn’t know was that I’d changed my mind. I had a strong hunch something like that might happen.”

  “You only did what you thought was right.”

  “When you came home and told me Hobart wouldn’t honor the bank draft, I wanted to shove it down his throat.”

  “I can understand that… .”

  “But I went too far in taking the money.”

  “But what else
could you do, Lassiter? He refused to accept the bank draft.”

  “Well, he’s honoring it now, which I should’ve made him do in the first place.”

  “Don’t blame yourself.”

  “But I do. If Doane and the others hadn’t been after the money they thought I had, Rooney would still be alive.”

  She sank back on her heels, looking grim. “I repeat, it wasn’t your fault, Lassiter. Not at all.” Then she picked up a pan of pinkish water and carried it out the back door.

  His first chore was to clean his weapons. The rifle had malfunctioned, having been fouled with sand. He couldn’t afford to let it happen again. He had to be ready for the showdown that had been postponed much too long.

  Millie returned after a few minutes, carrying one of his clean shirts and his razor. “You’re going to stay in this house where I can keep an eye on you.”

  He shook his head. “What would the men think?” he asked with a wry smile.

  “I don’t give one damn what they think.” Her lips trembled and she seemed close to tears. She reached for Lassiter’s hand and gave it a squeeze. But he did not respond. He was thinking of what they had to face. Word would have to be sent to Sheriff Doak Palmer up at Tiempo about Rooney’s death instead of reporting it to a local deputy. The long-time deputy in Santos had died six months before and the sheriff had not gotten around to appointing a replacement—due to Diamond Eight, some hinted. Sanlee wanted more or less of a free hand until he had his cattle empire intact.

  There was also Rooney’s funeral to face.

  “Does Rooney have any relatives?” he asked Millie.

  She said she didn’t think so. “At least none of them ever came for his wife’s funeral. Frankly, I think he was alone in the world. And now he’s gone, poor man.”

  When he started to dismantle his weapons for cleaning, his hands shook so much that he had to give it up for the present. But he did brace himself for the task of writing to Sheriff Palmer, explaining the death of Rooney, naming the man responsible, Pinto George. Lassiter always suspected the name was an alias. His handwriting was shaky and when he had finished there were numerous ink blots. He started a letter to the undertaker but had to give up. Millie finished it for him.

  One of the men would be sent to Santos with the two letters. The one to the sheriff would go north on the morning stage.

  He was on the mend and soon he would be ready for any eventuality… .

  20

  *

  Lassiter’s insistence to sleep on the sofa, he knew all too well, was only a futile attempt to postpone the inevitable. When it did happen, finally, the act between him and Millie was as natural as breathing. They had finished supper and he insisted on shaving thin slices of yellow lye soap into a pan to do the dishes.

  “You’re a remarkable man,” she said solemnly, watching him from a kitchen chair. “Tough as cold steel in one way, yet gentle in another.”

  “Not many would agree on the latter,” he said with a short laugh.

  When the dishes were done and she had given him a towel to dry his hands, their eyes met. He dropped the towel and impulsively reached for her. And she responded, her arms warm against the back of his neck. He picked her up and carried her to the rear of the big house. He forgot about the healing shoulder.

  “Not in there,” she said softly when he approached the bedroom she had shared with Rep Chandler.

  “I didn’t figure to,” he said and, in a back bedroom, lowered her gently to a bed. Moonlight filtered through lacy white curtains and turned the room to pale yellow. There was a headboard of polished dark wood. A strip of Mexican rug put color in the room. A night table beside the bed held a lamp with a rose-colored shade.

  After a time of heady exploration, they came together, their eager bodies struggling in an ancient ritual. Occasionally, her muted cries of pleasure broke the stillness of the lonely house. Tree branches gently scraped across roof tiles as a breeze came up.

  The only time he froze was when her arms locked across his broad back and she cried out, “Now I’ve got you, got you forever!”

  Then she collapsed. For several minutes while he held her close, she did not open her eyes. When she did, it was to smile happily up into his shadowed face.

  When the funeral for Buck Rooney was finally held, it was not well attended. Business establishments in Santos closed for the ceremony. Isobel Hartney in a new dress, her favorite color of green, was there with parasol over a shoulder.

  “I don’t believe in morbidity,” she explained when one of the women mentioned that she wasn’t wearing black.

  Isobel smiled. Her busy eyes searched the sparse crowd and settled on Lassiter, who was late in arriving. Clinging to his arm was Millie Chandler, her dark hair shining in the sun. Isobel realized she suddenly hated her.

  A solemn Brad Sanlee rode in from his ranch. For once he was alone. He seemed unusually reserved, most everyone thought, and decided he apparently was deeply affected by Buck Rooney’s death. No one had realized they were that close, a man near Lassiter was explaining to a neighbor. Lassiter smiled grimly.

  Marcus Kilhaven spoke gravely to Millie and shook hands with Lassiter. He mentioned his late friend, Rooney, in his usual quiet way. A black suit, obviously purchased some years before, did not quite fit his tall, raw-boned frame.

  This time a traveling reverend happened to be on hand, so the ceremony was lengthy, not abbreviated as had been the case with Rep Chandler.

  Tate, Kilhaven’s nearest neighbor with the exception of the deceased Buck Rooney, was not present. When someone whispered a question, it was revealed that Tate had sold out to Brad Sanlee, suddenly, and left that part of Texas. Upon overhearing this low-voiced exchange, Lassiter couldn’t help but be reminded of the list Sanlee had shoved under his nose at their initial meeting that day in O’Leary’s Saloon. Kilhaven, Tate and Rooney. Now only Kilhaven remained.

  All during the ceremony, Sanlee avoided Lassiter’s eyes. The reverend was extolling the earthly virtues of the late Buck Rooney, whom he had never met.

  When Brad Sanlee was riding out, Millie stared at his broad back and whispered, “He’s up to something. I know him so well.”

  Lassiter was also staring at Sanlee, a look of cold blue winter in his eyes.

  “Suddenly, I’m afraid,” Millie said shakily. She clung to Lassiter’s arm as if it were an anchor to keep her from slipping off the face of the spinning earth.

  The funeral had purposely been delayed so as to give the sheriff time to come down from Tiempo. But he hadn’t come. Nor had there been any word from him regarding the letter Lassiter had sent.

  After the funeral, Millie found herself encircled by women firing questions. How was she getting along since the death of her husband? Some of them cast sly glances at the tall, dark Lassiter standing nearby. Isobel came gliding up with a rustle of her stylish dress.

  “You see, I was right,” she said softly with a tight smile. “You didn’t like it when I pointed out a fact to you one day.”

  “What fact?” he snapped and instantly regretted it.

  “A charming widow and a ranch …”

  Lassiter’s attention was drawn to Arthur Hobart, who stood a few feet away. There was a secret smile on the banker’s smooth, round face. When he found Lassiter watching him, he averted his gaze but did not lose the smile. Seeing it caused a chill to slide down Lassiter’s backbone. He thoughtfully fingered the clean white bandage Millie had placed around his throat that morning. Something deep within warned him to get out before he brought disaster to Rep’s widow. He had lingered much too long in this Texas brush country.

  On the way back to Box C, Luis Herrera and three of the vaqueros trailed the buckboard. Lassiter was driving. The subject of his leaving Texas came up. But each time Millie interrupted with her bright and eager voice, pointing out exceptionally colorful huisache blossoms or pointing at the sky where giant clouds were whipped into gargantuan shapes by the wind.

  “They look li
ke castles,” she exclaimed. “Can’t you see castles up there, Lassiter?”

  “Millie, listen to me… .”

  “I think the tribute to Mr. Rooney was sweet but much too long. When my time comes, which I’m sure will be years away, I hope we’ll be buried together in the ranch plot. I’m sure Rep wouldn’t mind.”

  Lassiter felt a dull pain that wasn’t altogether from his healing wounds.

  The trouble came with the suddenness of a spring storm where the sky is the bluest of blue one minute, then spouting rain and violent wind a quarter of an hour later. He had gone into Santos to confront Arthur Hobart at his bank. He was remembering the banker’s sly smile the day of Rooney’s funeral.

  “I want you to show me in your books where you credited the $37,000 dollars to the Chandler account.”

  Now that Hobart was alone with Lassiter, with not even the gaunt clerk nearby, he was not so cocky. With trembling hands, he got out a ledger, flipped pages and then pointed to an entry.

  Lassiter nodded. “Just figured to make sure.”

  “Anything I can ever do for you, Lassiter, just say the word.”

  Lassiter looked at the round face, the mound of belly and the nervous hands. Why was Hobart so obsequious all of a sudden? he asked himself. Was it fear? Or was it knowledge that coming events would set things right in his favor?

  “I’ll be leaving here,” Lassiter said coldly. “And I expect you to treat Millie Chandler decently.”

  “As you’ve been treating her, I expect,” Hobart said with a straight face.

  “What’d you mean by that?”

  Hobart paled. “I … I … it just slipped out. I meant nothing.”

  “I know what you meant.” Lassiter gave him a look that caused the banker’s jaw to drop. “Watch your talk, Hobart. Or I’ll find some way to wash the dirt out of your mind with lye soap.”

  As he rode along the alley behind the bank, he saw from a corner of his eye Isobel Hartney dash from the rear of her store and wave to him. She was wearing a large apron, the inevitable pencil under the yellow hair at her ear. When he ignored the wave, she called to him. But he rode on, his face tight. In his present mood he didn’t trust her any farther than he could throw an ox.