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The Iron Marshall Page 17

East, then. Shanaghy thought of it carefully. Holstrum was known in Kansas City, at least to a few people. If Shanaghy rode after them, he would have to almost kill his horse in catching up, and they might have fresh horses waiting, which would leave him stranded on the prairie and out of action.

  He got up. "Sit tight, Mr. Moorhouse. I'll be calling on you."

  "I ain't arrested?"

  Shanaghy grinned and held out his hand. "You're too good a man to lie in jail. Besides, you've already been helpful."

  "Well ... Like I say, I killed a man or two but I'm no thief. My ma raised me better."

  Tom Shanaghy stepped into the saddle. His knuckles were battered and sore and his shirt was torn. He turned his horse and rode back to town.

  All was quiet when he rode in. He stepped down at the livery stable and saw Greenwood come out of his saloon and lean on the rail. Judge McBane joined him there.

  Leaving the horse, Shanaghy walked slowly down the street. Greenwood glanced at his torn shirt. "Looks like you've had some trouble."

  "I could use a beer."

  "What happened?"

  "Moorhouse didn't want to talk. We went around and around a bit. Then he talked. He's not a bad man."

  "They got the gold," Greenwood said. "They said it was picked up outside of town by somebody with an order for it. The order was signed by Holstrum and by Carpenter."

  "Carpenter? He's dead."

  "So he is, but how could the express messenger know that?"

  Shanaghy accepted the beer and took off his derby and placed it on the bar beside him. Greenwood's news was no more than what he had expected.

  "Did the engineer come in here?"

  "Him? Why should he? That train stopped only a few minutes and then pulled out. Seemed like they were glad to get away from here."

  Nobody said anything for a minute or two. Shanaghy tasted the beer. He was very dry. The beer was cold and it tasted good.

  "Drako's dead, and so are his boys," McBane said. "You shoot almighty straight, son."

  "I had to. I wasn't going to get any second chance." Shanaghy drank from his glass. "But I had some help, and I've had no chance to thank them."

  "Josh had his own score to settle."

  "That's right. Win Drako was about to hang him, one time." Tom straightened up. "Is Dick Pendleton still in town?"

  "Matter of fact, he isn't. Josh told him you were in trouble and he came in to help. He rode back to the ranch, in something of a hurry, I guess."

  "And Josh? I could use him." He finished his beer. "Thanks, Greenie. I needed that."

  "Well, you tried." Greenwood rested his hands on the bar. "Have another beer if you like. Might as well enjoy it. I'm cleaned out."

  "I don't think so," Shanaghy said quietly. "I don't think so at all."

  Startled, Greenwood stared at him.

  Shanaghy was smiling. "I may be guessing all wrong, but I don't think I am. If I am, you may have lost all you say, but if I'm right-"

  "If you're right ... then what?"

  "We'll get it all back." Shanaghy hitched his gunbelt into an easier position on his hips. "Is Holstrum around?"

  "He closed up when the shooting started. Holstrum never did like gunfire. He'll be around when things look quiet again. Believe me, this isn't the first time Holstrum closed up. At the first sign of trouble he hunts cover."

  Tom Shanaghy was thinking about Jan. Dick had ridden out of town in a hurry ... Why? He had not seen Jan since he left her with Coonskin.

  He turned to Judge McBane. "Do you know a man named Coonskin Adams?"

  McBane smiled, his eyes twinkling. "Don't tell me you've run into him!"

  "Met him."

  "Didn't know ol' Coonskin was still around. He's a wolf-hunter. Used to trap the Rockies for fur, then worked for a couple of cow outfits cleaning up the predators."

  "Where's he live?"

  McBane chuckled. "Now that's a question! To tell you the truth, I doubt if anybody has ever asked that question. Coonskin is one of those people you see around. He comes and he goes. He's here one day, gone the next. He's not a man who talks of himself even when he is around."

  "Somebody killed his burro," Shanaghy said.

  McBane's expression changed. "God help them then."

  "I need to talk to him."

  "Go where you last saw him and build yourself a fire. Send up a smoke. Coonskin is as curious as any wild animal, and my bet is he will come to you. McAuliffe, who is division superintendent, knows him well and he might give you a lead. Send him a wire."

  McAuliffe ... Big Mac? Maybe.

  "Judge? Do the folks here still think I killed Carpenter?"

  "I am afraid they do. I'd heard the story before ever I got down to breakfast, told me as the gospel. I must say I never believed it for a moment."

  The door opened and Josh Lundy came in. His rifle was cradled on his arm. "Heard you was back. They got away?"

  "Not yet."

  Lundy looked at him carefully. "You got some idea? If I can help, count me in."

  "You have helped, but I do need you. I'm going to need some more help."

  "I'll come," Greenwood said.

  "And I," Judge McBane added. "What have you got in mind?"

  Briefly, Shanaghy explained how the train had been deliberately backed in front of him to block pursuit, then described his arrival at Holstrum's place, and what he had learned from Moorhouse.

  "Judge, I want authority from you to search Holstrum's store and his living quarters. If he is there, then at least part of my conclusions are wrong, but I am betting that he's gone. And then," he added, "I want us all at the depot to take the evening train east."

  McBane shook his head. "Shanaghy, I can't permit you to enter a man's private premises on nothing but suspicion."

  "Suppose we go knock on his door? If he answers the door I shall go no further with it. If he doesn't, I want to search the area ... if I have to," he added. "I shall do it on my own authority." He smiled. "If I am wrong you can please the town by firing me."

  "I can't believe Holstrum is involved," McBane said.

  "Judge, he is a man with a dream. He's a great, hulking, somewhat nearsighted man, but all his life he has dreamed of young, sophisticated women. Suddenly such a woman is here, and he believes she is going to be his. He believes the money is the key to it."

  "Do you mean he planned it all?" asked the judge.

  Shanaghy shrugged. "I doubt it. He may have started it or somebody may sort of suggested it ... Not right out, maybe. I don't know how it all happened. I don't even know if I am right, but we're going to find out."

  He turned to the door. "Judge? If you'd like to come? And Josh?"

  Tom Shanaghy went up the few steps to the store's walk. His footsteps echoed hollowly as he walked along, followed by McBane and Josh. He paused at the store's door. There was a sign: closed until further notice.

  "Same sign he always uses," Josh commented.

  Tom rapped on the door, and the sound echoed hollowly. He waited, listening. When there was no sound, he rapped again.

  "His living quarters are in the back. There's a door around to the side."

  Again Shanaghy led the way. There was a sinking inside him. Secretly he had been hoping he would find Holstrum within. He wanted to find no man guilty, and even though all pointed to Holstrum, he could be wrong. He hoped he was wrong. He knew how a dream could die, and how futile had been the dreams of this man. How much worse it would have been for him had he realized the dream in fact, for what could two such people have said to each other? What could they have done together? Sometimes it was better to keep the dream and forget the realization.

  Shanaghy rapped on the back door, and there was no response. Josh walked back to the stable. "His horse is gone," he called.

  Shanaghy took hold of the doorknob, hesitated. For he shrank at entering the home of another, uninvited. Yet he put his shoulder to the door and the foolish lock burst.

  There was a bare, simple room.
A rag rug on the floor, plus two chairs and an old leather settee. There were two paintings on the wall, mystic, ethereal things ... obviously originals, like something Poe might have visioned.

  There were a few books, several of poetry, but only the first few leaves had been cut as if the reader had gone that far and stopped. There were a bottle of whiskey and a glass, the bottle half empty. There was a bottle of Chateau LaFite with one drink gone.

  The bed was made, neatly tucked in. The few clothes in the closet were nicely hung. The drawers were half closed as if Holstrum had packed in a hurry.

  The drawers were empty except for one. There was a dainty handkerchief edged with lace ... perhaps a memento of the girl Holstrum had seen but once and then never again. Shanaghy picked it up, glanced at it and dropped it back into the drawer. He remembered something Holstrum had said, or that had been said about him, about looking in a window and seeing some elegantly clad people dancing. Well, Holstrum was still looking in windows, and he was still standing outside.

  Shanaghy swore softly, and McBane glanced at him. "He's missed the boat again," Tom said, "I wish he could have made it, just once."

  "You have compassion, my friend. One does not often find it in an officer."

  "More often than you think," Shanaghy said.

  "And maybe Holstrum will make it this time."

  "No ... " Shanaghy shook his head slowly. "I know the kind of people he is dealing with and he does not. He is thinking of her, and of what they can do in some great city. She is thinking of that money, and what she can do. And George is thinking of the money and wondering how he can wind up with all or most of it. And I think that other man, I think he is the one named McBride. I think he intends to have it all and knows how he will ... And they are all wrong unless I can stop something here."

  "Here?"

  "We must get our tickets."

  Shanaghy closed the door behind him, fastening it as securely as possible. They walked back up the alley together. A few people were in the streets now, and some were talking, pointing out where the men had stood when the gunfight took place.

  Shanaghy paused. "You said ... I killed them?"

  "Both," Josh said, "dead center. I never did see better shootin'. Wilson Drako was here on the steps. He went down right there, and Dandy, who was clerkin' at the ho-tel ... "

  "The clerk was a Drako? The one with the rifle?"

  "Didn't you know? Sure, he was a Drako, and he hated your guts."

  They had paused on the boardwalk in front of Greenwood's saloon. "Judge, Josh ... where we're going isn't far, I'm thinking. But at the end of it there will be shooting, and when there's that much money at stake they won't care who they kill, or how many."

  "I cut my teeth on a shootin' iron," the judge said dryly. "I fit Injuns before I was dry behind the ears, and I served four years in the War Between the States. I can stand beside any man when it comes to gunfire."

  "All right." Shanaghy paused. "Judge, we're going to take that evening train out. Josh, you go down and get the tickets for us. Don't mention where we're going, just buy tickets for Kansas City."

  Shanaghy took the money from his pocket. "And above all, don't tell that agent or anybody else who's going along. If you want, tell them it's for the Pendletons."

  "Do you think he's in on this?" McBane asked.

  "I do."

  "And that engineer? And the brakeman?"

  "I think they were slipped a few dollars just to act stupid with the train. And, if anybody came along, to block the road.

  "They had it all timed nicely. I think they had practiced taking that wagon down, and I believe they had horses waiting. And I think they ran them hard to the Holstrum place and then took off on fresh stock.

  "By now they are swinging back around to meet the railroad line-"

  "What if they don't?"

  "Then I'll have my work cut out for me. But look at it this way. Some of these people are easterners. The railroad is something they know. They'd have to ride a long, long way to get anywhere a'horseback. They won't have any idea we have this figured out, and they'll think we're running in circles back here. When that train pulls in and they want to board it, we'll be waiting for them. With luck we can do it without shooting ... but don't bank on it."

  It was a long shot, and he knew it. Shanaghy checked his guns, then reholstered them.

  "Judge"-he saw Josh coming back up the street with the tickets-"there's one more thing. Maybe I've read this right and maybe I haven't. Somebody said once, 'Set a crook to catch a crook.' Well, I'm no thief but I've known a'plenty of them back in New York town. I think what we've got here is one of the nastiest triple-crosses I've ever seen."

  "We'd better get on down to the station," Greenwood suggested.

  "Wait ... we'll hear the whistle and we can start then. It's less than a hundred yards.

  "What's happening must have started just about the time you people got together and planned to bring money in here to pay off the cattle drivers, and I don't know whose idea it was ... Maybe it started in two or three places, but I do know there's one person who not only wanted all the money, but was a bitter, vengeful person along with it.

  "They think they've won. They have the money, or think they do, and only one thing remains. That's to kill the man who caused them so much trouble, and somebody has figured out a way of doing it without risk."

  "Without risk? You?" Josh exclaimed. "That's crazy! Why, I've seen you in action and there isn't a man-"

  "That's right," Shanaghy said quietly, "so ... "

  Mrs. Carpenter was walking up the street toward them.

  Chapter Twenty

  SHE WAS neatly dressed in a fashionable black traveling dress, with a small bonnet perched on her head. In her hand she carried a handbag.

  "You've got to be crazy!" Greenwood said. "Why-!"

  "The story is around that I killed her husband. She is a bereaved wife. Who else could kill a man, in this country, and get away with it? Even have the blessing of most of the townspeople?"

  "You mean she was in on it?"

  "Maybe not from the beginning, but you can just bet most of the planning was hers. And right now, if she kills me, she can board that train and ride off a wealthy woman, sharing with no one but her brother."

  "But they have the gold!"

  "Maybe, but I doubt it. I don't believe the gold ever left the train."

  She was walking up to them now and she had slipped her hand inside her bag. She stopped. Her thin, rather pretty face was drawn in suddenly hard lines.

  "Marshal, you are an evil man! You murdered my husband! You killed him and then tried to burn the-"

  "Mrs. Carpenter," Shanaghy said. "Sure, ma'am, and you're too late. It's all over. We know what was done and how it was done, and we know that you yourself killed your husband, and that it was you who closed the doors and set the barn afire.

  "It was you, with your brother, who planned to steal all that gold."

  Her eyes tightened at the corners, as did her mouth. "I have no idea what you are talking about, and-"

  "Mrs. Carpenter, I have no desire to be rough with a woman-even one who has murdered her husband and probably others as well. So please ... Do not try to take that gun from your purse, because I-"

  Her hand started to come out from the handbag, but almost casually Shanaghy slapped the purse from her hand with his left and then brought his right hand up under the barrel, twisting it up and away. It was let go or have a broken finger, and Mrs. Carpenter let go. Shanaghy passed the gun to Judge McBane.

  "It is all over, Mrs. Carpenter, all over. None of it worked."

  She was very cool. The hardness became only a shadow in her eyes, covered by amused contempt. "You're such a little man, Marshal, so pleased with yourself, taking a gun away from a woman. Mr. Holstrum will testify-"

  "Holstrum is dead," Shanaghy said.

  McBane turned his head sharply and Josh was staring.

  "Or if he is not, I shall be very surp
rised. You see, Mrs. Carpenter, some of the others were thinking just as you were. Once outside of town Holstrum was no longer needed, so why share with him? I am betting they killed him somewhere between his ranch and that little station thirty miles east where they planned to rejoin the train." He smiled. "Rejoin it with what they thought was the gold."

  "You mean they don't have it?" Greenwood exclaimed.

  "As I said, it never left the train. What they took off at the water tank were some boxes prepared for the purpose. Mrs. Carpenter's brother, as station agent, had connived to get the manifest changed. The boxes that actually contained the money were being shipped right back to Kansas City ... where Mrs. Carpenter would pick them up."

  "You mean they have already been shipped back?"

  "My guess is that they went west last night, and that they will be on the evening train when we board it."

  Mrs. Carpenter stood stock-still, her hands clasping her purse, staring off into space. Yet, while there might be some shock at being frustrated, at having all her carefully laid plans go sky-high, Shanaghy had an idea her mind was working swiftly toward some sort of a solution.

  "I'd like to go home now," she said suddenly.

  Shanaghy shook his head. "You're not thinking clearly, Mrs. Carpenter. You are under arrest. But something which you should be thinking of now is your friends, if you can call them that."

  She merely looked at him.

  "If they have not already discovered that they do not have the gold, they will discover it very soon. They will also suspect what has happened, and when they do I would imagine they would be looking for you.

  "Of course, your plans were to be on the train going east by now, and so safely away. But you are not going east, and neither are they."

  He paused. "So I shall lock you up until we return."

  She looked her contempt. "Will you shackle me to the hitching-rail as you did those others?"

  He shook his head. "No, Mrs. Carpenter. Holstrum has a storeroom where we can leave you until we return, which will not be long."

  In the distance, a train whistled. "Greenwood, would you lock her up? And stay here, if you will. Vince Patterson and his boys should be riding in today and they will want some drinks. Get hold of Vince and tell him what has happened. Tell him everything."