Gunpowder Express
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Synopsis
Time to Meet the Widowmaker
Vulture City is home to a prosperous gold mine and every bad man in the Arizona Territory knows it. Nearly every stagecoach attempting to deliver the gold to the railroad at Maricopa has been ambushed on the trail — a trail known as the Gunpowder Express for the bullet-riddled bodies along the way.
With gold piling up and a lack of volunteers to transport it, the mine owner hires Newt "Widowmaker" Jones to ride shotgun on the next stage. Foolhardy and desperate for money, Newt joins three other guards — and a passenger, Jenny Silks, a stubborn firebrand with her own stake in seeing the delivery through. But waiting on the Gunpowder Express is Irish Jack O'Harrigan and his band of outlaws. There's not a soul alive he wouldn't think twice about putting six feet under. But he's never traded lead with the man known as Widowmaker....
Release date: December 31, 2019
Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Print pages: 283
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Gunpowder Express
Brett Cogburn
The punch was the kind of blow that comes out of nowhere, and the kind you’re never really set and ready to take. It was the kind that’ll knock you flat like a Texas tornado; the kind that can make tough people slobber and crawl, and the weak ones won’t get ever get back up.
The big man, as ugly and scarred as he was tall, took that punch square and true on his jaw. He felt the sharp bite of knuckles crash into the marrow of his bones and the hard thud of the ground rising up to meet him. The dust rose up and floated around him as wispy and ephemeral as the dull roar of the crowd cheering and screaming for his demise. Truly, he couldn’t have told you where he was in that instant, or even so much as his name. But the pain was real, and it was something to lay hand to.
Slowly, his senses returned until he was aware of other things outside the throbbing of his skull. He tasted the dirt in his mouth mixing with the blood, and the grit of sand scraping under his eyelids. He rolled onto his back and stared up at the face of the referee floating in the furnace sky above him and waving his hands to signal the end of the round.
The big man got one hand under him and then the other, followed by his knees, and pushed his belly up from the ground. The ropes that marked off the fight ring came into focus, at first a blur, and then one, two of those ropes with the screaming crowd behind them cheering and slopping beer down the fronts of their sweat-stained shirts. None of those things came to the big man in clear, individual thoughts, but rather as a wave of impressions, a blur of sights and sounds. He was sure of none of those impressions, and only one thing, one instinct, screamed for attention above it all. He had to get up or they would ring the bell. The bell meant you were done; the bell meant you lost. You had to beat the bell. You had to toe the mark.
The crowd went silent, if only for a brief instant, when he got a leg up under him and wobbled to his feet. But their shock quickly turned to anger over the audacity of the man to take what most couldn’t, to fight back against the narrative of his demise. They heckled him while he nodded drunkenly at the referee and raised his fists to show that he was ready to fight again. Somebody flung an empty beer bottle at him, but it went wide of his head and sailed into the crowd on the opposite side of the ring from whence it had come. He didn’t even notice the flying bottle and kept shuffling his feet to keep his balance, lest he fall again. All the while, he was listening for the sound of the bell. He was half-afraid it might have sounded without his hearing it.
But the bell had not rung, and he was still in the fight. In a determined, weaving march, he made his way back to his corner, turned, and propped his shoulder blades against the corner post and draped an arm over the top rope to either side of him. His whole body sagged, and only his hollow eyes seemed alive when he stared across the ring at the man who had knocked him down.
And then there came a slight quirk at one corner of his mouth and the parting of his lips to reveal a slit of bloody, clenched teeth. Slow to form, this expression, like the breaking apart of an old scab or wound. Maybe it was only a muscle spasm on the face of a man as punch-drunk as they came, or simply a grimace of pain. Regardless, to the crowd, it looked like a defiant snarl.
The big man pawed at his forehead with one hand and slung the sweat from it to the sand at his feet. He blinked once, twice, at the fighter across the ring from him, as if he was still having a hard time focusing his vision. He blinked a third time, and then that quirk formed at the corner of his mouth again, every bit as wolfish as it had been the first time it cracked his face.
The devilish name and the reputation of the man passed through the crowd like a slow whisper riding the tobacco smoke hovering over them, blown from one to another like an accusation until more than one of them voiced his name as if it explained what they were seeing. Most of them had bet good, hard-earned money against him, yet, there he stood with that snarling expression and glaring back at them and the whole damned world in general. He should have stayed down; he should have been out cold no matter how damned mean he was supposed to be.
Should have. It dawned on some in the crowd then that the damned fool wasn’t snarling at all, and that realization made them all the madder. He was trying to grin like the whole thing was funny. Who grinned at a time like that? Poor bastard was out on his feet. That had to be it. One more round and he would go down for good and get what he deserved.
They wouldn’t have understood his expression even if they had been sober, or even if they had known him better. He was an unusual man in any place or time, and they wouldn’t have understood even if he had the words to explain it to them, which he didn’t.
But the crowd had guessed one thing right. The odd contortion at the corner of his mouth was truly a grin, or at least the closest his battered face could come to such an expresion at the moment. And to his way of thinking, he had plenty of reason to grin. Yes, he was punch-drunk and hurt and hanging on by a thread, but there was still the chance to walk across that ring and draw back and knock the living hell out of the bastard who had downed him. That mattered a lot to him. However, what mattered most, and the real reason he grinned, was simply because he was back on his feet and not a one of them had gotten to ring that bell and take him out of the fight. Not yet.
And then he heard someone in the crowd speak his name, and then another—that old name that was none of his choosing but that he wore like another of his scars.
“Widowmaker . . . Widowmaker . . . Widowmaker,” the whisper went.
There were some who said Vulture City got its name because the prospector that founded it spotted some buzzards hovering over the site, a simple enough and slightly romantic tale. While it was true that even such humble and homely creatures gliding high overhead on a thermal wind would have added some romance and color to an otherwise drab place, it was also true that the story of its naming was undoubtedly nothing more than a folktale. Or, in other words, a load of horse pucky to those cynical sorts with enough common sense to realize certain facts.
For starters, such a place held little interest for even a single buzzard. Yes, there was often death—a thing one would think would attract such avian scavengers—but even the promise of a ready meal wasn’t enough to tempt the city’s namesake birds. Vulture City was simply too damned hot and miserable for anyone, even buzzards, to live there given any other choice.
Secondly, it was really no city at all, except in name, but rather a ramshackle sprawl of construction scattered on a brushy, gravel flat amidst the litter of rocks, cacti, and cast-off junk at the foot of an eroded, red ridge rising up out of the desert. Some might say it was unremarkable, and others less kind could have reasonably claimed it was ugly. Thirsty men usually pointed out that Vulture City had three saloons, a thing worthy of overlooking the place’s other faults.
Three saloons or not, there was no denying Vulture City’s builders apparently gave little thought or effort toward aesthetic appeal and pleasant architecture. Every bit of man-made habitation seemed to exist only for practical purpose, mainly that it would grant the occupants some modicum of shade when the worst of the afternoon heat bore down on the camp. The buildings were a mismatch of framed lumber, sheet iron, stacked stone, or poorly plastered adobe bricks. None were built exactly the same and were similar only in the uniform coating of dust they shared.
If substance counted for anything, the commissary was the only building that held promise at first glance. Although it was built of dull brown and burnt red native stone stacked in a most common way and coated in more than its share of common dust, it was at least tall—two stories tall—and all that imposing height and those tons of rock were meant one day to hold the offices, assay room, and the treasure vault for the Central Arizona Mining Company. That ownership and any mention of treasure should have made it at least an iconic tower of optimism and civilization in such a frontier hamlet, no matter how plain and ordinary its rectangle design, but sadly, it was still under construction and only three-quarters complete. Its walls had been slower to take shape than they would have been in an ordinary place. Three months of work so far, to be exact, because the piles of sunbaked stone and mining rubble gathered around it and meant to add to its structure would unfortunately blister your hands any time except at night or in the earliest hours of the morning. As it was, for a newcomer, it was hard to tell if the commissary was a new building under construction or an ancient rock tomb whose walls were slowly crumbling down over the centuries.
Beyond the commissary and slightly uphill stood an eighty-stamp mill, usually pounding away incessantly with a mind-numbing racket at the gold ore its crews fed it, but ominously silent for the afternoon. And beyond that, slightly more upslope and rising above everything, stood the massive hoist and headframe of the Vulture Mine. The hard-rock shaft burrowing deep into the earth beneath it and the vein of high-grade ore it promised were the only reasons that such a place came to be at all in that expanse of desolate nothingness. And the shiny tin water pipeline snaking out of camp to the east toward the Hassayampa River ten miles away was the only means by which Vulture City survived long enough for anyone to dig their hearts away for gold or to take a break from the grueling monotony long enough to get drunk and watch a Saturday-afternoon boxing match.
And such a boxing match was currently under way.
The promise of getting to see two men pummel each other wasn’t to be missed, considering how much Vulture City’s citizens admired a good fight. And no usual fight, this one, but a genuine, imported professional pugilist had come to the mining camp, a thing as rare as it promised to be bloody. Bloody was good.
The peeled cedar posts that had been used to build the crude boxing ring glared under the desert sun like old ivory tusks, and the two large strands of grass rope strung through holes bored in those wooden supports sagged under the oppressive afternoon heat as much as they did because of the press of the crowd of cheering miners they held back. A single, massive ironwood tree stood on one side of the ring, and the furnace breeze periodically gusting through its grotesquely twisted and gnarled limbs cast dappled shadows across both the spectators and the two shirtless and sweating combatants doing their best to punch each other into bloody oblivion inside the ropes. The sounds of those two fighters’ bare fists smacking flesh and their grunts of exertion filled in the brief moments when the crowd of spectators paused to catch their breath, mop their brows, or to purchase another mug of lukewarm beer.
Some five hundred hardy souls called Vulture City their home, most of them working for the Central Arizona Mining Company, and the rest consisted of those trying to make a living off those miners, honestly or otherwise. Add another score or so of itinerant types passing through on their way to hell or some other similar place more promising and pleasant than Vulture City, and you had a sizable population, especially considering that neither God nor nature probably ever intended a single human soul to reside there for so much as a minute. And it seemed as if every one of that population had turned out to watch the fight.
All but two.
A man and a woman stood at the completed end of the commissary building in the narrow shade it cast. From their vantage point they had a good view of the fight, and although only thirty yards away, their position behind the crowd let them go unnoticed.
The man was middle-aged and indistinct of look from almost any other adult male of the camp, from the thatch of grizzled, gray hair sprouting out from under the slouching brim of his hat, to the sweat-stained white shirt pinned to his torso with a pair of suspenders, and to the faded canvas pants and lace-up work boots scuffed so badly that they looked as if an entire pack of coyotes had gnawed on them. He puffed thoughtfully on a curve-stemmed pipe, eyes squinted slightly in thoughtful repose.
The woman beside him, on the other hand, would have caused most of the camp to do a double take at the sight of her had they looked away from the fight long enough to notice she had come outside, and not only because she resided in a place in short supply of females. In truth, there were things about her so unusual that she would have drawn stares no matter where she stood, in backwater Vulture City or anywhere else.
It was hard to tell whether she was young or old, for next to nothing of her was revealed, but the way she dressed was unique, to say the least, and lent her an air of mystery that she might or might not deserve. She wore a long-sleeved, red cotton dress, despite the afternoon heat, and where the ends of those sleeves should have revealed the flesh of her hands a pair of tight, kid leather gloves covered them. Where a bit of ankle perhaps might have shown at the bottom of her dress when the furnace breeze lifted it, there were only the high tops of her riding boots with a dainty pair of silver-overlaid California spurs strapped to them. A broad, flat-brimmed felt hat of Spanish style sat atop her head, and a black lace veil was secured around the crown of it. That veil entirely covered her face and shoulders to the extent that her features were hidden to the world.
The shade cast by the commissary was slowly retreating toward the foot of its stone wall, and for a brief instant the sun caught a few scattered strands of pale blond hair beneath the edge of her veil. She moved quickly back into the shadows, as if that brief touch of the sun might melt her, and as if she were as out of place beneath the burning sky as was hair the color of snow in the desert.
The man with the smoking pipe noticed her retreat into the shade, but remained where he was, now half cast in sunlight. He gave a brief, scornful glance at the sky as if it were an old enemy that he could do nothing about.
“It’s a hot one today, sure enough,” he said more to himself than to her, like a man long used to spending time alone with his thoughts will do.
She did not reply, instead, continuing to watch the fight playing out down the hill from them.
Inside the roped-off boxing ring, the two fighters shuffled their feet and circled each other, their movements lifting dust from the raked sand. One of them was a redheaded man, half a foot taller than anyone in camp. He wore a pair of black tights with a green sash tied around his waist and a pair of high-topped, lace-up boxing shoes on his feet.
The man with the pipe muttered, “The damned fools put up a collection and ordered that boxing getup for him. Had it sent here all the way from San Francisco.”
“Hmm,” was all the woman gave in reply.
“Guess we couldn’t have our local champ looking like any old country bumpkin, could we?” the man with the pipe continued.
Instead of answering him, the woman shifted her gaze to the other fighter squared off against the redhead.
He was a big man himself, although not so professionally attired for a bout of pugilism. He was stripped to the waist like his counterpart, but instead of tights he wore only ragged work pants, and his feet were encased in, of all things, a pair of Indian moccasins. Well over six feet at a guess, still tall, but a couple of inches shorter than the redheaded giant he faced.
She studied him closer to see what it was that had given her the initial impression that he was larger than he was. He was an abnormally big-jointed and big-boned man, true, and all angles and jutting jaw. Maybe that was it. And the muscles and tendon cords stretched over that outsized frame were visible even from a distance, as if every bit of spare fluid and finish had been sucked out of him. His waistband was bunched in wads and cinched tight over his gaunt belly with a piece of rope that served as a belt, as if the pants were two sizes too big for him or as if he hadn’t eaten regularly in a long, long time.
Truly, he should have seemed almost a sad, comical figure standing in that ring in his ratty, oversized pants and Indian moccasins, and with the shaggy mop of his black hair hanging lank and sweat damp over his brow as if he hadn’t had a haircut in months. And to add to that impression was the still, almost bored expression on his face, as if it didn’t matter that the mining crowd was cheering for the redhead to cave his head in. Just a raggedy man too far from where he had come from and too far from his last good luck. But still, there was something about him. Maybe it was the scars.
To say that the big man’s face was scarred was putting it nicely. Maybe he had been handsome once, and maybe he still was if you liked them rugged, but it was hard for her to look away from the scars. In between the broad swath of his forehead and the jut of his blunt chin, the bridge of his nose was knotted and bent, obviously having been broken more than once. And his eyebrows were so scarred that one of them was all but hairless, and similar scars marked his cheekbones and the rest of his face. All like a roadmap of pain, and story symbols of a life of battles painted on him for all to see.
While she was contemplating such things, the redhead swung a wide, awkward fist that clipped the scar-faced man on the jaw. Even with no more than she knew about boxing, she could see that the redhead had little skill for such things. But skill or not, he was powerful. And that slow, ponderous fist he threw had enough power in it to knock his opponent down, even though it had only grazed him. The scar-faced man lay in the dust while the referee called for the end of the round and made sure the redhead went back to his corner.
“I thought he was supposed to be a professional,” she said to the man with the pipe. “Professional, you said.”
“I didn’t use that word,” the man answered. “I said he was tough, or at least that’s the rumor.”
“Well, his reputation isn’t doing him much good.”
The man beside her nodded, but didn’t seem especially bothered by what they had seen. “They say he brought Cortina’s head back to Texas in a sack.”
Her voice was quiet like she was short of the air required to speak in a normal tone, breathless and slightly husky, as if the afternoon heat had sucked the oxygen from her lungs. “A tramp boxer who cuts off heads in his spare time? Not exactly inspiring, and a poor recommendation for employment if I ever heard one, if that’s really even him.”
“Oh, it’s him, all right. I’m certain of that. Same one that tamed that mob in Shakespeare a few years back, and the one that got back that Redding boy from the Apaches last fall. Read it in the newspaper and I heard it from an army officer I ran across in Tucson,” the man said. “And there’s another rumor going round that he spent the winter in Mexico hunting after another kid he lost down there while he was after the Redding boy.”
“You know how people like to talk.”
“Maybe.”
“How did he end up here?”
The man took another thoughtful puff on his pipe and shrugged before he answered. “Rode in about two weeks ago wearing rags and riding a horse about as starved as he was. Said he’d been in Mexico and lost his traveling stake. Wanted a job.”
“Is that why you believe that story about him going back to Mexico after the other kid? Because he said he had been in Mexico?”
“No, I didn’t even know who he really was until somebody who had seen him box up in Silver City recognized him and came and told me. But that story fits with what I saw. He came from the south, and unless I miss my guess, he’d ridden a far piece on nothing but guts and bad water.” The gray-haired man pulled his pipe from his mouth and used it to gesture at the scar-faced man in the ring. “Notice what kind of Injun moccasins he’s wearing?”
“They’re Apache, I presume.”
He put the pipe back in his mouth and nodded while he drew on it. “You always were a smart girl.”
“What else?”
He shrugged. “Shows up to work every day. Doesn’t complain. Doesn’t say much at all, for that matter. Best man with a double-jack I’ve got unless it’s Ten Mule there. That redheaded devil can swing a sledgehammer, I promise you, but that man yonder isn’t far behind him.”
“That’s not much to go on.”
“Any man that will pester an Apache has got plenty of guts, and he got Cortina. Cortina was good with a gun. Real good.”
“Still . . .” She put a gloved pointer finger to where her mouth would have been if not for the veil, as if rethinking what she had been about to say and shushing herself.
“Who else could I hire?” he asked. “There aren’t many around here that might handle the job and fewer that wouldn’t laugh at us if we asked them. There was a man over at the store yesterday claiming he saw Irish Jack and two of his gang on the road between here and White Tank.”
The mention of that name caused the woman to turn her head and look at him, and she took a deeper breath before she spoke again. “You said we need at least four men.”
He nodded. “Six or eight would be better.”
“I don’t think you’re going to find six or eight, and neither do you. So, let’s say four guns.” She gave an inclination of her veiled face toward the boxing ring and the scar-faced man only then getting up off the ground. “Say that’s one. Who else have you got in mind?”
“The Dutchman will come.”
“Waltz? You trust him more than I do.”
“He’s tough, knows the trail, and if he says he’ll go, he’ll go.”
“Who else?”
“The Stutter brothers.”
She nodded again, as if she, too, had thought of them but didn’t like it. “I’d trust them farther than I would the Dutchman, but they aren’t exactly the brightest stars in the sky.”
“Maybe not, but they’ve both got good rifles and they’ve offered to let us use the company coach.”
“I still don’t like it,” she said.
“You forget that this isn’t your run. It’s mine.” The man squinted at her through his pipe smoke.
Her reply came no louder than any of those that came before, but her voice was stronger. “I’ve got as much riding on it as you do. Don’t you forget that.”
They stood in silence once more, watching the fight. By then, the scar-faced man in the moccasins had gotten himself back up and to his corner.
“Got to give that to him. Not many can take a lick from Ten Mule and get back up.” The man beside her jabbed a thumb in the direction of the boxers, and the corner of the man’s mouth curled in an ironic smirk around the stem of his pipe.
“Widowmaker,” she said. “That’s what they call him, isn’t it? The Widowmaker?”
“That’s what they call him.”
She turned as if to go, not toward the boxing ring below them, but the opposite way. She had taken several steps before she called over her shoulder, “It will take more than a name to get that gold to the railroad.”
“Are you saying we ought to try and hire him?”
“If Ten Mule doesn’t kill him first,” she said without looking back.
Ten Mule Mike, that’s what they called the overgrown devil glaring back at Newt Jones, and if ever a name fit a man it was that one. The red-haired Irish puke had a head made of pure gristle and bone, and every punch he landed on you felt like a team of mules had run over you and kicked you twice in passing for good measure. Hard as nails, that one.
Newt Jones leaned his back against the corner post and swiped a wet sponge at the sweat and the blood running down into his right eye where an old scar had been laid wide open above his eyebrow. He stared across the ring to where Ten Mule stood in the opposite corner of the prize ring. Ten Mule was sweating heavily, too, and there was a red knot over one cheekbone where Newt had clipped him one. But he didn’t seem especially bothered by it. Newt spat a stream of bloody spittle onto the sand between his feet and tongued the jaw tooth that Ten Mule had loosened for him. He’d be lucky not to lose that tooth.
Heavy. Not just his arms and the fists hanging at the end of them, but Newt’s whole body and something on the inside of him suddenly felt outsized and sagging, weighing him down like a wet blanket. And it wasn’t only the battering he had taken in the first round or the punch Ten Mule had landed out of nowhere. Newt was plain and simple weary, and had been for a long time. Tired of it all. And that bonehead across the ring was staring at him like this was something new, as if knocking him down was really special.
Maybe there was something to be said for a man who will keep getting back up no matter how many times he’s knocked down, at least that’s what some claimed. But Newt didn’t know what it was that was worth saying. “Don’t know the meaning of quit.” That’s what Mother Jones used to repeat almost proudly, as if that were a thing a man could . . .
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