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Synopsis
THE GREATEST WESTERN WRITERS OF THE 21ST CENTURY From national bestselling authors William Johnstone and J.A. Johnstone comes the epic tale of Hangtree County, Texas, where a gunslinger and a lawman work to bring peace to the most dangerous town in the west . . . TO SAVE A KILLER, A GUNMAN BLASTS HIS WAY ACROSS TEXAS On the trail to Hangtree, a gang of bandits give chase to a teenage gunslinger. Young Bill is bracing for the end when the crack of a Winchester scatters the bandits. Sam Heller, Hangtree lawman, has saved another life. And Bill will beg Heller to save one more . . . Bill rode in from East Texas, where Cullen Baker, the original quick-draw artist, fights a life-and-death battle with a corrupt robber baron for control of the Torrent River. Bill came seeking help from Cullen’s old pal, Johnny Cross, who agrees to ride east to lend a bullet or two. It’s a long way to go for justice, requiring a trek across a desert held by brutal outlaws just waiting to kill under a merciless sun. But with Sam Heller at Cross’s side, the odds are better. And when the ammo’s loaded and the triggers are cocked for an all-out gun battle, the Torrent will flow red—with blood . . .
Release date: January 31, 2017
Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Print pages: 433
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Seven Days to Hell
William W. Johnstone
The Sunrise Café was the best eatery in town, in the county for that matter. Which wasn’t saying much. To be a regular there meant one had arrived, was an insider. It gave one prestige—so Spud Barker reckoned. He liked to see and be seen there. The food was good, too. Spud was a big eater.
Sunrise Café at weekday breakfast time was the last place he expected to find trouble. This morning trouble would find him.
It was about eight in the morning and the breakfast rush was over. Westerners were early risers generally and Weatherford folk were no exception. About a dozen patrons were scattered among the tables on both sides of the central aisle.
Among them but not of them was Sam Heller, no citizen of Weatherford he. He sat alone at a front table facing a window, which gave him a view of the entrance and beyond to the town square.
He was laying for Spud Barker, and when he saw him coming he rose from his chair and quietly sidled over to the front door, standing to one side of it.
Sam Heller was a yellow-haired and bearded well-armed titan in buckskins and denim. A Yankee born and bred, he was Texas sized, standing several inches above six feet, broad shouldered, raw boned, long limbed.
A Northerner who stood alone in Texas 1867, when the War Between the States was recent history and Yankee-hating by the populace was the rule rather than the exception, had to be able to take care of himself.
Sam Heller was such a man.
No one in the café knew him. They didn’t know he was a Yankee, didn’t know him from Adam. They were blissfully unaware he was about to set in motion a chain of events guaranteed to generate considerable bad feelings.
Sam felt good about the prospect.
Spud Barker came in first, then Terrill, then Driscoll. None of them spared more than a passing glance at the big galoot gawking at the picture on the wall. Their minds were on their bellies for they were hungry. More, they assumed they were safe on home ground. Spud’s bodyguards had perhaps grown too comfortable in the seeming security of familiar everyday surroundings.
They moved toward Spud’s usual table on the left-hand side of the dining room, comfortably set back from the strong morning sunlight filtering through red-and-white-checked curtains that covered the pair of windows bracketing the front door.
The first warning Spud Barker had that something was amiss was a sudden sense of rushing motion in the immediate vicinity. That was the sound of Sam Heller coming up fast behind Terrill and Driscoll.
He grabbed each of them by the back of the collar and slammed their heads together, making a loud thumping noise. Chubb Driscoll took the brunt of the hit, eyes rolling up in his head as he went down, hitting the floor.
Vic Terrill went wobbly at the knees but stayed on his feet, stunned, seeing stars. He went for his gun more by instinct than anything else, groping blindly for it, but before he could find it Sam grabbed his gunhand by the wrist. Terrill struggled but could make no headway against Sam’s iron grip.
Sam used the arm as a handle to swing the bodyguard hard against the wall on the left. Terrill hit an empty table along the way, rocking it but not knocking it over, upending several chairs.
Terrill slammed into the wall, crying out. Sam closed in on him, powering a pile-driving right uppercut that connected square on the point of Terrill’s chin. Terrill’s head snapped back, hitting the wall. His eyes showed all-whites, his face went senselessly slack.
Sam’s fist was cocked, ready to deliver a follow-up blow but it was unneeded. Terrill was out cold. He folded at the knees, sliding down the wall with his back to it, falling in a crumpled heap at Sam’s feet.
Spud Barker’s bodyguards had been put out of commission in less than thirty seconds.
Sam turned, bearing down on Spud. It had all happened so fast that Spud hadn’t had time to react. Now he did. He felt the Fear.
Spud’s mouth went cotton-dry and his belly felt like the bottom dropped out of it. His hands flew up in front of him in a warding gesture: “No! Don’t—”
Chubb Driscoll stirred on the floor, groggy, glassy eyed. Getting on hands and knees and trying to rise.
Sam swerved from his path toward Spud to kick Driscoll in the head. Driscoll flopped down and out.
The distraction gave Spud time to recover some of his wits. He started to reach toward his right-side jacket pocket for an object inside that made a suspicious bulge.
Before he could put a hand in his pocket, he was the recipient of a punch in the face that rocked him back on his heels, sending him hurtling backward. Sam crowded Spud, giving him no time to recover.
Sam grabbed Spud by the lapels, holding him upright and giving him a good shaking.
“W-what are you p-p-icking on me for? I don’t even know you—”
“But I know you, Spud,” Sam Heller interrupted.
Sam had set his attack inside the café to maximize the element of surprise, hitting his targeted men where and when they would least expect it.
He now wanted to take the action outside where there was less chance of innocent bystanders being hurt.
The windows flanking the front door caught his eye—and Sam was a direct actionist.
He grabbed Spud’s collar by the scruff of the neck, his other hand gripping the top of the man’s belt and waistband at the small of Spud’s back.
Sam heaved upward, lifting Spud until only the toes of his boots were touching the floor, hustling him toward the front of the building.
Sam was giving Spud Barker the “bum’s rush,” a technique well known to bartenders and bouncers for ejecting belligerent drunks and troublemakers from the premises with a maximum of haste and a minimum of fuss.
“No!—What’re you doing? Stop! You loco? Stop, stop!—” came Spud’s wailing cries as he was swept forward toward a window to one side of the entrance.
“No, don’t—!”
Sam stopped short, using his momentum to help heave Spud headfirst into the window.
It was closed.
Sam manhandled Spud Barker like pitching a hay bale into a wagon. A clean toss!
Spud hit the window in a tremendous explosion of shattered glass, splintered wood, red-and-white-checked curtains, and brass curtain rods—gone, now.
He spewed through the window frame into the outer air, landing with a bone-jarring thud on the boardwalk porch fronting the café.
Spud lay still, unmoving. After a pause he started groaning and twitching.
Sam grinned. He wasn’t done with Spud Barker yet, not hardly. But first he had to make sure his rear lines were secure. That meant ensuring the bodyguards were still out of commission and stayed that way.
Sam turned, facing inward to the café. The customers were townsfolk mostly, judging by their clothes, and a few ranchers. They seemed a fairly prosperous lot.
Now they looked like a bomb had gone off. Sam’s sudden outburst of violence had come as unexpectedly as a thunderbolt crashing out of a clear blue sky.
Customers and staffers alike tried to make themselves very still and small to avoid drawing Sam’s notice. They looked away, not meeting his eyes.
Well and good. Part of the reason for Sam’s shock tactics was to cow them into submission so none would be minded to interfere. Which took some doing with stiff-necked Texas men but so far it seemed to be working.
Vic Terrill lay sprawled on the floor, inert, unconscious. But Chubb Driscoll was showing signs of life.
Driscoll had managed to drag himself to an upright support pillar. The side of his face where Sam had kicked him was bruised with an eye swollen shut. His good eye glared hatefully, rolling this way and that. Sam started toward him. Chubb Driscoll went for his gun, pawing at it. Sam came on, not breaking stride. He grabbed a table chair and threw it at Driscoll. Driscoll had his gun in hand, he opened his mouth to shout—
The chair hit hard, breaking apart, silencing his outcry. Chubb Driscoll didn’t break, but the hit didn’t do him any good, either. He went limp, slumping to the floor.
Busting up the café was one thing but a shoot-out was a horse of a different color. Sam took his chances as they came but he’d hate like hell for some luckless breakfaster to catch a bullet right in the middle of his or her ham and eggs.
He took a look at Chubb Driscoll. Driscoll’s eyes were closed, his smashed nose and lips bleeding. Was he alive or dead?
Sam didn’t know. In any case the first thing to do was disarm him. Driscoll’s gun was clutched in a closed fist but hadn’t been fired.
Sam stepped on Driscoll’s wrist, pinning his gun hand to the floor. Driscoll moaned, wincing and flinching like a dog having bad dreams.
“Alive, eh?” Sam said to himself. “But he won’t be getting up any time soon.”
He broke Driscoll’s gun, emptying it and throwing the rounds out the broken window. He let the empty gun fall to the floor.
Sam absently rubbed the top of his big right hand, where he had skinned a couple of knuckles. He crossed to Terrill to give him the once-over. Terrill lay facedown, motionless in the spot where he’d been knocked out.
Sam grabbed a handful of Terrill’s hair and raised his head off the floor to see what condition he was in. Terrill didn’t so much as twitch.
Sam liked it when they stayed down after he hit them. He let go of the hair, Terrill’s head flopping down.
Sam emptied Terrill’s gun anyway. He wouldn’t be getting a bullet in the back from either of the bodyguards any time soon.
Now he could do his business with Spud Barker undisturbed.
Sam Heller took a last look at the people in the dining room, a long hard look. Had any been minded to show fight, that steely eyed gaze stifled any fleeting impulse toward combativeness.
Sam went out. Unlike Spud Barker, he used the door.
Weatherford town was the capital of the same-named county. It lay in North Central Texas roughly along the same east-west latitude line as Dallas and Hangtree.
Dallas was a money town, Hangtree was a frontier cowtown, and Weatherford was . . . what, exactly?
Weatherford town and county was a good locale for ranching and farming. It was a good locale for lawlessness, too, far enough away from Dallas to avoid attracting unwanted attention from Federal troops yet close enough to be within ready reach of the U.S. Cavalry when Commanche raiders were on the prowl.
In the war’s aftermath Weatherford had attracted a bumper crop of outlaws who preyed on Hangtree, Dallas, and all points in-between . . . The gangs raided neighboring communities, killing and plundering.
No lonely ranch house was too small, no settlement too large to escape their depredations. Travelers and wayfarers were prime targets. Many stagecoaches, freight haulers, and wagon trains had left their burned-out hulks scattered about the countryside.
And the sun-bleached bones of their passengers, too.
Weatherford was a clearinghouse for stolen goods. Outlaws from nearby counties disposed of their loot in town. Rustlers, robbers, bandits, and brigands all came knowing their plunder would find a ready market in the merchants of Weatherford. They paid pennies on the dollar but it added up.
People being people and times being hard, buyers and sellers alike were none too fussy about little things like titles and bills of sale for goods and livestock that changed hands.
Any fool could see that the newcomers thronging Weatherford were outlaws dealing in stolen goods, but only a bigger fool would call them on it. Such great fools tend to be short-lived.
That was Weatherford: a lot of folks doing all right by doing wrong. Making it of interest to Sam Heller, a soldier of fortune, bounty hunter, and more. Much more.
A class of men, and some women, too, had sprung up who served as contacts linking town merchants with the bandit chiefs.
These middlemen—or fences, to call them by their right name—insulated the merchants from the tricky and dangerous business of dealing directly with the outlaws in the field, providing much-needed protection for the townsmen to avoid being robbed and killed while trying to exchange money for stolen goods.
The fences took a fat cut of the profits from buyers and sellers in exchange for brokering the deals.
One such middleman was Spud Barker, making him of interest to Sam Heller.
Sam was even more interested in Loman Vard, Spud’s partner. Spud took care of business in town but it was Vard who had the contacts with the outlaws. Spud was a businessman and politician, and Vard was an outlaw and killer.
Sam very much wanted to get his hands on Loman Vard, but Vard was a tough man to corner. To get at him, Sam needed a middleman: Spud Barker.
Spud Barker didn’t know what hit him. Literally.
He came crashing through the café window into the fresh clean brightness of a spring morning, one he was unable to appreciate at the moment. Somehow he managed to rise to his hands and knees, head hanging down. Pieces of broken glass that had gotten stuck to his clothes fell off, making little chiming tones when they hit the wooden plank board sidewalk.
His vision swam in and out of focus. He raised his hands to his aching head. The backs of his hands and forearms were all cut up, covered with hairline bleeding scratches—his face, too. His hat was lost somewhere along the way between café and sidewalk, but that was the least of his worries.
He made quite a sight in that heretofore-quiet street scene, though there weren’t too many people around to see it.
The Sunrise Café stood on the west side of the town’s central square, which was lined along the sides by some of Weatherford’s leading establishments. There was a bank, a hotel, the town hall, a dry goods emporium, a feed store, and so on. Also a couple of more or less respectable saloons and various shops and stores.
A few people were out on the street, mostly townsfolk running errands or doing some early shopping. They stopped what they were doing when Spud Barker exploded out the café window onto the boardwalk sidewalk. They paused to see what it was all about, staying a safe distance away.
A fancy two-wheeled buggy drawn by one horse rolled north, its driver slowing it to a halt when he came abreast of the café. The driver had a long bushy beard reaching to his collarbone. He wore a white shirt, black vest, and dark pants. He stared open mouthed, goggling at Spud Barker.
Spud stood on his knees, gingerly feeling around at the top of his head for damages and in the process dislodging more pieces of broken glass. He winced as his fingers discovered a goose egg–sized bump atop his aching noggin. The pain brought tears to his eyes. He blinked away the wetness until he could see clearly again.
Spud didn’t like what he saw. A pair of boots had stepped into his field of vision. His gaze traveled upward, taking in the figure of the man looming over him—the wildman who had knocked eight bells out of his bodyguards and thrown him through the window.
Seeing Sam Heller come out of the café to hover over Spud Barker, the driver of the two-wheeled cart snapped the reins to get his horse moving up the street and away.
Sam Heller cut an impressive, even formidable, figure.
Beneath a dark, battered slouch hat his yellow hair fell to his shoulders in the go-to-hell style favored by certain U.S. Cavalry scouts, of which he had once been. That long hair taunted hostile Indians, “Take this scalp if you dare!”
By contrast Sam’s beard was close cut, neatly trimmed.
He wore a gun, a .36 Navy Colt tucked handle out into his waistband over his left hip. But that was not his main weapon. That was a Winchester 1866 repeating rifle, chopped down at barrel and stock. A weapon commonly known as a mule’s leg. It rested in a custom-made leather holster on his right hip.
Sam also carried a Green River knife with an eighteen-inch blade, secured on his left side in a belt-sheath low-slung enough to avoid blocking access to the Navy Colt. Like the famed Bowie knife, the Green River model was also balanced for throwing.
His blue eyes were as cold as polar seas.
Sam didn’t like standing with his back to the café, his broad back a tempting target for anybody inside wanting to take a shot at him.
“Let’s have some privacy, Spud,” he said, grabbing the other by the back of his collar and hauling him to his feet.
Spud Barker’s face swelled above the choking collar, reddening under Sam’s tight grip. Sam hustled him away from the café to the south end of the wooden sidewalk. The sidewalk and building fronts were raised three feet above the ground. A short flight of three wooden steps with no railing angled down to solid ground.
Sam booted Spud Barker down the stairs. Spud’s too-solid flesh clattered and banged on the stairs, counterpointed by his howls of pain and outrage. He hit the ground sprawling.
“You trying to kill me?” he demanded.
“If I do, you won’t have to ask, you’ll know it,” Sam said. His ready boot toe none too gently prodded Spud to his feet.
“Stay on your feet, Spud. I’m getting tired of picking up your sorry carcass. If I have to do it much more you might just as well stay down permanently,” Sam said.
An alley mouth opened at the bottom of the steps. The passageway stood crosswise to the street and ran between two blocks of wooden frame buildings.
Sam muscled Spud fifteen feet deeper into the alley, propping him up and slamming his back against the wall.
“That’s better. Now we can have a nice private talk,” Sam said.
“I’ve got nothing to say to you!” Spud Barker blustered.
“No?” Sam said, chuckling.
“No! . . . Why, I know what you are! You’re a Yankee, a damned Yankee!” Spud Barker accused, his fleshy jowls quivering with indignation as he stabbed a pointing forefinger at Sam.
“How’d you figure that out?”
“You talk funny,” Spud spat. “You know what’s good for you, you’ll hightail it out of town quick and don’t look back. We don’t rightly care for your kind in Weatherford, Billy Yank. It’s none too healthy for outsiders of the Northern persuasion.”
“Not for the sons and daughters of Old Dixie, either, going by all the burned-out wagon trains and stagecoaches I’ve seen scattered around the county,” Sam said.
“Northerners, every last one of them,” Spud declared, chin outthrust defiantly.
“Lots of Southerners packing up and heading for California and points west these days. Anyway, how would you know if the missing wayfarers are Yankees or Rebs?”
“The devil must have a special sauce for Yankees, to make them so mean.”
“Probably, but we’ll get to that later. First, I want to make sure you’re defanged.” Sam reached into Spud’s right-hand jacket pocket, pulling out a four-barreled pepperbox derringer. “Standard issue for the well-dressed Weatherford businessman,” he said. “This little beauty can make a real mess. Too much gun for you, Spud—you might hurt yourself. I’ll put it away for safekeeping.”
He dropped it into a pocket of his buckskin vest. A further pat-down search yielded a set of spiked brass knuckles, a penknife, and a wad of greenback bills. Sam tossed the knuckle-duster and the penknife farther back into the alley and held on to the greenbacks.
“Enough frogskins here to choke a horse,” Sam said, thumbing through the wad. “Big bills all the way through, with no little ones to pad it out. It’ll go toward covering my expenses.”
Sam pocketed the bills while Spud Barker sputtered with impotent outrage.
“Damn you! This is robbery! Robbery in broad daylight, no less!”
Sam tsk-tsked. “Makes you wonder what the town is coming to, eh?”
“You must be mad. The marshal’s office is straight across the square and he’s probably on his way here right now with his deputies. If you value your skin you’ll give me back my money and make tracks out of here as fast as you can—”
“Not to worry, Marshal Finn and company are otherwise engaged. I’m afraid he’s going to be a no-show.”
“How can you know that?”
Weatherford’s notoriously corrupt town marshal, Skeates Finn, upheld the law with sterling evenhanded impartiality, allowing every outlaw who cut him in on the take the right to sell stolen goods in town.
He and his deputies were equally merciless to any badmen who refused to pay, or cheated the lawman out of what he regarded as his fair share. Such offenders were usually shot dead out of hand.
Sam said, “While you and the rest of Weatherford’s good citizens were sleeping, Chuck Ramsey’s bunch was making a predawn run of stolen goods into town for delivery at Banker Drysdale’s warehouse off Town Square. Real first-class merchandise, from what I heard—this ring any bells for you, Spud?”
“Not a bit; I don’t know what you’re talking about.” But Spud did know, if the flicker of recognition in his sick eyes was any indication, and Sam Heller reckoned it was so.
“Here’s something you don’t know. The Ramsey gang ran into an ambush and got shot to pieces, every last man-jack of them, dead,” Sam said.
Spud Barker looked even sicker, face wrenched out of shape by a spasm of strong emotion, as if he’d taken a bite out of an apple to find half a worm.
“It’s a sin and a scandal how cheap these owlhoots hold human life,” Sam went on. “Maybe they figure such killers and scavengers ain’t really human . . . or maybe it takes one to know one, as the saying goes.
“Now here’s the part that’ll really gall you, Spud. After going to all that trouble of bushwhacking the Ramseys, the hijackers set fire to the wagons and burned up all the goods.”
“They-burned-them-up?!” Spud Barker said every word carefully and distinctly.
“Burned them up,” Sam repeated cheerfully. “All those plundered goods, turned into a heap of ashes. It’s like burning up money, don’t you think? A lot of money, I heard.”
“You hear a lot,” Spud said, looking daggers at him. “Too much.”
“I get around,” Sam said modestly. “Some good Samaritan passing through stopped by the warehouse to give them the bad news. Banker Drysdale being one of the big men in town there was nothing for it but for Marshal Finn and deputies to saddle up and gallop put pronto out to Hansen’s Pass where the ambush went down.
“Now just between the two of us, Spud, and don’t let on where you heard it, but I suspicion that when Finn gets to the pass, he’s going to find some clues and a set of tracks that lead right straight to Lem Buckman’s camp on the far side of the ridge.”
“Buckman!” Spud said, startled into angry vehemence. “Buckman would never cross Ramsey, they’ve been stringing together since the war! They’re like brothers! It’s all a put-up job to point the finger at Buckman and away from whoever really did the job—”
“Buckman didn’t do it, eh, Spud? You would know.”
“I don’t know a thing,” the other said dully.
“Lord, I hope Finn doesn’t go off half-cocked and ride into Buckman’s camp shooting! A lot of fellows could get hurt . . . Here’s a puzzlement: If Buckman and his bunch didn’t jump the Ramsey gang and burn the wagons, who did?”
“You tell me,” Spud said in flat, clipped tones.
“Loman Vard,” Sam suggested brightly. “Why not? Who better? Vard could be going behind your back and everybody else’s, trying to take over the town—”
“You madman!” Spud Barker had reached the breaking point where fear gave way to rage, greed, and frustration. “It’s not Vard who’s sneaking around doing the back shooting and burning, it’s you! You lowdown no-account good-for-nothing Yankee jackanapes! Who are you? What do you want? What’re you trying to do to this town, destroy it?” Spud Barker was all but shrieking.
“I’ll do that and more if that’s what it takes to get what I want,” Sam Heller said quietly.
“If it’s money you’re after, I’ll pay you to go away and leave me alone. I’ll pay you one hundred—no, five hundred dollars in gold!”
“Glad you upped the ante, because there’s more than two hundred dollars’ worth of greenbacks in your billfold alone, Spud.”
“Five hundred dollars in gold, in your hand within the hour, if you’ll leave me alone and ride out.”
“Sure, let’s take a stroll over to the bank and you’ll take it out of the petty cash drawer. What could go wrong? I trust you. Who wouldn’t trust a receiver of stolen goods plundered from robbed and murdered travelers and emigrants, men, women, and children?” Sam mocked.
“We’ll work out a way to get you the money that doesn’t put you at risk,” Spud insisted.
“I like money as well as anyone else, Spud, but it’s just incidental. What I want is information.”
“You won’t get it from me; it’ll take more than a lunatic lone Yankee storming into town, beating innocent people within an inch of their lives and slandering blameless businessmen like myself to make me betray my sacred trusts!”
“I’ll make you talk, Spud.”
“I’ve had a bellyful of your damned cat and mouse games—”
“Cat and rat, more like.”
“Blast you, speak plainly and say who you are and what you want!”
“The name’s Heller, Sam Heller, if that means anything to you.”
It did. Blood drained away from Spud Barker’s florid complexion, leaving it a sallow white. His eyes narrowed, calculating. He chewed tiny flecks of skin from his quivering lower lip.
Spud felt quite the fool. Had he not been so intimidated by his assailant, the mule’s leg on his hip should have been a dead giveaway to his identity. The notoriety of the Yankee bounty man with the chopped-down Winchester was widespread throughout North Central Texas and beyond.
“The Yankee bounty hunter who kills for gold,” Spud said. He tried to speak forcefully but his voice cracked, causing him to finish with a near-whisper.
“Guilty as charged,” Sam said.
“Y-you’re wasting your time sniffing around here, Bluebelly. There’s no price on my head!”
“That’s because you haven’t got caught yet. You may not be a wolf in sheep’s clothing but you’re no lamb, either . . . A polecat in sheep’s clothing, maybe.”
“Quit name calling and tell me what you want.”
“Loman Vard, that’s who I want.”
Spud Barker waited a long time before replying. “Never heard of him.”
“Stop it. If you’re going to lie—you might as well put some feeling into it. There’s not a man, woman, or stray dog in Weatherford who doesn’t know who Loman Vard is,” Sam said. “Loman Vard, your partner in the stolen goods and livestock business. Ring any bells yet?”
“Oh, that Vard!”
“Uh-huh, that one. Loman Vard—there’s only one,” Sam pressed.
“Sure I know him, er, ah, that is I mean I’ve heard of him, certainly, yes,” Spud said, stalling for time. “I got confused for a minute—who wouldn’t be, after getting beaten up, thrown through a window, and terrorized by a maniac Yankee? But you’ve got the wrong man, mister. I’m not partnered up with Vard or anyone else in the stolen goods business. I’m an honest dealer in used and secondhand merchandise—oof!”
This last reaction was occasioned by a sharp stiff jab that Sam Heller popped into Spud’s soft belly. It was not a particularly hard hit, for Sam wanted the other to be able to talk. But Spud still staggered under the blow.
Some color had been returning to Spud’s face, but the jab turned it pasty-white again.
Sam grabbed a fistful of Spud’s shirtfront, tearing cloth and sending buttons popping. “Better talk while you can, Spud. If Johnny Cross gets hold of you, your life won’t be worth a Confederate dollar,” he snapped.
“Johnny Cross!—what’s he got to do with me?!” Spud Barker was near-hysterical. White rings circled his eyes, fear-dilated pupils swollen to black disks.
“Vard sent Terrible Terry Moran to kill him—You’re Vard’s partner! Cross’ll kill Vard but he won’t stop there, he’ll clean up on the whole gang and everybody tied in with Vard, then he’ll burn down Vard’s house to warm his hands by!
“The only chance you’ve got of coming out of this alive is to give me Vard first. If I get him before Johnny does, I can keep you out of it. But if Johnny gets to Vard first, you’re a dead man. You can start running now, but no matter how far and how fast you go, some fine day you’ll find yourself looking at Cross from the wrong side of a gun.”
“This is madness! You’ve got the wrong man, I tell you.” Spud Barker’s shoulders heaved and he knuckled his eyes as though wiping away tears.
Sam noticed that Spud’s eyes were both dry and that Spud was peeking at him over the tops of his hands, looking to see if Sam was buying his story.
“It’s no good, Spud. I’m not guessing, I know. I tracked down Fly Norvine, the only member of Moran’s gang to escape the gundown. He spilled his guts by the time I was through with him. He told about Moran and all the rest of it, how you and Vard were thick
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