Bat Garrett goes to the funeral of a friend from high school, only to find that there are some family members of the deceased who think the death wasn’t accidental. Bat begins to look into the death and is confronted by old memories, some ex-girlfriends, and the disturbing idea that–if it was murder–it was committed by someone Bat knew.
When I got my private investigator’s license I figured my life would be a lot like the lives of those guys who used to show up late at night in the old shows on cable. High speed car chases, fist fights (where I would always win), and beautiful women who find a guy with a spotty income strangely alluring. Occasionally even solving a case.
Why was I so often surprised back in those days when life didn’t imitate art? Or even TV?
What the TV shows were especially bad at portraying was the stakeout. Oh, you would have the obligatory shot of the guy in his car at night, flashing neon in the distance, as he sips coffee from a thermos to set the mood, but considering the shows were only an hour long (minus commercials) they couldn’t show the reality of a stakeout.
Hour after hour, and sometimes night after night, just sitting there. Trying to stay awake and trying not to drink too much coffee ‘cause then you gotta go to the restroom and leave your post. So you just sit there.
And sit there.
And, if you’re me, drinking no coffee at all because you hate even the smell of it so you drink Dr Pepper like it’s going out of style, which still leads to bathroom issues.
Sometimes, you have a client who wants a meticulous log of everything that happens. “12:15Dog barks. 1:17Pizza delivery. Delivery vehicle license number … “ It sounds miserable and tedious—and it is—but at least with those you have something to do.
This was not one of those nights. I was sitting in my car across the street from an all-night diner that served, based on the smell, fried grease. As a side dish, one could order lard straight. But working in the diner was a woman who was being rapidly stalked by middle age and a husband who was convinced she was having an affair with one of her customers.
Now, you may be thinking that my job would be to watch her through the windows and see if she paid anyone any special attention. Not exactly. The husband was pretty sure who the affair was with, so I was supposed to sit there and watch to see if the Assumed One showed up and, especially, if the Waitress Woman were to leave with him.
Five nights down and not only had the Assumed One never showed, the Waitress had treated all of her customers with the same hostile indifference. Most of her customers left looking less than happy, so I couldn’t really see any of them saying something like, “Hey babe, after that rather belligerent service and a sandwich made—apparently—from old shoe leather, there’s nothing I’d like better than to take a hot mama like you out on the town.” Eight and a half hours after she would clock in (with a thirty minute “lunch” in the middle which she smoked away on a bench around the side of the building from the front door) she would leave and go straight home.
If this were a television show, the reason for the whole farce would be that I had been working on another, more important, case and this whole thing had been cooked up as a means of distracting me. In real life, I had taken this under-paying and boring job because there just wasn’t anything else, and hadn’t been for some time. It was a slack time in the P.I. biz, apparently. And being winter, it wasn’t much of a time for painting houses, either (my other listing in the phone book).
With Jody’s paycheck from her job as a speech therapist barely covering necessities, I was taking any job I could get in hopes of making ends meet. Thankfully, our cars were paid for and we didn’t pay much in rent, but you can’t eat an apartment—even the green moldy stuff on the walls that looks almost edible. We were still newlyweds in a lot of ways but, as much as I like old Glenn Miller tunes, his song about being able to live on love was starting to ring hollow.
Another night looked like it was going to drift by with no consequence when, just after three-thirty in the morning, a car that looked like the one I was told Assumed One drove pulled up in front of the diner. I perked up a little, then. I perked up a lot when the Assumed One, Mister Wally Norris himself, got out of the car. Tall, slatternly, with a one of those big droopy mustaches like country stars wore back in the eighties, I positively identified him from a picture I had been given when he stepped into the lights of the diner’s front entranceway.
As he went into the diner, I slipped quietly out of my car and closer to the diner, camera at the ready. Once in a position where I could get some good pictures of pretty much anywhere in the seating section of the diner, I started snapping.
It was a fairly old—let’s say broken-in—SLRand worked beautifully. For daytime shoots I was transitioning to a digital camera, but for nighttime work nothing beat that oldSLRand some 1200 film. Cameras may have gotten simpler to use as time has gone on, but that old camera could practically take the pictures itself even without auto-focus. It eventually developed a light leak I couldn’t get fixed and I sold it to a collector, but I always regretted it later, thinking I should have given it a place of honor on a shelf in my office. But I didn’t have a shelf in those days, let alone an office, and the collector helped me make a rent payment, which is neither here nor there for this story as it was some years later. Months anyway.
So there I was, getting pictures of him walking into the restaurant. And then there’s a picture of the Waitress looking none too pleased to see him. As I’m snapping away, she points toward the door, instructing him to leave. (It’s clear from the body language; I didn’t have to hear what she was saying.) But Assumed One steps right up to her and grabs her by the arm.
He should have grabbed the other arm—the one carrying a customer’s food—because she slammed the tray full of food upside his head. It was a horrible sight, all that Salisbury steak and candied apple slices spreading across the room. My last picture showed him letting go of her arm as he reached for his gravy-covered face, trying to get the apple chunks out of his eyes.
I dropped the camera—trusting the shoulder strap to take care of it—and darted for the diner’s door. By the time I was through the door, Assumed One had cornered Waitress behind the counter and the one customer was a guy who was rooted in place by fear and shouldn’t have been screaming like that in my humble opinion. His screams were soon drowned out by the screams of Assumed One, who had just taken a saucer of hot grease to the kisser.
No, I don’t usually talk like that, but it is a private eye story.
As Assumed One hit the floor on all fours and clawed at his face, the cook called 911 and the Waitress stood over her assailant with the saucer held in a threatening manner. I wouldn’t have thought it could be done, either, if I hadn’t seen it. If she had been holding a Glock with a round in the chamber, her demeanor could have been no more menacing.
Despite graduating from a correspondence college with a degree in private investigations and a long-ago Boy Scout merit badge in First Aid, I wasn’t sure what the protocol was for “hot-grease-in-face”. Still, it seemed like something ought to be done, so I pulled out my gun.
“The cops are already here?” asked the cook in impressed dismay, popping up from wherever he had been hiding.
“Probably just someone else that wants to kill him,” the Waitress grumbled, remarkably calm about the whole thing. Seeing my weaponry, though, she set down the saucer. Then, told me, “Go ahead and shoot him. I’ll gladly testify it was self defense.”
Assumed One, peaking at me from between his fingers with one red eye, just whimpered and made a larger mess on the floor than had been there previously. “I’m not going to shoot you,” I told him.
He had never seen so many books in one room. Stacked on rickety shelves from floor to ceiling, they overwhelmed the room, and the visitor. Chris Farmer, investigator for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, suddenly felt like he knew nothing about the person he was trying to help. But he was suddenly curious. Why would someone so young-why would anyone-have so many books? Alyste Smith was a young woman who lived with an abusive step father and longed to escape. The only way she knew how was through books. So she read and read and read, hoping beyond hope that, one day, a hero like the ones in her books would walk through her door and rescue her.
I had never really noticed her until I saw the books. Hundreds of books (thousands, I was to learn later) adorned her small room. She had bookshelves she had brought in from somewhere at, I guess, the start of it. Between them she had built other shelves. They would have made Norm Abrams cringe, but they would have warmed the heart of any librarian.
Some shelves were built by putting a board across cinder blocks, then more cinder blocks, then another board and so on up to the ceiling. In some cases, where cinder blocks or other bricks couldn’t be found, larger books were used to hold the shelves above off the books below. Here and there an ineffectual nail had been driven into a board to secure that board to the side of another shelf or to the wall itself. The whole business showed a profound lack of engineering knowledge but would have made even Rube Goldberg envious.
How the whole mess stood and hadn’t collapsed and killed her years before I have no idea. My own experience with dismantling it all brought a few paper avalanches that threatened to take my own life, but I’ll have to get back to that later.
“You’ve read all these?” I asked in dubious wonder as I looked at the books that lined the walls from floor to ceiling, making the little eight by ten room about seven by eight and a half. If she could have figured out a way to attach a bookshelf to the back of the door, I was sure she would have.
“Uh-huh,” she nodded. Then, in the apparent need for accuracy, she amended, “Everything but these two shelves. I haven’t read them, yet. But I will.” Pulling back the covers on the bed, she revealed a weathered paperback and, picking it up, said, “And this one. I haven’t finished it, yet. I …can I take it with me?”
“Yeah,” I told her, still looking in awe at the walls-which I couldn’t see, but assumed they were back there-somewhere-behind the books.
I knew there were more important and pressing matters, but I couldn’t help stepping closer to the books for a moment. There was no discernible theme in the volumes chosen. I saw a few romance novels, of the kind I would have stereotyped a young woman in her position to read. But I saw much more. There were psychology textbooks and biographies of famous people, from Teddy Roosevelt to Tacitus, and books by Twain, L’Amour and Kafka. There was a shelf of books by CS Lewis, just above a shelf of books by Tolkien (having never read either, I had no idea of the significance of this paring). I saw books on horticulture and agriculture and books of poetry by people with names I couldn’t read, let alone pronounce.
“All of them?” I asked again, though not necessarily meaning it to be out loud.
“All of them,” she confirmed.
“Do you have a favorite?”
I happened to be looking at her at that moment and realized from the look that flew fleetingly across her face that I had asked her a question akin to asking a mother which of her children were her favorite. When her composure was regained, she replied, “Probably whichever book is in my hands at the moment you ask.”
I pointed to the book that she had picked up off the bed and asked, smiling and trying to make it sound friendly, “So right now it’s that one?”
She looked down at it, a slight grimace at the corner of her mouth, then back at me and replied, “No. Not this one. It’s not that good.”
“So why read it?”
There was just the slightest hesitation before she answered, “Because I started it.”
For the first time, I took a look at this remarkable person who had, up until that very moment, just been a part of another complicated if strangely routine and boring case.
The way he looked at the books intrigued me.
Not many people had seen my collection of books, but some had. All the others had had pretty much the same reaction, though. Wondering why I had so many books, why I wanted so many books, or complete incredulity at my claim to have read them all.
People my age were the worst. The couple times I had met people my age who claimed to be readers, when they saw all my books, they usually looked at me like they thought I was crazy. Most of them, I would find out (if given the chance, most were gone after a glimpse into my room), read more than the average teenager, but they only read one thing. All romance books, or all mystery novels or all books on a single subject. That, to me, sounded like eating the same thing meal after meal, year after year. I like pizza, but I have to eat some other things now and then, you know?
So when he looked at the books with amazement, I thought I had found a soul mate. I was so surprised later to find he wasn’t a reader. Oh, he knew how, of course. He had just never known why anyone would do it on purpose. What struck me, though, was that he didn’t dismiss my reading. And when he found out just how many books I had, he didn’t renege on his offer to carry them all out. For the first time since my mother died, someone saw my books and didn’t treat me like a freak.
On the other hand, I have never been able to understand people who don’t read, or don’t love reading. I love reading. Even when my life was going well, I loved reading.
A ghost. Bat has to be seeing a ghost. While recuperating in Houston he stumbles across a shopgirl who looks and sounds just like someone he lost a year before. As his friends think he’s going crazy, and even he’s starting to wonder if he watched “Vertigo” one too many times, he tries to piece together the background of the shopgirl. The investigation takes Bat from Houston and Dallas, to Arkansas and Durango (where he meets a young Garison Fitch) and closer to the conclusion that he may not have been the only one set-up by the Home Agency.
To read more about Bat Garrett, be sure and check out “The Nice Guy“, “The Return of the Nice Guy” and “Up to Bat“. All available on Kindle & in paperback! And, if you want to read this story from Jody’s perspective (as well as find out what happened next), be sure and read “Cheerleader, Gymnast, Flautist, Spy“!
… Read a Sample
“What is it we’re going to go look at?” Dave asked as we walked through the mall. I was surprised how few people were there shopping, but I guessed it was because it was a week day. “Sunglasses. I’m telling you, Dave, these are the ugliest you’ve ever seen. They would have been great for that day in college when we had the ‘Ugliest Outfit’ contest.” “I didn’t know the Galleria had a gag shop.” “It’s not intended to be, but these will make you gag.” As we were nearing the store, I saw a girl walk into the shop ahead of us who just about took my breath away. I stopped dead in my tracks and could feel my heart pounding in my chest like faulty pistons in a Ford Granada. If I had been prone to such things, I think I would have had a heart attack. The quick and unexpected (even to me) stop on the crutches almost made me fall on my face, so I had to take a moment to regain my balance. “What—what is it?” Dave asked. The look on my face must have scared him. I imagine I went almost completely white—maybe even green. “That girl that just walked in.” “So? She was cute; but we’ve seen several of those today. She wasn’t as pretty as Heather, I didn’t think.” “No. This girl looked like … like someone I used to know.” “Let’s go see her,” he said. “Maybe it’s her.” “Couldn’t be.” “Why not? Houston’s a big city.” He smiled, “Shoot, I bet there’s more than two hundred people in this town. I hit that many cars in the parking lot.” “But this couldn’t be her, Dave.” “It’s a small world, Bat.” “But it’s not the Twilight Zone.” “What are you talking about?” “The girl she reminded me of is dead.”
Dallas private eye Bat Garrett is hired by wealthy Texas oilman Frank Gaston, who thinks someone is trying to kill him.
Bat is skeptical but when Gaston is found dead, slumped over at his desk, the fear seems to have been well-placed.
Darla Gaston, the beautiful young oilman’s daughter, is encouraged by her lawyers to fire Bat and let the police investigate. Darla, however, wants Bat to find out why her father has been calling a number in Colorado for several years. Bat discovers that Gaston has left a trail of lies and deceit, bigamy, and maybe even a decades-old smuggling operation involving children and a massive real estate deal in Oak Cliff.
It’s the biggest case Bat’s ever had, but it may cost him more than he’s ever had to give.
Available on Kindle and paperback. Make sure you read the whole Bat Garrett (& Jody) saga, beginning with “The Nice Guy“, followed by “The Return of the Nice Guy“, then this book, then concluded (this arc, anyway) in “Last at Bat” …
Reading Sample
My name is Bat Masterson Garrett. I’m a private detective. I always dreamed of leading a glamorous life like the P.I.s on TV, but it doesn’t seem to work out that way in real life. Real life private detectives track down husbands who don’t pay their alimony, or find out if someone is having the affair their spouse suspects them of having. Once in a while, there is a fight; but there aren’t many shootouts or car chases. I sometimes wonder why I wanted that stuff in the first place.
Detectives on TV always get the girl, too. That never happens. Like I said, the people I deal with are usually already married (albeit trying to remedy the situation). Besides, people in real life don’t even look like the people on TV. Well, some people (my former fiancé Jody Anderson) used to accuse me of looking like Kevin Costner.
Well, what she said was that I probably weighed the same as Kevin Costner. My hair’s almost the same color as his, but I have blue eyes and am only about an even six foot—while I’ve always figured him to be taller. Some girls think I’m attractive, some don’t, so I’ll let you draw your own conclusions.
One day, I was sitting in my apartment in North Dallas looking at my baseball card collection when the phone rang. My phone never rings, so it liked to scared me to death. I hastily picked up the cards I had dropped and went over to the phone, sorting them on the way. I figured the odds were that the cards were more valuable than the phone call and deserved my attention. Having once owned a baseball card shop of my own (for about six months), I knew something of their value.
I answered and a man asked, “Is this B.M. Garrett Investigations?”
“Sure is, what can I do for you?” I was real surprised that anyone wanted me to investigate something. I’m also listed in the yellow pages under “Painters: House”, and that seems to generate the majority of my calls for gainful employment. A couple times people have tried to hire me as a body guard, but I don’t much care for the “rough work” after my limited experience with it. I’m not exactly a “big dude”, anyway, and most of my schooling in self defense would fall under the heading of “run”.
“This is Franklin Gaston,” he told me, “Of Gaston Oil.” He put in a pause like I ought to have heard of him but I hadn’t so I just mumbled noncommittally. I don’t keep up with the oil market except to the extent that I go to the cheapest gas station.
He continued, “I think I am in need of the services of a private investigator, Mister Garrett. You are Mister Garrett, aren’t you?”
“Yes, but call me Bat.”
“Pat?”
“No, Bat. Like those things that sleep upside down in caves.”
“Well, yes,” he said as he tried to regain his train of thought. My name always does that to people. Thanks, Dad.
“What did you need, Mister Gaston?”
“Well,” he said cautiously. “I really think it would be much better for us to meet in private—and in person. I’m confident no one is listening in, but I would just feel more confident if I could talk to you in person.”
“I understand,” I told him. It already sounded like he was going to ask me to trail his wife and find out if she was cheating on him. If that were true, I thought, he was probably afraid she would walk into the room he was in and overhear the conversation. Maybe she was already in there. You never know about these people. One guy hired me to watch his wife then told her I would be there. I didn’t get much on her for some reason.
“Where would you like to meet, Mister Gaston?” I asked. “I’m pretty flexible.”
He seemed to be thinking a minute, then replied, “It needs to be some place out of the way. Do you have any suggestions?”
“I know just the place. It’s on Northwest Highway—”
“That’s not out of the way,” he told me.
“In a way, it is. Think about it, if you were having a secret meeting, would you normally go to one of the busiest streets in town? See, the idea is to do what’s not expected. Like in football, sometimes you run the play that seems like the worst choice because the other team is confident you won’t run that one.”
Sean Clarke moves to the town of his dreams, to a house he loves, to a life he’s always wanted. There he meets and falls in love with Angie. a beautiful young woman. Sean’s family is happy for him, but they are waiting: for that moment when Sean discovers something he doesn’t like about another perfect woman and dumps her.
A novel of self-discovery, about finding out that the things that irritate us most about the faults of other people are when they mirror our own.
To read more about Brad, Allie and Angie, make sure you read the novel Mended Lives! To read how Joe and Ellen met, check out Hating God – a love story!
…
Sample Passage
He let go of her to hold the picture in both hands. He was looking at it, but he wasn’t seeing it. He wasn’t seeing anything. His mind was gone and it didn’t show any signs of coming back any time soon.
“I’m sorry,” she finally said, when she didn’t think he would ever speak again. “I never meant to hide this—to hide anything—from you. But I was so ashamed—”
“You should be!” he blurted out.
“I know, I—”
He jumped to his feet and demanded, “What else are you going to tell me, Angie? When am I going to start meeting all these guys you slept with? What about the millions who saw you nude? When are more of them going to show up and start asking me if I’ve seen what they’ve seen? When, huh?”
She stood up in front of him and tried to reach out to him. “I wish I could take back all those pictures, Sean. I do. But I can’t. What can I do?”
“You could leave.”
“Sean!”
“What do you expect me to say? ‘Hey great! All the men of England have already seen my fiancé naked but I haven’t!’ Just leave, please.”
He picked up the folder, stuck the picture back in it (but not before seeing that there were other similar pictures in it and actually letting one slip out unnoticed that slid under the rocking chair), and thrusting the folder at her demanded, “Take these with you.”
“Sean—”
“Please, go.”
“Can I come back?”
He took a deep breath and replied, through clinched teeth, “I’ll get back to you on that.”
“Sean—”
He stepped around her and opened the front door. Gently but firmly, he pushed her outside and closed the door behind her.
She turned around to face the door, but heard the unmistakable sound of the deadbolt being thrown. She thought about knocking but didn’t think it was the right time. She sat down on the front porch steps, put her head on her knees, and started crying.
It was almost half an hour later that she got up, smoothed out her dress with her hands and, taking the folder, walked back to the café. Inside, the cook asked if she were all right, to which she nodded but didn’t answer out loud. She just put on her apron, then put on her customer face, and went out to deal with the public. She was relieved that the British couple was gone.
She looked around, though, at the crowd now there and wondered if any of them had ever seen her ads for Sutley’s, or Liverpool football, or any of the other ads she had done? What about just the magazine layouts? She remembered when she used to pat herself on the back because she had never done full-frontal, but now it didn’t seem like such a big deal. “Partly evil is still evil,” she muttered to herself. Then, noticing that a customer had overheard, she smiled, said, “Excuse me,” and took his order.
After that order, though, she went back and relieved the cook. Not only did she want to be away from the general public, working with food had long been a way to calm down and think. She did so, now.
Brad Reynolds comes home to Medicine Park, OK, to take over his father’s old business and try to put his life back together after a divorce. He’s fitting in, he’s meeting great new people, he’s even started attending a Bible study. Brad’s a great guy by everyone’s account. What they don’t know is that he has an addiction. He’s kept it well-hidden so far, but it’s already destroyed his marriage and it will soon destroy his whole life. So Brad tries to bury it, to ignore it, to power his way through it … but it keeps escaping from the box he keeps it in.
“I really liked it. I had never read a book with that viewpoint of the guy with the sex addiction. It was interesting as he grew in Christ. I thought it was very encouraging as we all have aspects of ourselves we need to put under Christ’s Lordship.” ~KD, LA
And the “sort-of” sequel …
If you would like to read more about Brad, Allie and Angie, be sure and pick up the novel Joyfully Ever After.
…
Sample Chapter
The divorce was final the same day his parents died in the car wreck.
He thought about not even telling Darria, or trying to tell her in such a way as to hurt her. But he didn’t. He just called her and, as she prepared for one of his trademark snide remarks involving either the postal service or how relieved he was to finally be rid of her, he calmly told her he had gotten the papers and his parents had just died.
Darria didn’t know what to say, except that she was really sorry to hear that. She meant it and hoped she could convey her sincerity but knew she had her own reputation for caustic remarks, especially where Brad was concerned. Still, she had always gotten along just fine with the Reynolds and they had even reached out to her recently, as things had begun to go sour in her marriage to their son. She had bristled at the intrusion, but secretly appreciated it, too.
“Well,” he said, “I’ve got to go. I’ve got to go pick up Mike at the airport. Then, we’ll, um, head over to the mountains.”
“Yeah,” she said, nodding at the phone even though he, of course, could not see the motion. Then, she quickly added, “For what it’s worth, I’m really sorry it finalized today—of all days.”
“I’m sorry they had to die today, of all days.” He tried to think of something else to say, then, not even sure if she were still there, told her, “Good bye, Darria. Be seeing you, huh?”
“Yeah. I’m really sorry, Brad.”
“Thanks,” he told her as he hung up.
***
They hugged at the airport, cried a bit, then things got so quiet as they left the airport in Brad’s car that they jumped into as banal a brand of small talk as they could muster before they were even onto I-44. “You have to wonder whose idea it was,” Brad quipped, “To build the Wiley Post Terminal of the Will Rogers Airport on Amelia Earhardt Drive.”
“What do you mean?” Mike asked.
“What do those three people have in common?”
Mike thought a moment, then nodded, “They all died in airplane crashes, didn’t they?”
They ran out of small talk just as they passed Norman, however, and were stuck with silence, again. Suddenly, Brad said, almost to his own surprise, “I’d like the store.”
“What?” Mike responded, completely thrown off guard. His thoughts had already gone to his wife and baby, who were driving down from Colorado and would be joining him (hopefully) the next day. He hadn’t wanted to do it that way, but the fact was they just couldn’t afford three airplane tickets on such short notice but still felt Mike should be there for his brother as soon as possible.
“The bait shop,” Brad explained. “I’d like the bait shop.” Suddenly thinking it through aloud, he offered, “I’ll buy your half from you for whatever you think is fair. I can take what I got from mine and Darria’s house and make you a down payment. For the store and your half of Mom and Dad’s house. I’ll get a loan to cover the rest.”
Realizing how impetuous he was being, he suddenly added, “Unless you want it. I was just thinking that I’ve kind of been wanting out of my job—and out of Oak City—for a while now. But I don’t think that little bait shop makes enough money for us both to live on. So, you can have it, if—”
“No,” Mike replied, just as suddenly. “You take it.” After a moment, “I’m serious. Annette and I really like Aurora. It’s where we want Collin to grow up. It’s home now. Why don’t you just list me as a silent partner in the store and then slowly buy me out? That way you won’t get nailed for all that interest.”
“I wasn’t thinking of anything like that—”
“Why not? It works out for both of us. I get a monthly payment I haven’t been getting and you get the store.” After a moment, Mike asked, “Why do you want it? I don’t remember you showing any interest in it before.”
They were several miles further along before Brad answered, “You grow up in a small town and you can’t wait to get out. Now, I want to go back. I know it won’t be the same. But maybe I can recapture a little bit of what it was . . . once. I’m a grown-up now. As of today, I’m officially divorced—”
***
“I really feel bad about that. Wished there was something I could have done. Wished I had seen it coming.”
“The only people who could have were me and Darria and we waited too long to acknowledge it, and then longer to do something about it. And you didn’t see it because we tried so hard to hide from everyone, including ourselves. I think that’s part of why I want to get out of Oak City. I’ll always associate this place with my marriage. Now I can get out.”
“Do you really think going back to Medicine Park is the right answer? You want to get away? Come back to Aurora with me. You’ve always liked Colorado. You can get a job in Denver. You’d be near family. Lots of accounting jobs there.”
“Uhg. I’ve done accounting, Mike.” He smiled and added, “Maybe I could go to Texas, where cousin Denny lives. Maybe there’s a job in Frognot. I’ve always kind of wanted to live there just so I could have that name on my letterhead.”
***
The funeral home had done a good job, as far as such jobs went. Instead of two people who had been in a car that had gone off a rain-soaked highway, they looked like two people who had just chosen a strange place to take a nap. After a few moments of “viewing,” Mike commented to Brad, “I don’t know about you, but I’m ready to close the lids.”
“Yeah,” Brad nodded anxiously. He motioned to the funeral director, a thin woman with iron grey hair perfectly coiffed She came over and, with the help of a young assistant, closed the caskets. “Remember the line from that cousin in Arizona—I can’t ever remember his name. I just remember being at a funeral for some uncle or other and someone comments about the body looking natural and he said, ‘No he doesn’t. I’ve known Uncle Chuck for twenty years and not once can I remember him getting dressed up in his best suit, coming down to the church, then taking a nap in a box at the front of the room.’”
Mike actually smiled as he said, “I remember that. Uncle Leonard, wasn’t it? The man who died, I mean. Lived in New Mexico somewhere, didn’t he?”
“Las Vegas, it seems like,” Brad nodded. “I just went so I could be with Mom and Dad.”
“Yeah, and I met ya’ll there mainly so I could see everyone. Can’t remember that cousin’s name, though.”
“Private detective, wasn’t he? I remember that just because he was the only private detective I ever met.”
“I think you’re right. We’ll be back in the morning,” Mike told the funeral director suddenly, when he realized the director was still right behind them. The two brothers had already cried on each others shoulders to the point that now they were just drained and ready to leave and the moment’s laughter had been genuine under the relief it had brought. Neither had seen the other cry like that ever, so it left a surreal picture in their minds as they left.
***
Standing in the living room of their parents’ house, dressed now in casual clothes, Annette nearby playing with Collin on the floor, Brad commented, “It just doesn’t seem real. I keep expecting them to come in here. For Mom to try to feed us something.”
Looking around, Mike asked, “Are you sure moving here is the right idea? The fish and tackle shop is one thing, but this house? Sell it and buy another one nearer the shop if you want. You always joked you were going to buy a house in Paradise Valley just because you liked the name. Do that.”
“Naw, this is home. I may have never thought about having the bait shop, but I always dreamed about having this house. Pictured Darria and I having kids and moving here. You know, Mom and Dad always said they would move somewhere when they retired. Figured they’d move near you in Denver and we’d get this place. Maybe telecommute to a job in Oak City or just over in Lawton and drive in one or two days a week.” He sighed and shrugged, “The Darria part’s gone now. I can get the house, now, though.”
Mike bit his lip a moment, then said what he’d been thinking, not just all day but ever since he had heard that his brother was getting divorced, “Are you sure there’s no chance of you and Darria getting back together? You two were so great together—”
“I think she’s got somebody else,” Brad answered. At the looks in his brother and sister in law’s eyes, he quickly explained, “Don’t get the wrong idea. She was never unfaithful. Neither was I, for that matter. Anyway, I heard from a mutual friend that she had met somebody at her work that she was going to go out with as soon as the divorce was final.”
“It’s not like she’s already remarried,” Mike said, ignoring the look from his wife that was trying to tell him to just shut up. “Can’t you work things out?”
“I used to think so. Went to counseling and everything.” Another big shrug as he leaned on the mantel and looked into the low fire. “Didn’t work.” He looked over at Collin and said, “Kids were part of it, you know. Sometimes wonder, if we had been able to have kids . . . “ After a bit, he added, “On the other hand, sure am glad we didn’t put any kids through this. Divorce is hard on kids.”
“Well,” Mike said, stumbling over the words, “I don’t want to bug you about it. But if you, um, get the chance, talk to Darria. Maybe you two just needed some time away.”
Brad was too worn out to argue, so he just nodded and said, “Yeah. Maybe so. That’s what Dad said, too.”
***
“Thanks for coming,” Brad said as they walked away from the graveside service. The minister from the Reynolds’ church had delivered the eulogy and had done quite well. Brad and Mike had both thanked him for the words, and everyone else for coming out on such a cold, if sunny, day.
Darria nodded uncomfortably, then threw her arms around his neck and, sobbing, told him, “I am so sorry for you. And for Mike, too. But I’m really sorry for, for everything happening. Now, of all times.”
“Well, it wasn’t just you,” he told her as he held her close, feeling her for the first time in months. It had a strange familiarity that was surprisingly comforting. “I know the timing was an accident. But I, uh, do thank you for coming here today. It really does mean a lot. Can you come over to the house for a while? There’s a lot more food there than even Mike and I can eat. Give you a chance to see Annette. And Collin, too.”
“He sure is getting big, isn’t he?” Darria commented wistfully. She then let go of the hug, wiped her eyes and said, “I better get back into town, though. I told the office I would try to make it back for the afternoon.”
“Well, don’t go so fast you . . . drive carefully, huh?”
She was prettier than he remembered. Maybe it was the black dress. He had never seen her in black because she had always said it made her look washed out. With her reddish blonde hair and freckled skin, he had always taken her at her word. But now, looking at her, he realized she looked pretty attractive in black. And she had lost weight. She wouldn’t have been able to fit in that dress when they were still together.
But then, he had lost weight, too. He didn’t think it was stress so much as that he just hadn’t eaten as regularly since the split. He was almost back to his college weight. And what with walking every day in the sun, the red had come out in his brown hair and a few freckles had resurfaced that he hadn’t seen in a long time.
People used to say they belonged together but he always figured it was because they were both red haired and fair skinned. He wondered if, that day at the cemetery, they looked like they ought to be together again. He wondered if she were wondering the same thing.
She nodded, then kissed him on the cheek and walked away to her car. He watched her go, not knowing how he should feel. If it were a movie, he knew, he would run after her and catch her in his arms and convince her to stay with him. Or he’d watch her go and cry. But he didn’t feel like doing either. He didn’t feel like doing anything. So he just watched her go.
***
“You sure you don’t want me to hang around for a while?” Mike offered. “I’ve got a couple weeks coming. I could help you move and get settled in at the shop and all.”
“No. Your family needs you with them. I’ll be fine. Old Simms is going to run the shop until I can get out there, and most of my stuff is in storage so it won’t take all that much to move it. Got some friends that can help with that.”
“Well, if you need me, you call, all right? It’s just you and me now, brother.”
“Hey, same here. I mean, if you need anything, you call me. I know how to get to Aurora.” Brad snapped his fingers and said, “Let’s plan on getting together in a couple months. Maybe head into the mountains or something.”
“Sounds great,”
Brad hugged Annette, thanked her for coming, and held a very wriggly Collin one more time, kissing the little boy on the forehead. “I can’t believe how fast you can move, little guy. You’ll be walking by the next time I see you, I bet.”
Two years after the murder of a prominent north Texas banker has been solved and the killer put in jail, Dallas private eye Bat Garrett is hired by an attractive widow to find out why her husband was killed. The police (and everyone else) say it was just a robbery gone bad, but the widow thinks differently. With Jody Anderson still on crutches from her horrific ordeal in “The Nice Guy” but by his side as always, Bat undertakes a case that leads him through an amateur archaeological society in Dallas and into a centuries old mystery in the ancient ruins of Mesa Verde in southwest Colorado. Did the unassuming banker uncover something someone else would rather have stayed hidden?
Make sure you read the prequel to this book, “The Nice Guy” and book 3 in the series, “Up to Bat“!
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Reading Sample
Without a doubt, that was the best summer, fall and winter I had ever had.
As we have come to expect from the geniuses in government accounting, the Home Agency let me keep the money they had paid me for the job I had done for them back in the spring. It was way more than the job was worth—well, I should probably …
Anyway, I took the money and invested it in a friend who was opening up a baseball card and comic book store in Farmer’s Branch. As investments go, that wasn’t a whole lot better than just piling it up in the back yard and setting fire to it, but it gave me a chance to help out a guy who had been a good friend for a long time—and especially when I had needed one.
My private investigating business was starting to take off, too. I wasn’t getting any glamorous cases, but word had somehow gotten around that I was a pretty good hand at surveillance and so I was getting fairly steady work—some of it even from other investigation firms. I’ve always been a pretty plain guy, so I was a natural at hanging around in the background and watching other people without being observed myself.
Of course, the thing that made that summer, fall and winter better than all previous summers, falls and winters was that I had a girlfriend. A real, honest-to-goodness, she-likes-me-as-much-as-I-like-her girlfriend. I had never really had one of those before. Well, there had been Thalia, but that had been … oh, never mind. Her name was Jody Anderson and she was the love of my life. The one you know that—even if things were to go sour—she’d always be the one you’d think of as “the one great love.” The kind you’d write songs about if—unlike me—you had rhythm or any sense at all of musical style.
She had shoulder-length hair that was somewhere between auburn and brown, tending to the red in the sunshine. She was petite of build but a perfectly shaped figure for all that. And she had this great little mole just above the left corner of her mouth.
She might not have thought of that summer as a great time, because she spent most of it in the hospital, or in rehab. She had shattered her right leg—above and below the knee—and there was talk on more than one occasion that it might have to be amputated. I think she kept it strictly out of will-power.
She had broken the leg while on the job with me for the Home Agency. She had also been shot, but that—by comparison—was easily dealt with. I mean, by itself, it would have kept her in the hospital for a couple weeks at a minimum. But then she would have been out and rehab would have probably consisted mainly of walking and getting her lungs back in shape. The leg, though, was a process of multiple surgeries and rehab that lasted well past Christmas.
So I say that the government overpaid me, but I doubt that Jody would say the same thing about the remuneration she received. They took care of her medical bills, of course, but no amount of money would be worth that kind of pain and suffering.
The conclusion of the John Overstreet saga. The gunfighters are hanging up their guns, a new century is dawning, and a different kind of fight comes to the You’ll See. But one more gunfight is on the horizon for John Overstreet: the last gunfight.
Available in ebook (in many formats, including Apple) and paperback.
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Reading Sample
“Aunt Melinda! Aunt Melinda!” Ben shouted as he ran up the road from town. He had run all the way and though he was about out of breath, he was long on enthusiasm and that was making the difference. Afraid something was wrong, Melinda stepped out on the porch and was relieved that he seemed to be shouting it in a happy way. Still calling her name, he ran up onto the porch and into her arms, panting happily like a dog. “What is it, Ben?” He tried to tell her his news, but his wind had finally caught up with him (or left him, depending on how one looked at it) and all he could do was stand there and breathe heavily. He was a blonde-headed boy with his mother’s green eyes and his father’s good looks. A little more stout than his older brother, he was still good-sized for his age and becoming very athletic. His real passion, though, was art. So he held up a piece of paper and managed, “Read this.” Melinda took the paper and read, “‘Dear Mister Rathum, We are pleased to inform you that the drawing you submitted has been chosen as a finalist and will be on display in the Denver Museum of Art and is eligible for first prize in The Rocky Mountain News’ Young Artist Competition.’ Oh Ben, this is wonderful!” She gave him a hug, which he barely acknowledged as he took the paper back and read it again. “Can we go see it? In the museum, I mean?” “You bet we will!’ Melinda told him with another hug. “We’ll take the whole family. And we’ll be sure and let Jo and Leonard know, too.” “Can I write them?” “You sure can.” “Can I tell Uncle John when he gets in?” “Certainly.” Melinda laughed and added, “You might want to sit down and breath between now and then, though.”
“Uncle John!” Ben practically screamed as John rode into the ranch yard. “I’m a finalist!” John got off his horse and, walking it to the Hayloft, asked, “A finalist for what?” Ben quickly explained the commotion and showed John the paper. John read it and gave Ben a hug. “Aunt Melinda says we can go to Denver and see my picture in the museum.” “You bet your life we will. Come on, let’s put my horse up, then we’ll go make some plans. Which picture was it?” “That picture I drew of the Old Homestead with that special pencil you got me for Christmas.” “That was a good picture.” He tousled Ben’s hair and added playfully, “Must’ve been the pencil.”
“And this drawing,” the tour guide explained, “Was drawn by a member of our very own tour group: Mister Benjamin Rathum of Como. Wave your hand, Ben.” As Ben shyly stuck up his hand, the group of a couple score people clapped politely and several were heard to remark that it was amazing a child of his age could draw so well. He received several pats on the back and more than one vote of confidence that he would win the prize. Nervous beyond belief, Ben held tightly to John Mac’s hand and just nodded at all the compliments. If anyone noticed that Ben’s blonde hair didn’t seem to fit in with the black-haired family he was traveling with, they were polite enough not to say anything. Everyone involved, including Ben, thought of him as part of the Overstreet family these days. John Mac followed him around the way Andrew and Emily followed John Mac around and John and Melinda treated him like one of their own. In return, he treated John and Melinda as if they were his parents. Almost from the moment he had come to live with them, there had been a bond of love that was so strong as to be unbelievable. But Ben was a very special boy, one bound to make a mark in the world if in no other way than all the people he would be kind to. As the tour moved on, Melinda realized that Emily was about to fall asleep where she stood. Melinda whispered to John, “I’m just going to sit in that chair over there and snuggle Emily. She needs a nap and my feet are killing me.” “We’ll come back and get you before we leave,” John whispered in return. Melinda sat in a big, surprisingly comfortable chair, and Emily eagerly climbed into her lap. She had chattered on the whole train ride from Como and in the carriage from the train station to the museum and had worn herself out. And while she and Andrew were both giving up their naps as a general rule, Emily could still be persuaded to take one in her mother’s lap now and again. As she sat there, Melinda found that she was almost tired enough to go to sleep herself. They had gotten up early, then all dressed in their best clothes so they could come straight to the museum, and the long day was suddenly catching up with her. Through half-focused eyes, Melinda absently watched the few other patrons who had elected to tour the museum sans a guide. There was an elderly couple who talked happily about every picture; a college-aged looking young man who scrutinized every piece of art as if he were a world-renown art critic visiting the Louvre; and a middle-aged woman with fading blonde hair who stopped at every picture, examined the name plate then moved on without seeming to have seen the picture at all. Melinda found herself watching the woman. She moved slowly, her feet almost dragging, as if she had walked to the museum from a great distance. Melinda had read of people who appeared to be “beaten down by life” and, while she had seen a few such people, this woman was the personification of the idea. Melinda couldn’t see her face, but she could see the slumped shoulders, the tired gait, the hands that reached out to every name plate as if for a life raft. Melinda began to wonder about the woman and what her story might be. She tried not to stare at the woman—even though she guessed that the woman was oblivious to everything around her—but cast furtive glances her way in an attempt to, somehow, read the woman’s story. Suddenly, Melinda was very awake, but was also thankful that Emily was there. An inveterate people watcher, Melinda had spent many hours watching people while holding one or another of her children on the porch of the Como Hotel or the boardwalk on Rowe Street. She had even done it a few times in Denver and had always enjoyed it immensely for there were so many more people to watch. The woman was wearing a traveling dress of impeccable style, which would have been incongruous with the picture she put forth except that it was still dusty from travel. In a world where the streets were mostly dirt and carriages mostly open, the dust wasn’t necessarily out-of-place. But the dress was so nice, Melinda realized that what looked odd was that normally someone with a dress like that wouldn’t have stepped out of their railway car without borrowing a brush from one of the porters and giving it a once-over. The train? Melinda suddenly wondered why she thought this woman had just gotten off a train. She realized, with closer scrutiny, that it wasn’t just dust that clung to the woman’s dress but soot. That fine soot that Melinda had been so careful to brush off her own dress before coming over. So what would posses a person who seemed so ill at ease with life to hop a train and come to a museum? Maybe, Melinda thought, she’s downtown for something else and stopped by the museum to kill time. There were a few lawyer’s offices nearby and the capitol building wasn’t all that far away. No. She came to believe as she watched the woman (less and less furtively), that the woman was in the museum for a purpose. There was something in these pictures that she was looking for. What could it be? No again. As Melinda watched the woman’s movements she realized that the woman was looking not at the pictures but the names. One of these pictures was done by someone that meant something to the woman. A grandchild perhaps? All the pictures in this room were done by children twelve years of age and under and it was unlikely that this woman could have a child in that range. What is it about a grandchild’s picture that would so enthrall this woman, so entrance her that she would travel across country to see it? The woman came then to Ben’s picture and stopped. She actually looked at the picture, and then put her hand on the name plate as if it and not the wall behind it were holding her up. She put her other hand to her heart as if to keep it from killing her, and just stared. Just as Melinda began to shoot various scenarios through her mind to explain these events, she mumbled to herself, “Oh my!”
Settled in the Colorado mountains and hoping his gunfighting days are over. John finds marriage and family to his liking, but he’s still hounded by the family of the man he killed in Texas.
Available for ebook (in many formats) and paperback.
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Sample reading
It was late fall in eighteen eighty-six when Lydia Rathum discovered she was pregnant again. She and her husband David had been trying for two years and had almost begun to think that David Junior wasn’t going to get a sibling. But as the last of the aspen leaves was buried under a mound of snow, Doc Baker told them a new member of the clan would be born the next summer. In the mean time, it looked like it was going to be a cold, long winter, but the You’ll See was prepared. John had worked out a deal with the Sundown Mining Company to mow hay in some pastures the mine held title to. It worked out well for the mine because it insured someone would be on their property, at least occasionally, and might possibly discourage claim jumpers. This hay, combined with what they had cut off their own eight hundred plus acres, would give the You’ll See more than enough fodder for the winter. John expected to have some left over, even. He thought if he could get ahead, then the next winter the ranch might be able to sell a little hay and make a bit of extra income. It would also foreshadow the produce that would one day be the Bayou Salado’s number one income. He came out of the bank and instantly buttoned his coat one button higher and pulled the collar up as high as it would go. Comfort had won out over pride several winters before and he wore a fur-lined hat that kept his ears warm and would have gotten him laughed out of his old haunts in Texas. On his hands he wore gloves but the right glove had the fingers cut out even though his heavy coat would pretty much have prevented any sort of fast draw anyway. But, it was a habit more than anything and necessitated keeping that hand in his pocket all day to keep it warm. The upshot was that John became more than a fair hand at doing things left-handed. Beyond that, there were some jobs that were just easier to do with non-gloved fingers and this saved him the time of taking off his glove and then putting it on again later. He was instantly alert when he heard footsteps coming rapidly up to him and turned to find Claud crunching through the snow. He, too, was dressed for warmth and had a muffler on so that all you could see of him were his eyes peeking out from under the hat brim. All the same, they showed through the gray air with that laughter Claud was always known for. Claud caught up with John and they made their way to the restaurant of the hotel for a drink of something—anything—warm. Hunched against the snow, they tried to acknowledge the people they passed on the street but everyone was intent on getting to their destination before their respective blood froze. No one had any mind to take their hands out of the warmth of their coat pockets to shake hands—let alone wave. Perhaps it was such as this that caused all southerners to believe that all northerners were unfriendly. And caused all northerners to think all southerners were too gregarious. There were two hotels in town at that time, the Pacific Hotel and the Como House. The Kelly family and the Coyne family also ran boarding houses, and there were a few other rooms to let about town, but only one building in town served the needs of the lodger and the diner so well as the Pacific Hotel. The Hotel—as it would be called for as long as it stood—was a large red brick building with rooms on the second floor and a restaurant on the bottom. It stood so close to the railroad tracks that the dishes rattled if the train was going by at any speed but the front window had a breathtaking view of Borias Pass, Silver Heels and Little Baldy—only slightly cluttered by the foreground vision of Como. The two men stomped the slush off their boots as they entered and hung up their coats and hats near the door. With a keen sense of the weather—or just a good grasp of the obvious—the hotel proprietor had installed about twice as many coat racks as a hotel that size would normally have. Feeling twenty pounds lighter, Claud and John went and sat where they had for years—in Maggie’s section, near the fire. Annabeth came out and smiled. As she brought them cups and saucers, John asked, “Where’s Maggie?” Annabeth seemed uncomfortable and looked around for a moment. She had only recently gone back to work at the hotel, and that only on an extremely limited part time basis during the busiest part of the day. She asked, nervously, “You haven’t heard?” “Heard what?” Claud replied, answering for both of them. Annabeth, her figure having become quite “motherly” following the birth of her third child, sat down and said, “She left.” “Left? The restaurant?” Neither cowboy was comprehending. “Left the state,” Annabeth told them. She rather enjoyed stringing people along in conversations like this. Everyone in town was now used to it and resigned themselves to long, somewhat confusing, conversations whenever talking to Annabeth. If not in the mood for such a thing, it was best just to avoid talking to her. It was said that she had all the makings of a fine politician, had women been encouraged to run. “She went to California.” “I’ll be,” John mused, shaking his head and wishing Annabeth would bring them some coffee or hot tea. “That’s all?” Annabeth demanded of him. She was shocked. She had expected her revelation to make a much bigger stir. She had been waiting all day to share the news with John Overstreet. “Don’t you want to know why?” “It’s her business,” John pointed out. “And she’s a grown lady, so she can go wherever she wants. And in spite of what everyone in this town has thought for the last six years, Maggie isn’t my girl and never has been.” “But you’ve sat here in her section every time you’ve come in for six years!” Annabeth objected. Everyone in the restaurant was paying close attention to the conversation because, after all, they couldn’t keep from hearing it. And most of them had been waiting for the last six years for John to ask Maggie out on a date, or maybe even marry her. It had never occurred to them that it might not happen. “And you sat by her at church every Sunday through seven different parsons. What were we supposed to think?” “You’d have thought whatever you wanted to think, that’s what. A few people asked about it over the years—including you, Annabeth—and I always gave you the same story I’m telling now. Maggie was a friend of mine and that’s all,” John told her, trying to sound upset but finding it all amusing. When it was obvious that Annabeth was neither going to leave nor pour coffee John asked, “Why did she go to California?” Annabeth leaned forward and said, “She got married.” This did take John by surprise and he exclaimed, “Married? To who?” “Never thought she’d do it, did you? Thought you could just string her along until you decided to marry her, didn’t you?” “I thought nothing of the kind! Like I just said, she was a friend and nothing more! I never once thought of marrying her,” John contradicted. “I just want to know who she married!” Annabeth waited a moment to build the tension, then said, “She married that drummer that comes through with the brushes.” John said, more to upset Annabeth than anything, “Seemed like a nice fellow the time or two I met him. Sold me two of the best currying brushes I ever owned. I hope this doesn’t mean he won’t be coming back through here again. I could use another one.” Annabeth threw up her hands in disgust and went to get their drinks. She poured Claud a cup of hot coffee and John took tea. He didn’t particularly care for either drink but he needed something to cut the chill. The drink was a joy if for no other reason than that it warmed up the icy bones in his fingers. He could live with the fact that, to him, all tea tasted like water with dirt in it. Once in Denver he had tried a cup of hot chocolate and had really liked that, but the one time he asked for it in Como he was told that it was a “kid’s drink” in a voice that said very clearly that the cook wasn’t going to bother making some up for an adult. Claud looked at John and asked, “You really don’t mind that Maggie ran off with someone else?” John thought a minute, then shook his head, “No I don’t. She was a good friend, and that’s all. I hope she’s found a good man. What I knew of that Fuller guy, he seemed like stable stock. Wonder if she’ll travel with him or if he’ll stay on the road or what?” Claud poured some of his coffee into the saucer, blew on it to cool it off, then poured it back into the cup. John watched the whole operation and shook his head because the only attractive thing he had ever been able to find about coffee was the heat. So, why order coffee then cool it off? After taking a few sips, Claud ventured cautiously, “Still waiting for that one woman?” John merely nodded and continued with his tea. It tasted like dirty branch water, but it was warm and left a good feeling in him as it went down—if a lousy taste in his mouth. After it was done with, he told himself, he’d go over to Carman’s and get a licorice whip to wash the taste away. Of course, just about anything would leave a better after-taste than tea, he mused, and not for the first time. He wondered if they’d serve him just a cup of hot water, but then he figured that wouldn’t taste any good, either. “You really think she’s out there?” Claud asked in all seriousness. John nodded again and said, “She’s out there. I just ain’t found her yet. But I will.” “You sure don’t seem to be doing any searching.” John turned and smiled at Claud, “What about you?” “What about me?” Claud was completely off guard. “What about you? You’re twenty-three years old. That’s marrying age anywhere you go. That’s past marrying age in some places. If you were a woman and unmarried at twenty-three, people’d be calling you a spinster. Why don’t you have a girl?” Claud shrugged and—after a moment—replied, “She got away.” “Huh?” John had never heard Claud even mention being interested in a girl. And he had known him since the young cowboy was sixteen. John was sure Claud hadn’t been keeping steady company with anyone since coming to work for the You’ll See and had never mentioned any woman from before then—other than his father’s wives, who he talked about with disgust often. When Claud didn’t answer, John asked, “Who? I never heard you mention anyone.” Claud was obviously uncomfortable, but he said, “I never told no one.” “Did you tell her?” Claud shook his head and it was obvious that this was what troubled him the most. “When I met her I was too young and unsure of myself. Used to watch her and tell myself I was going to talk to her, tell her how I felt, but I never did. I’d always tell myself there’d be a next time. By the time I thought about saying something, it was too late.” “Too late?” “She found someone else,” Claud explained. It was clear that was all he intended to say on the subject, but John added consolingly, “Well, you know what they say: ‘There’s other fish in the sea.'” “Not for me,” Claud replied. “Your woman is out there somewhere. I know where mine is, but she’s not for me.” He hastily gulped down the last of his coffee and stood up. “I’m heading back. You coming?” “Not yet. I need to go by the general store and pick up some things. I’m all out of shaving soap.” Claud nodded and left. John was curious to know who the woman was but enough of a respecter of persons not to bring it up again. And being that he knew Claud better than anyone around, there wouldn’t be any sense to asking anyone else. He sat back in his chair and studied on it for a moment. Claud had sat by a woman or two in church over the years; had danced with a few at barn-raisings and socials; and had even called on one or two of the young ladies in town. They had talked about it afterward, but Claud had always seemed profoundly disinterested in most of them. Or had he? Had Claud hidden his feelings about one of them? No, that didn’t make sense. If he had the nerve to ask a girl to a dance, he’d have had the nerve to tell her how he felt. So what were they talking about? Was Claud still “holding a torch” for someone he knew back when he was fourteen or fifteen? Was that maybe the real reason he had drifted east to Colorado? John had heard that those Mormon men sometimes took young wives. Maybe Claud’s love had married someone else when she was just thirteen or fourteen and he just couldn’t stay around and watch. Shrugging, John stood up, left a quarter on the table for Annabeth, and walked over to get his wraps and head into the cold.
Niles Carman, a young man who was tall but skinny as a rail, was running the store when John came in. John placed his order and was looking at an old newspaper as the kid filled it. Of course, he wasn’t really a kid anymore but his face looked it even if his height didn’t. John couldn’t believe the little boy he used to know was old enough to be running the store now, but the kid seemed to be doing a good job. And his father was never far away. Probably down at the Allen Saloon, John suspected. “You hear who’s in town?” Niles called over his shoulder from the back room. “Nope.” “Alvis McClory,” Niles proclaimed. He added proudly, “And I met him.” “You don’t say,” John replied absently. When he had finished the paragraph he was reading, he looked up with more interest and asked, “What’s he doing in Como?” “Who?” Niles asked, toting up John’s order and not paying much attention to the conversation he had initiated himself. “McClory!” “Don’t rightly know. Some folks say he’s speculating in gold or coal or suchlike. My Pa’s thinking maybe he’s up here to meet with Tabor—over at Leadville. Maybe he came here so’s people wouldn’t know about it and make a big deal out of it. Them high-powered people like that stick together, it seems. Others say he’s here just because of his wife.” “His wife?” John had heard much about Alvis McClory. Mentioned in the same breath with Silver Dollar Tabor and Jay Gould, he was a high-powered cattle man from Texas who had made money in every venture known to man, it seemed. And rumor had it he was always looking for something new to invest in. John knew how often he was “hit up” by people who wanted the You’ll See to invest in one crackpot scheme or another, so he couldn’t imagine how many lunatics hung around a legitimate baron like Alvis McClory. No one knew his exact worth, it was said, but it was estimated at several million dollars. He even owned land in Australia, South America and Africa, according to some people. But in all the talk, John had never heard talk of his wife—never even thought to wonder if he had one. Come to think of it, John mused, I never even heard tell of him having family. But then, what did he know about any of the names? He was pretty sure Tabor and Gould were married, but he had no idea of their wives’ names or if they had any kids. “Yeah,” Niles told him, carrying a bag of items he had put together. “They say she’s been all over the west looking for her brother for nigh onto fifteen years. She ain’t seen him in a long time, I hear.” “Must be an understanding husband to fund such an endeavor. Fifteen years of travelling is a long time.” “Oh, they ain’t been married but about seven years. And what does he care about travel? If he sees a place he likes, he can buy it. Lute, over at the masonry, he told me they were in Terlingua looking for her brother and he happened across an abandoned silver mine. McClory bought it and hit pay-dirt a week later.” “Terlingua?” John mused. “I’ve been there. Punched cattle down that way for a while. It’s part of the Big Bend area. So many holes in the ground it looks like a giant walked through with those spiked boots some of the miners wear. Wonder why Terlingua? Where else have they been?” “Shoot, you name it and they’ve been there. Sounds like they spent most of their time in Texas looking. ‘Course, that’s where she’s from. You know Texas, don’t you?” John laughed and said, “I should smile. I grew up there. Probably been everywhere they’ve been—in Texas, anyway. Never got down to The Valley, though. Always wanted to, but the closest I ever got was down in the Big Thicket. Seems like ever’ time I’d think about going to the Valley, something else would come up.” “Well then, maybe you could help them. They told me where all they had been looking but the names didn’t mean nothing to me. Me never being in Texas in my life, and all. But she seems powerful anxious to find her brother and that Alvis, he dotes on her and would buy her the moon if she asked for it. You help her find her brother, there’d probably be money in it for you—not that you need it,” Niles quickly added with embarrassment. Curious, John asked again, “Where all did they say they’d been?” “Said they started in that Big Thicket you just mentioned; I reckon that’s in East Texas from what they said. Said they lost her brother’s trail for a while but got a tip that someone who looked a lot like him was seen down in the Big Bend area. That’s when they went to Terlingua. After that, they say he drifted north and they’ve only heard rumors.” “That’s odd. I was in those places. If her brother was there, I probably would have met him.” John took a licorice whip from the jar and began to chew on it. Pulling out a few coins to pay for his purchases he wondered, “They think he might have come up here?” “They aren’t sure.” “How is it that you know all this, Niles?” “Oh, they came in here right after they got off the train. Alvis was right where you’re standing—wearing some suspenders with buckles on ’em that I bet were real gold. And his wife was asking my pa a few questions. She’s a right handsome woman, too. Probably forty, but she’s got thick black hair and carries herself like a real lady. I heard her describe what her brother used to look like, but it didn’t sound like anyone I knew—no one particular, anyway. She hadn’t seen him in a long time, o’ course, but she said he used to be a skinny, gangly kid. Said he had mousie brown hair and blue eyes. That could be a lot of people.” “She give a name?” “Yeah. But there ain’t nobody in the South Park Valley by that name. Pa said he’d never met anyone by that name, anyway. And I know I never heard of anyone by that name.” “So what was it?” Niles shrugged and answered, “James Conley.” John blanched white and nearly dropped the sack he was holding. He asked Niles quickly, “Where are they, now?” “Huh?” “Where’d they go from here?” John demanded sharply. Niles seemed taken aback by the abrupt change but he finally replied, “Up the street—to Judge Stoner’s house. Him and Alvis got the same friends, or something like that. You know what I said about rich folks. They stick together.” John put the sack down and started quickly for the door. Niles called out, “Hey! Don’t you want to take these with you?” “I’ll be back—or send ’em out to the ranch with Claud or Cleave if you see one of them,” John called as he shut the door behind him and took off running through the snow.
John knew it wasn’t a good idea to get worked up in such cold weather because a man’s sweat will freeze and form a thin layer of ice inside his clothing. When that happens, the body’s temperature can start dropping rapidly and the result can be frostbite or pneumonia—often leading to death. But it was a short distance to the Judge’s house and John was clomping up onto the porch in a matter of seconds, heedless of everything except getting there. His breath was coming fast even before he started running and was coming in great, heaving gasps by the time he was mounting the steps. The porch had been freshly swept, but you wouldn’t have known it after John arrived. He took no notice of the mess he was making and knocked loudly on the door. After a moment, Stoner opened the door and seemed surprised to see John standing there. Through the screen, Stoner said, “I have company right now, John. Could you come back—” He never finished because John was pushing his way past and into the living room. Ignoring Stoner’s blustering, John walked into the midst of a fairly formal tea comprised of the McClorys, the Bakers and the Stoners. Everyone looked up and Mrs. Stoner was about to object to the rude intrusion when John looked Mrs. McClory in the eye and said, “You finally came back, huh? You sure took your sweet time about it!” All the tea partiers were aghast at his bold entry and insolent behavior—especially coming from a normally respectable young man. All took grave exception and made various blustering noises much like the Judge’s, except Mrs. McClory, that is. She calmly set her tea cup and saucer aside and rose gracefully. She looked at John for a moment, as if studying him from head to foot, front to back and inside out, then asked softly, “James?” John shook his head and told her, “I stopped being James Conley fourteen years ago. I buried that little boy in the swamps a long time ago, Clarice.” Most everyone in the parlor was speechless but Clarice McClory seemed undaunted. She took a step closer and said, “I was afraid you’d feel that way, James.” “It’s John,” he corrected. “My name is John Overstreet now.” He took a step back and said, “I’ve been John longer than I was James.” Clarice hung her head for a moment and, when she looked up, there was a tear in her eye. Taking another tentative step, she told him, “You’re right, John. To feel the way you do, I mean.” “Sure I’m right!” he retorted. “I was an orphan and you—my only blood kin I knew how to locate—you never came when I wrote for you.” Coming closer, she said, “John, we have a lot to talk out.” Angrily, he told her, “I have nothing to talk about to you. You ran out on Ma and Pa and then you ran out on me.” “You’re my brother—” “No!” John shook his head. “I am not your brother. You lost all right to make that claim fifteen years ago! You were James Conley’s sister but you’re not mine!” Before she could say anything else, John turned for the door. As he left, he muttered to Judge Stoner, “Sorry to interrupt.” For possibly the first time in his life, Judge Stoner was speechless.
When morning came the snow had stopped falling but it had left its mark on the land. Everything that hadn’t already been buried was now covered in such a pristine whiteness that John hated to spoil it by walking on it. Still, there were things that needed to be done and he knew he had best be about it. A few moments of walking in the snow had changed his attitude from one of appreciating the beauty to cursing it. Dressed as warmly as the day before, and covering his face with the scarf Amelia had knitted for him years ago, he set out for the north pasture to help Bob Vernor. The stock tank they had built at the end of a small stream in the north pasture had proved to be a good water source but it was out in the open and not especially deep so it froze over quickly. So John could expect to spend most of the morning chipping a hole through the ice for the horses to drink through. A horse can break a thin layer of ice with its nose, but it will shy away from something as thick as the ice on that pond regularly got. Had they been so inclined—and not needed the ice for more important things—it would have been a good place to go ice skating. As they were cutting the hole, they looked up to watch the train come by, less than a hundred yards away. It was making pretty good time through the fresh snow in the valley, but Bob remarked, “Bet that’s going to be a long trip over the Pass. They usually get a good half foot more than we do down here—sometimes better than that.” “I bet,” John replied. He had worked up enough body heat that he had shed the scarf and one layer of clothing. He knew not to shed any more or complications could arise. “I’ve seen ’em stop running in better weather than this.” “You ever been over the Pass in the winter?” John nodded and Bob mused, “Something, isn’t it? The way they get that snow-plow engine up there and cut through what looks like an impenetrable wall. They keep the snow plow in that new roundhouse they got down there—”” “‘Impenetrable’?” John laughed, having missed the last part of Bob’s talk after being surprised by the big word. Bob shrugged sheepishly and replied, “I guess that’s what happens when you have a daughter in college. She uses words I never heard of before—and I’ve been around animals all my life—and went to school myself.” “What do you mean by that?” “Well, when she told me she was studying to be a veterinarian I figured I’d know what she was talking about. I mean, I’ve doctored animals and birthed ’em and done just about all you can do with one.” “Any chance we could get her to come back here?” John asked. “I mean, when she graduates. We sure could use a good vet. The more the coal and gold business dies up here, the more popular cattle and horses are going to be. A veterinarian could pull in a good living up here.” “I’ve mentioned it to her, but she’s kind of liking the east right now. I think, though, when she tries to find a job she’s going to find out how hard it is for a woman to get a man’s job. Out here, we mostly just care whether a person does a good job or not. Besides, everybody out here already knows her and would be happy to throw her business.” He hesitated, then added, “And there’s still a lot of folks that wouldn’t go to a black veterinarian, even if he was a man.” “People are stupid,” John commented. “That’s a bit harsh, ain’t it?” “Well, I mean,” John thought for a moment, “I mean individuals, they can be pretty smart. But get a bunch of us together and suddenly we’re stupid. There’s a lot of good white men who fought right alongside a black man during the war, but he gets back among a group of white men and forgets everything he learned. Me, I call that stupid.” “It goes both ways. I know some black folks that think every white man’s a slaver. They’re so convinced that opportunity is never going to come their way, they don’t realize it when it does.” John nodded and commented, “I figure anybody that can do a job ought to do it. I knew a man back in Presidio that could sew like you wouldn’t believe. Big, husky guy, too. Big ol’ hands. Looked like he ought to be swinging a sledge hammer or managing a big team of horses. But he made pretty quilts—and even dresses. Pulled in a good wage for it, too. I figure a person ought to do what they do best.” Bob nodded and went back to chipping away at the ice. Just making conversation, he said, “They ever decide what to do about those bodies over to the King No. One Mine?” “Just leave ’em, I hear,” John shrugged. “That’s terrible,” Bob remarked, shaking his head. “I don’t care if they was Chinamen, when thirty-five men die in a mine explosion I think something ought to be done about it.” John pointed out, “Doesn’t make a lot of sense to dig ’em up just to bury ’em again.” Bob nodded, but added, “Still, I hear they’re planning on going ahead with working the other seven levels this summer. I ain’t a superstitious man by nature, but I’d sure hate to work knowing there was thirty-five men buried. Buried above me. Be like working in someone else’s grave.” “I know what you mean. I understand that the work’s got to go on, I guess. Does seem like they could put up a marker or something—maybe one that lists all their names.” “I bet there ain’t anyone in the management that knows all thirty-five names.” John nodded, then said, “They could find out—” “If they wanted to,” Bob nodded. The sound of the train had not completely died away when they heard another sound. It was the sound of bells and it stopped the talk of graves and mine disasters short. “Little early for Santy Claus, ain’t it?” John quipped. Bob watched as the source of the sound came from behind the trees. “It’s a sled,” he remarked. It was driving on the right of way and looked to contain two people, a man and a woman. John knew immediately who they were. When Bob saw that John was upset, he asked who it was. John mumbled something under his breath and replied, “It’s my sister.” “I didn’t know you had a sister.” John shrugged and told him, “For a long time I didn’t think I did, either. And now I ain’t sure I want a sister.” The sleigh pulled up near the pond and Alvis helped his wife down. She was bundled up like an Eskimo and moving about was no easy task. She maintained her characteristic grace, though. To John, the grace just irritated him, and he wasn’t sure he wanted to put voice to why. “Hello John,” she offered cordially. With no feeling in his voice, he replied, “Howdy.” Undaunted, she continued, “John, you didn’t meet my husband yesterday. This is Alvis McClory.” “Pleased to meet you,” John told him, though he seemed more indifferent than pleased. He introduced Bob and they all shook hands. “I’ve heard a lot about you,” John said to Alvis. “Good, I hope,” Alvis laughed, an affected laugh but a well-intended one, nonetheless. Bob excused himself and headed for the barn. The icy breath was only the first clue he saw that made him not want to be around this little family discussion. John’s breath wasn’t as icy as his attitude. Bob knew John well enough to respect his feelings in any matter, but also knew that families had a way of bringing out the best and the worst in any man. Besides, between the snow and the high altitude, he could hear whatever was said from the barn anyway. Clarice said, trying to put as much warmth into her voice as possible, “We saw one of your hands in town. Cleave, I believe it was. He said you’d be out here.” “Thanks, Cleave,” John muttered. Clarice looked around and said with admiration, “This sure is a beautiful place you own, John.” The mountains were covered in snow and it really was a wonderland—especially to someone from the flatlands of Texas. “Part owner,” John corrected her. “I only own a third.” Alvis, speaking for the first time, said, “But the people I’ve talked to in town say you’re the driving force behind this ranch. They say without you the You’ll See would have been sold and broken up years ago.” “I doubt that. Whose to say what might have been?” “How much land do you have here?” Alvis asked. “About eight hundred and sixty acres. ‘Course, some of it’s not good for anything because it’s on the side of that mountain, yonder. Couldn’t raise horses there unless they all had shorter legs on one side than the other.” “You own your own mountain?” Clarice asked in amazement. “Mostly, yeah. There’s some mining claims on the far side but no body works them anymore. Dry hole, as they say. Odd how one mountain’ll have gold and the one next to it won’t.” He took his pick and began knocking holes in the ice. “So, what did you come out here for?” “We need to talk,” Clarice replied seriously. “‘Bout what?” She sighed heavily, then began, “I need to apologize.” He looked up at her, then went back to picking away. The hole was actually big enough by now, but he needed something to do. Something other than look at her because she was looking really sincere and he was afraid he would forget what she had done and start believing her. Continuing, “You never knew why I ran away, did you?” He shook his head, so she continued, “I ran away because of our father.” John didn’t look up, but the painful memories came back. He remembered their father coming home in a drunken stupor and taking them to task for everything. John himself, or James, rather, had taken more than a few beatings. And he had watched in horror as his father beat their mother. “I put up with it as long as I could, John. Mother always told me he didn’t mean it and that he would change one day. And when he sobered up, he’d come to me and cry and beg my forgiveness. When I got about fourteen I was big enough to fight him off. Or at least fast enough to get away. And he wasn’t a strong man; he was a weak, sniveling coward. Maybe that’s why he acted like he did. He couldn’t prove himself a man to anyone else, so he did it to us—the only way he knew how.” She shook her head of the line of thought and added, “He laid off me then. “I moved to Fort Worth when I turned eighteen. Do you remember that? You were so little.” John nodded and said, “I remember you coming back and visiting Ma and me from time to time. I always thought it was coincidence that you never came while Pa was there.” She shook her head, “I planned it that way. I couldn’t bear to see him. And I hated the thought of what he was probably doing to you. I tried to talk Mother into leaving, but she never would. She believed she should stay with him no matter what. She always said he didn’t mean it, that he really loved us. I never could convince her otherwise. “But I made a mistake when I was twenty-five. I came home thinking I was old enough to deal with … Father. But I got there late one night and he was drunk when I got there. He—he had this strange look in his eyes. He started yelling at me, calling me all sorts of foul names, and he hit me. He knocked me down and then jumped on me. I thought he was going to beat me, like he used to, but he was trying to rape me. I cried out but you and Mother weren’t there. He just laughed.” She paused, short of breath, then continued, “When he tore my blouse, something went off inside my head. I had more strength than I had ever felt before—and, like I said, he wasn’t all that strong. I threw him off and ran. I got on my horse and left.” “That was the last time I ever saw you, wasn’t it?” John asked. “You came by the Andrews place where Ma and I were staying. I heard you tell Ma something like, ‘He’ll never do that again,’ but I didn’t know what you were talking about. I never saw Pa again. Then Ma went off to Fort Worth for a while and left me with the Andrews. When she came back, she looked old and worn—like she was ten years older than when she left. She died about two weeks after she got back. And I never could find you—or anybody.” With difficulty, Clarice told him, “We wanted it that way.” Before John could object, she said, “I know now it was wrong. But I didn’t know it at the time. It’s time for you to know the truth. We’ve hidden it from you for too long. I’m surprised you never found out on your own.” “Found out what?” He was completely surprised that there was, apparently, a secret behind all that had happened. He had just assumed everyone had left him and had been so mad at them that he’d never checked into it. After another deep breath, Clarice related, “I left the Andrews place that night and caught a train for Houston. Charlie lived there. You never knew him that well, did you?” John shook his head and tried to remember his older brother. He was two years younger than Clarice, but he ran away from home at the age of ten, two years before John was born. Charlie was just a picture on his mother’s dresser. “I never met him but once,” John told her. “He came by one night when I was about seven. Talked to Ma a while about something, then left again.” This seemed to make her cry, but she took a moment and composed herself. She told, “I found Charlie working in a buggy shop in Houston. I had heard Ma talk about him being somewhere down there and he wasn’t really hard to find. I told him what had happened and—and I told him what I wanted to do. He hated Father more than I did and the wounds had festered in the years since he left. He blamed Father for everything that had ever gone wrong in his life—and maybe he had a right to. I can’t say anymore. But even at ten years old, he had run away because of Father. It takes a lot for a ten year old to run away and not come back.” She took another deep breath and said, quickly, as if saying it slow she might not get it out, “John, we went back and killed Father a week later.” John was shocked, and a little disbelieving. “Ma told me he just went off one day and didn’t come back.” Clarice shook her head. “That’s what we wanted you to think. We thought you were too young to know all the awful truth. But Charlie and I both shot Father. We used his gun and we each put a bullet in him. Then we went and turned ourselves in.” “You could have run,” John told her, even though he didn’t agree. “Yes, we could have. But we decided on the trip from Houston that we wouldn’t. We decided that even prison or hanging would be better than a life with Father. In some weird perception of morality, we decided ahead of time to take our consequences. We were young and foolish. Murder is not a solution. To anything. “The trial was in Fort Worth. That’s why Mother was gone that long time. It wasn’t much of a trial, since we had already confessed, but they had to decide on sentence. The judge said we had reason to kill our father, but he couldn’t condone murder. He sentenced us both to five years in prison. When the story came out in the papers of what our father had been like, the judge’s decision was a very popular one. Justice with leniency, they said. It was then I found out he was up for reelection. He probably should have given us a lot more time.” “So you got out, met Mister McClory here some time later, and started looking for me. Is that it?” he said, still a little disbelievingly. It was all too pat. She nodded. “That’s it. Alvis has been so wonderful.” “How did you meet?” The side of him that was still wanting her to leave and never come back was doing battle with the side that wanted to have a sister again. “I was working in a diner in Austin, trying to decide what to do with my life when he came in. Started eating there regularly.” Alvis added, with a smile, “I asked her out a dozen times before she even gave me the time of day.” “Even when I went out with him—to a church social there in Austin—I thought about hiding the past from him. I made up a dozen stories in my head that morning before he picked me up. But, I couldn’t. Then the preacher talked about how people need to be honest with each other and I thought he was talking right to me. So right at the social, while we sat there under a live oak, I told him about Father and prison and everything.” “And it was more than I could handle,” Alvis said, with shame on his face. “I took her home with the intention of never seeing her again. I kept thinking of my family and everything.” “So what happened?” John asked, genuinely curious. Alvis smiled at Clarice and said, “I kept thinking about her. I finally decided to swallow my pride and see her again. Family and pride be damned.” Clarice smiled, “I didn’t even know he felt this way because he was back in the diner on Monday asking me to go out again.” “It was a long Sunday night,” Alvis laughed, with more than a little embarrassment. “But we went out and didn’t speak of prison again until after we were married.” She took her husband’s hand, smiled at him, and said, “Not only did he risk his social position by marrying a convicted murderer, but he has used his fortune and influence to help me find you.” “Why look?” John asked. “After all this time, why look? You must not have even known whether I were alive or not. ‘Specially since I wasn’t going by the name of James Conley, anymore.” “I had to let you know the truth. And I had to make sure you were all right. I never stopped thinking about you Ja—John. Ma was pretty worn out when you came along. I raised you almost as much as she did. When I left and went to Fort Worth, it was almost like leaving my own baby behind—you’ve got to believe me.” She breathed a sigh of relief and asked, to lighten the mood, “Where did the name come from?” He laughed and said, “After Ma died, and I couldn’t get a hold of you, I hooked up with a trail drive to Kansas. Up there, I heard singing one Sunday and I asked somebody where the church was. Fellow told me, ‘It’s over a street.’ I got there and the preacher was preaching from the book of John. I decided I didn’t want to be James Conley anymore, so when the preacher asked me what my name was after the service, I just told him John Overstreet. I guess it’s kind of silly, but it’s the only name I feel at home with anymore. Kind of got used to it.” Alvis laughed and, speaking up for the first time in a while, said, “Ah, the many times I’ve wished for a name other than ‘Alvis.’ Many’s the time I came home from school near tears from the sport my name had been made of.” “So I guess instead of changing your name, you turned your name into something big, huh?” “I guess so; though, that was never my intention. I just have a good history of being in the right place at the right time. Some people say there is no such thing as luck—I know differently.” John turned back to Clarice and asked, “Whatever happened to Charlie?” She hesitated a moment, then said, “He died last year. Tuberculosis. He lived his last few years in Arizona and it was only the climate out there that allowed him to live as long as he did.” With a smile, she added, “He owned a buggy shop which his sons will take over one day. We hold it in trust for him for now.” “I’ll have to go look ’em up one day. Nephews,” he laughed with a rueful shake of the head as, after so many years alone, he suddenly had a really big family. He paused, then asked, “Whatever happened to Reuben?” John just barely remembered Reuben. Five years his senior, Reuben, too, had run away from home at age ten. Even when home, Reuben had been an outdoors type of kid and had rarely been at home. “He would be thirty-one now, wouldn’t he?” Clarice smiled and said, “You’re not going to believe this, but we just saw him. He manages a hotel in Leadville for Silver Dollar Tabor.” “Leadville?” John asked with disbelief. “He’s that close? How long has he been there?” “About eleven years.” John turned and looked at the majestic mountains around and smiled. He laughed and said, “This is too strange. I’ve been all alone for so long, I don’t know what to do with a family. Now I find that I have a brother, a sister and two nephews.” “Six nephews, four nieces,” Clarice corrected. “What?” “Charlie had two boys. Reuben has three boys and a girl. Alvis and I have one boy and three girls.” John took a moment to let it soak in, then asked, “Where are they? Your children, I mean?” “With my mother,” Alvis replied. “They needed to stay in school, so my mother and father are watching them.” Sheepishly, John requested, “When school’s out, could you bring them out here to see me?” Before they could answer, he said, “Why don’t I just have you and Reuben and Charlie’s family and everybody out here to the ranch next summer?” “Better yet,” Clarice suggested, “Why don’t we all meet at Reuben’s hotel?” John looked at Clarice and said, “You know something we have to do, first, though?” “What?” He smiled widely and told her, “I’ve got a sister I haven’t seen in fourteen years and I haven’t gotten to kiss her, yet.” They embraced and it seemed like fourteen years of separation melted away forever.
“So this is where you live?” Clarice asked, trying not to let too much into her voice. John knew what she was seeing: a simple cabin. He had swept it and picked up anything lying loose, but it wasn’t much to look at. And being winter, it smelled like a shut-up man’s cabin. “This is it,” he told her. “How will you even a bring a woman here? You do want to bring a woman here, don’t you?” John smiled and replied, “If you’re asking do I want to get married, the answer is yes. And if your next question is whether I’m seeing someone, the answer is no. I just ain’t met her yet.” Clarice reached out and touched the few books that sat on a shelf and asked, “Have you read these?” John stepped over and said, “Just the Bible there. I read a lot, ‘specially in winter, but then I trade off what I’ve finished. I’m about a third of the way through Meriwether Lewis there. Haven’t started on that Dickens or Mister Douglass’s book. My friend Bob loaned me that one, so I reckon I’ll read it next.” “You were an early reader,” she commented, wistfully but happily. “It provided you something of an escape, didn’t it?” “I ‘spect so.” Clarice turned and looked at her little brother, now so much taller than she, and asked, “How did you get here?” “You must know some of it, or you wouldn’t have followed me to Terlingua and up here.” “You were in Terlingua?” she asked in surprise. “I have just been everywhere with Arlis. And everywhere we went, I asked about you. I’ve never had any clue I was close to you until you burst into the judge’s parlor the other day.” “Really? That’s something!” “Tell me,” she prompted. “Please?” He smiled again and said, “I’m not reluctant. I’m just trying to remember.” He bade her sit on his lone chair, then took a seat on his bed. He thought back and said, “I stayed with the Andrews until Ma came back. After she died, I heard about some fellows that were rounding up wild cattle down in the big thicket. I made my way there and lied about my age. I don’t know that they believed me, but they were hard enough up for help that they took me on. Learned how to be a cowboy. “Helped them take a herd up to Kansas. That was when I met that preacher—Peter Oberson was his name. He was trying to start a school there, so I took from him for a while. But then he got fired over something, so we drifted down to Texas. He started preaching at this Campbellite church in Haskell and teaching school on the side. I took from him when I could, but I was hired on with a local ranch run by a fellow named Shook. Took his herd to Dodge when I was just short of fifteen—” “Seriously?” John nodded deferentially and said, “I was the only one that knew the trail. Couple of the other hands weren’t no more than twelve. We got back and that church was going some good. Peter, he was forever trying to talk me into going into the ministry. I believed in it all, but just didn’t think that was for me. “I got a chance to ride with some fellows down to the Big Bend area to take a string of horses to a ranch down there owned by the brother of one of our church members. I went, figuring to just be gone for a couple months or so. Got wounded in a bank hold-up—no, Sis, I wasn’t robbing the bank I was trying to stop the hold-up. That put me out of commission for a couple months, then I rode for a ranch over to Presidio for a while. I was writing letters to Peter, and he was writing back. “But then one day I got into a scrape in Presidio. The law said I was in the right, but I was just thinking that neck of the woods—which had no woods—was unlucky and decided to head back to Haskell.” He paused, then said, “Got back in time to see Peter just before he died.” “He died?” “Consumption. I never knowed he had it. I knew he coughed some, but he would always just say it was allergies. The church near ‘bout fell apart then. I wanted to help, but I didn’t know how. Wound up riding for a ranch about sixty miles north of Haskell. Got into another scrape and headed up here, on account of the man I had killed had him some mean brothers and a father that knew nothing but grudges. Caught on with the You’ll See and been here ever’ since.” Clarice had looked for the last few minutes as if something were on her mind then she started mumbling, “Terlingua, Presidio, Haskell … are you the Haskell Kid?” John blushed and finally replied, “Well, yes.” “Then you’re a gunfighter?” she asked with alarm. “They say you’ve killed twenty men!” The look of horror on her face made him ashamed even as he said, “Five. I have killed five, and all in defense of either myself or someone else.” He knelt before her and said, “I never set out to be a gunfighter, Sis. I’ve just been … where things were happening.” “But how—” She put her hands on his shoulders and said, “No. I will not—” She looked down, then back up at him and said, “There will be time, perhaps, someday. For now, I am just going to be thankful I have my brother back.” She pulled him into a hug and whispered, “Both our lives have been darker than maybe they should have been. But, well, that’s what it’s been.” As he held her, he said, “Someday, maybe we’ll tell each other our stories—in all their detail. Right now, I’m just thankful I have a sister … again.”
That murder was done is clear to all. But who was murdered? And will anyone be brought to justice or will a whole town look the other way?
Published by Outlaws Publishing and available on ebook (in many formats) andin paperback!
Six men rode into the west Texas town of Rook in December of 1895. Moments later, all six men lay dead in the street, shot to death by the good citizens of the town.
Ira “Doc” Pearson is sent by the Texas Rangers to investigate, expected to just rubber stamp the proceedings for the dead men were known as the Lawrence Gang: wanted in Texas and New Mexico for bank robberies, rustling and murder.
Ira knows, however, that one of the members of the Lawrence Gang was in jail in Lubbock at the time of the massacre. So who was the sixth man who died that day?
Official Texas is satisfied that justice was done, but Ira can’t let it go.
Also available on Audible and iTunes, narrated by Tom Lusty!
Six men rode into the Texas panhandle town of Rook. By the looks of them, six hard men, five of them on fine horses such as only an outlaw could afford, all wearing guns that had seen some use.
The people of Rook took all this in in a moment, and that was all they took.
Rifles, six-shooters and shot-guns seemed to appear as if by magic from every upstairs window on the dusty street. No signal had been heard or seen.
All fired at once and six men went down. Only two were even able to get their guns out of their holsters, but neither got off an effectual shot before scratching their last sign in the dirt of the street.
No horses were hurt more than a couple grazes, for the men (and maybe some women, if the rumors were true) of the west in general and Rook in particular thought a lot of horse flesh and had taken great care not to hit any of the animals.
All six riders died quickly. Nobody was gut-shot and writhing in the dirt, for the people of Rook were good shots
and toasted each other later in the saloons and each other’s houses that there had been no suffering. Not like the banker these men had made die slowly down in Banderas, or that parson who’d just been in the bank at Dimmit at the wrong time and had taken a month to die.
Nope, just six clean deaths.
One couldn’t say it was just six shots, though. Someone counted up later and found that most of a hundred Rook bullets had struck the six bodies. It was a wonder they hadn’t more than grazed the horses.
No one from Rook had so much as a scratch on them. Maybe some red eyes or sore throats from the smoke of the gunpowder, but nothing more. It had just been a few seconds of red-laced hell and then it was over. Six lay dead and a lot of people across west Texas and eastern New Mexico started sleeping easier again.
The worthies of Rook buried the six bodies in a single grave out at the town cemetery and the Campbellite parson said some words over them. A marker was put up but all it said was, “Lawrence Gang” and, below that, “Put here by the good citizens of Rook on 4 December, 1895“.
Chapter One
Folks took notice
when the stranger rode into town on the sorrel horse of his. It wasn’t quite like the old days, when every stranger who passed through Rook was noted, though, for mor
And this stranger wasn’t an especially striking specimen. A shade over six foot, with short light hair and beat-up clothes—though of tough cloth—nice boots, and a saddle that had seen some miles. Nor did his gun catch anyone’s eye, for while things were starting to get civilized, there were still quite a few men who wore guns, especially if they were traveling for civilization hadn’t completely caught up with the road agents. The stranger’s horse was a good-looking animal, one that looked like it could go all day and night, but it wasn’t a “show horse” for all that. Just a good-looking horse anyone would be proud to have, but not the kind that made people say to themselves, “I want that horse!”e people traveled anymore. On any given day, a dozen strangers might ride through, stopping only for water or a meal, before making their way back onto the road to Hereford or maybe McKeon. Most of the time, they drew no more notice than if a local had ridden through.
What got people’s attention, and set the tongues to wagging and brought the whispers to a dull roar was the silver on the man’s chest, for he wore the badge of a Texas Ranger. The badge was polished and glinted in the bright Texas sun, catching the eye of everyone who even glanced that way.
Soon, Sheriff Montgomery was hustling out of his office and greeting the stranger even as the man was tying his horse to the hitching rail in front of the jail. Extending his hand in a manner that seemed to be forced friendliness over an underlying nervousness, he said, “Howdy. I’m Sheriff Montgomery. I, um, I figured one of you would come.”
“Did you now?” the stranger replied, taking off his riding gloves then taking the sheriff’s hand. “Pearson’s my name. Ira Pearson. I reckon you already realized I’m a Ranger.”
“Uh, yes sir,” said the sheriff, even though he was probably a good fifteen years older than the Ranger. “Won’t you come inside?”
“Thank you,” the Ranger said politely.
Sheriff Montgomery watched with keen interest as the Ranger took off a Stetson that had seen some miles but was well-taken care off. The Ranger brushed some dust off the hat and then hung it on a peg just inside the door. The Sheriff saw then that the Ranger had the most grey eyes he had ever seen. Somehow both piercing and bland at the same time.
“Coffee?” the sheriff offered.
“Don’t mind if I do,” Ira Pearson replied. He took the cup gratefully, then sat in the offered seat. He waited a beat for the sheriff to sit down behind his desk, then said, “You probably know why I’m here.”
“To give the town a medal?” the sheriff tried to joke.
Ira Pearson chuckled, shaking his head. “There are some in Austin who have already suggested that. The citizens of some of your nearby towns would probably go along with that idea. But no, Sheriff,” he said, suddenly becoming more stern, “I don’t think anyone is going to try to argue that the Lawrence Gang didn’t have some retribution coming. However, six men shot down in a street with no provocation does look a lot like murder to the courts.”
“Murder?” the sheriff demanded. “After what they did in Monahans, or to them sheepherders down by—“
The Ranger held up his hand to forestall further talk from the sheriff and said, “We know those things. The whole state knows those things. And I have access to crimes I daresay you haven’t even heard of save in rumor, Sheriff. But there are laws in this state and murder is at the top of the list—even when the person murdered deserved what they got by every known set of rules.”
“So what are you going to do, Ranger?” The last word was said with something less than admiration in its tone.
“My orders are to investigate exactly what happened and turn in a report to my superiors. I can make recommendations, but it will be up to the Attorney General what is to be done ultimately.” He smiled then and asked affably, “May I assume that I will have the full cooperation of this office, Sheriff?”
“Um, uh,” the sheriff fumbled, taken off guard by the sudden friendliness, “Sure. Absolutely.”
“Thank you.” The Ranger reached into a vest pocket, pulled out a little notebook such as most ranchers carried for tallying up stock, and a pencil that was already sharp and said, “For starters, I’d like to hear your account of what transpired on Wednesday of last week.”
The sheriff cleared his throat, looked around for help where there was none, then began, “Well, it really started before last Wednesday.” Steeling his will, he said, “Here’s what happened, Ranger—wait, ain’t you the one they call ‘Doc’ Pearson?”
The Ranger hesitated, chagrin on his face, then replied, “Yes. But I prefer Ira, or Pearson, or Ranger or ‘Hey You’ for that matter.”
“All righty,” the sheriff agreed, wondering what the story might be behind both the nickname and the obvious dislike the wearer had for it. Still, he shrugged then began, “I’m sure you know all about the Lawrence Gang. Well, I know it, too, and I may know more than you think I do. But that’s no never mind. What I do know is that in the last week of November they stuck up a stage over by Lubbock. Shot the driver and the express man. Beat up the passengers—three men and a woman—and left them beside the road. One of the men is still laid up, they tell me.
“From there, they drunk up half the liquor in Littlefield and shot out most of the windows. Beat a bank teller half to death ‘cause he didn’t have but twenty dollars to give them. Y’know, Ranger, they used to just rob a bank now and then. But somethin’ went wrong with that Frank Lawrence up here,” he gestured toward his own head. “I ain’t saying they didn’t deserve jail or death for the robbin’, but here lately they just went plumb crazy.
“After Lubbock, and then being in Littlefield, I didn’t worry none ‘cause I figured they was headin’s away from us. Next thing I know, they’re in Olton, then somebody east of Hart said he thought he saw them on the trail to Tulia. Everybody in this town had heard that, too, Ranger, so they got up the citizen’s committee and started asking what they should do.” He looked furtively toward the door, as if hoping someone would come in and interrupt his proceedings, before continuing, “Now I, um, I told them what we’d have to do was arrest them Lawrences and then get word to you—the Rangers, I mean, not just you personal.
“Sudden like, ever’body in town’s walkin’ on eggshells. Men wearing Colts strapped to their pants that hadn’t been fired in ten years. I was, I tell you, I was worried about a accident—“
“Accident?” Pearson questioned.
“You know how it is,” the sheriff explained, somewhat plaintively. “Ever’body’s on edge and, first thing you know, one fella’s bumped into another in the saloon and all of a sudden ever’body’s firin’ guns and somebody lays dead.”
“And that’s not what you wanted? Dead men in the street?”
“What? No sir!” Sheriff Montgomery objected forcefully. “I never wanted no such of a thing! But I tell ya: when it happened, the people of Rook handled it like men.”
“And how was that?” the Ranger asked calmly.
The sheriff was sweating, even though it was a cold panhandle day outside and the pot-bellied stove was only putting a dent in the chill. He suddenly blurted out, “Well, you remember back a couple years ago when that posse caught up with the Lawrences down hear Odessa, don’t you? Had ‘em chained up and everything. But ol’ Pete Lawrence, he had him a cousin there in Odessa who got a file to ‘em. They slipped out slick as whistles in the night and have been raising—well, you done told me you know what they been doin’.”
He stopped for a moment, formulating his words, then offered, “I told ever’body that we needed to catch them Lawrences legal and hold ‘em tight! I was goin’ to swear in a passel of deputies and we was goin’ to watch over them like new mothers over a baby ‘til you could get here.”
“Wise plan. What happened to it?”
“’It’?”
“The plan. What happened to the plan?”
“Went all to pieces,” the sheriff said with a laugh. Suddenly enjoying himself, he explained, “Word had somehow got out that our bank had took delivery of a large sum of money, so I was on edge anyway. Then, we heard about the Lawrences coming. Then, that morning, Collin Warner—he runs a little dairy operation just south of town—he wakes me up and says he seen a bunch of men hiding out in a draw on his place. He said he seen their fire, then snuck up on ‘em knowin’ nobody honest would be a camped out like that without saying ‘hey’ to the owner. Collin, he used to be in the Army and he injunned his way up there and said he seen Pete and Frank big as life—“
“How’d he know it was them?”
“Wanted posters, I reckon. Ever’body knows—knew—Frank had that scarred-up nose from when that feller bit him down in Abilene. And Pete was so skinny he had to stand twice to cast a shadow. And ol’ Onion Taylor, we all knowed what he looked like on account of the stories told about him. And they was true, let me tell you. Must’a took thirty shots hisself before he went down.”