Authors: Linda Lael Miller
But it was Gideon who’d come calling, not Rowdy. Pardner was with him, wagging his tail in greeting.
Looking up into Gideon’s solemn face, Lark was briefly, terribly, afraid. Had he come to tell her—
She caught hold of her imagination. Even managed a wobbly smile. “Come in, Gideon,” she said. “And you, too, Pardner.”
The young man, her newest pupil, removed his hat. Stepped over the threshold and shut the door behind him.
“Rowdy asked me to come,” Gideon said shyly.
“He can’t take you to the dance tonight because he had to head straight back to Flagstaff, when we’d no more than got here.”
Lark was both relieved to know that Rowdy was safe, and disappointed that she wouldn’t see him that night. “Back to Flagstaff?” she asked.
“We had to go there so I could get a horse,” Gideon explained, swallowing once and looking for all the world like a young man telling either a bold-faced lie or a partial truth. “The one I had was hired from the livery. Coming back, we met Sam O’Ballivan and Major Blackstone, and they wanted Rowdy to go on with them.”
“I see,” Lark said, still smiling even though a little frisson of alarm went through her. She knew Sam and the major had hired Rowdy to serve as town marshal, but what business could all three of them have in Flagstaff? “Let me take your hat and coat, Gideon. And do sit down.”
He hesitated, then nodded. Shed his coat and handed it over, along with his hat. His gaze strayed to the rum cake, and Lark smiled again.
In the meantime, Pardner had gone straight to Lydia, who was making a fuss over him, and Lark saw Gideon’s regard move in their direction and soften slightly.
He approached Lydia’s chair, crouched, looking up into the child’s eyes.
“Feeling better?” he asked.
Lydia nodded. “I remember you,” she said. “You brought me here on your horse. And it was snowing out, and very cold.”
“That’s right,” Gideon said hoarsely.
Lydia was silent for a few moments. Then she said, “My papa died. His funeral is Sunday afternoon.”
Lark’s throat tightened around a spiky ball of pain.
“I know,” Gideon replied. “I was real sorry to hear that.”
“I’m going to Phoenix to live with my aunt Nell.”
Lark sank slowly into a chair at the kitchen table, careful not to disturb Mr. Porter’s birthday cake. She’d tried several times to broach the subject of Nell Baker’s impending arrival, but always without success. Lydia would simply bite down on her lower lip and look away, sometimes giving her head a small, decisive shake. Now, perhaps because Gideon, big as he was, was in some ways another child, or perhaps simply because he’d rescued her and she was grateful, Lydia was ready to confide in someone.
Lark was desperately relieved.
“I went to Phoenix once,” Gideon said quietly, and it struck Lark, once again, how like Rowdy he was, in his appearance as well as his manner and his countenance, but also in deeper ways. He was kind, and he didn’t shrink from hard duties; he simply did what needed doing, efficiently and without complaint. “It’s warm all the time there.”
“Are there Indians?” Lydia asked, very solemnly.
“Pimas,
mostly,
” Gideon confirmed. “They’re peaceful. Farmers. They’ve got irrigation ditches down there that are better than ten thousand years old.”
“Ten thousand years?” Lydia marveled.
Gideon nodded.
Lydia considered that extraordinary length of time, which must have seemed like an eternity to an eight-year-old, then gestured, and Gideon obligingly leaned forward, so she could whisper in his ear. Even from halfway across the room, though, Lark, whose eyes were glazed with sudden tears, heard the child’s words.
“I’m scared,” Lydia said earnestly.
“I reckon your aunt Nell must be a nice woman,” Gideon said, giving one of Lydia’s pigtails an affectionate tug. “She’ll take real good care of you.”
Pardner looked on, turning his head toward Gideon, then back toward Lydia.
“Do you really think so?” Lydia asked, in a breathless tone, her eyes wide.
“Sure I do,” Gideon answered. “She’s coming all this way to get you, and that means she wants a girl to raise.”
“I hope she’s not like Mabel,” Lydia said.
Lark sniffled and dried her eyes on the cuff of her dress. Straightened her back. Lydia would be safe with Miss Baker, almost surely, and she’d be fed and clothed. Was it too much to hope that the woman would
love
Lydia as well?
“I don’t figure she could be like Mabel,” Gideon mused.
“How come?”
“Well, because she’s your aunt. That means she’s got to be a little bit like you, anyhow. Maybe she’s even a
lot
like you. And you’re real nice, Lydia, so she must be, too.”
“What if she’s mean, though?” Lydia fretted.
“Then you just send me a letter,” Gideon said staunchly. “I’ll come right down to Phoenix, first thing, and fetch you back here to live with Miss Morgan.” He turned his head, looking at Lark. “It’s all right to promise that, isn’t it?”
Lark could barely speak. “Yes, Gideon,” she managed. “It’s all right.”
He turned back to Lydia. “See?”
“I don’t know how to write,” Lydia said, worried again. “I mean, I can write
some,
but my letters go every which way.”
Gideon must have smiled, because, suddenly, Lydia smiled, too. “If Miss Morgan will give me a sheet of paper and an envelope, I’ll write the letter for you. Make out the envelope and put a stamp on it, too. Then, if you ever have any trouble with anybody, all you’ll have to do is mail the letter. Soon as I get it, I’ll be coming for you.”
After some searching—given that she was a fugitive, living under a partially assumed name, she didn’t write letters—Lark produced a sheet of tablet paper, along with a pencil. The envelope was Mrs. Porter’s.
She stayed close, watched over Gideon’s shoulder as he wrote, “Please come and get me right away” in large block letters, slanted forcefully to the right. He read the message to Lydia, who nodded her approval, then carefully folded the paper, tucked it into the envelope and addressed it to himself:
Gideon Rhodes, Deputy Marshal
General Delivery
Stone Creek, Arizona Territory
Lark purloined a stamp from Mrs. Porter’s supply and gave it to Gideon, who licked the back of it and ceremoniously pressed it to the envelope with the pad of his thumb.
“What if you aren’t here when the letter comes?” Lydia asked.
“Somebody will forward it on to me, wherever I am,” Gideon replied, with the kind of certainty only the young could offer so readily.
Lydia grasped the letter tightly. “When I grow up,” she said, her gaze searching Gideon’s face, as if to memorize his every feature, “can we please get married?”
Gideon patted Lydia’s small hand. “If you still want me then,” he replied easily, “we’ll tie the knot. Chances are, though, you’ll forget all about me, and when you’re old enough, and pretty enough to have your pick of suitors, you’ll marry somebody else.”
“I’ll
never
forget you, Gideon,” Lydia said solemnly.
And neither will I,
Lark thought.
Neither will I.
T
HE RIDE TO
F
LAGSTAFF
seemed longer this time, being so soon repeated, and when Rowdy, Sam and the major got to the railroad depot, it was full dark. Little splashes of lantern light stretched along the train tracks as men rode back and forth, ferrying women and children into town, then turning right around to head back out for more.
Clearly, there
had
been a robbery, and maybe something even worse.
Reston materialized out of the gloom to greet them as soon as they rode up—Sam first, then the major, then Rowdy, who was the last to dismount.
“They dynamited the tracks,” Reston reported gravely.
Rowdy stiffened inwardly. He’d never known his pa to use dynamite, but there was always a first time. If a train was moving fast enough, it might roll right through a blaze laid on the tracks, even with logs the size of whiskey barrels.
“Anybody get hurt?” Sam asked Reston. He had to be thinking about an experience he’d had with a train down in Mexico, Sam did. God Almighty, Rowdy hoped this robbery hadn’t been a calamity like that one.
“Nope,” Reston replied, his gaze straying, measuring, to Rowdy, before shifting back to Sam. “No injuries to speak of, beyond a few bruises. Folks were scared, though, and they were a long time out there before we got to them. Soon as the train was late, though, we sent riders out to investigate.”
The major scanned the darkness, as though he could see all the way to that train, stranded out there in the dark and cold. “I suppose the robbers were masked,” Blackstone said, resigned.
Reston nodded. “According to Mr. Whitman—he owns this railroad and we brought him back among the first of the passengers, thinking he might have a heart attack, he was in such a dither—the leader had blue eyes and rode a black gelding. That’s about all we know.”
Rowdy’s stomach pitched, then rolled over backward.
Blue eyes, striking enough to be memorable to a frightened old man.
A black gelding.
Payton Yarbro.
Damn if the old bastard hadn’t lied through his teeth when he’d said he’d given up robbing trains. And when he’d claimed he was headed for Mexico, too.
“The old feller’s over at Ruby’s right now,” Reston said. “You might want to talk to him yourselves.”
“That can wait,” Sam replied, “until after all the passengers have been brought in.”
“We’re almost done with that,” Reston told Sam, but he was looking at Rowdy again. Probing at him in a way that made the small hairs rise on the back of Rowdy’s neck. “No sense in wearing out your horses. Or yourselves.”
Sam considered, then nodded. “Ruby’s?” he asked.
Reston nodded. “Your friend here knows the way,” he said, before peeling his eyes off Rowdy’s hide. To Rowdy it felt like some of the skin came away with his glance.
Sam looked Rowdy’s way, very briefly but in some depth, then mounted up again. Rowdy and the major followed suit.
After he’d shaken off the effects of Reston’s stare, Rowdy turned his thoughts to what little he knew about the robbery. Two details, that was all he really had. And all he really needed.
If he could have found his pa right then, he’d have done it. Handed the lying son of a bitch over to the rangers without batting an eye.
The lights of Ruby’s Saloon glowed in the gloom as they rode up, but the piano wasn’t playing. Out front, Rowdy, Sam and the major dismounted and found places for their horses.
Autry Whitman held court in the middle of the big, smoke-blued room, his white hair standing on end. A black man sat at the same table, as did Ruby herself, but everyone else kept their distance, staying on the periphery, lining the bar and claiming the far tables.
Whitman exuded power—and righteous wrath. He looked like some Old Testament prophet, and kept clenching his fists and mumbling, while Ruby, looking pale and jumpy, tried to ply him with free whiskey.
Rowdy knew what was going to happen. Knew there was no way to avoid it. So he resisted the urge to pull his hat brim down low over his eyes.
Sam was the first to speak. “Mr. Whitman,” he said, evidently needing no introduction, “my name is Sam O’Ballivan. I’m an Arizona Ranger. This is Major John Blackstone and Rowdy Rhodes.”
Whitman’s stony gaze moved from Sam to the major to Rowdy, and stopped with a lurch as jarring as a train coming fast onto a gap in the tracks.
The old man narrowed his eyes.
“That’s him,” he said, flushing dangerously and starting to his feet.
Rowdy stood his ground, didn’t move or speak.
He felt Sam and the major looking at him.
Whitman half rose, then sat down again, heavily. Shook his head, as if suddenly confused.
“It couldn’t have been him,” Ruby said evenly. “He was in this saloon when that train was robbed.”
“Those blue eyes,” Whitman murmured.
“Lots of people have blue eyes,” Sam said quietly. But he glanced thoughtfully at Ruby, then turned his attention back to the railroad mogul, skipping over Rowdy entirely. “Do you know what time it was when the train was robbed, Mr. Whitman?”
“Ten-thirty,” Whitman said, with an accusing look at the black man. “I’d just looked at my watch, to see how late Esau here was, serving up my breakfast.”
Esau looked mighty uncomfortable, and didn’t speak.
“At ten-thirty,” Ruby said, “Mr.—Rhodes was right here in this saloon. I remember him because of the badge.”
They were on dangerous ground, and Rowdy hoped Ruby knew that and would tread lightly. If she said Rowdy was her stepson, Sam and the major were sure to make the obvious connection. Then they’d want to know all about Jack Payton. And what Ruby didn’t tell them they could learn by questioning anybody on the street.