Arizona Territory (24 page)

Read Arizona Territory Online

Authors: Dusty Richards

BOOK: Arizona Territory
12.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
“No problem. We'll never get accepted as a state until we clean up the crime, and we need statehood for more economic development and growth.”
“Spoken like a true American and a businessman. Amen.”
“Since they have ended occupation of the South, perhaps we can be better understood in congress as hardworking people needing statehood.”
Arnold agreed. Rachael moaned more about how uncomfortable she was from the heat, and her husband, for his part, totally ignored her. Chet tended his own business, and Jesus tried to sleep.
They stopped at Picacho Peak Stage Stop for a horse change. The sun had set and the small peak stood out against the night stars.
“Aren't you lucky you don't have her?” Jesus said privately, standing a short distance from the coach.
“Amen.”
“He don't even hear her.”
“You're right.” They climbed in and took their seats. The Arnolds soon joined them and Rachael continued to fan herself.
Nothing would help the heat except being under a waterfall, Chet mused. They weren't close to where they were going, traveling through the night in a hot wind and churning up acrid dust. Tucson, the walled city, wouldn't be any better, with no place to escape the temperatures as the stage charged through the narrow dark streets. Chet knew he'd be grateful to be at the hotel at last.
Disembarking the stage, he had the agent take care of their saddles and war bags. Then he shook Arnold's hand and spoke cordially to his wife, before they went to their hotel two blocks away. The Arnolds had reservations at the Congress. Chet found it too pricey, and where they stayed at the Brown was adequate.
A street vendor made them
burritos
and they lounged near her spot to eat the meal.
“About time we found some food,” Chet said.
“That cook at the Peak hasn't taken a bath since Christmas,” Cole said.
“We never eat there,” Jesus said.
“Not even starving,” Chet teased.
They walked into the Brown lobby and took their room keys. Chet asked to be woke at seven, and when he answered the man's knock, he was thinking he hadn't slept very much.
They took breakfast in the hotel restaurant and went to the federal courthouse to meet with Marshal John Thomas and find out what they could do for him. No sign of Roamer, but Chet decided he must be on his way with the horse stock.
Thomas shook their hands and thanked them for coming. They went in his office and he showed them on the wall map where the robbery occurred. The spot was north of the main stage route, across southern Arizona west of Benson where the road went to Fort Grant.
“Did they have a wagon or did they use the one it was on?” Chet asked.
“We haven't found the Army wagon with our roadblocks east and west on the Butterfield Road.”
“They had to have a wagon to haul that many coins, either the Army's or theirs.”
Thomas agreed. “We've looked and found nothing. I had some Chiricahua scouts look for it. Nothing.”
“When my men get here, we'll look for it.”
“If Indians can't find it . . .” Thomas cut him a hard look.
“I have nothing against Indians. But they didn't find it. My men will go up there and look. A large wagon didn't evaporate, unless they burned or buried it. That might tell us more about the robbery than we know now. If they didn't use it to haul those coins out, then they had another conveyance.”
“They tell me you and your men are among the best lawmen in the territory, so I'll do anything you wish, but we've not found a shred of evidence we can use to make an arrest or launch a grand jury investigation.”
“Give us a week. If we don't turn up anything, I'll go home and run my ranch.”
“I thank you, sir, for coming.”
“Do you have any witnesses that saw them?”
“They were all masked. They swooped down with what must have been maybe twenty raiders or more, and ran over them, killing anyone they came to and took the rig away. They left the dead and wounded.”
“They went south toward the Butterfield Route?”
“We think so, but lost the trail.”
“I'm sure we can find the trail to Fort Grant out there,” Chet said, convinced.
“What can I do for you?”
“That new coin money should be a flat giveaway if they spend it.”
“Everyone has been notified to be on the watch.”
“My man will be here with horses for us shortly, and I'll let you know what we find.”
They shook hands. Once outside the courthouse, Chet shook his head. “We are late to look at this situation, but we can still follow it. No one steals coins. They're too hard to transport and dispose of. The robbery site must be twenty miles east of here. If I stole it, and if I lived here and had a sound team to drive, I could be home in six or seven hours.”
Roamer found them after lunch. He and Shawn had brought the riding horses and pack ones, too. Chet fed the two men lunch from a street vendor, while Cole and Jesus went for their saddles and war bags. By three o'clock they rode east, and about sundown asked a rancher permission to camp at his windmill.
The rancher told them he had been quizzed by the lawmen and had no idea who had done the crime.
“Is there any word about this robbery? I mean, folks talking about it,” Chet asked.
“No. I was surprised. I thought maybe Mexican bandits did it, but there isn't much talk about it.”
“If twenty men rode up that road, wouldn't folks see them?” Chet asked.
“Sure, unless they went one or so at a time and were local, huh?”
“You have any notion about that?” Chet asked.
The man shook his head like that was all he wanted to say.
Later in camp, Cole said, “Sounded to me like he told you something.”
“He has to live here. If that's what happened, that the robbers are people who live here, he would have to keep it to himself. I savvy that's why he isn't saying anything.”
“How will we ever prove it, if no one will talk about it?” Jesus asked.
“We need to start thinking about that as possible. I say, ‘possible.'”
Both his men nodded their heads.
“Men, it looks like this may be the toughest case we ever tried to solve.”
“We heard about it happening down at Tubac, but it has been kind of subdued, like there is something wrong,” Roamer said.
“I imagine before we're through, we'll have spent lots of time trying to figure it out. If we can.” Chet shook his head. “Why is this robbery so damn strange?”
“Why did they let them get this close to the fort? Looking at that map, they let it get almost there,” Cole said.
“They had to have a good road to take a wagon that heavily loaded out of here. The roadblocks east and west on the Butterfield Road turned up nothing. So they either hid it or buried it.”
“It may be parked somewhere under a mesquite bush,” Shawn said.
“But how many packhorses would it take to haul it away?”
“They might of buried it.”
Chet agreed. “Until things cool down. Maybe. Tomorrow, I want both ways from the site of the robbery scouted. Look for anything unusual. If it is an inside deal, we'll learn, sooner or later.”
He went to sleep that night in his bedroll, thinking about his wife. They had been together for nearly a year and he was spoiled. Poor cowboy, looking for a little sympathy.
She definitely was not there. Go to sleep
.
C
HAPTER
27
Come morning, it felt cold in the early dawn, stirring around with his crew to saddle horses and cook breakfast. Roamer and Shawn would work north asking anyone what they knew and look for evidence. His three would go south and see if anyone saw anything or had any ideas. When the sun rose, the chill wouldn't last very long, and he'd bet Rachael Arnold wouldn't be up this early to enjoy it. Poor woman must be cooking in Tucson. Glad that he was not her husband, he poured coffee into tin cups for everyone.
“How is your farm doing on the river?” he asked Roamer.
“My wife has a Mexican woman helping her, and they take vegetables to the market every day. Lupe is a real salesperson and they're making money. I'm surprised, but they are really doing well.”
“Good.”
“Yeah, I was surprised when she set in to do all the planting, but folks are looking for fresh turnips and carrots and lettuce. I may be a farmer someday.”
They all laughed. Chet shook his head. If Roamer ever became a farmer, he'd operate from a chair in the shade. He was a great lawman, but not an industrious laborer.
“Saddle up. We can meet back here. Listen close to any witnesses. But don't put words in their mouth. We need witnesses who saw them.”
They spent the day on the road interviewing anyone who would talk to them, coming and going, and stopping to talk to residents who lived on or near the road.
Did they see anyone driving a wagon by on that date?
Anyone strange drive it?
What did they look like?
Jesus talked to the Hispanic people softly and nodded his head at their replies. Chet sat patient on his horse while it switched its tail at flies. Cole rode ahead to look for another witness.
Jesus soon returned and mounted up. “The Castros said they saw the mounted guard go by and it never came back. He said the only wagon that came south that evening was a Mormon bishop named Elliot.”
“He say what he was hauling?”
“No, he could not see it, but said his big horses were in their collars whenever they hit a little grade.”
“Why didn't anyone else see him?”
“Castro is not a Mormon.”
“Jesus, many of these white folks we've talked to are probably of that same religion.”
“What should we do about it?”
“We need to talk to the main men from the marshal's office. I'm sure they won't want any trouble with a church group over this matter, but Elliot is the only man we can identify as being seen driving down from Fort Grant.”
Cole rode up to join them. “You two learn anything?”
“Jesus talked to a Hispanic couple. They didn't know why he was asking, but the only person who came by that day in a wagon was a ward bishop named Elliot.”
“Holy cow. That make him a suspect?”
Chet held up his hand. “Not so fast. We need to check on him and learn a lot more, but so far he's the only one anyone has seen go by. I doubt a dried up little Mexican man and his non-English-speaking wife will make a jury convict a high official of any church.”
“That bothers you?” Cole asked.
“Sure, it does. If someone like that murdered the payroll guards and stole the money, they aren't any better than the Mexican bandits we've run down.”
“I feel like that, too. Now what do we do?”
“We go back and talk to our boss, and his boss, if he's still here.”
“Tomorrow?”
“Let's ride in and get there by mid-morning. We may be able to get a search warrant from a judge and search his place, if they want to do that.”
“Maybe Roamer found something.”
“I hope it was something more than what we did. Let's get back to camp.”
Everyone jogged their horses for camp. Chet had a bad feeling about the outcome of this whole robbery business and was still perplexed by what he knew.
When they caught up with Roamer, he was no help, but he did hear about four men who rode in from the north that day. Someone saw them that day, but didn't know them. They were well armed. Careful with his words, Chet told Roamer and Shawn what they had learned.
“What next?” Roamer asked.
“We go to Tucson and talk to the boss tomorrow. If he don't want to do anything, we won't, and I say we all go home if that is the case. If he wants to get us a search warrant, we'll serve it and apologize if we find nothing.”
“Think he'd have the money at his place?” Roamer asked.
“He might think because he is church leader, because of his position, he won't be checked.”
“Damn, what will we do?”
“Let our new boss decide.”
“Good enough for me.” Roamer and Chet shook hands.
Chet could hardly choke down the food Jesus served them. It hung in his throat going down and soured in his stomach. At last in his bedroll, he tossed in his sleep. No crime had ever drawn this out of him. Damn. He fought sleep, and finally slept, but wasn't rested at morning.
They reached the federal courthouse and Chet requested an audience with his boss from Earl at the desk, who went into the back office.
Thomas came out and said his boss was there. That he wanted to hear anything they had to say. Chet said he needed his crew in there.
Thomas agreed. The secretary, Earl, went for chairs and Shawn helped him.
“You've met Chet Byrnes,” Thomas said to Arnold. “He can introduce his men for you. This is the Force we have used on the border.”
“I met Cole and Jesus on the stage.”
“This is Roamer and Shawn.”
He shook their hands, nodded to each, and said he was glad to meet them.
“What do you have?” Thomas asked Chet.
“The only man that drove a heavy loaded wagon down that road that evening was a Mormon bishop named Elliot. He's a ward leader in charge of a Mormon church.”
“How good is the witness?”
“Jesus talked to him. They are an older Hispanic couple, and she speaks no English.”
“What do you think?”
“I think a Mormon church leader drove a heavy-laden wagon by their place after the robbery.”
Thomas looked at his boss, Arnold. “Do we need to show him what we picked up at the First Arizona Bank today?”
His boss nodded.
Thomas drew a heavy cloth sack out of the drawer in his desk and spilled the shining coins on the desktop.
Chet stepped closer and nodded. “Who deposited that money?”
“A farmer from upstream named Rickard who paid off his mortgage today with these coins.”
“Is he a Mormon?” Chet asked.
“I imagine so. I'd bet eight out of ten farmers on the Santa Cruz River are Mormons.”
Arnold broke in, “Byrnes, you live in this territory. Is this going to be another mess, like they had over at the Meadow Valley wagon train massacre in Utah over twenty years ago?”
“No, I know a lot of those people. This never has occurred before, or I've never heard of it, anyway. But they're all covering up seeing any of them on the Fort Grant Road. Except for the one couple who saw him, and I wouldn't want to endanger their lives.”
Arnold nodded. “What do you recommend?”
“We'd like a search warrant to look over Elliot's property. If we find any evidence, I plan to arrest him and bring him for trial as a participant in the crime.”
“How many will come to break him out?” Thomas asked. “I may need reinforcements to hold the jail.”
“If we need to help you, we'll do it.”
“Fine,” Thomas said. “Let's call in the federal prosecutor and get his opinion.”
Chet and his crew rested in the office while Thomas left to find the man. He returned with Alex Prior. After the matter was discussed, the prosecutor agreed if they had strong evidence he would prosecute him.
Thomas then went for a search warrant from Judge Monroe, a judge in his courtroom office.
“You realize to arrest a church leader is a dangerous situation?” Thomas asked, returning with the warrant and handing it to Chet. “Read it aloud and if he resists, subdue him and anyone else dangerous as well. When are you going there?”
“Right now.”
His men rose and agreed they wanted it over.
“You know where he lives?” Chet asked.
“North of town on the San Cruz River. I can make you a map. I'm not afraid, but one of us needs to hold the jail tomorrow if things heat up.”
After a quick meal from some street vendors, they left an hour later. The ride was hot and dusty. At sundown, they reached the farm and rode up the fenced lane.
A bareheaded man in his late thirties came out of the house and looked them over. “What can I do for you?”
“You Carl Elliot?”
“Yes. Why?”
“I have a federal warrant, issued by Judge Monroe, to search your property.”
“What do you want to find?”
Chet ignored his question. “Ask all your family to come out and be in the yard. Children, women, and all.”
“I may refuse. You're threatening me.”
“Then by the authority of the federal court, I will put you in irons. You have two minutes to get them outside. I don't want anyone hurt, but I will not put up with you resisting me from doing my job.”
“What is your name?”
“Chet Brynes.”
“I think—”
“Put him in irons, Jesus. Roamer, tell the family to come outside.” Chet knew Cole and Shawn were already out back, and he heard some shouting.
“Look what we found,” Cole said, with a nice-looking teenage girl in tow. He guided her by one arm and held a bucket in his free hand.
Chet took the bucket. It was heavy, and in the closing light he could see it was about half-full of newly minted coins. A baby cried in the arms of a woman in tears who came out of the house. There were six more kids from preschool to near teens rounded up and made to sit on the ground.
His men brought out from the house more money in containers, and Shawn and Roamer found more in the barn. In a quick discussion, they decided it would require a wagon to take it all back. Chet knew Jesus's relatives would give him a wagon to haul it, and their farm wasn't far from there.
“You realize you will be charged with murder and robbery and no doubt hang for this crime?” Chet said to the man seated on the ground in both cuffs and leg irons.
Elliot shook his head like the charges were nothing and it wasn't going to happen. “You can't ever convict me.”
“I guess we'll see, won't we?”
“You're wasting your time. No jury in Pima County will ever convict me.”
“I'm glad you're so confident. But the way I see it, this money we found here was part of the Fort Grant payroll stolen ten days ago.”
“I will repeat that you will not be able to convict me.”
The very notion of the smart-ass words gnawed on him. In irons, seated on the ground, and in the face of the strong evidence they had gathered, this man had no fear of prosecution. There was something else going on, and Chet had no idea what it was. Anyone else would be plea-bargaining by this time. Did he think the federal government wouldn't prosecute a Mormon bishop? Had he set himself up as God? All the members of the family were in tears, and Bishop Elliot was telling them there was nothing to worry about, that he would not serve any time. It was just some inconvenient time he had to spend in jail, and then he would be back home.
Chet's thoughts went back to his first days in Arizona, when he chased down the men who killed his first wife's foreman and his second-in-command. They'd also stolen horses, raped an innocent woman, and threatened another family. He'd chased them down himself, and then doubted if he took them in that this raw territory would prosecute them. Instead, he became judge, jury, and executioner. For their foul deeds, he hung them by himself, in a dry wash outside of Rye.
He'd taken lots of flack for doing that. He'd spent a lot of time since then arresting criminals and making certain they were tried by legal means. But as twilight faded on the hot day, he wondered if this Elliot didn't deserve the same treatment he gave those killers. He was so certain he would get off with killing five men and stealing that much federal money, that might just be called for.
“We've run out of light to look for any more,” Roamer said, jolting Chet out of his thoughts.
“You and Shawn stay here tonight. I'm sorry. When Jesus returns with the wagon, we'll take Elliot to Tucson and bring back a crew to scour this whole place.”
Roamer gave him a head toss. “I heard that bastard talking. What makes him so damn confident he ain't going to hang?”
“I'm not sure myself. I go back to that Rye deal. I figured those two killers would get off with murder and horse rustling and rape—so I hung them. You know all about that?”
Roamer nodded. “I'm with you. That guy needs his neck stretched for what he did. How will he get off? Brigham Young can't give him clemency down here.”
“I'm not sure, but he obviously has no fear about it. You make sure they don't hide any more money. They can sleep out here. Every one of his children must have known he stole it. That older girl was going off with part of it when Cole caught her.”
“I'll watch it. But I'm sure confused about him saying that we're wasting our time here.”
“So am I, Roamer. So am I.”
Jesus returned with a wagon. The money and their prisoner were loaded and they went back to Tucson. They arrived at sunup, and the prisoner was quickly taken inside and placed in a cell. Thomas and Arnold both shook their heads at the sight of all the money they brought back.

Other books

Darkness Series Epilogue by Contreras, Claire
torg 02 - The Dark Realm by Douglas Kaufman
The Girard Reader by RENÉ GIRARD
Hard Roads by Lily White
A Very Unusual Air War by Gill Griffin
He's a Rebel by Mark Ribowsky