Read Holmes on the Range Online
Authors: Steve Hockensmith
For a second there, I thought he was going to wrap his arms around Brackwell's ankles and beg for forgiveness. But my brother had something very different in mind. He let out a low whistle and started crawling toward the fireplace at one end of the room.
Brackwell and I gaped at him, goggle-eyed.
“Hel-lo! Someone's sure been busy here,” Gustav said, combing through heaps of gray ash under and around the grate. “Ol' General Sherman himself couldn't have done more with a match.” He pushed his nose in so close to the cinders it's a wonder he didn't dust his mustache gray. “Fresh,” he said, sucking in a whiff. “The fire died out not more than seven, eight hours ago.”
“Amlingmeyer. . . what
are
you doing?” Brackwell asked, sounding more perplexed than peeved.
“Detectin'!” Old Red replied. He began picking small bits of singed paper from the fireplace and depositing them gently in his left hand.
“You ain't quittin'?” I said.
“Quittin'? Brother, you know me better than that. I ain't gonna âconcede' squat to that blustery old son of a bitch.”
“And you ain't all broken up that Mr. Holmes is dead?” I asked, strangely pleased that my brother wasn't pulling our necks from the Duke's noose after all.
“Oh, I ain't happy to hear someone say it,” Gustav said, still sifting ash. “But sounds to me like they didn't find a body, and you know what Mr. Holmes himself says about jumpin' to conclusions. It wouldn't surprise me if he's just takin' a nice, long holiday somewhere, lettin' the folks back home assume what they will.”
I was so tickled Old Red wasn't turning tail I didn't bother pointing out how childish this wishful thinking was. If believing the great
detective was alive kept Gustav's spirits out of the dirt, I wasn't going to argue against it, no matter how silly the notion might be.
“You might just be right,” I said.
“I try to make a habit of it,” Old Red replied. “I apologize if I threw a scare into you, Mr. Brackwell. I needed to figure a way in here, and givin' the Duke what he wanted seemed like the quickest way to go.”
Brackwell had already brought out a grin that made him look almost as relieved as I felt. “
Appearing
to acquiesce to the Duke while doing as you please is a sound strategy. His children have been doing it for years.”
“Is that a fact?” Gustav muttered, taking the remark with a gravity it didn't seem to warrant. “So tell me, Mr. Brackwellâyou have any idea who lit up a bonfire in here last night?”
“I haven't the foggiest.”
“I didn't suppose you would. It couldn't be
that
easy.” Old Red swiveled around and moved to Perkins's desk, walking on his knees with a small pile of burnt paper in his hands. “You fellers havin' more of an eye for words and such, I'll let you look this over.”
He spread the char-edged scraps on the desk.
“And what exactly are we looking
for
?” Brackwell asked.
Gustav cocked an eyebrow at me.
“The paper Boudreaux took out of the cellar yesterday?” I said.
My brother flashed me a here-and-gone smile. Then he dropped onto his belly and took to crawling around the room like a baby, his nose no more than three inches from the floor. Brackwell and I couldn't help but stare at him a moment.
“I'm sorryâI still don't understand what we're looking for,” the Englishman said when we finally turned to the task at hand.
“All I know is it's a piece of paper,” I had to admit. “And it's important . . .for some reason.”
Brackwell gave the scraps before us a dismissive shrug. On most of them, blocky, typeset lettering was still visible.
“Well, I don't see anything
important
here. Just a shredded newspaperâused as kindling, I expect.”
“Yeah,” I said, sifting through the singed paper. “There ain't nothin' here that. . .hold on!”
One of the scraps was different from the rest. It was charred up good, but there was enough leftâa circle a little smaller than a man's palmâto see that it wasn't from a newspaper. It was blank.
When I flipped the paper over, I found scratchy, blurred writing on the other side. Most of the words had disappeared into the fire, but a few letters and numbers remained:
ill of Sal
nnuery 20, 1893
tallo
00âpayed
cfersin
klin Dammers
“ âBill of Sale,' ” I said after I'd read everything out for Old Red. “It's a receipt. And it ain't hard to figure out it's made out to McPherson, even if this Dammers feller couldn't spell worth a damn.”
“That'd be Franklin Dammers, manager of the Diamond 8 Ranch in Wyoming,” Old Red said from the floor. “Now why do you think Uly'd go all the way down there just to buy tallow? That ain't nothin' but animal fat, and he could boil down all he needed from cows here.”
I shrugged. “Lord knows he didn't use it to make soap. Until the Duke's bunch came along, I don't think he'd even heard of the stuff.”
“I'm sorry,” Brackwell said. “I'm quite confused. Could one of you pleaseâ”
“Well, hel-lo there, stranger!” Old Red called out. He plucked something off the Turkish rug that covered about a quarter of the office floor. He turned to show it to us, displaying the little ditty proudly, like a boy holding up a foot-long trout he's just pulled from the river.
It was a tiny bit of scorched fluffâanother feather, just like the one Gustav had found pasted to the hole in Boudreaux's head.
“I knew it,” I said. “We got us a killer
chicken
on the loose.”
“I'm afraid I'm not following this at all,” Brackwell said, looking so bewildered by now he was almost woozy.
“Don't worry,” I told him. “I ain't really followin' it myself.”
Old Red was too busyâand in too good a moodâto chastise me for my foolishness. He was running his fingers over a round depression in the rug near where he'd come across that feather. The fabric had been worn away or crushed by some friction or heavy weight.
“This is it,” Gustav announced.
Not far from the dimple in the carpet was a twin. Each spot was about two inches across, and they were separated from each other by another foot and a half.
You didn't have to look far to see what had made the marks. An ottoman was pressed up against the wall nearby, and the distance between the legs perfectly matched the distance between those indentations.
Old Red looked up at me.
“Would you be so kind?” he said, seeing that I'd added things up as he had.
I gave the ottoman a push, sliding it just enough so the legs covered those grooves in the carpetâgrooves they had themselves created by resting in the same place for months if not years. Gustav squirmed around my feet to see what the ottoman had been moved to conceal. There was no need for him to get up so close, however, for the stains in the rug were plain enough from where Brackwell and I stood.
“Surely that's notâ” the Englishman began.
“Oh, but it is,” Old Red said. “That's blood. Last night y'all hosted a murder in this house, and you didn't even know it.”
“Here? In the. . .?” Brackwell shook his head as if he could decline
this disturbing news with a polite “No thanks.” “I don't understand. The noise I heard didn't sound like a
gunshot
.”
“Gunshots can be muffledâespecially from a little gun like a der-ringer.” Gustav hopped to his feet and hustled toward the other side of the room. “Anyway, don't you worry about understandin' it all.” He pulled back the drapes and peeked out the window toward the bunkhouses and the corral. “That's my job.”
My brother had been delivering one surprise after another that day, so you might think my capacity for astonishment would have dropped dead from exhaustion by now. But it proved to be in good working order still, for I found my eyes again popping and my jaw again dropping when Old Red slid that window open and climbed on through.
“Well, I found what I aimed toâand then some,” he said once he had his feet planted outside. “I reckon the Duke's gonna come bustin' through the door any second now, so we can't dawdle. I'm gonna be gone for a few minutes. Otto, until I get back, I need you to do what you do best.”
“What's that?”
“Talkâand don't forget to listen while you're at it, cuz it's what Mr. Brackwell has to say in reply that I'm interested in.”
“Talk about what?”
“Edwards, mostly. And how he ties in with the Duke. And the Sussex Land and Cattle Company. And Lady Clara.”
“What's there to say? Edwards is another la-di-da fool with too much money, that's how he ties in with the Duke's crowd.” I turned and gave Brackwell an apologetic nod. “Not meanin' any disrespect to yourself or the lady, of course.”
Brackwell nodded back, a slight, rather distracted-looking smile creasing his thin lips. “Of course.”
“I suspect there's a good bit more to say about the man than you think, Brother,” Old Red said, taking a quick peek over his shoulder. When he was sure no one was behind him getting a bead on his back,
he continued, “Edwards seems a tad out of place amongst highborn English folks like the Duke and Clara and Mr. Brackwell here, don't he? Yet the old man treats him like a bosom palâalmost like family, you might say. I'd like to hear the why of it.”
“Maybe he won the Duke over with his sparklin' personality and natural warmth,” I suggested.
Gustav rolled his eyes.
“No, Otto,” Brackwell said, some weary despair weighing down his words. When I looked over at him, I found him shaking his head sorrowfully. “It's Edwards's substantial bank account that has endeared him to the Duke. And his ambition. I know what your brother's asking about. I can tell you all about it.”
“Alright, if you say so.” I swiveled around to face the window again. “So, Gustavâwhat'll you be. . .?”
There was no point finishing the question. There was no one there to hear it.
Old Red was gone.
Or, I Learn More About a Certain “Noble Bachelor”âand Two Not-So-Noble Ones
Y
our brother is an
extraordinary man,” Brackwell said. “So's Hungry Bob Tracy, but you won't hear his family braggin' on it,” I replied, though the crack came more from habit than my heart. “Now what's this about Edwards and the Duke and Clara and what all?”
Brackwell took a seat on the ottoman and stared down at his clasped hands.
“It's something I'd normally prefer not to discuss. You must understandâLady Clara is a dear friend. I've known her practically all my life. Her brothers and mine, they're cut from the same cloth. Their father's sons, I suppose. But Lady Clara and I have always been
different
. I almost think of her as. . .an older sister. I don't wish to betray any confidences or traffic in spiteful gossip.”
I sympathized with his tender feelings toward the lady, of course. But either Old Red or the old man were going to come barging back
into the room any second, and I didn't wish to face either one without getting the answers my brother wanted first.
“I'm sorry, Mr. Brackwellâwe don't have much time. Whatever you got to say, you need to go on and say it,” I prodded as gently as I could. “Tell you what. Why don't you start with Edwards? I bet you wouldn't mind bandyin' about some spiteful gossip
he's
attached to.”
“Oh, there's an ample supply of that,” Brackwell spat with a vehemence that caught me by surprise. “As much as he puts on airs, he'll never be accepted as a true gentleman. Not when all of respectable society knows how his family made its fortune.”
“Which was how?”
Brackwell grinned bitterly. “Are you familiar with something called Dr. Edwards's Feminine Regulator?”
As you might imagine, I don't have any use for patent medicines of such a sort myself. But anyone who's been in a drugstore or glanced at the ads in the
Ladies' Home Journal
knows of Dr. Edwards's cure-all elixir.
“Our Edwards is kin to Dr. Edwards?”
“Well, yes and no. âDr. Edwards' was his father. But the man wasn't really a doctor at allâjust a druggist with a flair for commerce. Mix together a pinch of this, a pinch of that, and a liberal dash of alcohol
et voilÃ
âyou've got a âfeminine regulator.' Whatever that might be.”
“And apparently you've got yourself a bundle of loot to boot.” I shook my head, marveling at the cockeyed things men will do to make moneyâand sometimes succeed doing it. “But I suppose cash can't buy you respectability, can it?”
“No. But not everyone knows that. For instance,
Mrs
. Edwards, widow of the good âdoctor,' craves social standing above all else. She was frozen out in Boston, so she took her sonâand her fortuneâto Europe.”