Jailbreak

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Authors: Giles Tippette

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G
ILES
T
IPPETTE
turned to writing westerns in the 1970s and quickly developed a loyal following. His 1971 western,
The Bank Robber,
was made into the 1974 movie
The Spikes Gang,
starring Lee Marvin and Ron Howard. When asked if he enjoyed the movie version of his novel, Tippette shrugged and replied, “I don’t know. I didn’t see it.” Another western,
The Sunshine Killers,
was optioned by Clint Eastwood but never quite made it to the big screen.
His other westerns include
The Texas Bank Robbing Company, Bad News, Jailbreak, Cherokee, Crossfire, Dead Man’s Poker, Gunpoint, Hard Luck Money, Hard Rock, Sixkiller, The Horse Thieves, Southwest of Heaven,
and the popular Wilson Young series, which included
Heaven’s Gold, Wilson’s Choice, Wilson’s Gold, Wilson’s Revenge, and Wilson’s Woman.
Mystery Scene
magazine said of Tippette’s work, “He writes crime novels set in the Wild West. His books are gritty, violent, and show the American West in all its harsh beauty.”
Mr. Tippette passed away in 2001 and, per his last request, was cremated and had his ashes scattered over West Texas. Even in death, Giles Tippette was a man about town.
ALSO BY GILES TIPPETTE
The Bank Robber
 
The Sunshine Killers
 
Cherokee
 
Dead Man’s Poker
Jailbreak
A JUSTA WILLIAMS WESTERN
G
ILES
T
IPPETTE
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
LYRICAL PRESS BOOKS are published by
 
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
 
Copyright © 1991 Giles Tippette
 
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
 
LYRICAL PRESS and the Lyrical logo are Reg. U.S. Pat, & TM Office.
 
First electronic edition: October 2016
ISBN: 978-1-6018-3814-8
The best book
that I’ve written so far,
to the best wife,
Betsy Anne,
I’ve had so far.
1
At supper Norris, my middle brother, said, “I think we got some trouble on that five thousand acres down on the border near Laredo.”
He said it serious, which is the way Norris generally says everything. I quit wrestling with the steak Buttercup, our cook, had turned into rawhide and said, “What are you talking about? How could we have trouble on land lying idle?”
He said, “I got word from town this afternoon that a telegram had come in from a friend of ours down there. He says we got some kind of squatters taking up residence on the place.”
My youngest brother, Ben, put his fork down and said, incredulously,
“That
five thousand acres? Hell, it ain’t nothing but rocks and cactus and sand. Why in hell would anyone want to squat on that worthless piece of nothing?”
Norris just shook his head. “I don’t know. But that’s what the telegram said. Came from Jack Cole. And if anyone ought to know what’s going on down there it would be him.”
I thought about it and it didn’t make a bit of sense. I was Justa Williams, and my family, my two brothers and myself and our father, Howard, occupied a considerable ranch called the Half-Moon down along the Gulf of Mexico in Matagorda County, Texas. It was some of the best grazing land in the state and we had one of the best herds of purebred and crossbred cattle in that part of the country. In short we were pretty well-to-do.
But that didn’t make us any the less ready to be stolen from, if indeed that was the case. The five thousand acres Norris had been talking about had come to us through a trade our father had made some years before. We’d never made any use of the land, mainly because, as Ben had said, it was pretty worthless and because it was a good two hundred miles from our ranch headquarters. On a few occasions we’d bought cattle in Mexico and then used the acreage to hold small groups on while we made up a herd. But other than that, it lay mainly forgotten.
I frowned. “Norris, this doesn’t make a damn bit of sense. Right after supper send a man into Blessing with a return wire for Jack asking him if he’s certain. What the hell kind of squatting could anybody be doing on that land?”
Ben said, “Maybe they’re raisin’ watermelons.” He laughed.
I said, “They could raise melons, but there damn sure wouldn’t be no water in them.”
Norris said, “Well, it bears looking into.” He got up, throwing his napkin on the table. “I’ll go write out that telegram.”
I watched him go, dressed, as always, in his town clothes. Norris was the businessman in the family. He’d been sent down to the University at Austin and had got considerable learning about the ins and outs of banking and land deals and all the other parts of our business that didn’t directly involve the ranch. At the age of twenty-nine I’d been the boss of the operation a good deal longer than I cared to think about. It had been thrust upon me by our father when I wasn’t much more than twenty. He’d said he wanted me to take over while he was still strong enough to help me out of my mistakes and I reckoned that was partly true. But it had just seemed that after our mother had died the life had sort of gone out of him. He’d been one of the earliest settlers, taking up the land not long after Texas had become a republic in 1845. I figured all the years of fighting Indians and then Yankees and scalawags and carpetbaggers and cattle thieves had taken their toll on him. Then a few years back he’d been nicked in the lungs by a bullet that should never have been allowed to head his way and it had thrown an extra strain on his heart. He was pushing seventy and he still had plenty of head on his shoulders, but mostly all he did now was sit around in his rocking chair and stare out over the cattle and land business he’d built. Not to say that I didn’t go to him for advice when the occasion demanded. I did, and mostly I took it.
Buttercup came in just then and sat down at the end of the table with a cup of coffee. He was near as old as Dad and almost completely worthless. But he’d been one of the first hands that Dad had hired and he’d been kept on even after he couldn’t sit a horse anymore. The problem was he’d elected himself cook, and that was the sorriest day our family had ever seen. There were two Mexican women hired to cook for the twelve riders we kept full time, but Buttercup insisted on cooking for the family.
Mainly, I think, because he thought he was one of the family. A notion we could never completely dissuade him from.
So he sat there, about two days of stubble on his face, looking as scrawny as a pecked-out rooster, sweat running down his face, his apron a mess. He said, wiping his forearm across his forehead, “Boy, it shore be hot in there. You boys shore better be glad you ain’t got no business takes you in that kitchen.”
Ben said, in a loud mutter, “I wish you didn’t either.”
Ben, at twenty-five, was easily the best man with a horse or a gun that I had ever seen. His only drawback was that he was hotheaded and he tended to act first and think later. That ain’t a real good combination for someone that could go on the prod as fast as Ben. When I had argued with Dad about taking over as boss, suggesting instead that Norris, with his education, was a much better choice, Dad had simply said, “Yes, in some ways. But he can’t handle Ben. You can. You can handle Norris, too. But none of them can handle you.”
Well, that hadn’t been exactly true. If Dad had wished it I would have taken orders from Norris even though he was two years younger than me. But the logic in Dad’s line of thinking had been that the Half-Moon and our cattle business was the lodestone of all our businesses and only I could run that. He had been right. In the past I’d imported purebred Whiteface and Hereford cattle from up North, bred them to our native Longhorns and produced cattle that would bring twice as much at market as the horse-killing, all-bone, all-wild Longhorns. My neighbors had laughed at me at first, claiming those square little purebreds would never make it in our Texas heat. But they’d been wrong and, one by one, they’d followed the example of the Half-Moon.
Buttercup was setting up to take off on another one of his long-winded harangues about how it had been in the “old days” so I quickly got up, excusing myself, and went into the big office we used for sitting around in as well as a place of business. Norris was at the desk composing his telegram so I poured myself out a whiskey and sat down. I didn’t want to hear about any trouble over some worthless five thousand acres of borderland. In fact I didn’t want to hear about any troubles of any kind. I was just two weeks short of getting married, married to a lady I’d been courting off and on for five years, and I was mighty anxious that nothing come up to interfere with our plans. Her name was Nora Parker and her daddy owned and run the general mercantile in our nearest town, Blessing. I’d almost lost her once before to a Kansas City drummer. She’d finally gotten tired of waiting on me, waiting until the ranch didn’t occupy all my time, and almost run off with a smooth-talking Kansas City drummer that called on her daddy in the harness trade. But she’d come to her senses in time and got off the train in Texarkana and returned home.
But even then it had been a close thing. I, along with my men and brothers and help from some of our neighbors, had been involved with stopping a huge herd of illegal cattle being driven up from Mexico from crossing our range and infecting our cattle with tick fever which could have wiped us all out. I tell you it had been a bloody business. We’d lost four good men and had to kill at least a half dozen on the other side. Fact of the business was I’d come about as close as I ever had to getting killed myself, and that was going some for the sort of rough-and-tumble life I’d led.
Nora had almost quit me over it, saying she just couldn’t take the uncertainty. But in the end, she’d stuck by me. That had been the year before, 1896, and I’d convinced her that civilized law was coming to the country, but until it did, we that had been there before might have to take things into our own hands from time to time.
She’d seen that and had understood. I loved her and she loved me and that was enough to overcome any of the troubles we were still likely to encounter from day to day.
So I was giving Norris a pretty sour look as he finished his telegram and sent for a hired hand to ride it into Blessing, seven miles away. I said, “Norris, let’s don’t make a big fuss about this. That land ain’t even crossed my mind in at least a couple of years. Likely we got a few Mexican families squatting down there and trying to scratch out a few acres of corn.”
Norris gave me his businessman’s look. He said, “It’s our land, Justa. And if we allow anyone to squat on it for long enough or put up a fence they can lay claim. That’s the law. My job is to see that we protect what we have, not give it away.”
I sipped at my whiskey and studied Norris. In his town clothes he didn’t look very impressive. He’d inherited more from our mother than from Dad so he was not as wide-shouldered and slim-hipped as Ben and me. But I knew him to be a good, strong, dependable man in any kind of fight. Of course he wasn’t that good with a gun, but then Ben and I weren’t all that good with books like he was. But I said, just to jolly him a bit, “Norris, I do believe you are running to suet. I may have to put you out with Ben working the horse herd and work a little of that fat off you.”
Naturally it got his goat. Norris had always envied Ben and me a little. I was just over six foot and weighed right around a hundred and ninety. I had inherited my daddy’s big hands and big shoulders. Ben was almost a copy of me except he was about a size smaller. Norris said, “I weigh the same as I have for the last five years. If it’s any of your business.”
I said, as if I was being serious, “Must be them sack suits you wear. What they do, pad them around the middle?”
He said, “Why don’t you just go to hell.”
After he’d stomped out of the room I got the bottle of whiskey and an extra glass and went down to Dad’s room. It had been one of his bad days and he’d taken to bed right after lunch. Strictly speaking he wasn’t supposed to have no whiskey, but I watered him down a shot every now and then and it didn’t seem to do him no harm.
He was sitting up when I came in the room. I took a moment to fix him a little drink, using some water out of his pitcher, then handed him the glass and sat down in the easy chair by the bed. I told him what Norris had reported and asked what he thought.
He took a sip of his drink and shook his head. “Beats all I ever heard,” he said. “I took that land in trade for a bad debt some fifteen, twenty years ago. I reckon I’d of been money ahead if I’d of hung on to the bad debt. That land won’t even raise weeds, well as I remember, and Noah was in on the last rain that fell on the place.”
We had considerable amounts of land spotted around the state as a result of this kind of trade or that. It was Norris’s business to keep up with their management. I was just bringing this to Dad’s attention more out of boredom and impatience for my wedding day to arrive than anything else.
I said, “Well, it’s a mystery to me. How you feeling?”
He half smiled. “Old.” Then he looked into his glass. “And I never liked watered whiskey. Pour me a dollop of the straight stuff in here.”
I said, “Now, Howard. You know—”
He cut me off. “If I wanted somebody to argue with I’d send for Buttercup. Now do like I told you.”
I did, but I felt guilty about it. He took the slug of whiskey down in one pull. Then he leaned his head back on the pillow and said, “Aaaaah. I don’t give a damn what that horse doctor says, ain’t nothing makes a man feel as good inside as a shot of the best.”
I felt sorry for him laying there. He’d always led just the kind of life he wanted—going where he wanted, doing what he wanted, having what he set out to get. And now he was reduced to being a semi-invalid. But one thing that showed the strength that was still in him was that you never heard him complain. He said, “How’s the cattle?”
I said, “They’re doing all right, but I tell you we could do with a little of Noah’s flood right now. All this heat and no rain is curing the grass off way ahead of time. If it doesn’t let up we’ll be feeding hay by late September, early October. And that will play hell on our supply. Could be we won’t have enough to last through the winter. Norris thinks we ought to sell off five hundred head or so, but the market is doing poorly right now. I’d rather chance the weather than take a sure beating by selling off.”
He sort of shrugged and closed his eyes. The whiskey was relaxing him. He said, “You’re the boss.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Damn my luck.”
I wandered out of the back of the house. Even though it was nearing seven o’clock of the evening it was still good and hot. Off in the distance, about a half a mile away, I could see the outline of the house I was building for Nora and myself. It was going to be a close thing to get it finished by our wedding day. Not having any riders to spare for the project, I’d imported a building contractor from Galveston, sixty miles away. He’d arrived with a half a dozen Mexican laborers and a few skilled masons and they’d set up a little tent city around the place. The contractor had gone back to Galveston to fetch more materials, leaving his Mexicans behind. I walked along idly, hoping he wouldn’t forget that the job wasn’t done. He had some of my money, but not near what he’d get when he finished the job.
Just then Ray Hays came hurrying across the back lot toward me. Ray was kind of a special case for me. The only problem with that was that he knew it and wasn’t a bit above taking advantage of the situation. Once, a few years past, he’d saved my life by going against an evil man that he was working for at the time, an evil man who meant to have my life. In gratitude I’d given Ray a good job at the Half-Moon, letting him work directly under Ben, who was responsible for the horse herd. He was a good, steady man and a good man with a gun. He was also fair company. When he wasn’t talking.
He came churning up to me, mopping his brow. He said, “Lordy, boss, it is—”

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