Authors: William W. Johnstone
Frank managed to get the bank teller's tarp-wrapped body roped down in the pack frame, then headed back to town.
Townspeople paused on the boardwalk, watching Frank ride slowly up the main street. Doc Bracken came out of his office to meet Frank in front of the jail.
“The bank teller fellow's in the tarp,” Frank told him. “I think it is, anyways. The other one is part of a gang that tried to ambush me. It was a setup to get me out of town. You seen that damn Charles Dutton fellow?"
“The Boston lawyer?"
“Yes."
“Not lately. Not since the shoot-out, I'm sure."
“I'll find him. How is Vivian?"
“Weaker, Frank. It's down to hours now, I'm sure."
“Conrad?"
“Finally accepting the fact that his mother is not going to make it."
“I'll get those bodies over to Malone.” Frank reached in his back pocket and pulled out the wad of bills. “The shooter had this money on him."
“I'd give Malone twenty-five dollars and keep the rest, I was you."
“I'll give it to Jerry.” Frank grinned. “For a wedding present."
“He and Angie have sure been making cow's eyes at one another of late."
“He'll make her a good husband, and she'll make him a good wife. Doc, you think this town is going to last after the mines play out?"
“Yes, I do, Frank. I just heard that a big cattle outfit is going to come in. The town will lose about half its population when the mines go, maybe more than that, but the solid citizens will stay. Why do you ask?"
“I told you. Doc. I'm pulling out. Jerry will make a fine town marshal."
“We'll hate to see you go, Frank."
“I forget the name of the writer who wrote that line about all things coming to an end ... something like that. It's almost time for me to move on."
Dr. Bracken's nurse came running out of his office and over to the men. “Doctor! Mrs. Browning just slipped away."
Doc Bracken looked at Frank.
“Correction, Doc,” Frank said. “It's time to move on."
Â
Â
Â
Twenty-Seven
Â
Â
“Mr. Dutton left several hours ago. Marshal,” the clerk at the hotel told Frank. “He had to make a very hurried business trip to Denver."
“Oh? How did he leave? There was no stage scheduled."
“Well, he had some rather rough-looking men escorting him. I'd never seen any of them before today."
“Thanks."
So much for Dutton
, Frank thought, standing outside the hotel.
I'll deal with him when I find him ... if I ever find him.
Frank had a hunch the Boston lawyer would never again set foot west of the Mississippi River.
The man who had told Frank about the body of the bank teller had hauled his butt out of town. No one had seen him before, and no one knew where he had gone. Another dead end. Undertaker Malone had stopped all other work to prepare Vivian's body. She was to be taken to the railroad spur line just across the border in Colorado and then to Denver. From there she would be transported back east for burial.
Conrad was to escort the body all the way back to Boston.
Frank walked over to Malone's funeral parlor. Conrad was sitting alone in the waiting room. He did not look up as Frank entered.
Frank took off his hat, hung it on a rack, and sat down beside his son. “Don't you think we'd better talk?"
“We have nothing to discuss. Marshal."
“I'm your father, Conrad."
“Biologically speaking, I suppose I have to accept that as fact. I don't have to like it. Mr. Browning was my father. He raised me."
“And he did a fine job. I didn't know I had a son until your mother told me just a short time ago.”
Just a few weeks back
, Frank thought.
And now she's gone ... forever.
“I want you to believe that."
“I believe it, Marshal. But it doesn't change anything. I want you to believe that."
It's too soon to be discussing this
, Frank thought.
I made a mistake coming over here. The boy is too filled with grief.
“I know that mother left you a small percentage of the company, Marshal. I will honor her wishes. I won't contest it."
“I didn't ask her for any part of the company, Conrad."
“I believe that, too."
“You want me to leave you alone?"
“I don't care, Marshal. You have a right to be here."
“I loved her very much. I never stopped loving her.” Conrad had nothing to say about that.
“Did Malone say when the”âFrank started to say “body” but he couldn't bring himself to form the wordâ“when people can stop by here to pay their respects?"
“In a few hours."
Frank stood up and snagged his hat off the rack. “I'll leave you alone for a time."
Conrad met Frank's eyes for the first time since Frank entered the waiting room. “I appreciate that, Marshal."
“Well, maybe I'll see you in a few hours."
“All right."
Frank was glad to leave the stuffy and strange-smelling waiting room of the funeral parlor. He had never liked those places. He stood on the boardwalk and took several deep breaths of fresh air, then looked up and down the street.
Another town I'll soon put behind me
, Frank thought.
In a few months they will have forgotten all about me, at least for the most part. The town's residents will settle back into a regular way of life ... and I'll do what I do bestâdrift.
No
, Frank amended.
Not just drift. I have a big job to do. I'll find the men responsible for your death, Viv. I promise you that. If it takes the rest of whatever life I have left, I'll do it.
The news of Vivian Browning's death spread quickly through the town. People spoke in hushed, sorrowful tones to Frank as he walked back to his office. At his desk he wrote out a letter of resignation, effective when Jerry was able to return to work ... which, according to Doc Bracken, would be in a couple of days. He dated and signed the notice, then sealed it in an envelope.
He checked on the prisoners, then walked over to his house and began packing up his possessions, leaving out a clean shirt, britches, socks, and longhandles. He went over to the livery and checked on his packhorse. The animal was glad to see him, perhaps sensing they would soon be again on the trail.
Frank stored his packed up possessions in the livery storeroom and then walked over to the café for a cup of coffee and perhaps a bite to eat. Angle took one look at Frank's expression and brought two cups and the coffeepot over to his table and joined him.
She touched his hand. “I'm sorry, Frank."
“I have to think it was for the best, Angie. Better than her starving to death. It was just her time to follow the light."
“That's beautiful, Frank. Follow the light. Frank? How is her son taking it?"
“He's all right. He's tougher than he looks."
“And you?"
“Getting ready to pull out. Just as soon as Jerry is on his feet."
“That quick?"
“Yes. I have things to do."
“I don't have to ask what those things are. Is that what Mrs. Browning would want?"
“It's what I want."
She lowered her eyes from his cold stare. She struggled to suppress a shiver. Looking into his eyes that day was like looking into a cold, musty grave. Years back, Angie had surprised a big puma feasting on a fresh kill. The puma did not attack, but the eyes were the same as Frank'sâcold and deadly. Angie backed away quickly and left the puma alone to eat.
Frank drank his coffee, declined the offer of food, and walked over to Willis's General Store. There he bought bacon, beans, flour, and coffee. He bought a new jacket for the trail, for his old one was patched and worn. He took everything back to the office. There, he sat and waited.
Â
* * * *
Â
Frank did not return to the funeral parlor to view Vivian's body. He respected her wish that he not have that image in his brain.
The next morning, Jerry came limping into the office about ten o'clock.
“You supposed to be up, Jer?"
“Doc said it was all right long as I don't try to run any foot races. Mrs. Browning's body is being loaded into the wagon now, Frank, for transport to the rails."
“I know."
“You're not going over there?"
“No.” Frank stood up. “You ready to be sworn in, Jer?"
“I reckon so, Frank. If that's what you want."
“Wait here.” Frank walked over to the bank and got Mayor Jenkins. Ten minutes later, Frank had handed in his badge, and Jerry had been sworn in.
Frank shook hands with Jerry and the mayor and walked out of the office. He did not look back.
A half an hour later, he was on the trail. He didn't know where the Pine and Vanbergen gangs had gone, but he would find them. All of them. One at a time.
All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2000 by William W. Johnstone
Cover design by Open Road Integrated Media
ISBN 978-1-4976-2500-6
This edition published in 2014 by Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
345 Hudson Street
New York, NY 10014
www.openroadmedia.com
Open Road Integrated Media
is a digital publisher and multimedia content company. Open Road creates connections between authors and their audiences by marketing its ebooks through a new proprietary online platform, which uses premium video content and social media.
Videos, Archival Documents,
and
New Releases
Sign up for the Open Road Media newsletter and get news delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign up now at
FIND OUT MORE AT
FOLLOW US: