smiled, but it died short of his eyes. âI never could resist a target like that. Iâm the champion rifle shot of the county three years running.â
I watched him, especially his eyes. At length I sighed and replaced the revolver in its holster. âIt was a hell of a good shot.â I wanted to say something
more, to try and restore the good thing that had been growing between us. Instead I said, âWhat are you doing out here?â
âLooking for you.â His tone was colder than it had been when weâd met. âPardee rolled into town an hour ago on a buckboard. His brotherâs in the back. Someone lynched him, and this time they finished the job.â
Â
We found the buckboard in front of one of the townâs two undertaking parlors. The box was empty but for a coil of rotted twine and about a pound of wet sawdust, wagon stuff. BYRON C. FITCH, MORTICIAN was lettered in gold paint across the parlorâs curtained front window.
The interior of the parlor looked more like a cathouse than most cathouses Iâd seen. Curtains were drawn across the front window and lamplight sifted dimly over the muted carpet and rows of mournersâ chairs arranged in front of a casket on a raised platform draped in black felt. The sweet smell of hothouse-grown flowers enveloped us as we entered.
An old man with wispy white hair brushed back over dry pink scalp and a scowl that had defied the undertakerâs best efforts lay in the casket, his head raised on a satin pillow and spotted hands folded across his vest. We took off our hats, as if that mattered any more, and went on past him through a door standing half open into the back room.
Rosy light from the setting sun fell through two small windows high in the west wall, illuminating a cluttered pine bench, half a dozen lidless caskets,
and a naked corpse stretched out on a pair of planks nailed together and propped across a pair of sawhorses. The raw stench of formaldehyde contrasted sharply with the flowery smell in the parlor.
A pudgy man in shirtsleeves who had been bent over the body glanced up and said, âThank God! Please help Mr. Pardee out of here, Marshal. Heâs not doing anyone any good, especially himself.â I recognized him as the man I had seen riding shotgun on Marshal Arnoâs hearse the day before.
Pardee, in rusty range clothes and a Stetson grown colorless from sweat and weather, looked like a man on the wrong end of a long fever. His face was slack and heavy, his eyes hot and sunk deep in purple-black sockets. I almost didnât recognize him without a cigar.
âLook at him.â His voice was so low he might have been praying. âLook at what those bastards did to him.â He was gazing at the thing on the planks.
The dead man was whipsaw-lean, tanned from neck to hairline and from fingers to wrists, and gray-white everywhere else. His eyes bulged, the burst blood vessels in the whites black and twisted like hairs on the lip of a washbasin, and his tongue was a dark swollen thing that had grown too big for his mouth to hold. The rope had burned a blue line around his neck and the weight of his body had stretched it twice its normal length. His clothes had been flung to the floor in a heap.
âPardee said he was last seen this morning, when he rode north after some strays,â Yardlinger said. âWhen he didnât show up by midafternoon, Pardee and some of the hands went looking for him. They
found him dangling from a tree a mile inside the Circle Tâs northwest corner.â
âA mile short of the Six Bar Six.â The foremanâs prayerful moan had fallen to a hoarse whisper. âThey didnât even bother to tie much of a knot. They just let him strangle.â
âWhose strays was he after?â I asked. âTerwilligerâs or Matherâs?â
Yardlinger gaped. âMurdock, for Godâs sakeââ
But Pardee was already moving. In one
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