LONGARM AND THE BACKWOODS BARONESS [066-066-5.0]

By Tabor Evans

Synopsis:

Darn shame, thinks Longarm. The normally pleasing odor of the
timber country now reeks with the stench of varmint--the lying,
cowardly kind.  There's a war of sabotage and subterfuge going on
between the cowboys and the lumberjacks.  Longarm's been sent to
settle things down, but he's got a conflict of interest.  See, the
lumber camp is headed up by a beautiful widow named Aurora
McEntire.  And on the other land there's a comely cattleman's
daughter named Molly Kinsman.  Life's just unfair.  But then, so's
death.  222nd novel in the "Longarm" series, 1997.

Jove Books
New York
Copyright (C) 1997 by
Jove Publications, Inc.

All rights reserved.

This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by mimeograph or any
other means, without permission. For information address: The Berkley
Publishing Group, 200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.

ISBN: 0-515-12080-4

Jove Books are published by The Berkley Publishing Group, 200 Madison
Avenue, New York, New York 10016.

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HTTP://WWW.BERKLEY.COM/BERKLEY
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"J" design are trademarks belonging to Jove Publications, Inc.

A Jove Book / published by arrangement with the author
Printing history
Jove edition / June 1997

PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this
book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to the
publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any
payment for this "stripped book."

DON'T MISS THESE
ALL-ACTION WESTERN SERIES
FROM THE BERKLEY PUBLISHING GROUP
THE GUNSMITH by J. R. Roberts
Clint Adams was a legend among lawmen, outlaws, and ladies. They
called him ... the Gunsmith.

LONGARM by Tabor Evans
The popular long-running series about U.S. Deputy Marshal Long--his
life, his loves, his fight for justice.

SLOCUM by Jake Logan
Today's longest-running action Western. John Slocum rides a deadly
trail of hot blood and cold steel.

BUSHWHACKERS by B. J. Lanagan
An all-new series by the creators of Longarm! The rousing adventures
of the most brutal gang of cutthroats ever assembled--Quantrill's Raiders.
Coming July 1997 from Jove Books.

Chapter 1

Cheroot clenched between his teeth at a jaunty angle, Longarm marched
through the outer office and past the open-mouthed Henry, who called out
futilely, "Marshal Long, just a minute-"

Longarm stalked into the office of his boss, Chief Marshal Billy Vail.
The banjo clock on the office wall showed the hour as being just after nine
o'clock. It was not unheard of for Longarm to arrive at the Federal
Building in Denver this early in the morning, but it was a mite rare.
Billy Vail frowned and opened his mouth to say, "What-"

"I quit," said Longarm. Vail gaped at him.

Longarm took the little folding wallet containing his badge and bona
fides from his inside coat pocket and dropped it on the desk. He grinned
at Vail. "Getting married," he said. The cheroot waggled merrily.

Vail's mostly bald head began turning pink. "Damn it, Custis!" he
burst out after a moment. "What in blazes are you talking about?"

"The holy state of matrimony, old son. You've got a wife. You ought
to know better'n anybody the joys and privileges o' wedded bliss."

"But you ... you  ..." Vail sputtered. "Hell, Longarm, you know the
old saying. You're already getting the milk for free, so why buy the-"

Longarm held up a hand, palm out. "Don't say it, Billy. I've seen
the error of my ways. It's time I made an honest woman out of that
friendly widow who's been keeping company with me."

Vail put his hands on his desk and levered himself to his feet. "That
friendly rich widow?"

"Billy, you wound me deeply!" Longarm exclaimed, placing a hand over
his heart. "The fact that she just picked up a tidy little dividend from
some of her investments has got nothing to do with my decision."

With a snort, Vail shook his head. "To think that I'd lose my best
deputy to something so venal as greed." He picked up a folder from his
desk and shook it at Longarm. "And just when I was about to give you a new
assignment too!"

Almost against his will, Longarm found his eyes drawn to the folder in
Vail's hand. "New assignment?" he heard himself repeating.

"That's right. Figured you could handle it better than any of my
other men."

"Is that so?" Longarm sat down in the leather chair in front of
Vail's desk and cocked his right foot on his left knee. "I reckon it
wouldn't hurt anything to listen to the details."

"Oh, no," Vail said, looking aghast. "You're not a federal officer
anymore, remember? You resigned, turned in your badge." He sank into his
chair and gestured to the wallet Longarm had tossed so casually onto the
desk a few minutes earlier. "I'll just have Henry send word for one of the
other deputies to come in. Mike Davis, maybe. He hasn't had an assignment
in a while."

"Davis!" repeated Longarm. "The reason Davis ain't had an assignment
lately is 'cause he couldn't find his ass with both hands!"

"I imagine he can handle this," Vail said confidently. "Of course,
people are getting killed, and the government's got quite a bit of money
riding on things, so I hope he can get this mess untangled kind of
quick-like."

"Damn it, Billy," Longarm said as he leaned forward and reached for
the folder on Vail's desk. "At least let me take a look at the paperwork.
Maybe I could suggest somebody-"

"Get your hands off that folder, Long." Billy Vail's voice was as
cold as the snow and ice that still capped the peaks of the Front Range,
despite the fact that it was summer. "That's the property of the United
States Justice Department, and like I said, it's none of your business
anymore."

"But Billy  ..."

Vail leaned back in his chair and folded his hands across his ample
middle. "Why, if you were to pick up that folder and read the report
inside, I'd have to assume that you were rescinding your resignation and
wanted to be considered for the assignment. In that case, you'd have to
pick up your badge and your identification papers too."

For a long moment, Longarm stared across the desk at his former boss.
Then he sighed and stubbed out his cheroot in Vail's ashtray. With his
right hand he reached for the folder, while with the left he scooped up the
wallet containing his badge. "You're a hard-hearted son of a bitch, you
know that?" he muttered.

"Damn straight." As Longarm opened the folder, Vail added, "Looks
like you're going back to timber country."

"Yeah. Looks like." Longarm started reading.

A half hour later, as he strode out of the Federal Building with
travel vouchers and a copy of the report folded up in his coat pocket, he
lit another cheroot and took a deep drag on it. Then he turned and looked
through the crystal-clear air at the mountains and felt, as he always did,
the irresistible pull of faraway places and new challenges. Once again, he
was free to answer that siren's call.

Grinning to himself, Longarm said quietly, "Much obliged, Billy.
Reckon I must've been out of my head, 'cause I pert' near made a mighty big
mistake."

His mistake, Longarm reflected as he ducked the huge, knobby fist
coming right at his face, had been getting off the damn train in the first
place. He should have turned around and gone back to Denver and that rich
widow. Cussing himself for his own indecisiveness and Billy Vail for being
so blasted smart, he threw himself forward, driving his shoulder into the
belly of the man who was trying to knock his head off.

The lumberjack staggered backward on the platform of the train
station. Longarm caught hold of the man's legs and heaved upward, and with
a wild yell the lumberjack went over on his back, landing heavily on the
planks. Longarm almost fell too, but he caught his balance in time to stay
upright. He twisted around, waiting to see who was going to jump him next.

Instead, he saw that the ruckus was about to escalate from fisticuffs
to gunplay. One of the cowboys was reaching for a Colt.

Longarm stepped forward quickly, palming out his own .44 from the
cross-draw rig on his left hip. The cowboy who figured to start shooting
had his back half-turned to Longarm, so Longarm was able to take him
unawares and clout him on the skull. The puncher's high-crowned hat
absorbed most of the blow's force, just as Longarm intended, but it was
still enough to drive him to his knees and make the half-drawn gun slip
from his fingers.

Since he already had his own Colt in his hand, Longarm put a round
into the roof that extended out over the platform. The roar of the gun
made the brawlers scattered around the platform stop what they were doing.
In some cases, they froze with fists cocked back in readiness for another
punch.

"That's enough, damn it!" shouted Longarm. "Next fella who throws a
punch is liable to be hobbling for the rest of his life from a bullet
through the leg!"

One of the lumberjacks glowered at him and demanded, "Who the hell're
you, mister?"

"And what gives you the right to go mixin' in with our business?"
added one of the cowboys.

"I'm a gent who just waded into a fight that ain't any of his
concern," said Longarm, preferring not to flash his badge and reveal his
true identity this early in the case, "but when you go to trying to knock
my head off, I'll make it my business."

"Nobody figured to hurt you, mister," said one of the lumberjacks,
rubbing a sore jaw. He pointed across the platform, where the cowboys were
regrouping. "It's them damn cow nurses who caused all the trouble!"

"That's a damn lie!" shot back one of the cowboys. "It was you
ax-swingin' bastards who bulled in where you weren't wanted!"

"If it wasn't for us, this whole state would go belly-up! You can't
raise cattle in the mountains!"

"The hell you say! We can raise cattle any damn place we want!"

Longarm sighed tiredly. It looked like he might have stepped right
into one of the sources of the trouble he was here to investigate.

Several days had passed since he had left Denver. Several days spent
in railroad cars that rattled more and shook more the closer he came to his
destination, days spent breathing air that grew more and more
cinder-clogged. Finally, the narrow-gauge spur line that ran up here into
the foothills of the Cascade Mountains had deposited him in a place called
Timber City, and when he had stepped off the train, he had found himself
smack-dab in the middle of a melee between lumberjacks in lace-up boots,
khaki pants, and red-checked shirts and cowboys in chaps and Stetsons and
cowhide vests. To save his own hide, he had been forced to drop his
warbag, saddle, and rifle and defend himself.

The combatants had grudgingly stopped fighting. The lumberjacks
formed a sullen group on one side of the train station's platform, the
cowboys an equally petulant knot of rannies on the other side. Longarm
looked at both groups in disgust and slid his revolver back into its
holster. He turned back to the spot where he had dropped his gear and
picked it up again.

"You can beat the hell out of each other when I'm gone," he said. "I
don't give a damn either way."

He stalked across the platform and into the lobby of the depot. The
railroad clerk had come out from behind his ticket counter so that he could
watch the brawl through the windows. Now he retreated behind the counter
as Longarm came toward him.

"Yes, sir, what can I do for you?" the man asked.

Longarm set his saddle down and jerked a thumb over his shoulder at
the platform behind him. "What in blazes was that ruckus about?"

The clerk sighed and shook his head. "They don't need a reason.
Whenever those loggers from Mcentire's camp are anywhere around the
punchers from the Diamond K, a fight breaks out, just like clockwork."

"They don't get along, huh?"

"That's putting it mildly, Mister  ..."

"Long, Custis Long." Longarm had never been to Timber City before, so
he didn't see any reason not to use his real name. If he ran into anybody
he had been responsible for throwing in jail in the past, they would
recognize him as much by his tall, rangy build and longhorn mustache as
they would by his name. He went on. "I reckon the Diamond K must be one
of the spreads hereabouts."

"That's right. It's about ten miles north of here, spread out along
the foothills at the base of the Cascades. And that's about where the
Mcentire lumber camp is, only it's up higher in the mountains."

Longarm nodded, thankful for the fact that most pencil pushers like
this gent were the talkative sort. "Well, I'll be sure not to get in the
middle of those two bunches again. A fella could get killed, happen he
wasn't careful."

The clerk looked solemn. "Several men have been killed already, I'm
afraid. All by accident ... or so the story goes."

"That so?"

"Yes, I think-" The clerk stopped abruptly. He grinned sheepishly.
"But I'm not paid to think, just to sell tickets. Too much gossip might
make people afraid to come to Timber City, and then the railroad wouldn't
make as much money, would it?"

"Reckon not," said Longarm, disappointed that the man had decided to
stop talking about the local troubles. Longarm couldn't press him on the
matter, though, not without appearing overly curious--and that was
something he didn't want to do just yet. He changed the subject by asking,
"There a good hotel here in town?"

"Certainly. The Ponderosa House, just down the street. You can't
miss it."

"Much obliged," said Longarm as he picked up his saddle again. He
turned, then asked over his shoulder, "What about a livery stable? I might
need to rent a horse."

"Right next to the hotel. Affiliated with it, in fact. They'll take
good care of you."

"Thanks."

Longarm left the station before the clerk could start asking any
questions of his own, like who Longarm was and what he was doing there in
Timber City. Longarm planned to keep that to himself for the time being,
at least until he'd had a chance to talk to Mcentire and find out more
about the trouble that had been plaguing the timber company, costing the
lives of several loggers in the process. From what he had seen so far he
had some pretty likely culprits in those Diamond K punchers.

Those same cowhands came around the corner of the building, and
Longarm cast a quick glance around for the lumberjacks, figuring there was
going to be more trouble. The timber-cutters had disappeared, however,
forestalling another ruckus.

And being escorted by the cowboys was a mighty pretty young woman,
Longarm noted. She was well-dressed in a bottle-green traveling outfit,
and had what appeared to be long red hair tucked up and pinned in a bun
under her stylish hat. A couple of the cowboys were carrying valises, and
Longarm noticed a spring wagon parked near the depot. He wasn't surprised
when the whole bunch headed toward the wagon.

There was a footstep behind him, and he glanced around to see that the
ticket clerk had followed him out onto the porch. "Deserting your wicket,
ain't you?" asked Longarm.

"Business is slack right now," replied the clerk with a shrug.
"Besides, I wanted a look at Molly Kinsman. She's been gone to school back
East for a while, and I'd heard she had changed a heap." He let out a low
whistle of admiration as he watched the young woman being helped into the
spring wagon by one of the punchers. "Changed for the better too, she
did."

"Kinsman," Longarm mused. "Her daddy must own the Diamond K."

"That's right. Matt Kinsman was one of the first ranchers in these
parts. Still has one of the biggest and best spreads." The clerk looked
over at Longarm and added curiously, "Say, you're just full of questions,
aren't you, mister?"

That was just the reaction Longarm had hoped to avoid by leaving the
station when he had. He hadn't counted on the blasted clerk following him.
Still, he had gotten some more information out of the fellow, who flapped
his gums like he hadn't seen another human being in a month of Sundays and
was desperate to talk.

Longarm shrugged casually. "I like to know what's going on in a place
when I come to visit," he said. "Been a while since I've had a riding job.
Might just pay a visit to this fella Kinsman."

The clerk looked askance at him. "You don't look much like a cowboy
in that town suit."

"Oh, these are just my go-to-meetin' duds. My range clothes are in my
warbag."

The spring wagon from the Diamond K rattled away as Longarm made his
excuses to the clerk. Several of the cowboys were riding on the wagon with
the young woman; the rest of the bunch trailed it on horseback.

"Don't know if Matt Kinsman's hiring or not," said the clerk, rubbing
his jaw in thought. "Like I told you, he's still got a good spread, but
times are a little tight for him right now. He lost some cows to rustlers
not long ago, then lost some more when he had a well go bad. Course, to
hear Kinsman tell it, somebody poisoned that well, but I can't think of
anybody around here who'd do a low-down thing like that."

What about those lumberjacks? Longarm asked himself.

There was bad blood between the two groups; he had caught on to that
fact within moments of arriving there in Timber City. If he was going to
lean toward the Diamond K punchers as likely suspects in the trouble to hit
the Mcentire lumber camp, wasn 't it just as fair to think that maybe the
lumberjacks had something to do with Kinsman's problems?

No matter how you looked at it, the whole thing had the makings of a
pure-dee mess. And he was going to have to sort it out as quickly as he
could, because Uncle Sam had money riding on the Mcentire Timber Company.

"I'll probably talk to Kinsman anyway, can't hurt," Longarm commented
to the clerk. Then, with another casual wave, he set off down the street
toward the hotel. This time, the clerk didn't follow, as Longarm saw with
a glance behind him, and he was grateful for that.

He couldn't dispute that the Ponderosa House was probably the best
hotel in Timber City, but that didn't mean it was fancy, not by any stretch
of the imagination. It was a three-story frame structure built of
whitewashed pine. There was no porch. The front door opened directly onto
the street, which was still muddy in places from some recent rains.
Longarm was able to avoid the worst of the mud, so he didn't track any into
the lobby when he entered the hotel.

That didn't stop the clerk behind the desk from pointing to a sign
beside the door and growling, "Can't you read, mister?"

Longarm looked back at the sign, which read, "PLEASE WIPE YOUR FEET."
He squinted and said, "Maybe I can make it out. It says ... lemme see  ... 
the fella with the money is generally right, and the hired help shouldn't
chase him off."
The clerk flushed angrily, but he said, "Sorry, mister. I'm just
tired of sweepin' dried mud out of here. What can I do for you?"

"Need a room," said Longarm.

"For how long?"

"Don't rightly know. Two or three days, more'n likely, maybe longer."

The clerk turned the register around so that it faced Longarm. "Come
to Timber City on business?"

"Mostly just seeing the country." Longarm grinned. "But I wouldn't
mind combining a little business with pleasure, if the right opportunity
was to come along." He scrawled his name on the register.

The clerk was good at reading upside down, probably from long
practice. "What line of business're you in, Mr. Long?"

"Little o' this, little o' that," Longarm said, being deliberately
vague. He had hinted to the ticket clerk over at the depot that he was a
cowboy. Maybe he should have intimated to this fella that he was in the
timber business. Keeping folks off balance was generally a good idea,
especially in a case with as many unanswered questions as this one. Until
his investigation had shed some light on things, it usually paid to keep
everybody else in the dark too.

"Well, if there's anything we here at the Ponderosa House can do for
you, you just let us know." The clerk took a key from the board behind him
and slid it across the desk. "You'll be in Number Eighteen. Go to the top
of the stairs and down the hall. Room's at the far end, on the left."

That would put it at the back of the hotel. "Best you've got?" asked
Longarm.

The clerk shrugged. "This town's a busy place, in case you hadn't
noticed."

Longarm had noticed. The streets of Timber City were full of wagons
and buckboards and horsebackers. Though it was named for the heavily
wooded slopes of the Cascades to the west, the town was also the supply
center for all the ranches in the area, which were also flourishing. That
was what they called the best of both worlds, Longarm supposed.

But right now, they appeared to be worlds in collision, and that could
cause a heap of damage unless someone intervened.

That was his job, to plunk himself right down between two incredible
forces rushing head-on at each other. And try not to get crushed in the
process.

Chapter 2

The ticket clerk at the train station proved to be right about the
livery stable. Longarm was able to rent a long-legged roan gelding for a
price that wasn't too outrageous, and since he had his own saddle, he
didn't have to pay extra to have the livery supply one. The hostler was a
stove-up old cowboy, which came as no surprise. Hostlers seemed to come in
only two varieties, Longarm reflected: geezers like this one or
wet-behind-the-ears kids. The old-timer's name was Charley Dodge, not that
Longarm asked. The old fellow volunteered it as Longarm was saddling the
roan.

"And you'd be  ... ?"

"Name's Custis," Longarm supplied.

"Well, howdy do, Mr. Custis. What brings you to Timber City?"

"Looking around the country," said Longarm. "Thought I'd get me a
job. Maybe riding for one of the ranches hereabouts, or even cutting down
trees."

Charley shook his head solemnly. "You don't want to cut down trees
for a livin'. "Taint honorable. Man like you needs a ridin' job."

Longarm had changed into denim pants and a butternut shirt with a dark
brown vest over it. He wore the vest so he would have a place to keep his
pocket watch and the deadly little derringer that served as a fob on the
other end of the watch's chain. He had to admit that he looked more like a
cowboy than a lumberjack.

"You look like you've pushed a few cows in your day," he said to the
old hostler as he finished tightening the cinch on the saddle.

Charley slapped his thigh. "Still would be if a bull hadn't busted
this here leg of mine in two places."

"Ever ride for the Diamond K? I hear that's one of the best spreads
around here."

"Matt Kinsman's ranch? Sure, I rode for ol' Matt for a while."

"What sort of gent is he?" asked Longarm.

"Hard as granite. You don't never want to cross him. But I reckon
he's fair. Boys who ride for his brand seem to swear by him."

"Maybe I'll ride out and see him."

"If'n you do, tell him ol' Charley Dodge says howdy do. He'll
remember me. Kinsman's riders are loyal to him,'cause he's loyal to them."

Longarm swung up into the saddle. "Much obliged. Be seem' you,
Charley."

He rode out through the big double doors of the stable and turned the
horse to the left, which pointed him north. According to the talkative
clerk at the depot, both Matt Kinsman's ranch and the Mcentire Timber
Company's camp were about ten miles north of town. It was only early
afternoon; he would have plenty of time to pay a visit to the lumber camp
and let Mcentire know he was on the scene. Then he could ride on to
Kinsman's place and maybe get there around supper time. Odds were, he
would be invited to join the Kinsman family for the evening meal. That
would give him the chance to do some more unobtrusive digging.

One thing you could say for this country--it was mighty pretty.
Steep-sided mountains covered with pines shouldered their way into the sky,
and the blue of the heavens contrasted with the dark green of the forests
to create a restful picture. Throw in some billows of white clouds
floating above the snow-crested peaks in the distance, add the crisp,
clean, pine-scented air and the murmur of crystal-clear, ice-cold streams
running through the valleys, and you had some downright beautiful scenery.
Longarm took deep breaths and kept his eyes wide open as he rode, trying to
drink it all in.

He was unsure how far he had ridden from town when he heard some new
sounds in the distance, blending with the bird calls and the rustling of
small animals closer by. A steady thunk-thunk-thunk and the muttering of
an engine, counterpointed by the faint, echoing shouts of men. Loggers at
work, he thought, the axes biting deeply into the flesh of the trees,
donkey engines hauling the fallen logs to a stream where they could be
fastened into a boom, warning shouts of
"Timberrrrr!" as the great giants
of the forest toppled. Each of the industries that were spreading
throughout the West had their own distinctive sounds, never to be forgotten
once they had been heard ... and Longarm had heard damn near all of them at
one time or another.

When he turned onto a side trail that led up into the mountains a few
minutes later, he heard another, all-too-familiar sound: the metallic
clatter of a Winchester's lever action being worked.

"Hold it, mister!" rang a shout from a nearby stand of trees. The
growth was thick and provided good cover for the rifleman concealed there.
As Longarm reined in, he saw the blued-steel snout of a Winchester poking
through the green pine boughs.

Longarm sat still in the saddle, making no move except to half-raise
his hands, even though the rifleman hadn't told him to put 'em up. He
didn't want to give the man any excuse for an itchy trigger finger. "I'm
not looking for trouble," he called out.

"You're a cowboy, aren't you?" The angry, accusing words shot out from
the trees.

"Not right at the moment, no, I ain't," said Longarm. "I won't lie to
you, I did some cowboying when I came out West after the Late
Unpleasantness, but I ain't pushed steers in a long time."

"Fought in the war, did you?"

"Yep, but don't ask me on which side, 'cause I tend to disremember."

A chuckle came from the brush, but it wasn't necessarily a friendly
sound. "Me too. What's your business out here?"

"I'm looking for the Mcentire lumber camp. Got business with the boss
there."

"Is that so?" There was a crackle of branches being parted, and the
rifleman stepped out of his hiding place. He was in his thirties, Longarm
judged, and his lace-up boots and checkered shirt marked him as a
lumberjack, though at the moment he was wielding a Winchester instead of an
ax. He gestured curtly with the barrel of the rifle and went on. "I work
for Mcentire Timber. Best tell me what your business is."

Longarm shook his head. "Nope. I'll only talk to your boss."

The lumberjack's face purpled with anger. Given all the trouble the
timber company had experienced recently, it made sense that they had posted
guards. And the way Longarm was dressed, he wasn't surprised that this
sentry had taken him for a cowboy, which made him a natural enemy so far as
this lumberjack knew. What with all the tension between the two groups, it
didn't take much of a stretch of the imagination to see that this fella
might just blast him out of the saddle and be done with it.

Reading the menace in the lumberjack's eyes, Longarm said quietly,
"You might want to think twice about what you're considering, old son.
Happens that I'm a lawman, a deputy United States marshal, and you don't
want to go shooting federal officers."

The lumberjack frowned. "A marshal? You sure?"

"I can show you my badge, if you don't mind me reaching into my vest
pocket."

"Make it slow and easy," the man warned.

Longarm was reaching for the wallet containing his identification when
a wagon came around a bend in the trail up ahead. It was moving fairly
fast, and the man sitting beside the driver, as well as the handful of men
in the back of the wagon, were all well armed. Bristling with rifles, in
fact. They were all timber-cutters, like the man who had confronted
Longarm.

The sentry must have signaled somebody else when he spotted a stranger
in range clothes, Longarm figured, probably by flashing a mirror at a guard
post higher on the mountain. That had brought the whole wagon load of
guards rushing down in case Longarm proved to be the vanguard of an attack.
These lumberjacks really were worried about more trouble coming their way.

The man driving the wagon, though somewhat older than his companions,
was dressed like them. His lined, weathered features and the iron-gray
hair on his head set him apart from the younger men. Despite his age, his
forearms were bulky with muscle under the rolled-up sleeves of his shirt,
and his rangy build hinted at enough power and stamina to keep chopping
down trees all day, and all night too if need be. He brought the vehicle
to a halt about twenty feet away from Longarm and called out to the sentry,
"Who's this, Andy?"

"Says he's a badge-toter, Mr. Flint," replied the guard. "A deputy
United States marshal."

The man called Flint raised bushy gray eyebrows in surprise. "Is that
so?"

Longarm finished sliding his identification out of his inside vest
pocket. He opened the wallet and held it up so that the afternoon sunlight
glinted off the badge pinned inside. "Name's Long, Custis Long," he said.

Flint dropped down from the wagon seat and stalked toward Longarm,
squinting up at the badge as he came alongside the roan. He grunted.
"Looks all right," he admitted. "I knew the government promised the boss
some help. Looks like you're it."

"Reckon I am," said Longarm dryly.

Flint stuck up a hand. "Jared Flint. I'm the foreman of the Mcentire
timber operation. I can take you up to the headquarters camp if you'd
like."

"That's what I'm here for, Mr. Flint."

"I'll turn the wagon around and you can follow us up to the guard
post. I can pick up a horse there and take you the rest of the way."

"Much obliged."

Flint grunted again. He wasn't the friendliest fella Longarm had ever
run across, but the hostility Longarm had sensed initially seemed to have
disappeared. All of the lumberjacks had relaxed since finding out he was a
lawman and not some cowhand from the Diamond K bent on mischief.

It took only a few minutes to reach the shack that served as a guard
post. Flint swung up onto the back of one of the saddle horses tied there
and led Longarm up the twisting trail that writhed back and forth like a
snake across the heavily timbered face of the mountain. Longarm judged
that half an hour had gone by when they came in sight of the lumber camp.

It was like a small settlement, complete with a store, a mess hall,
and a square little building with a cross on top of it that Longarm took to
be a chapel. A good-sized creek ran past the camp, and perched on the near
bank was a sawmill built of wood and tin. Next to the mill was an
impressive-looking log cabin with a porch built onto the front of it.
Beyond the mess hall were several long, low buildings that Longarm took to
be barracks where the loggers slept.

Jared Flint pointed his mount toward the log cabin. Longarm followed,
looking at the sawmill and seeing smoke rising from a tin stack on top of
the roof. He could hear the chattering roar of a steam engine coming from
inside the building, along with the high-pitched whine of a saw. No one
was moving around the camp except a bald-headed, gray-aproned cook who was
pouring out a bucket of dishwater next to the mess hall, but the sawmill
was obviously in operation. The rest of the loggers were higher on the
mountain, felling trees and hauling them to the creek so that they could be
floated down to the mill.

As Longarm and Flint drew rein in front of the cabin, a woman stepped
out onto the porch, taking Longarm by surprise. It wasn't unheard of to
find a woman in a logging camp; some of them worked as cooks or
washerwomen, and some camps even had schoolmarms to teach the children of
married loggers who brought their families to the camp with them. That
didn't appear to be the case here, since Longarm hadn't seen a schoolhouse
or any smaller cabins where families could stay. The barracks seemed to
indicate that all the Mcentire loggers were either single or temporarily
batching it.

The woman on the porch was sure something to look at, though. Tall
and in her early thirties, Longarm judged, with thick, lustrous dark hair
gathered at the back of her head in a loose bun. She wore a simple, dark
gray dress that tried but failed in its attempt to conceal the lushness of
her figure. Her hazel eyes were alert and intelligent as they looked
curiously at Longarm.

"Who is this, Mr. Flint?" she asked in a clear voice that reminded
Longarm of those mountain streams such as the one behind the cabin.

Longarm didn't wait for the foreman to introduce him. He tugged on
the brim of his snuff-brown Stetson and said, "Deputy U.S. Marshal Custis
Long, ma'am."

She took a deep breath that lifted the proud thrust of her bosom even
more. "We've been expecting you, Marshal," she said. "Are you alone?"

"Yes, ma'am."

A slight frown creased her forehead. "I wish you'd brought some more
men with you. You're liable to need them."

"Well, I'll do what I can to help," Longarm said modestly. "And you'd
be  ... ?"

"I'm Aurora Mcentire. This is my camp."

Now it was Longarm's turn to frown. The report he had read in Billy
Vail's office had included complaints of trouble from the owner of the
lumber operation, A. J. Mcentire. Longarm sure as hell hadn't expected
that to turn out to be a woman.

Still, if that was the situation he had to deal with, so be it. He
swung down from the saddle and flipped the horse's reins over a hitch rack
in front of the cabin. As Longarm stepped up onto the porch, Jared Flint
said, "I'll be getting back to work now, ma'am." Aurora Mcentire's voice
was sharp as she said, "No, Mr. Flint, I want you to stay while I talk with
Marshal Long. You know as much about the trouble we've been having as I
do."

Flint shrugged and dismounted, following Longarm up onto the porch.
Aurora turned and led them into the cabin.

The high-ceilinged room in which Longarm found himself was
surprisingly well appointed for being in a lumber camp. A thick rug was
spread out on the puncheon floor. To the right was a fireplace with an
overstuffed divan in front of it, to the left a big hardwood table that
evidently served not only for meals but also as a desk for Aurora Mcentire.
Papers were spread out on one end of it where a chair was drawn up to the
table. A door on the other side of the table led into what were probably
Aurora's sleeping quarters. The windows had oilcloth in them instead of
glass, but they were covered with fancy curtains anyway.

Aurora gestured at the table and said, "Have a seat, Marshal Long.
You too, Mr. Flint. Would you like a drink, Marshal?"

Longarm smiled. "Don't reckon you'd have any Maryland rye?"

Aurora returned the smile and shook her head. "I'm afraid not. I can
offer you some brandy, or there's a pot of coffee on the stove."

"Coffee'll do fine," Longarm told her. "Maybe with a dollop of that
brandy in it, if it's not too much trouble."

"No trouble at all," she assured him. "Mr. Flint?"

"No, thank you, ma'am," replied the foreman. He looked as if the very
idea of his boss offering him a drink made him uncomfortable, even if she
was a woman.

Aurora went to the cast-iron stove in the corner and poured two cups
of coffee from the pot. She took a bottle from a cabinet and added a
splash of brandy to each cup, then brought them over to the table. Longarm
had liked her on sight, and the fact that she took brandy in her coffee
made him admire her that much more. She was utterly feminine, yet clearly
she didn't go in for the pretenses that a lot of women did. Of course, for
a woman to run a lumber camp and be successful at it, she would have to be
pretty forthright.

She sipped her coffee and then said, "In case you're wondering,
Marshal, my late husband founded the Mcentire Timber Company. When Angus
passed away a couple of years ago, I took over the business."

"So you're the A. J. Mcentire who got in touch with the Justice
Department and asked for help with your troubles here," said Longarm.

"That's right. I don't hide the fact that I'm a woman, but I don't
always advertise it either. In this case, I don't think it would have
mattered. The government has a stake in our problems. Our contract to
supply lumber for government construction projects involves hundreds of
thousands of dollars, and unnecessary delays on delivery cost not only the
Mcentire Timber Company, they cost the federal treasury as well."

"That's why I'm here," Longarm pointed out. He lifted the cup to his
lips. The coffee was black and strong, just the way he liked it, with a
little added wallop from the brandy.

Aurora looked down at the table. "Like I said, I wish they had sent
more than one man. No offense, Marshal Long, but it may take quite a bit
of manpower to wipe out those troublemaking ranchers."

Longarm leaned back in his chair and held up a hand. "Hold on a
minute, ma'am. Let's eat this apple one bite at a time. Nobody said
anything about wiping out anybody."

"It was just a ... figure of speech," said Aurora, shaking her head.
"I suppose I'm just so frustrated by all the trouble  ..."

Jared Flint spoke up. "If you ask me, wiping 'em out is a good idea,
Miz Mcentire. Then they wouldn't kill any more honest loggers."

Longarm ignored the angry tone of the foreman's voice. He drank a
little more coffee, then said to Aurora, "Tell me exactly what all has
happened."

She sighed. "It started when a pulley rope snapped and dropped one of
our toppers about a hundred and fifty feet. The poor boy never regained
consciousness before he died. Accidents happen, of course, but when we
checked the rope that broke, it looked like it had been partially cut."

"That'd make it murder, all right," admitted Longarm.

"A few days later, an ax blade flew off its handle while it was being
swung and hit another cutter in the leg. The rest of the crew kept him
from bleeding to death, but he'll never be able to work again. The injury
was so bad he lost the use of his leg."

"Damn near cut it off," muttered Flint.

"Again it was something that could have been an accident," Aurora went
on, "but I think the head of that ax was deliberately loosened."

"Any way of proving it?" asked Longarm.

Aurora shook her head. "Not really. The axes are kept in the tool
shed at the back of the mess hall, so anybody could have gotten in there
fairly easily. After that, I ordered that all axes be checked first thing
in the morning before the men go to work."

"Seems like a sensible precaution," said Longarm. "What else?"

"Someone tried to burn down the mill. We were just lucky that Mr.
Flint saw the flames in time to rouse the men, and they were able to put
out the blaze before it did too much damage. If the mill had been
destroyed, that would have been a catastrophe."

"Again, you're sure it was deliberate?"
Flint said, "I saw some bastard--beggin' your pardon, ma'am--in a
cowboy hat skulking around over there just after dusk that day, and not
five minutes later, flames were shooting up along the wall. After we
formed a bucket brigade and put out the fire, you could still smell the
kerosene that somebody had splashed around."

That was pretty damning evidence, thought Longarm, but not completely
conclusive. "Anything else?" he asked.

"The worst loss of life occurred a couple of weeks ago," said Aurora.
"One of the donkey engines we use to haul logs down to the stream
overheated and blew up. Four men working on the boom next to the bank were
killed in the explosion. The safety valve had been tied closed. We know
that because we found part of it with some charred cord still attached to
it."

"Anything happen since then?"

"No ... but it's only a matter of time until Kinsman and his men try
again."

Longarm rasped a thumbnail along the line of his jaw and frowned in
thought. "I heard about Matt Kinsman in Timber City. Why would he or any
other rancher want to put you out of business?"

Aurora waved a slender hand in disgust. "They say that what we're
doing is going to ruin the range further down the mountains and in the
foothills. They say that without the trees we're cutting down to slow it
down, the runoff from the rains will wash away the best soil and foul their
water supply."

"Any truth to that?" asked Longarm.

Aurora hesitated, then said, "In some cases, there might be. Some
logging operations clear-cut the trees and don't leave anything behind when
they're through. But the Mcentire Timber Company doesn't. Angus learned
when he was a young man in Scotland how to cut selectively so that the
forest isn't ruined, and I've carried on with that as best I can." Her
voice became more fervent as she added, "I intend for my descendants to
still be logging on these slopes a hundred years from now."

That was an admirable goal, thought Longarm, but he wasn't sure how
sincere she was about it. He asked, "Has anybody ever bothered explaining
this to Kinsman? Maybe he'd listen to reason."

Flint snorted in contempt. "That stiff-necked bastard would never
believe anything good about loggers." This time he didn't bother
apologizing for his language.

"I told Kinsman he was wrong about us," said Aurora, "and he told me
the only reason he wouldn't call me a liar to my face is because I'm a
woman." She shook her head. "He thinks what he wants to think, Marshal,
and won't be budged by explanations."

"Well, I ain't saying I'm convinced he's to blame for your troubles,
but if he is, he can't go around killing people because of some mistaken
notion he's got."

Flint took a watch from the pocket of his trousers and flipped it
open. As he closed it, he scraped his chair back. "I got to be getting
back to the men, Miz Mcentire. You and the marshal need me anymore?"

"No, you go ahead, Mr. Flint. Thank you for helping me explain to
Marshal Long about what's been happening."

Flint looked hard at Longarm. "if you want to put a stop to this,
Marshal, you're liable to have to put Kinsman in jail. Either that, or
kill him. And if you don't-"

"That's enough, Mr. Flint," said Aurora sharply.

Flint stood there for a second, weathered face hard with anger. Then
he nodded curtly and turned toward the door. When he had stalked out of
the cabin, Aurora said to Longarm, "I'm sorry, Marshal. My foreman isn't
normally so hotheaded. He's just tired of the men facing unnecessary
risks. There are already enough dangers that go with the job of logging."

"Yes, ma'am, that's true enough," agreed Longarm. He put his hands
flat on the table and pushed himself to his feet. "Sounds to me like the
first thing I need to do is make sure Kinsman's really to blame for that
sabotage. If he is, he'll answer for it."

Aurora stood up as well and went to the door of the cabin with him.
As they stepped out onto the porch, she said, "Kinsman has to be behind it.
No one else has any reason, even a mistaken one, to hate us that much."
Longarm nodded. What she said made sense, all right, but there was
still a little matter of proof. He took a cheroot from his vest pocket and
slid it unlit into his mouth. Around it he said, "I'll try to ride back
out here tomorrow, let you know what I've found out-"

He broke off as a startled yell came from near the mess hall. As
Longarm looked up, he saw the bald-headed old cook start to run toward
them. The man was waving toward the creek and yelling something, but
Longarm couldn't make out the words over the rumble of the sawmill's engine
and the screech of the saw as it bit through the timber being fed to it.
He muttered, "What in blazes?"

"Boom!" shouted the cook, coming closer. "Look out ... boom!"

Longarm glanced over at Aurora Mcentire and saw her eyes widening in
fear.

Then the loudest crash he had ever heard in his life sounded right
behind them.

Chapter 3

Longarm was moving almost before the thunderous roar of destruction
began to assault his ears. His hand shot out and clamped around Aurora
Mcentire's arm, and he dove forward off the porch, taking her with him. He
barely heard her scream over the noise, which was now taking on a grinding
quality. When the two of them hit the ground, Longarm wrapped his arms
around her and kept rolling.

He came to a stop some ten feet away from the spot where they had
landed. When he lifted his head and looked back at that spot, he saw
several beams from the ceiling that had been over the porch now lying
there. The porch had collapsed, like the cabin behind it. Through the
rubble, Longarm could see the ends of several huge logs jutting up out of
the creek. It was those logs, tied together into a boom, that had been
carried along the fast-moving stream to crash into the cabin.

As Longarm sat up, Aurora pushed herself onto her elbows beside him
and stared in horror at what remained of the cabin. "M-my God!" she
exclaimed. "What happened?"

Before Longarm could answer, the cook pounded up to them and yelped,
"Miz Mcentire! Miz Mcentire! Are you all right?"

"I'm fine, Eli," she assured him as she sat up and ran her fingers
through her hair, which had come loose from its bun and was now dotted with
splinters and sawdust. "Thanks to Marshal Long, the porch roof didn't fall
on us."

"Pure dumb luck," Longarm told her. "I heard all hell breaking loose
behind us and just wanted to get out of there as fast as I could."

"Don't be modest, Marshal. You saved my life as well as your own."

Aurora's chin trembled a little, but that was the only outward sign of what
she had to be feeling. She had nearly been killed and had lost her
headquarters building, as well as the place where she had been living.
Longarm admired her control.

He got to his feet, brushed off his clothes, then offered her a hand.
The cook was already helping her up, however, and the men who had come
boiling out of the sawmill after the crash were gathering around her as
well, shouting anxious, excited questions.

The rattle of hoofbeats caught Longarm's attention, and he looked
upstream to see Jared Flint galloping back toward them along the creek
bank. "Miz Mcentire!" he called before he even brought the horse to a
halt. "Are you all right?"

Aurora nodded as Flint reined in, dismounted, and strode quickly
toward her. The sawmill workers gathered around her parted to let the
foreman through. "I'm fine, Mr. Flint," she told him, "just shaken up a
little. Marshal Long's quick action saved my life."

Flint looked at Longarm and gave him a curt nod. "Much obliged,
Marshal. We couldn't keep going around here without Miz Mcentire."

"I want to know how this happened," Aurora said sharply. "That boom
wasn't supposed to be floating loose like that."

The cook spoke up. "I seen it comin' lickety-split down the creek,
Miz Mcentire, and it looked like it was headin' either for your cabin or
for the mill. That's why I come a-runnin' like that, tryin' to warn you."

Aurora smiled at him. "Thank you, Eli. You did all you could." She
glanced over at the ruined cabin and shook her head sadly. "I'm glad we
escaped with our lives, but this is still quite a blow."

Flint walked around the rubble and moved out onto the boom, which
looked like a mighty precarious perch to Longarm. The timberman was
evidently used to stepping from log to log, though, and he quickly made his
way to the back of the crude raft. Some of the ropes that had been used to
bind the logs together had snapped under the impact of the crash, and the
timber shifted with a series of groanings and scrapings. Aurora watched
what Flint was doing, and anxiously caught her lower lip between her teeth
as the foreman balanced himself carefully and reached down to haul a thick
rope out of the water.

"Cut!" he yelled harshly as he turned toward the bank and waved the
end of the rope. "Just like that pulley rope! Somebody sawed through it
and let the boom get away early."

Longarm picked up his hat and slapped it against his leg to knock the
dust off. As he settled the Stetson on his head, he said, "How could
anybody cut that boom loose and know that it would wreck the headquarters
building?"

"They couldn't," replied Aurora, "not for sure. But they could be
pretty sure that it would do some damage to something, as fast as the creek
is running. A small boom like that, released prematurely before more logs
could be fastened to it, would be carried along so quickly that it was
bound to get out of control."

Seemed like sort of a haphazard way to foul things up, Longarm thought
with a frown, but he couldn't argue with the result. Even though chance
had played a part in it, this latest act had had serious, almost lethal,
consequences. As it had turned out, he and Aurora could have easily been
killed.

Flint hopped agilely across the logs back to shore and came up to
Longarm and Aurora. "I'll have some of the boys start going through the
cabin," he said. "We'll salvage as much as we can, Miz Mcentire."

"Thank you," said Aurora. "I think ... I think I'll go over to the
mess hall and sit down for a little while."

"Good idea," Longarm said. He turned to Flint and went on, "I'd
appreciate it if you'd send a man upstream to where that boom got loose,
find out if anybody up there saw anything suspicious."

Flint nodded. "That's what I figured to do. What about you,
Marshal?" His tone was faintly challenging.

"I was about to head for Kinsman's spread when that boom rammed the
cabin. Reckon that's what I'll go ahead and do."

"Are you going to arrest him?" Again the challenge was in Flint's
voice.

"Not without some proof," Longarm said flatly.

Flint glared at him for a second, then turned away to get the rest of
the men busy on their tasks. Some of them headed back into the mill to
keep it going, while the others began picking through the rubble of the
cabin, trying to retrieve anything that could still be used.

Longarm walked with Aurora over to the mess hall. "Don't mind Mr.
Flint," she said. "He's just worried."

Longarm wasn't sure if that was it or not. Flint had acted so upset
and worried that Longarm had to wonder if the man possessed feelings for
Aurora above and beyond those of a foreman for his boss. She'd been a
widow for a couple of years, she had said. Maybe Flint had decided it was
time to change that.

With that speculation in his mind, Longarm said his goodbyes to Aurora
and swung up onto the roan, which thankfully hadn't jerked its reins loose
from the hitching rack and run off when the boom crashed into the cabin.
He took the trail on which Flint had led him up to the camp earlier in the
afternoon, and when he got to the guard shack, the man who had accosted him
on his arrival stepped out of the shack and nodded to him. "Heading back
to town, Marshal?" he asked.

"Not just yet," Longarm told the man, recalling that his name was
Andy. "Can you tell me how to get to Matt Kinsman's ranch?"

Andy frowned darkly at that question, and Longarm went on. "Your boss
and Mr. Flint know I'm headed there. I'm trying to get to the bottom of
the trouble around here."

"Then you're headed for the right place," said Andy. "Kinsman and his
damned cowboys are to blame for everything that's gone wrong around here
lately."

And Andy didn't even know about the latest incident, Longarm thought.
If he did, he would have been ready to go to the Diamond K too. Only his
goal would have been the exact opposite of Longarm's. Andy and the other
loggers wanted a shooting war.

Unless he was able to come up with some answers pretty quick, Longarm
told himself grimly, that was probably just what they were all going to
get.

Matt Kinsman's spread wasn't hard to find. Longarm would have been
able to locate it even without the directions furnished by Andy. Once he
reached the main trail, he continued north for another half mile, then
veered to the west on a narrower path.

Kinsman's range was fenced, and Longarm had to pass through a gate in
the barbed wire. He latched it behind him and rode on, but he hadn't gone
far when he heard a horse coming from the other direction.

He reined in and waited. There was a straight stretch of trail in
front of him and whoever was coming, Longarm preferred to get a good look
at them, rather than running head-on into them at a bend in the trail. The
rider came into view a moment later, mounted on an Appaloosa. Longarm
thought for a second it was a young man. Then he saw the long red hair
falling free underneath the flat-crowned hat. He saw as well the way
smallish breasts bobbed enticingly under a rather tight man's shirt.

That was Matt Kinsman's daughter riding toward him, Longarm realized,
the young woman he had seen being met at the train station in Timber City
by some of Kinsman's cowhands. The pace of the Appaloosa faltered a little
as she noticed him sitting there waiting for her, but she came on steadily
after that, startled perhaps by his unexpected presence but obviously
unafraid to confront him.

He saw why she wasn't afraid of him when she drew rein some thirty
feet away and slipped a Winchester carbine from a saddle sheath. With a
smooth, crisp movement, she worked the carbine's lever action and pointed
the barrel at him. "Who are you and what are you doing here?" she called.

"It's not very hospitable to point a gun at a fella when he hasn't
given you any reason for doing it," Longarm pointed out, keeping his hands
in plain sight as he rested them on the saddle horn.

"You're on Diamond K range," said the young woman, "and we've had more
than our share of troubles lately. If you're a rustler or an outlaw, the
only thing waiting for you around here is a slug."

Her voice was taut, angry. Longarm recalled the ticket agent in
Timber City mentioning that Kinsman had had some problems of his own
recently, such as rustlers and possibly poisoned wells. Must've been
something to that, Longarm reflected, because the young woman was clearly
on edge. At this moment, she would have just as soon shot him as looked at
him.

Longarm didn't want that, of course--but he didn't want to reveal his
true identity either. Aurora Mcentire, Jared Flint, and some of the other
members of the lumber crew knew that he was a lawman, but no one here on
the Diamond K did. Might be best to keep it that way for a spell.

"I'm no outlaw," he said, "and I've never rustled a steer in my life.
I'm just a chuck-line rider, looking for a riding job."

"Who told you to come out here?"

"Fella in town said the Diamond K was the best spread in these parts,"
Longarm replied honestly. "Thought I'd come out and talk to the boss, see
if maybe there was a job to be had." He added dryly, "You ain't him, are
you?"

The carbine's barrel lowered slightly. "You already know a man named
Matt Kinsman owns this ranch. He's my father. I'm Molly Kinsman."

"Name's Custis," Longarm introduced himself.

She nodded and walked her horse a few steps closer. "Not a very
common name."

"It's the one my mama gave me, back in West-by-God-Virginia."

"So you hail from West Virginia. I've never been there. But I spent
the last two years in a school in Massachusetts."

Longarm grinned. "Should I offer you my condolences?"

Unexpectedly, she laughed, a bright, clear sound. "Might be
appropriate," she said. "After growing up out here in the West, I like to
have stifled back East. The teachers at Miss Hallowell's Academy for Young
Ladies taught me a lot of things, but they don't know jack shit about
ropin' or brandin'."

Longarm's grin widened into a laugh of his own. Now that she wasn't
so suspicious of him, Molly Kinsman was turning into a downright likable
young woman. He said, "You mind taking me on to the ranch headquarters?"

"Sure. You didn't think I was going to let you wander around our
range by yourself, did you? Just because you say you're not a rustler
doesn't mean it's necessarily true."

She had a point there, but at least she wasn't aiming that Winchester
at him anymore. He heeled the roan into a walk that carried him alongside
her as she sheathed the carbine and turned her own horse around.

"Are you just out for a ride, Miss Kinsman," he asked, "or were you
looking for strays like me?"

"I like to ride," she said, not really answering his question but
coming close enough. "And I pick up strays wherever I find them."

Longarm chuckled. Young Molly had a bold glint in her eye as she
looked at him, he thought. Under other circumstances, he might've been
tempted to find out just how bold she could be, but right now, he had a job
to do.

Still, that didn't stop him from appreciating the way that red hair
blew out behind her as she rode, or the intriguing movements of her breasts
under her shirt, or the fine curve of her slender hips in a pair of denim
trousers. He was willing to bet she was a ring-tailed terror when her
Irish was up, but if a man was strong enough to hang on and keep up with
her, it would be a hell of a ride.

They had cantered a mile or so up the trail when more riders appeared,
trotting on horseback toward them. Molly slowed her horse and muttered
something under her breath, but Longarm couldn't make it out. She turned
to him and said, "let me handle this."

"Yes, ma'am," Longarm said mildly. "This is your daddy's ranch, after
all, and I expect those are some of his riders."

"They are."

Molly brought her horse to a halt, and Longarm followed suit. The
cowboys riding toward them actually picked up the pace at the sight of
them, so that their horses kicked up a little dust when they brought them
to skidding stops about ten feet from Longarm and Molly.

The man in the lead, who looked to be in his early twenties, thumbed
back his hat on a thatch of shaggy blond hair and demanded, "Molly, what
the hell are you doin' ridin' around out here by yourself? And who's this
long drink of water?"

"I can ride wherever I want, whenever I want, Seth Thomas," responded
Molly, her voice sharp with annoyance. "And this gentleman is named
Custis. He's come here looking for work."

The young cowboy called Seth snorted. "Ain't no work around here for
saddle tramps. You might as well turn around and go back where you came
from, mister."

"You stay right there, Custis," snapped Molly. To Seth she said,
"It's not up to you who gets hired around here. That's a decision my
father and Joe Traywick make. Last time I looked, Joe was still the
foreman of the Diamond K, not you."

Seth glared at her, and Longarm got the idea that he wasn't
particularly happy that someone else was the ranch foreman. Could be Seth
had his eye on that job for himself.

He sure had his eye on Molly, Longarm added to himself. Though Seth
had been barely civil to her so far, he had that certain look about him.
Longarm had seen it before. Given half a chance, Seth would be so
moon-eyed over Molly that he could scarcely stand up.

Which was neither here nor there where his assignment was concerned,
Longarm reminded himself. He swung his gaze to the other four riders and
saw that they were all youngsters too, likely Seth's pards who would follow
his lead.

"I'm not looking for any trouble," said Longarm. "I'll just talk to
Mr. Kinsman, and if he doesn't have any work for me, I'll move on."

"Damn right you will," Seth said unpleasantly. "And if you don't,
I'll kick your ass right off this ranch, old man."

Longarm sighed. Some folks you just couldn't be polite to. He leaned
forward in the saddle and said, "Why don't you get down off that horse?"

Seth's eyes lit up with excitement as he replied, "You just bet I
will!" He began to hurriedly dismount.

"Custis, don't," Molly said, reaching over to put a hand on his arm.
"Seth's just young and hotheaded. He didn't mean any harm."

"You hush up, woman!" called Seth. "This ain't any of your business
anymore."

Longarm smiled faintly. "Don't worry, Miss Kinsman. I reckon I'm so
old and stove-up it won't take long for Seth here to take care of me.
Maybe he won't hurt me too bad."

Seth already had his gunbelt off. He coiled it around his saddlehorn
and then hung his hat on top of it. When he turned back toward Longarm, he
brought his clenched fists up in a crude imitation of a professional boxer.

"Where'd you learn that stance, from pictures in the Police Gazette?"
Longarm asked as he stepped down from the roan and took off his own gunbelt
and hat. He handed them to Molly to hold, then started to turn back toward
Seth.

With a yell that was echoed by shouts of encouragement from his
friends, Seth charged forward, swinging wildly. Longarm tipped his head
back a little and let the first punch whip harmlessly in front of him.
Then he leaned to the side as Seth's momentum carried him past. Longarm
stuck the toe of his boot between Seth's ankles and sent the young cowboy
sprawling to the ground.

Seth landed hard, the breath coming out of him with an oof! Longarm
stepped back and watched as Seth rolled over and came up furious and
gasping for air. "You son of a bitch! That wasn't fair!"

"You got a few years on me, as you so kindly pointed out," said
Longarm. "Figured it was all right for me to even the odds a mite."

"I'm goin' to kill you!" Once again, the cowboy charged. This time
Longarm blocked the first punch and then straightened Seth up with a short,
hard right to the face. Seth's head rocked back from the blow. Before he
could recover, Longarm stepped closer and hooked a left into his belly.
Seth lost his breath again. Worse, he doubled over so that his jaw was in
perfect position for the looping right Longarm brought around. He fell
like a sack of potatoes dropped from the back of a wagon.

Longarm stepped back, not even breathing hard. "Just so you know," he
said to the feebly writhing figure on the ground, "it ain't the years that
put age on a man, old son. It's the miles."

The other young cowhands were looking on in amazement, clearly stunned
that Longarm had disposed of Seth so easily. Longarm glanced at them to
make sure that none of them were showing any signs of taking up the
gauntlet for their fallen friend, then turned back toward Molly. He heard
Seth stagger to his feet behind him.

"You ... you  ..." Seth gasped. Longarm didn't stop or look around.
"You bastard!" Seth finally got out. "I'll ... kill you!"

Longarm glanced back and saw Seth lunging toward his horse. The
cowboy reached his mount and clawed at the holstered revolver looped over
the saddlehorn. As the gun came free and Seth started to turn, Molly drew
her carbine and brought it up. "No, Seth!" she cried. "I'll drop you in
your tracks if you cock that gun!"

"Molly!" Seth practically wailed. "You ... you wouldn't-"

"Damn right I would." A faint quaver in Molly's voice revealed the
strain she was under.

"Good Lord," Longarm muttered. "The antics of you youngsters are a
vexation, pure and simple. I didn't knock all the brains out of your head,
Seth. Use what you've got left and put that gun away before the lady has
to shoot you. I imagine it'd plumb ruin her day to have to kill you."

For a second, Longarm thought one of them was going to be foolish
enough to start shooting anyway. Then, with a disgusted curse, Seth shoved
his pistol back in its holster. "Reckon it ain't worth dyin' over," he
said. He pointed a finger at Longarm. "But one of these days, you and me
are goin' to finish this!"

Anything Longarm could have said would just make the situation worse,
he decided, so he didn't say anything at all. He picked up his hat and
gunbelt, which Molly had dropped to draw the Winchester, and made sure the
.44 was all right before he strapped the belt around his waist. For the
second time today, he knocked dust off his hat--it was starting to look
more gray than brown, he reflected--and put it on. "I reckon if you're
ready, Miss Kinsman, we'll ride on to the ranch and see your father."

"Won't be necessary," said one of the other cowboys, speaking up for
the first time. "Here comes Big Matt now!"

Chapter 4

Longarm turned and saw another group of riders coming toward them, led
by a tall, broad-shouldered man on a deep-chested black stallion. He wore
a sheepskin coat that flapped open over a woolen shirt. The outfit was
probably a little warm for this time of year, thought Longarm, but it
didn't seem to bother the man. His hair under the broad-brimmed hat he
wore was a mixture of gray and bright red, so now Longarm knew where Molly
got her flaming tresses.

And her temper. As the riders came up, the big redheaded man barked,
"What in the name o' the seven imps o' Satan is goin' on here? You been
fightin' again, Seth? Damn it, boy, I warned you that if you didn't stop
thinkin' with your fists, I'd boot your butt from here to Kansas, and by
God, I've got half a mind to do just that!"

The rider beside him, a middle-aged man with a seamed face and a
thick, graying mustache, said quietly, "Better take it easy, Matt. You
know the doc over in Portland said it'd be better for you if you stopped
gettin' so riled up all the time."

"To hell with that sawbones and all the other pill-pushers!" Matt
Kinsman exploded. "Where in blazes were all of them when I was carvin' a
ranch out of the wilderness? Answer me that, Joe!"

Joe Traywick just shook his head. He looked over at Seth and said,
"Get your hat and gun on, boy, and get mounted up. I want all of you up in
that northwest pasture, pronto."

Muttering a little--but casting leery glances toward Kinsman as he did
so--Seth did as he was instructed. A moment later, he and his friends were
galloping off.

Besides Kinsman and Traywick, there were two more riders with them.
Like Traywick, they were older hands who were probably some of Kinsman's
longtime, trusted riders. Kinsman watched Seth and the younger men leave,
then turned his attention to Longarm and asked, "Who the hell're you?"

Despite the brusque attitude, Longarm sensed that Kinsman wasn't
really as unfriendly as he sounded. The rancher had undoubtedly endured a
great many hardships while he was establishing the Diamond K, and it was in
his nature now to be curt. That was different from Seth's behavior. The
young cowboy had been trying to be a horse's ass.

Longarm nodded respectfully and said to the rancher, "Howdy, Mr.
Kinsman. My name's Custis, and I'm looking for work."

"Sort of long in the tooth to be a cowboy, aren't you?"

"I've been to see the elephant a time or two," admitted Longarm.
"That don't mean I can't dab a loop on a proddy steer or chase mavericks
out of the brush."

"Mavericks, eh? Texan?"

"Been there a heap of times. Ain't from there."

Kinsman didn't ask where Longarm was from. He just said, "What do you
think, Joe?"

Traywick regarded Longarm intently for a moment, then said, "We could
use another man or two, Matt. We're spread kind of thin, and with all the
trouble that's been goin' on  ..."

Kinsman looked sharply at Longarm. "You heard my foreman. There's
been some trouble in this part of the country, Custis. You sure you want
to mix in? No offense taken if you decide to ride on."

"I've been around trouble too," Longarm said. "It never bothered me
overmuch."

"Good enough," Kinsman said with an abrupt nod. "You're hired." He
gave a booming laugh, demonstrating that his moods could change like
quicksilver. "If nothin' else, havin' you around'll be a burr under Seth's
saddle, after the way you whipped him. Dose of humility'll do that boy
some good, I hope." He looked over at Molly and frowned. "What're you
doin' out here, girl? Thought you was back at the house."

"I wanted to take a ride," explained Molly. "I happened to run into
Custis down close to the main trail."

"Just happened to run into him, huh. Was he a gentleman?"

"A perfect gentleman," Molly said with a quick smile for Longarm.

"Good, I won't have to shoot him then." Kinsman wheeled his horse and
jerked his head to indicate that the others should follow him. "Come on,
Custis. Too late in the afternoon to get you started today. You can have
supper with us and get settled into the bunkhouse."

"Sure," Longarm agreed easily. "My warbag and Winchester are back in
Timber City, but I reckon I can pick 'em up in a day or two, soon as I get
a spare minute."

"Cook'll be goin' into town day after tomorrow to pick up supplies,"
said Joe Traywick. "You can go with him and help load the wagon. That'll
give you a chance to get your gear."

"Sounds good," said Longarm. He instinctively liked Traywick. He
wasn't so sure about Kinsman just yet.

Of course, he didn't want to get too fond of anybody on the Diamond K.
Not when he might have to arrest some of them for murder.

The headquarters of the Diamond K lay in a beautiful lower valley with
the peaks of the Cascade range towering above it. The grass in the
pastures was thick and lush, the green landscape dotted with grazing jags
of cattle. The ranch house itself stood among a group of pines. It was an
impressive structure, three stories of stone and whitewashed timber.
Longarm took in the other features of the ranch: a high-ceilinged hay barn,
a chicken house, extensive corrals and a barn for the spread's horses, a
blacksmith shop, a cookshack, and a bunkhouse. A fence built of peeled
pine poles enclosed a well-cared-for yard in front of the house.

Big Matt Kinsman brought his black stallion to a halt on a small rise
that overlooked the ranch headquarters, and the riders with him did
likewise. For Longarm's benefit, Kinsman waved a hand at the buildings and
said, "This is the Diamond K, Custis. Built the house with my own two
hands for my late wife, Molly's mother. She's been gone five years now."

"Sorry to hear it," Longarm said, and meant the words.

Kinsman nodded. "Alice was a hell of a woman, let me tell you.
Would've liked to have more kids, but Molly was the only one that ever came
along." He glanced over at his daughter. "Not that we were ever
disappointed in her, mind you. She's the best child a man could want."

"It's just too bad you can't seem to remember that whenever you're
laying down the law to me, Pa," she said.

Kinsman scowled. "Every child needs firm instruction in what's right
and what's wrong--and it's wrong for a gal to sass her daddy like that."

"Yes, well, you can't punish me if you can't catch me," said Molly
with a roguish grin. "And we all know I can ride rings around you any
day."

As if to prove it, she heeled her horse into a run. It leaped ahead,
carrying her toward the ranch house. Her hair streamed out behind her as
she leaned forward over the neck of the racing horse, and Longarm thought
that made an even prettier picture than the scenery on display.

Kinsman chuckled. "She's a mite headstrong, but one of these days the
right man will come along and love all the devil out of her."

"We can hope so anyway," Joe Traywick said dryly, "'fore she's the
death of you an' me both, Matt!"

Kinsman put his horse into a walk. Longarm, Traywick, and the other
two riders followed him. When they reached the ranch headquarters, Kinsman
headed for the big house, saying over his shoulder, "Show Custis the ropes,
Joe."

"Sure will, Matt," Traywick agreed.

The other two riders trotted over to the horse barn. Traywick swung
down from his saddle and motioned for Longarm to do the same. They led
their mounts toward the barn, and as they walked, Traywick pointed out most
of the things Longarm had already noticed about the place. Now that he got
a closer look at everything, Longarm was struck by how it was all in top
shape and good repair. If the Diamond K was truly having trouble, a fella
couldn't tell it by looking at the place.

"Tell me the truth, Custis," Traywick said after another moment of
silence. "How long has it been since you did any real cowboying?"

Longarm pondered, then admitted, "It's been a while. I reckon you
don't ever forget how to work with cows, though, after you've learned it."

"Probably not," Traywick grunted. "But what I'm interested in is what
you've been doin' in the meantime." He gestured at the .44 in Longarm's
cross-draw rig. "You sell your skills with that?"

Longarm drew himself up indignantly. "I'm no hired gun, if that's
what you mean. I can use a hog-leg, but I've never shot anybody who didn't
have it coming."

"What about gambling? You a tinhorn?"

This time Longarm grinned at the question. "I'll own up to enjoying a
friendly game of poker, and I've bucked the tiger at faro a time or two.
But I've never made a living with the pasteboards, nor had a hankering to."

Traywick nodded. "Don't mean no offense by askin' so many questions,
Custis. It's just that I've been with Matt Kinsman for a long time, and I
sort of look out after him. I reckon you understand."

"Sure do," Longarm assured the foreman. "I'll be honest with you, Mr.
Traywick, I'm the fiddle-footed sort. Spend most of my time drifting from
place to place, just seeing what's on the other side of the hill. But
whenever I light in a place, I give my boss an honest day's work for as
long as I'm there. You got my word on that."

"I'll take it," Traywick said as he extended his hand. "Welcome to
the Diamond K, Custis. You'll be treated fair here."

Longarm shook the man's hand, feeling the calluses that years of
working with a rope had put there. Now that he had been accepted by the
foreman, Longarm thought he might risk a question or two of his own.

"What's this about problems you've been having in these parts? Seems
plumb peaceful to me."

Traywick sighed and shook his head. "That's because you just ain't
been around here long enough. I swear, I'm afraid somebody's goin' to get
killed 'fore it's all over." Venom came into the man's voice, sounding odd
because Longarm was already accustomed to Traywick's normally mild tone.
"And it's all the fault of those damned lumberjacks!"

"There's a logging outfit around here?" Longarm asked innocently.

"Three or four of 'em in this part of the Cascades alone." Traywick
jerked a thumb toward the timbered slopes of the mountain rising above the
ranch. "It's the bunch operatin' right up yonder that's causin' all the
trouble, though. I'd stake my liver on it."

"Bad blood between them and the Diamond K, huh?"

"It all started when we lost some cows to rustlers a while back," said
Traywick. "Matt and I rode up there to that lumber camp to find out if
maybe they'd seen or heard anybody movin' cattle durin' the night, and
damned if they wasn't all sittin' around eatin' steaks!"

"You think lumberjacks rustled your beef?" That sounded pretty
unlikely to Longarm. Those timbermen might know their way around a knife
and a fork, but most of them weren't any good with steaks still on the
hoof.

"I'm convinced of it. That woman who's runnin' the place claimed they
hadn't seen any sign of anything suspicious."

"What about the steaks?"

"Said they bought 'em in Timber City."

"Well, I reckon that's possible," said Longarm.

"Sure, but it's just as likely they stole those cows from us,"
Traywick said stubbornly. "Matt practically said as much, and that woman
got her dander up and told us to get out. Matt told her that bein' a
gentleman, he wouldn't call her a liar to her face--but it was plain that
was what he thought of her."

That agreed with what Aurora Mcentire had said ... almost. She had
left out any mention of steaks cooking and rustled beeves. Longarm said,
"I've heard tell that some of those logging outfits cut down so much timber
that the runoff from the rains does a lot of damage to the range down
below. That true in this case?"

"Well, not so much." The admission on the foreman's part was
grudging. "I reckon it's just a matter of time, though. Sooner or later,
so many of the trees'll be gone that none of the soil will hold. That'll
cause flooding down here, and erosion will foul the streams too." Traywick
shook his head. "No, sir, ranching and logging just don't go together."

"Those loggers pulled any other tricks?"

"Less'n a week after Matt and me rode up there, one of our wells in a
dry pasture went bad. Couple of dozen head died from drinking at the stock
tank we filled from it. If you ask me, those lumberjacks poured poison
down it."

"But you can't prove that."

Traywick looked at Longarm with slitted eyes. "Say, what're you
actin' so doubtful about? You intend to ride for the brand or not?"

"Sure, I do," Longarm said quickly. "I just like to know who's on the
other side if I'm getting into a fight."

"Well, now you know." Traywick jerked his head toward the barn.
"Let's get these nags unsaddled and rubbed down. I'm tired of flappin' my
jaw."
What he had said so far was interesting enough, thought Longarm. Matt
Kinsman was hotheaded and held a grudge, and it was possible the friction
between the Diamond K and the Mcentire Timber Company had started over a
few rustled cows that the loggers hadn't really had anything to do with.
Was Kinsman the sort to strike back at the timber operation and get some
men killed just to satisfy a grudge? Longarm couldn't answer that question
for certain, but his instincts said no. However, he didn't know all the
men who rode for the Diamond K, and for that matter, he had already met one
who flew off the handle and resorted to violence mighty quick. Seth
Thomas. As Longarm unsaddled the roan, rubbed it down, and settled it in a
stall with grain and water, he reflected on what he had learned so far.
The loggers and the cowboys hated each other; whether for good reason or
not didn't matter. He could easily imagine Seth and some of his cronies
trying to strike back at the lumberjacks for imagined injustices, which
would in turn lead the timbermen to try to get even by poisoning wells and
such. It was a cycle of violence that could escalate into a bloody,
full-scale war unless somebody tamped out the flames mighty soon. That
somebody, of course, was him.

And his theory, if it was correct, still left unanswered the question
of who had rustled Kinsman's stock in the first place.

Longarm was going to have to ponder on that later. As he and Traywick
left the barn, the sound of the dinner bell being rung came from the ranch
house. The sun had already slipped behind the peaks of the Cascades to the
west.

Traywick led Longarm to the house. As they walked toward it, several
other men appeared from various places around the headquarters, all
converging on the big house in response to the clangorous summons of the
cook ringing the bell. He was a wizened little Chinaman, Longarm noted,
who had probably come to this country during the construction of the
Central Pacific Railroad a little more than a decade earlier. A lot of
those former coolies had a way with grub, Longarm knew, so he expected
dinner would be good.

The inside of the house showed the same care as the outside. Molly
had been away at school in the East for several years, so it wasn't a
particularly feminine place, but Longarm could see a woman's hand at work
here and there. The windows all had curtains on them, and the rugs were
clean. Chairs and sofas made of heavy wood and thickly cushioned were
scattered around the big main room. Through a wide doorway with a thick
beam above it was the dining room, complete with a long table that had been
polished to a high shine. A glass-fronted cabinet on one side of the room
contained the late Mrs. Kinsman's china and crystal, and all of it sparkled
in the light of the oil-burning chandelier that hung over the table. The
place settings tonight weren't anything fancy, but the plates and cups and
silverware were functional enough to suit the cowboys who were gathering
around the table.

The table itself was loaded with platters of food. Longarm saw steaks
and fried chicken, bowls full of mashed potatoes and green beans, corn on
the cob, steamed carrots, biscuits, gravy, and sliced tomatoes. Longarm
felt hunger pangs clutch at his belly. The lunch he had grabbed quickly in
Timber City before riding out had been both meager and a long time ago. He
was ready to eat.

Matt Kinsman was already seated at the head of the table, with Molly
at his right hand. Joe Traywick took the chair at the other end of the
table. There was a vacant seat to his left, and he gestured for Longarm to
take it. As Longarm did so, he looked across the table and found himself
staring into the angry face of the young cowboy, Seth Thomas. Seth's jaw
was already starting to turn purple where Longarm had clouted him.

There weren't any other empty chairs, and to move at this point
wouldn't have looked very good anyway, so there was nothing left to do
except brazen it out. Longarm smiled and nodded at Seth, who just glowered
that much more. A glance at the other end of the table told Longarm that
Molly was watching what was going on, but he couldn't read the expression
on her face.

"Say grace for us, Joe," rumbled Kinsman, and all the cowboys bowed
their heads. Traywick muttered a blessing. Then, almost as one, eager
hands shot out toward the platters of food, and the next few minutes were
filled with the clatter of silverware as the cowboys served themselves and
passed along the platters.

Longarm heaped his plate and dug in with enthusiasm. The Chinese cook
carried around a coffeepot and filled everyone's cup. There was glasses of
buttermilk too, cool enough so that little beads of moisture formed on the
outside. The meal was every bit as good as Longarm expected it to be.

Like most of the other ranch crews he had been around, these men
weren't talkative when there was serious business like eating to be taken
care of. Conversation would come later in the bunkhouse, while they were
playing cards or mending tack or whittling or just shooting the breeze.
Though he would never go back to it, cowboying wasn't a bad way to live,
Longarm thought. The work was hard and sometimes dangerous, the pay was
poor at best, but it was a life that had its own special rewards.

Sort of like being a deputy United States marshal.

When the meal was over, most of the hands headed for the bunkhouse.
Seth gave Longarm an especially baleful stare before he went. Longarm
returned the look blandly, not letting the youngster see that he was
getting a little annoyed. As Matt Kinsman scraped back his chair and stood
up, he said, "Joe, you and Custis stay here a minute, if you don't mind."

"Sure, Matt," said Traywick, and Longarm nodded.

Kinsman turned to his daughter. "Molly, you can go on upstairs."

"What if I don't want to?" she asked. She had changed into a simple
dress with little blue and yellow flowers all over it, and Longarm thought
she looked mighty pretty.

"Blast it, girl, I'm goin' to be talkin' business," Kinsman said with
a scowl.

"And who's going to be running this ranch someday?" said Molly.

"Your husband, damn it!"

Molly made a delicate sound of utter disdain that Longarm imagined
must have been part of the curriculum back there in Massachusetts at Miss
Hallowell's Academy for Young Ladies. Every woman he had ever encountered
had known how to make it, from soiled doves to countesses, so he figured
somebody had to be teaching it somewhere.

Kinsman was just as stubborn as his daughter, however, and after a few
minutes of stubborn, mutually glowering silence, Molly gave up and left the
dining room. Longarm heard her steps on the stairs leading up to the
second and third floors. He wondered idly which floor her bedroom was on
 ...  not that he was likely to be finding out.

Kinsman led Longarm and Traywick into his study, the walls of which
were lined with bookshelves and gun racks. As he sat down behind a big
desk, the rancher asked Longarm, "Did Joe fill you in on the trouble we've
been havin' around here?"

Longarm nodded. "Yes, sir, he did."

"You look like a man who's seen a mite of trouble in his time," said
Kinsman bluntly. "That's one of the reasons I hired you. What do you
think of the situation?"
Carefully, Longarm said, "Sounds like those lumberjacks up on the
mountain are a mite too big for their britches."

"Damn right," said Kinsman with a snort. "They're behind all of it,
I'll warrant. And I'll not take any more from them, either. Next
timber-cutter I find gettin' up to mischief on my range, he's goin' to rue
the day he was born, by God!"

"Maybe you ought to take the fight to them," suggested Longarm
casually. It wasn't likely Kinsman would admit to a near stranger that he
was behind the problems up at the lumber camp, but anything was possible.
Sometimes long shots paid off.

But not this time. Kinsman scowled and shook his head vehemently.
"Nope. I ain't one to hunt trouble, and as long as I'm left alone, I'll
leave the other fella to go on about his business." His fist came down on
the desk with a thump. "But I'll not be trifled with neither. I just want
you to know, Custis--you find any of those lumberjacks on Diamond K range,
you handle it however you see fit and I'll back you up on it. I wouldn't
say that to all of my hands--some of 'em are too young and hot-headed--but
I figure you've been around enough to know what to do."

Longarm nodded solemnly. "As long as I'm drawing pay from you, I'll
look out for your interests, Mr. Kinsman. You got my word on that." That
wasn't exactly a lie, Longarm added to himself. He didn't intend to ever
draw any wages from the rancher. He planned to have this case wrapped up
and be long gone from Oregon by the time a month had rolled by.

Reaching for a drawer in the desk, Kinsman said, "Speakin' of pay, you
need an advance? Again, I wouldn't say that to just anybody."

Longarm shook his head. "No, thanks. I didn't ride in here
stone-cold broke, and I don't like to take money until I've earned it."

"Well, then, I reckon we're done." Kinsman stood up and extended his
hand across the desk. "Welcome to the Diamond K, Custis," he said, echoing
what Traywick had said earlier.

Longarm shook hands with the rancher, then bade him good night.
Traywick stayed behind to go over the books with Kinsman, and Longarm left
the house to stroll toward the bunkhouse.

He detoured along the way and walked over to the horse barn instead,
intending to check on the roan. He found a lantern on a hook just inside
the door, lit it with a lucifer that he flicked into life on an iron-hard
thumbnail, then walked along the broad central aisle to the stall where the
roan was stabled. The horse whickered gently as Longarm reached over the
gate to scratch its nose. There was still plenty of grain and water in the
stall, so Longarm turned toward the front of the barn again, satisfied with
this errand.

A figure stood there in the open doorway.

"What are you doing roaming around out here, Custis?" asked Molly
Kinsman.

The sight of her had brought him up short. She moved quiet on her
feet, like an Indian. That was something they didn't teach at Miss
Hallowell's Academy. More than likely it was just natural grace on Molly's
part. Longarm stood there by the stall and watched appreciatively as she
walked toward him.

"Reckon I could ask you the same thing," he said. "I thought your
daddy sent you upstairs."

"My daddy sends me a lot of places. I don't always go." She stopped
in front of him, only about two feet separating them. "He thinks I'm going
to settle down and get married--to some dull cowboy of his choice,
naturally--and then do nothing but pop out one baby after another while my
husband takes care of the important things, like running the ranch."

"You don't care much for that plan, do you?" Longarm said quietly.

"I know as much about running this ranch as anybody! At least, I
would if he'd ever give me a chance. And I certainly don't intend to marry
some ignorant puncher like Seth Thomas just to give my father some
grandchildren."

"Nothing wrong with marrying a cowboy, I guess," Longarm said with a
shrug of his shoulders.

"It's not what I want," insisted Molly. "I want a man who's been
places and done things. Maybe ... somebody like you, Custis."

She closed the distance between them, sliding her arms around his
waist and pressing her body to his. Longarm reacted instinctively, his
shaft hardening against the soft pressure of her belly. He hung the
lantern on a hook so she wouldn't get up against it and burn herself. She
was already hot enough.

But he was in no mood to get himself shot or strung up for taking
advantage of an innocent young girl, so he backed off and said, "I ain't
sure this is such a good idea."

"Don't worry about my virtue, Custis," she said in a husky voice as
she moved with him. "I lost that less than a month after I arrived in
Boston. But it's been a long time since I've been with a man like you."

Her hand strayed down to the bulge at the crotch of his denims, tracing the
length and heft of him through the material. She caught her breath.
"Lord! Come to think of it, I don't believe I've ever been with a man
exactly like you."

She kissed him then, her mouth hungrily seeking out his. Longarm's
arms went around her of their own volition, pulling her more tightly
against him. He could feel the erect buds of her nipples poking through
the soft material of her dress. She moaned deep in her throat as she
thrust her hips against his groin. Her mouth opened and her tongue
flickered boldly around his.

The lantern was still burning and the doors of the barn were wide
open, which meant that anybody who happened to walk by could look in and
see them wrapped up in each other's arms. As tempting as the thought of
taking Molly into one of the empty stalls for a roll in the
hay--literally!--might be, he didn't want to ruin this investigation before
it even got properly under way.

He put his hands on her shoulders and firmly moved her away from him.
"This ain't a good idea, Molly," he said. "I don't reckon you're even half
my age."

"I'm nineteen," she said.

"Close enough."

"And I already told you, I'm no blushing virgin. I know what I want,
Custis."

Longarm took a deep breath. "That don't matter. I work for your
daddy, and from what I've seen of him so far, he'd likely ventilate me if
he caught me messing with his little girl. If he didn't, I reckon Joe
probably would."

"You're afraid of my father?" Molly shook her head. "I don't think
you're really afraid of anything, Custis." Again she cupped his groin
brazenly. "Unless it's that you can't keep up with me."

"Lord," muttered Longarm under his breath. She was persistent, he had
to give her that.

He wasn't sure what he should do, but fortunately, he didn't have to
make the decision after all. Footsteps sounded outside the barn, and Molly
suddenly gasped and stepped back away from him. She turned and walked
swiftly toward the entrance, leaving Longarm behind her, blinking a little
in surprise. Molly was mighty bold, all right ... until she thought she
was about to be caught.

As she left the barn, she passed Seth Thomas, who Paused and lifted a
hand toward her. "Molly?" he said. But she didn't stop, just continued
toward the house.

Seth looked into the barn and saw Longarm standing there next to the
stalls. "You!" he exclaimed. "What'd you do to Molly?"

"Not a thing," Longarm said. "Just checking on my horse before I
turned in for the night." He reached out and took the lantern from the
hook, then carried it up the aisle toward the entrance. When he reached
the doors, he blew out the flame and replaced the lantern where he had
found it.

"Wait just a damn minute!" Seth put a hand on Longarm's shoulder to
stop him when Longarm started past. "You didn't tell me what Miss Kinsman
was doing out here."

"If it's any of your business, she was doing the same thing I
was--checking on her horse. Now I'll thank you to let me by." Longarm was
tired, and he didn't bother trying to keep the annoyance out of his voice
now.

Seth moved his hand and stepped back, but he managed to display some
bravado as he said, "You better not cross me, mister. I may have to work
with you, but I don't have to like YOU."

"Feeling's mutual," said Longarm. He took a cheroot from his vest
pocket, put it in his mouth, and strode off before Seth could say anything
else. As he walked, he scratched another lucifer into life and lit the
cheroot, drawing deeply on it.

Had Molly known that Seth was headed toward the barn when she made her
play for him? Longarm wondered. Could be she was just using him to make
Seth jealous, despite all the things she had said about not liking the
young cowboy. And even though Seth seemed to consider her some sort of
pest, Longarm had already guessed the boy was more than half in love with
her. This was just the sort of game a couple of feisty kids who were
really attracted to each other might play.

He just shook his head, feeling old, and walked on toward the
bunkhouse.

Chapter 5

Longarm hadn't forgotten how early cowboys got up. Joe Traywick
rousted the hands out of their bunks the next morning when the sky was
barely turning gray in the east. Longarm rose with the rest of them,
trying not to groan. After this, he vowed, he would never again complain
about Billy Vail wanting him to show up at the Federal Building in Denver
by nine o'clock in the morning. He knew, of course, that he would break
that vow about the second morning back from this assignment.

Molly didn't put in an appearance at breakfast, which came as no
surprise. Longarm hadn't expected to see her at the table. Seth Thomas
was there, though, still glaring at him. Longarm ignored the young man and
listened as Traywick handed out the day's chores.

"Custis, you'll be with me today," concluded the foreman. "I'll see
that you get the lay of the land."

Longarm nodded. "Fine by me."

The Arbuckle's was black and strong, and the Chinese cook piled up the
flapjacks and bacon and scrambled eggs on each man's plate. Longarm ate
heartily, and when he was finished, he felt considerably more alert and
ready for the day that was stretching out in front of him. He went out to
the barn with the other hands to saddle his horse, enjoying the cool
morning air as he walked from the ranch house.

He had told Aurora Mcentire and Jared Flint that he would try to get
back to the lumber camp today to let them know what, if anything, he had
found out. That might not be possible after all, since it was likely he
would be riding with Joe Traywick all day. But Longarm was working his way
in here at the Diamond K so well that he didn't want to risk ruining
things. Aurora and Flint would just have to wait.

The night before, Longarm had listened carefully to the talk going on
around him in the bunkhouse. He had thought that one of the cowboys might
let something slip about making trouble for the Mcentire lumber operation,
but that hadn't proven to be the case. The conversation had been the usual
mixture of jokes and boasts and jeers common to any gathering of cowhands.
Clearly, if someone on the Diamond K was responsible for the timber
company's problems, it was going to take longer to root him out.

Longarm didn't mind having the opportunity to tour the ranch with
Traywick. Any time he was working, he liked to familiarize himself with
the terrain. He had been to the western slopes of the Cascade range
before, but not for a while and not this particular stretch of country.

Traywick proved to be a good companion too, an easy talker but not so
long-winded about anything that he tired out a fella's ears. Longarm was
the most interested when the foreman pointed out the boundaries of Diamond
K range.

"That's all government land up there," said Traywick, waving a hand
toward the upper slopes as he and Longarm reined in high on the shoulder of
the mountain. "That Mcentire woman has got a timber lease on it." His
voice sounded like he had a bad taste in his mouth.

Longarm crossed his hands on the saddlehorn and leaned forward to ease
his muscles. "How far north does their lease run?" he asked casually.

Traywick snorted. "Damned if I know--or care. It runs out somewhere,
though, because there's another outfit loggin' those slopes over yonder.
Belongs to a fella named Callahan."

Longarm filed that nugget of information away. He doubted that it
would ever prove useful, but he wanted to remain in the habit of taking
note of things.

He and Traywick continued their loop, which would eventually take them
back to the ranch headquarters. The Chinese cook had packed lunches for
them--fried chicken legs left over from the night before, biscuits, and a
little jar of marmalade that made Longarm lick his lips in delight when
they stopped to eat at midday. They arrived back at headquarters late in
the afternoon. Most of the other hands were still out on the range,
including Seth Thomas, so Longarm didn't have to contend with the proddy
kid for a change.

Molly was standing at one of the corral fences, however, a booted foot
propped on the bottom rail as she watched a couple of cowboys trying to
gentle some half-wild horses. She was wearing jeans and a man's shirt
again, and Longarm admired the way the clothes showed off her breasts and
backside. She glanced over her shoulder and caught him looking at her, and
he felt unaccountably foolish. She had a way of keeping him off balance,
and that was unusual.

He led his horse into the barn, following Traywick, and commented,
"The boss's daughter seems like a pretty high-spirited filly."

"That she is," agreed Traywick. "She didn't much want Matt sendin'
her off to school like that after her mama passed on, but he wouldn't be
talked out of it. Said that with Alice gone, the ranch was no place for a
young girl. I expect he was right ... but it was still hard on Molly."

The foreman shot a warning glance at Longarm. "I wouldn't take it kindly
if anybody was to ever hurt that gal."

"Figured that much already," said Longarm. "I wouldn't want to do her
any harm, Joe. You got my word on that."

Traywick nodded. "Good. Glad to hear it."

Of course, Longarm reflected, having heard Molly's boasts about her
lusty exploits back in Boston, it was debatable whether or not he would be
harming her by a friendly little romp. That seemed to be exactly what she
wanted. But it would sure as blazes complicate his current chore, which
was to get proof of who was attacking Aurora Mcentire's timber operation
and put a stop to it. Business before pleasure, Longarm reminded himself.

That was a good rule ... but one that wasn't always easy to follow.

The next morning after breakfast, Longarm and the Chinese cook, whose
name was Wing, got on the spring wagon that had been used to pick up Molly
at the train station and headed for Timber City. Wing had a long list of
supplies he needed for the ranch's kitchen, and Longarm was supposed to
help him load them onto the wagon, along with several rolls of barbed wire.
On the way into town, Wing chattered incessantly in a sort of pidgin
English. Longarm smoked and didn't pay much attention to what the Chinaman
was saying.

Suddenly one of Wing's comments intruded itself on his attention.
"Missy Molly ver' pretty, ver' smart. Make some man good wife, you bet."

Longarm grinned over at his companion. "You trying to marry me off to
your boss's daughter, Wing?"

"Just telling you. Missy Molly like Custis. Wing see it in eyes."

"Well, old son, you'd better just keep on looking, because I ain't the
sort to settle down. Though I'll agree that Miss Molly is mighty pretty
and mighty smart."

"Diamond K good spread. Man who marry Missy Molly wind up with ranch
too."

Longarm threw back his head and laughed. "You're a hell of a
salesman, Wing. But like I said, I ain't the kind of man she needs."
The cook shrugged and said, "Cannot blame Wing for trying."

"No, I reckon not." Longarm played a hunch and went on. "What do you
think about all the troubles Mr. Kinsman's been having lately? You reckon
those loggers are behind it, like him and Mr. Traywick think they are?"

"Wing cook once for logging camp. Timber men hate cowboys. Not like
'em at all. Ver' much hard feelings." Wing's head bobbed up and down.
"Lumberjacks could try hurt Diamond K."

"You've been around timber cutters before, you said. Did you ever run
across any of 'em who knew one end of a cow from the other?"

Wing frowned. "Lumberjacks not like cattle, except eat."

"That's right. Seems to me like they'd have had a hard time rustling
very many steers, especially since whoever did that was so slick they
didn't even leave a trail."

"Wing not think of that. Confused now."

"You and me both, old son," Longarm told him. "You and me both."

The previous night Longarm had again listened closely in the bunkhouse
for anything that might give away the culprits, and again he had come up
empty. This was turning into an odd case. There was trouble on both sides
of the argument, and he had likely suspects for all the wrongdoing, but not
an ounce of proof for anything. His years in law enforcement had taught
him that the simplest explanation was usually the right one ... but there
were always exceptions that proved the rule.

He pondered on the situation all the way into Timber City. Once they
arrived, he was too busy to think about it very much. Wing kept him
hopping as they gathered their supplies and loaded them into the back of
the wagon. The barbed wire was at the depot, having come in on a freight
from back East. The talkative ticket agent noticed Longarm hefting the
rolls of wire and tossing them into the back of the Diamond K wagon, and he
strolled out of the building to say, "See you got a job."

"Yep," said Longarm. "Riding for the Diamond K."

"Well, good luck to you."

Longarm waved at the man, then, when he was finished with the barbed
wire, told Wing, "I'm going down to the hotel to pick up my gear."

"Ver' good. Start back to ranch soon."

"I'll be right back," Longarm promised.

The desk clerk at the Ponderosa House was the same one who had told
Longarm to wipe his feet a couple of days earlier. He looked at Longarm
and said, "Well. I didn't know if we'd see you back here or not."

"I paid for two nights," Longarm reminded him. "That means my warbag
and Winchester ought to still be up in my room."

"Actually, they're here behind the counter. I had one of the boys
bring them down earlier this morning."

Longarm supposed the clerk had been within his rights to do that, but
it still annoyed him a little. He gave the clerk a curt nod as the man
handed the rifle and the warbag over the counter to him.

"Leaving town, are you?" asked the clerk.

"I'm riding for the Diamond K now," said Longarm. Wouldn't hurt to
spread that news, he thought. Having a job in the area would allow him to
poke around without arousing any suspicions--he hoped.

He had to get word to Aurora Mcentire that he was still working on her
behalf, despite his employment on Matt Kinsman's ranch. The best thing to
do might be to pay a surreptitious visit to the lumber camp as soon as
possible. He would keep his eyes open for an opportunity to do just that.

He slung his warbag over his shoulder and carried the Winchester back
down to the depot, where Wing was waiting impatiently on the seat of the
spring wagon. The reins were already in the cook's hands when Longarm
tossed his warbag in the back on top of the supplies. He kept the rifle
across his knees as he settled down on the seat next to Wing.

"Must get back to ranch now," said Wing as he slapped the reins
against the backs of the mule team pulling the wagon.

"What's your hurry?" asked Longarm.

"Mr. Kinsman, he want peach cobbler for supper tonight. Take long
time get ready and cook."

Longarm's culinary skills began and ended with biscuits, beans, bacon,
and a few other items of trail food, so he didn't dispute Wing's statement.
All he knew about peach cobbler was that he liked to eat it, not how long
it took to prepare it.

Wing kept the wagon moving at a brisk pace as they left town on the
trail that ran to the north, roughly paralleling the mountains and twisting
among the foothills. Longarm rocked easily with the vehicle's motion.

They had covered about half the distance between Timber City and the
Diamond K when Wing hit a particularly rough stretch of trail. Longarm was
jolted heavily.

As his head jerked to the side, what sounded like a giant bee whipped
past his ear.

Longarm knew that sound, knew it all too well. Hard on the heels of
it came the crack of a rifle. Longarm lifted the Winchester and worked its
lever, jacking a shell into the chamber, as he called out to Wing, "Whip up
those jugheads! Somebody's shooting at us!"

Wing let out a startled yell and began flapping the reins harder.
Longarm had no idea where the first shot had come from, but as a second
bullet buzzed past his head, he saw a puff of smoke come from a thickly
wooded knoll about two hundred yards ahead of them, to the left of the
trail. Which meant as the wagon careened along, it was actually drawing
closer to the bushwhacker--or bushwhackers, because there might be more
than one.

Longarm snapped the Winchester to his shoulder and fired three times
as fast as he could work the Winchester's lever. He didn't expect to hit
anything--the spring wagon had a gentler ride than a plain buckboard, but
he was still bouncing around pretty good--but maybe the return fire would
distract the hidden rifleman a little anyway.

A slug chewed splinters from the narrow patch of wagon seat between
them, making both of them jump and Wing yell, "Son of a bitch!"

Longarm threw another shot at the knoll. The trail was too narrow for
the wagon to be able to turn around easily, so the best course of
action--the only course of action, really--was to rush straight ahead just
like they were doing.

The mules were running flat out now. Mules were sometimes difficult
to get started, but once they began running there was no stopping them for
a while. Longarm was jolted again, and had to grab the small iron railing
around the outside of the seat to keep from being thrown from his perch.
Beside him, Wing was still yelling and whipping the mules, though it was no
longer really necessary considering the way they were already galloping.

Another sharp crack sounded, but this time it didn't come from a
hidden gun. It was much closer, right underneath them, in fact. Longarm
recognized it as the sound of an axle breaking. "Look out, Wing!" he
yelled as he felt the right front corner of the wagon dip drastically.
Then the wheel spun off, and the body of the wagon crashed into the rutted
trail.

Longarm kicked himself upward off the seat, trying to throw himself
clear. Somehow he managed to hang on to the Winchester as he sailed
through the air and then slammed to the ground next to the trail. Luckily,
the grass there was thick enough to break his fall, at least slightly. As
he rolled over and over, he heard a grinding crash that he knew was the
wagon overturning. He came to a stop on his belly and shook his head,
trying to clear away some of the cobwebs that had gathered there during the
last few perilous seconds.

Wing had jumped clear of the wagon too, Longarm saw. The wiry little
Chinaman was scrambling to his feet on the other side of the trail. He
darted toward the wrecked wagon, clearly intending to use it for cover from
the ambusher's fire. The hidden gunman on the knoll wasn't shooting at
Wing, however. His target was Longarm, who surged up onto hands and knees
as slugs thudded into the ground around him. He flung himself toward the
trail and the overturned wagon, sprawling behind the wrecked vehicle as
more lead whined around him.

Wing crawled over next to him, and Longarm said grimly, "You might be
safer staying as far away from me as you can, old son. It's me that damned
bushwhacker's after."

"Yeah, but it's my wagon that bastard made me wreck!" Wing shot back,
his singsong accent vanished now. "Gimme a gun, Custis!"

Longarm didn't have time to ponder the transformation in the cook. He
just slid the .44 from the cross-draw rig at his waist and extended it
butt-first to Wing. "Pepper the top of that knoll with this," he said.
"You can't really reach it from here with a handgun, but maybe it'll keep
the son of a bitch occupied for a minute."

"What are you going to do?"

"Try to get behind him." Longarm had already spotted a gully that ran
from near the trail to behind the knoll. If he could reach it, he could
work his way along it until he might have a shot at the bushwhacker from a
different angle.

Wing reached into the pile of supplies that had been tossed
helter-skelter from the back of the wagon. He grinned as he brought out a
box of .44s. "With these extra cartridges, I can keep that low-down skunk
hoppin'!" he promised.

Longarm nodded, then moved to the other end of the wagon and waited in
a crouch. Shots were still coming from the knoll, the bullets smacking
into the thick wood of the wagon's body but not penetrating. After a
moment, Wing raised up enough to stick the barrel of the revolver over the
edge of the wagon. He blazed away at the knoll.

At the same instant, Longarm launched himself into a run that carried
him toward the beginning of the gully. It was about twenty yards away, and
Wing's covering fire allowed Longarm to cover fifteen of those yards before
the bushwhacker realized he was in no danger from the handgun. A couple of
slugs kicked up clods of dirt around Longarm's feet as he raced for the
gully, but all they made him do was run faster. He threw himself forward
in a dive that carried him out of the line of fire.

Wing had reloaded and was shooting again. The rifleman couldn't
ignore him completely. Accuracy was impossible at that distance with a
pistol, but pure dumb luck was always within the realm of possibility.
Chance might carry one of Wing's shots that far and pose a danger to the
ambusher.

Pushing himself up into a crouch, Longarm ran along the bottom of the
gully, using the barrel of the Winchester to thrust aside brush that clawed
at him and tried to entangle him. Within moments, he had several painful
scratches on his hands and face from the briars. He stuck his head up to
see how close he was to the knoll.

He had covered more than half the distance when he became aware that
he no longer heard the spiteful crack of the rifle, only the steady booming
of the Colt that Wing was using. Having seen Longarm disappear into the
gully, the bushwhacker might be playing it safe. He might be headed for
his horse at this very moment, intending to flee so that he could try again
to ambush Longarm some other time.

Longarm wasn't going to allow that to happen. He increased his pace,
ignoring the stubborn brambles.

A couple of minutes later, he emerged from the gully and saw that he
was behind the knoll where the rifleman had hidden. He heard the thud of
hoofs. There was only one bushwhacker, Longarm saw, and the man was
already mounted up and wheeling his horse around, about fifty yards away.

Longarm brought the Winchester to his shoulder and yelled, "Hey!" The
bushwhacker twisted in the saddle and tried to bring his own rifle around
for a shot, but Longarm pressed the trigger first. The Winchester kicked
against his shoulder, and through the haze of powder smoke that spurted
from its muzzle, he saw the ambusher go flying from the back of the horse
as if he were a puppet being jerked around by a puppeteer in a giant Punch
and Judy show. The gunman went one way, his rifle the other, and Longarm
was pounding toward the man in a run before either of them hit the ground.

There hadn't been time for any fancy shooting, drat the luck, Longarm
thought as he came up to the sprawled body. His bullet had taken the man
in the left side and punched clear through to the right, ventilating both
lungs and probably the bushwhacker's heart. He was stone dead already,
eyes open and glazed.

Longarm had never seen him before.

Hunkered on his heels beside the body, Longarm quickly went through
the man's pockets, finding only the makin's and a couple of double eagles.
Blood money? Longarm wondered. The bushwhacker wore range clothes, and it
was clear from the high-crowned hat that had fallen from his head and the
riding boots on his feet that he was no lumberjack. Longarm didn't recall
seeing him on the Diamond K--but he might not have seen every one of
Kinsman's hands in the time he had been on the ranch. Wing would surely
know if this was one of Kinsman's riders, though.

Longarm straightened and walked to the top of the knoll. The gun Wing
had been using was silent now, so Longarm shouted, "Hold your fire, Wing!

It's me, Custis!" He stepped into sight of the trail and waved the rifle
over his head.

Wing emerged from behind the wreckage, and Longarm waved for him to
approach. The cook hurried up the slope and asked, "Are you all right?"

"Yeah, but that bushwhacker ain't. I had to kill him." Now that the
situation wasn't quite so urgent, Longarm added, "What the hell happened to
that accent of yours?"

Wing grinned sheepishly. "I've lived in this country for nearly
thirty years, Custis. Came over to San Francisco back in the fifties.
Most folks take one look at me, though, and expect me to start waving a
hatchet around and talking like a heathen Chinee." He shrugged. "I've
found it's usually easier to give folks what they want."

Longarm chuckled and shook his head. "I've run up against some real
hatchet men from time to time. You do a passable imitation, Wing. If
that's the way you want it, I won't say nothing about it when we get back
to the ranch. Right now, I want you to take a look at that fella who just
tried to kill us."

Chapter 6

Wing didn't recognize the dead bushwhacker either, and he did know all
the men who rode for the Diamond K.
"Rough-lookin' gent," he said as he gazed down at the corpse, "but I
can tell you this for certain, Custis, I never saw him before."

"Me neither," grunted Longarm. "Wonder why he was trying to kill me."

"Maybe he wanted to steal those supplies we had in the wagon."

"Maybe," Longarm said dubiously. He knew better. He had been the
target of enough ambush attempts to realize when someone was trying to gun
him down. The dead man hadn't cared about the supplies, or the wagon, or
even Wing.

He had just wanted Longarm dead.

They each took one of the bushwhacker's legs and dragged the corpse
down the hill to the trail. Then Longarm went back for the man's horse.
Once that was done, they set about getting the wagon upright again. The
mules hadn't broken their traces and run off, for which Longarm was mighty
grateful. He and Wing unhitched a couple of the animals and tied ropes
from them to the wagon. When they got the mules to pull with some yelling
and whacking across the rumps, the ropes drew taut and then pulled the
wagon back onto its wheels--back onto three wheels anyway, since one had
come off. Longarm found it and rolled it back to the spot of the wreck.
Then he and Wing replaced the broken axle with the spare that was hung
underneath the wagon and put the wheel back on. It was hard, sweaty work,
but they got it done. Most of the supplies had spilled out of the vehicle
when it overturned. Longarm and Wing gathered them up and replaced them in
the bed of the wagon, then added the body of the dead ambusher. Longarm
tied the man's horse on behind the wagon.

"They probably expected us to be back on the ranch before now," Wing
said as he got the wagon moving once again. "Might be gettin' worried by
now."

A few minutes later, he was proven right. A group of riders led by
Joe Traywick came trotting around a bend in the trail. Traywick held up
his hand in a signal to halt, and the horsemen waited until Wing drove the
wagon up to them.

"Where in blazes've you been, Wing?" demanded the foreman. "Figured
you'd be back more'n an hour ago."

"We have trouble, Mist' Joe," said Wing, and Longarm tried not to grin
at the return of the accent. "Man try shoot us. Wagon turn over."

"What the hell!" exclaimed Traywick.

Longarm jerked a thumb over his shoulder. "Wing's telling the truth
of it, Joe," he said. "The ambush sort of backfired on the fella, though.
He's back here, dead as a mackerel. Didn't give me no choice but to shoot
him."

Traywick prodded his horse forward so that he could look into the back
of the wagon. He grunted as he studied the dead man's face. "You know
him, Custis?"

"Nope. I was sort of hoping you might've seen him around these parts
before."

Traywick shook his head solemnly. "Never saw this buzzard in my life.
You reckon it was a holdup?"

Longarm nodded, catching Wing's eye for an instant as he did so. "I
reckon he was after our supplies and the wagon. Could be he saw us loading
up in town and rode ahead of us so he could set up his ambush."

"Well, good riddance." Traywick rubbed his jaw. "There's a deputy
sheriff in Timber City. When we get back to the ranch, I'll send a rider
to him with word of what happened. He can come out with the undertaker for
the body if he wants, or we'll plant the son of a bitch ourselves. Come
on. I reckon Matt's gettin' a mite worried about the two of you by now."

Wing gave Longarm a puzzled look as the wagon rolled forward again.
Earlier, Longarm had been clear about the bushwhacker wanting to kill him,
yet now he was telling a different story. Clearly, Wing was willing to
play along with that, but he had to wonder what Longarm was up to.

The Chinese cook was used to keeping a secret of his own, thought
Longarm. If he was going to reveal who he was to anyone on the Diamond K,
it would be Wing. It might come in handy to have an ally on the ranch--but
only if it became absolutely necessary.

When they reached the headquarters of the Diamond K, both Matt Kinsman
and his daughter Molly were standing on the front porch of the big ranch
house. At the sight of Longarm sitting on the wagon, Molly hurried down
off the porch as if she was going to run out to meet them, then stopped
abruptly. Kinsman strode past her and demanded, "What the hell happened?

How come it took you so long to get back from town?"

Wing answered the questions. "Badman ambush us, Mist' Kinsman. Try
kill us and steal wagon and supplies."

"The hell you say! Who'd do a thing like that? One of those damn
lumberjacks, more'n likely!"

Longarm shook his head. "This fella was no lumberjack," he said,
inclining his head toward the back of the wagon. "Here's his body, if you
want to take a look at him, Boss. None of us know who he was."

As Kinsman came over to the wagon to peer at the corpse in the back,
he asked, "That the son of a bitch's horse tied up there?"

"Yep," said Traywick. "The brand on it ain't one from around here, if
that's what you're thinkin', Matt. Looks like this fella was just a
drifter who picked the wrong gents to bushwhack."

Kinsman's rugged face was impassive as he studied the dead man without
a sign of recognition. "Which one of you killed him?"

"I did," said Longarm.

"That was good shootin'. Either of you hurt?"

Molly had come closer to the wagon, and Longarm saw her watching
intently. He said, "Nope, just shaken up a mite," and saw a look of relief
appear in her eyes. Of course, he reminded himself, she could have been
worried about Wing, who had evidently been with Kinsman for quite a while.
Just because she was glad neither of them had been hurt didn't necessarily
mean she was getting attached to him.

Traywick dismounted and led his horse over to Kinsman. "I'll send a
rider into town to tell the deputy about all this, Matt," he said. "Pretty
clear-cut case of self-defense, if you ask me."

"Damn right it is," said Kinsman with a snort. "Diamond K riders
don't kill folks without a good reason, even owlhoots like this one." He
jerked his head toward the rear of the house. "Wing, take that wagon on
around back and get it unloaded." Kinsman looked around, and his gaze fell
on one of the young cowboys standing nearby. "Seth, go help Wing."

Seth Thomas's eyes widened. "But that's his job!" he said, pointing
at Longarm.

"Custis has done enough for one day, downin' that bushwhacker like
that," snapped Kinsman. "Now get movin', boy. Custis, you come on inside
with me. I want to hear more about this."

Longarm tried hard not to grin at Seth as he stepped down from the
wagon and retrieved his warbag from the back. He was still carrying the
Winchester. Seth was red-faced and fuming, but he did as Kinsman had told
him to do, following the wagon toward the rear of the house as Wing drove
it away.

Longarm went into the house with Kinsman, Molly, and Traywick. The
rancher led the way to his study, and as he paused before the door he said,
"Go help Wing in the kitchen, Molly."

"Why?" she demanded. "Because I'm just a helpless female and hadn't
ought to listen to you talking about men getting killed?"

"That's right," said Kinsman. "That's just exactly right."

Molly's eyes narrowed angrily, but Traywick moved smoothly between her
and her father and said quietly, "Best do like Matt says, Molly."

She sighed in resignation. "Oh, all right, Joe. I'll go along with
the old goat ... for your sake."

"Old goat, is it?" exclaimed Kinsman indignantly. "Why, you little-"

Molly turned with a flounce--not an easy thing to do while wearing
jeans and a man's shirt, thought Longarm--and walked away down the hall,
ignoring her father's reprimand.

Kinsman shook his head. "Gal's got a mind of her own," he muttered.
"Come on, Custis. I want you to tell me everything that happened."

Longarm did so, leaving out only his conviction that the ambusher had
been after him and him alone. As he talked, he lit a cheroot, and both
Kinsman and Traywick filled pipes and lit them.

When Longarm was finished, Kinsman blew out a cloud of smoke and said,
"Sorry this had to happen to you on just your second day here, Custis. On
the other hand, maybe you got your bad luck out of the way early."

"Don't seem like bad luck to me," said Longarm with a shake of his
head. "I'm still breathing, and the other gent ain't."

Kinsman chuckled. "You could sure as hell look at it that way, all
right." His expression became more serious. "Say, I wonder if it was that
Mcentire woman or one of her men who hired that fella to bushwhack you?"

Longarm frowned. Kinsman was bound and determined to blame everything
that went wrong on the loggers. "Don't recall saying that I thought
anybody hired the fella," he pointed out. "Seemed to me like a simple
holdup."

"Could've been," said Kinsman, nodding slowly. "Or maybe not."

Unfortunately, the rancher was right. Though Longarm didn't agree
with Kinsman's eagerness to cast blame on the Mcentire timber outfit, that
didn't mean Kinsman was incorrect in his assumptions. While Aurora had
given no indication that she was the type to strike back at an enemy by
hiring a gunman, Longarm didn't know her well enough to completely rule out
the possibility. Of course, if she was responsible for this attack, that
meant she was trying to play him for a fool by asking for his help, then
continuing to make the conflict between cattlemen and loggers worse.

Wouldn't be the first time he had run across a woman who figured her
pretty face would allow her to pull everybody's strings, he reminded
himself. Under the circumstances, it was even more important that he find
a chance to talk to Aurora Mcentire again, and soon.

The chance came sooner than he expected. As dinner was being
completed that night, the rider Joe Traywick had sent to Timber City to
inform the local deputy of what had happened reappeared, and with him came
the star packer himself. The deputy sheriff was a red-faced, big-bellied
man in a town suit and derby hat. He revealed a sun-freckled, mostly bald
pate when he took off the derby to nod respectfully to Molly. After a
longing glance at the spread of food Wing had prepared, the man turned to
Kinsman and said in a high-pitched voice, "I'm sorry, Mr. Kinsman, but I
got to ask you to let that cowboy called Custis come back to town with me."

Longarm sat up straighter in surprise. Kinsman nodded toward him and
said to the deputy, "There he is, Bullfinch. Ask him yourself."

Deputy Bullfinch--as the target of more than one humorous comment
about his own name, Longarm didn't envy the local lawman--turned to him and
said, "How about it, mister?"

"What do you need me for?" asked Longarm coolly.

"The sheriff says I got to start doin' things more legal-like. That
means havin' a inquest ever' time somebody gets theirselves killed by
violent means."

Longarm didn't point out that it might be difficult to kill somebody
by non-violent means. Bullfinch's request tied right in with Longarm's own
plans, so he nodded and said, "Sure, I'll be glad to come with you,
Deputy."

"I'm much obliged. The hearin' will be tomorrow mornin' at nine
o'clock. You can stay the night in the Ponderosa House, or if you like,
there's nobody in the cell at the jail house right now, so you could sleep
there."

Kinsman spoke up again. "No rider of mine is spendin' the night in
jail unless he deserves it. I'll pay for your room at the hotel, Custis."

"Thanks, Boss," said Longarm with a grin. "I got to admit, the idea
of sleeping behind bars don't appeal much to me, even if the door isn't
locked."

Seth Thomas put in, "Bet you've spent more than one night in jail."

"If I have, it's none of your business, junior," Longarm replied
crisply.

"That's enough, you two," said Kinsman. He waved a hand at the table,
which had plenty of leftovers scattered on it. Un less you're in a big
hurry, Bullfinch, sit down and have some supper before you start back to
Timber City."

The deputy practically licked his lips as he reached for an empty
chair. "Thanks, Mr. Kinsman," he said eagerly. "I reckon the trip back
can wait a spell. That'll give Custis a chance to get together any gear he
might want to take."

"That's right," said Longarm dryly. There wasn't much he planned to
take along, however. He would be traveling light on this trip to Timber
City.

And on the way back, he would pay a visit to the lumber camp and try
to find out if maybe, just maybe, Aurora Mcentire knew anything about
bushwhackers.

The inquest was pretty cut and dried. The local undertaker also
served as the coroner, and he swore in a jury of six townies who heard
Longarm testify that he had killed the deceased only after the fella had
done his best to kill both Longarm and Matt Kinsman's cook, Wing. Deputy
Bullfinch had explained to Longarm that Wing wouldn't need to testify,
being a Chinaman and all. Longarm's word was good enough for the jury.
The verdict was a foregone conclusion: The deceased had met his end in the
course of committing a crime, so good riddance. Longarm stood up as the
coroner banged a gavel on the table in the front room of the undertaking
parlor, where the hearing had taken place. "This hearing is adjourned,"
said the undertaker in a reedy voice.

Longarm turned to Deputy Bullfinch. "You through with me?"

"I reckon so. Appreciate you comin' in with me, Custis. We're tryin'
to bring law an' order to this part o' the country, and the only way to do
that is to see that ever'thing's done legal-like."

Longarm refrained from commenting that if Bullfinch really wanted to
do something for law and order around Timber City, he would have gotten to
the bottom of this feud between the cattlemen and the loggers before now.
The Justice Department, in the form of Longarm himself, had been called in
only when it became obvious that local authorities weren't going to put a
stop to the trouble.

Longarm settled his hat on his head and stuck a cheroot in his mouth
as he stepped out of the undertaking parlor. His saddlebags and the
Winchester were at the hotel, his saddle and the roan at the livery stable.
It took only a few minutes to gather everything he needed and ride out of
Timber City.

He followed the main trail to the cutoff that led to the lumber camp,
and veered west on the smaller path. A few minutes later, one of the
lumberjacks stepped out of the underbrush and challenged him. It was
similar to his experience the first time he'd come up there. "I'm Deputy
Marshal Long," he told the sentry. "I was up here to see Mrs. Mcentire a
few days ago."

The lumberjack nodded. "Yeah, I remember you. You were in camp the
day that boom got away and wrecked Miz Mcentire's cabin."

"That's right. I need to speak to her again."

"Go on ahead," the man said with a wave of his hand as he lowered his
rifle. "I'll signal for the others to let you pass."

"Much obliged." Longarm prodded the roan into a walk.

As he rode on up the mountain, he spotted several other sentries. He
wondered if there had been any more trouble since the runaway boom.
Anybody who wanted to sneak up on these loggers was going to have to be
pretty stealthy about it now.

When he reached the camp, he saw to his surprise that another log
cabin had been thrown up near the sawmill. It was not as large as the one
that had been destroyed by the boom, nor did it have a front porch, but it
would serve just fine as the camp's headquarters and Aurora's residence.
One thing they had plenty of around here, reflected Longarm, was logs.

He swung down from the roan and tied it to the hitching post in front
of the newly constructed cabin. Before he could knock on the door, it
opened and Aurora stepped out. "I saw you coming, Marshal," she said.
"How are you?"

"Reckon I'm fine," replied Longarm. "Any more problems around here?"

"Not so far, thank goodness." Aurora wore a dark blue dress and had a
ribbon of the same shade tied in her thick dark hair. "Come inside."

Something about her tone struck Longarm as being cooler than it had
been a few days earlier on his previous visit. Could be she was angry he
hadn't gotten back out to the camp before now, he told himself. If that
was the case, she would likely change her mind once she found out what he
had been doing.

However, he realized a moment later that she already knew what he'd
been up to--or at least she thought she did.

As soon as he had shut the door behind him, she rounded on him and
said frostily, "I hear you've gone to work for the enemy."

Longarm's eyes widened a little in surprise. "What--oh, you mean
you've heard about how I'm riding for the Diamond K."

"I thought you worked for the government."

"I do," he told her solemnly. "You ever hear of working in secret,
Mrs. Mcentire?"

She flushed, and he wasn't sure if it was from anger or embarrassment.
"You mean you're trying to find proof that Kinsman is behind our trouble?"

"Kinsman--or somebody else on his ranch."

Aurora lowered her eyes. "I'm sorry, Marshal. I should have known it
was something like that when I heard in town that you were working for
Kinsman. He doesn't know you're a lawman?"

"Nope. I'm not sure how long I can keep it that way, though, so I
want to sort out this mess as quick as I can."

"What's to sort out? Just get the proof that he's trying to ruin me
and arrest him."

Longarm shook his head. "It ain't quite that easy. For one thing,
I'm not completely convinced that Kinsman's to blame for your troubles."

"What?" She stared at him in disbelief. "Who else could it be?"

"I don't rightly know," admitted Longarm. "Could be some of the young
punchers on his spread, acting on their own."

"No," insisted Aurora. "That unpleasant old man is behind things, I'm
sure of it."

"Or ... it might be somebody else entirely. Do you have any other
enemies who might want to see you have trouble with that government
contract?"

"Of course not. It has to be Kinsman," Aurora said stubbornly.

"Funny thing," said Longarm, though he didn't really consider it
amusing at all. "He says the same thing about you. He blames you for
rustling cattle and poisoning wells on the Diamond K."

Aurora's face lit up again, and this time it was definitely caused by
anger. "The old ... the old fool! How could he think that?"

"He found you and your men cooking steaks the day after some of his
cows disappeared," Longarm pointed out. "Don't recollect you mentioning
that to me the last time I was out here."

"Because it's such an absurd idea that I didn't think it was worth
mentioning!" Aurora crossed her arms across her ample bosom and began to
stalk back and forth across the room. Most of her belongings from the
other cabin had been salvaged from the wreckage, but this new place was
still more sparsely furnished than the original. In addition, it had only
one big room, and in one corner was the bed. Aurora's pacing brought her
almost to it before she turned back each time. Her self-control slipped,
and she began to wave her arms as she said, "I don't understand it! I'm
the one whose men have been killed, whose business has been threatened!

Kinsman is the one behind it, and you're defending him!"

Longarm felt a surge of anger himself. He had explained his actions.
More than that, he had pointed out where Aurora herself had not been
completely honest with him. He had as much right to be put out as she did.

Acting on impulse, he stepped forward and caught hold of one of her
wrists as she swung her arm through the air. "Wait just a minute!" he
said. "I ain't defending anybody. I'm just trying to get to the truth."

"Let go of me, damn you!" She thrust her face up toward his, glaring
at him. "You've got no right-"

Longarm was tired of listening to her. He shut her up the best way he
knew how.

He kissed her.

His mouth came down hard and demanding on hers. His arms went around
her and pulled her against him. Her breasts pressed softly against his
chest, flattening as he embraced her. Longarm slid one hand down to the
small of her back and massaged the hollow there. Aurora's hands caught
hold of his shirt and plucked at it as she moaned deep in her throat.

For a long moment they stood there like that, sharing the hot wet
urgency of their mouths. Then Aurora pulled her head away from Longarm's.
"We ... we shouldn't be doing this," she practically gasped.

"You're probably right," Longarm said quietly. He didn't let go of
her, however. Instead he lifted a hand and cupped her left breast, feeling
the hard nubbin of puckered flesh at its center.

"Oh ... to hell with it!" exclaimed Aurora breathlessly. "All the men
are either up in the woods or working in the mill, and they won't bother
us." She reached down to his groin and found the hardness pressing
urgently at his denim trousers. "Oh, my!" Her fingers fairly flew over
the buttons, and within seconds she had freed his shaft from his pants and
his long-handled underwear. Her eyes widened as she closed her hand around
the long, thick pole of rock-hard flesh. "It ... it's been such a long
time."

"No need to wait anymore," Longarm said gently. He bent, slipped an
arm behind her knees, and scooped her up in his arms. Moving as
effortlessly as if she were weightless, he carried her to the bed and
lowered her onto the thick, quilted comforter.

His own fingers were pretty damned nimble as he unfastened the buttons
on her dress, he thought, especially since all the while she was reaching
up and caressing his manhood, fisting her hand around it and running her
soft palm up and down the length of him. The way she was licking her lips
was downright distracting too. But within a few moments, he had the dress
spread open and was pushing up the cotton shift she wore underneath it,
revealing firm calves and creamy thighs. As the thick triangle of dark,
fine-spun hair at the juncture of her legs came into view, she spread
herself wide, and Longarm reached down to the hot, wet core of her. She
cried out softly as he fondled her, his fingers exploring the folds of
flesh he found between her legs. Her hips thrust up involuntarily as he
plunged his middle finger into her.

Mouth half open, eyes glazed with passion, she humped up at him as he
caressed her intimately. "D-damn you, Marshal!" she gasped at him.
"D-don't just ... play with me! I need you inside me!"

Longarm was always pretty much glad to oblige a request like that. He
withdrew his finger, making her moan in frustration, and shucked his boots
and pants as quickly as he could. "Leave the damn shirt on!" said Aurora.
"I can't wait!"

Longarm moved over her, and she grasped his pole eagerly to guide it
into her. He didn't need much help. Her portal was gaping wide and
drenched in her vital juices. Longarm felt the tip of his shaft touch the
wetness and surged forward with his hips, burying his full length in her.
He was afraid from the way her eyes went so wide that she was going to let
out a yell, but she managed to stifle her cry of ecstasy. He held himself
there, with Aurora penetrated to the fullest extent, before launching into
a steady rhythm of thrusts. She moaned and clutched at him, and her legs
came up and locked together at the ankles above his back.

He had to admit that she gave as good as she got, thrusting back at
him so that their bellies came together with soft slapping sounds. Each
time they came together so that she was filled to the brim, she squeezed
him tightly with a surprisingly muscular grip. Though he had been pounding
into her for only a short time, he felt his climax threatening to surge up
from inside him.

Aurora must have sensed that, because she said hoarsely, "Don't hold
back! Give it to me! Fill me up!"

Longarm did just that, tightening his arms around her as his hips
drove forward one final time. Then he held himself motionless as his seed
boiled out into her in spurt after wrenching spurt. Aurora spasmed too,
her own flood mixing with his. Longarm gave one last shudder, then threw
his head back and drew a deep breath into his lungs. Below him, Aurora
trembled once or twice. Her eyes were closed now, and she was breathing as
hard as he was. A fine sheen of sweat covered both of them.

Longarm felt his softening shaft slip out of her. She made a little
noise of regret as he rolled to the side. Then she turned her head, opened
her eyes, looked at him, and said once again, "Oh, my."

Too out of breath to speak, Longarm settled for lifting a hand to
stroke her cheek.

"That was ... that was so wonderful," she said. "I ... I haven't
been with a man since ... since Angus died. I ... I had almost forgotten
what it was like."

"It comes back to you," Longarm managed to say.

"Yes, it does," agreed Aurora. She reached down and stroked the
instrument that had given her such pleasure. "Oh, yes, it surely does!"

Chapter 7

The way Aurora kept playing with him, Longarm figured he was going to
be ready for some more loving pretty soon, but after a few minutes, she sat
up suddenly and said, "Do you hear that?"

Longarm was so caught up in the sensuous pleasure she had been giving
him that for a second he didn't hear anything except the pounding of his
pulse in his head. Then he realized that it wasn't his pulse alone he was
hearing.

There were the hoofbeats of an approaching horse outside the cabin,
hoofbeats that came to an abrupt halt.

Aurora swung her legs out of bed and stood up, tugging her shift down
around her hips and frantically fastening the buttons on her dress. The
wanton female of a few moments before had disappeared, and the respectable
businesswoman and widow was quickly coming once more to the forefront. She
hurried to one of the oilcloth-covered windows and moved the oilcloth aside
just enough to peer out. There was a startled expression on her face as
she swung back toward Longarm.

"It's Ben Callahan!" she hissed. "You've got to get out of here!"

Seeing how she was reacting to the prospect of company, Longarm had
already reached for his clothes. While he felt a little resentful about
her attitude, not to mention a mite embarrassed at the way this encounter
had suddenly turned into something out of a French farce, he didn't want to
cause trouble for Aurora. If she wanted him out, he would do his best to
oblige. He finished buttoning up his pants and stomped into his boots,
then snagged his gunbelt from the back of the chair next to the bed where
he had hung it.

The cabin had only the one door, but there was a good-sized window in
the back. Longarm moved the oilcloth covering aside and swung a leg over
the sill. He paused and looked back at Aurora, who was running a comb
through her disheveled hair and pinning it back in place. The
transformation was well nigh miraculous. She didn't look like she'd ever
had an impure thought, and there was certainly no hint of what she had
actually been doing with him on that bed a few minutes earlier. As Longarm
watched, she gave a quick jerk to the comforter, which straightened it out
and removed the evidence of their activities.

Longarm caught her eye and mouthed
"So long" at her. For a second she
looked exasperated, as if she wished he would go on and leave and be done
with it, but then she gave him a quick grin that told him she had enjoyed
their lovemaking every bit as much as he had. Carrying the memory of that
grin with him, Longarm stepped out the window and let the oilcloth fall
back into place behind him.

Then he paused just outside the cabin and thought about what Aurora
had said. According to her, the visitor was Ben Callahan, and it took only
a second for Longarm to figure out why that name sounded so familiar.
Callahan owned the logging outfit that was operating to the north of the
Mcentire timber lease in the Cascades.

And for some reason, Aurora didn't want Callahan to even suspect that
she had been enjoying a midday romp with a man. Otherwise she would have
told Longarm to get dressed but would have allowed him to remain in the
cabin while she greeted Callahan. She could have introduced him to the
owner of the other timber company and come up with a plausible reason for
his being there.

Clearly, that hadn't even occurred to her, and Longarm wondered why.

There was one way to find out, he thought. Given an opportunity to
eavesdrop, he wasn't going to pass it up. There was no way of knowing when
something he overheard might turn out to be important to the case.

Those thoughts went through Longarm's head in a flash. Leaning closer
to the window, he heard the sharp rapping on the door, then heard it open
and Aurora say, "Why, Ben Callahan! What are you doing here?" Her voice
was pleasant enough, but it held an undercurrent of tension.

A man's voice said harshly, "You know perfectly well why I'm here,
Aurora. I've come to raise my offer--though I warn you this is the last
time I'll do so. Forty thousand dollars, and not a penny more."

"Don't be ridiculous, Ben," said Aurora. "That government contract
alone is worth twenty or thirty times that much, not to mention the lumber
I've been able to sell to private business. Why should I sell you my
company for forty thousand dollars?"

"Because it's all the cash I've got in the world," said Ben Callahan,
"and because we both know that contract should have been mine!"

"We both had a chance to bid on it," Aurora returned firmly.

"Yes, but you took advantage of the fact that Angus and I were friends
and used to be partners! You found out what I was going to bid, and then
you undercut me!"

Aurora's voice was a smooth but dangerous purr as she said, "You and
Angus were never friends from the day you dissolved the partnership, Ben.
You thought you could do better on your own, and when you found out that
you couldn't, you held it against Angus and resented him for the rest of
his life."

Heavy footsteps stomped back and forth across the floor. Callahan was
pacing angrily, Longarm thought. Longarm put his face close to the window
and risked a quick glance throughthe narrow gap around the oilcloth. He
was grateful that the sawmill and the cookshack were on the other side of
the cabin. If anybody saw him peeping into the window like this, he'd feel
like a damned fool.

And yet he wanted a look at Ben Callahan, and he got one as the rival
timber magnate swung around to stalk back across the cabin's single room.
Callahan was a tall, broad-shouldered man who looked like he had swung an
ax and wielded a saw plenty of times himself. His features were craggy,
battered, and at the moment flushed. He was balding, and the hair that was
left was brown laced with gray. The muscles of his arms and shoulders
bulged the coat of the tweed suit he wore.

"That's not true," he answered Aurora's accusation. "I never resented
Angus or envied his success."

Longarm didn't even know the man, and even he doubted the truth of
that claim. Callahan sounded as if he had resented Angus Mcentire plenty.

"Well, I'll certainly not sell the company to you," said Aurora.
"Poor Angus would turn over in his grave if I did that. But I will buy you
out if you'd care to sell."

"What?" roared Callahan. "By God, woman, if I didn't know better, I'd
say Angus passed his brass balls on to you when he died!"

Outside the cabin, Longarm had to suppress a chuckle. Though he knew
Callahan was deadly serious, something about the idea of Aurora Mcentire
with brass balls just struck Longarm as funny. He gritted his teeth to
keep from laughing and continued eavesdropping.

"This is getting us nowhere," Aurora said coldly. "I want you to
leave, Ben. I'm not interested in selling my company to you now, nor will
I be in the future."
Ominously, Callahan said, "I wouldn't be so sure about that.
Everybody in this part of the country knows you've been having trouble,
Aurora. You might be better off to salvage what profit you can by selling
and get out now, before anybody else gets hurt."

Longarm stiffened. Of all the high-handed  ... ! This put things in a
whole new light, he thought. Callahan was blatantly threatening Aurora.
Practically admitting that he was behind her troubles. Longarm had been
looking for another suspect in this case--and he had just found one.

"I won't stand for that kind of talk," snapped Aurora. Longarm heard
the rasp of a drawer opening in a desk. "Get out."

"You might as well put that down, Aurora," said Callahan. "I'm not
afraid of you. You're not going to shoot me."

Longarm sure as hell hoped not. He didn't want to have to bust in
there and take a gun away from Aurora if she was mad enough to plug
Callahan.

The next instant, he heard the unmistakable metallic clicking of a
pistol's hammer being drawn back and cocked. "You think I won't?" Aurora
asked. "I'll shoot you, Ben. I promise you, I'll be glad to shoot you."

Clearly, this was a long-standing disagreement between these two. If
they got along this badly, Longarm thought, why hadn't Aurora said anything
when he'd asked her if she had any other enemies? From the sounds of
everything going on in that cabin, Ben Callahan sure as hell fit the bill.

"All right, I'm going," Callahan growled after a moment. "But this
isn't over, Aurora. One of these days, you're going to come to your
senses."

"Not if it means selling my company to you. Now, get out of here.
Good-bye, Ben."

Longarm heard some more muttering from Callahan. Then the door of the
cabin opened and shut. He heard Callahan stomp around a little before a
horse trotted off. Callahan hadn't gone graciously.

The oilcloth over the window was pushed aside, and Aurora said, "You
can come back in now, Marshal."

"After what we've been through together, you ought to call me Custis,"
Longarm told her as he climbed in through the window. "And how'd you know
I was still out here? I could have sneaked off."

"I just figured you waited to hear what was going to happen. I never
saw a lawman who wasn't curious."

Longarm grinned. "Guilty as charged. And Callahan may be too."

"What do you mean by that?" asked Aurora.

"I mean, didn't it ever occur to you that maybe Callahan is the one
who's hurting your operation? It makes more sense than blaming everything
on Kinsman and the Diamond K. Callahan and his men would know a lot more
about how to ruin things for loggers than a bunch of cowboys would."

Aurora shook her head. "That's ridiculous. Ben would never do such a
thing, regardless of any hostility he might feel toward me. He's too much
of a gentleman."

Longarm suppressed a snort of disbelief. From what he had seen and
heard of the man, Callahan wouldn't stop at anything to get what he
wanted--and what he wanted now was the Mcentire Timber Company.

"Did I hear you say that Callahan and your husband used to be
partners?"

"Years ago," Aurora replied with a nod. "Before I even married Angus,
in fact. Then, when he and I became engaged, I think that Ben seemed to
regard it as a ... a betrayal of sorts. He said he was going to form his
own company and go his own way. Angus tried to talk him out of it, but
there was no persuading Ben to change his mind." She smiled wistfully. "I
don't think Ben likes me very much, and I always felt a little guilty about
driving a wedge between him and Angus. They were good friends, good
partners, before that."

"Maybe you're letting that blind you to the fact that Callahan could
be behind your troubles," Longarm told her. "Guilt can make you see things
differently."

Aurora laughed quietly. "I don't feel that guilty. I loved Angus
very much, and I've never regretted marrying him, no matter what other
circumstances might have arisen from that. I just don't think Ben is
capable of such violence."

Longarm wasn't convinced. He and Aurora might have to agree to
disagree on that point for the time being, however. He couldn't make a
move against either Kinsman or Callahan without coming up with some proof
first, solid evidence that not even Aurora could dispute.

At least he had another lead now, despite his lack of progress so far
on the Diamond K.
And that was where he needed to go now. Kinsman, Traywick, and the
others were expecting him to come straight back to the ranch after the
inquest in Timber City, and he had already delayed long enough. It had
been a mighty pleasurable delay, of course, and maybe informative as well.

"I've got to be riding," he told Aurora.

"Back to Kinsman's ranch?"

"That's right."

"Even though you don't believe he's guilty?"

"I never said that," Longarm pointed out. "I said I wasn't completely
convinced, that I hadn't found any proof either way just yet. That doesn't
mean I'm going to stop looking."

But he was going to be looking long and hard at Ben Callahan too, he
added to himself.

As he started to turn away, Aurora stopped him by placing a hand on
his arm. Her gaze was soft and warm as she looked at him and said, "Be
careful, Custis. We may not agree about everything, but you've already
done so much for me." She stepped forward and lifted her face to his for a
brief kiss.

Longarm knew what she meant. He had reawakened a passion inside her
that had been slumbering since the death of her husband. She had submerged
herself in work, the business that had been built by Angus Mcentire.
Longarm had brought her out of that for a few minutes, lifting her back to
the surface so that she had emerged into the glorious sunlight of her own
needs and desires. The hot urgency of her kiss made it clear that she was
eagerly anticipating the next opportunity to repeat the experience--as was
Longarm.

But for now he had his own business to tend to, so after a final
embrace, he left the cabin without looking back and untied his horse's
reins from the hitching post. Swinging up into the roan's saddle, he
pointed the animal down the path that would take him back to the main
trail. As he rode past the cookshack, the bald-headed old biscuit-shooter
stepped out and lifted a hand in greeting. Longarm returned the wave, then
put the lumber camp behind him.

He didn't see the sentries on his way back to the main trail. They
had withdrawn into the timber to stand guard in case anyone bent on trouble
tried to approach the camp. Of course, watching the trail was one thing,
and Longarm didn't blame the loggers for posting sentries. But there were
other ways to approach the camp, and they couldn't all be watched, not if
any work had to get done. He felt a tingle of uneasiness. Other than the
bushwhack attempt on his life, the last couple of days had been free of
trouble.

That couldn't last, thought Longarm. Every instinct he had developed
over a lot of dangerous years as a lawman told him SO.

Still, he wasn't expecting all hell to break loose quite so quickly.

He swung his mount back onto the main trail, then a few minutes later
veered off it again when he came to the path leading to the headquarters of
the Diamond K. This path led through a thick stand of timber, and though
the day was sunny, the shadows were thick here underneath the boughs of the
towering pines. Longarm breathed the fragrant air and thought about what
he had learned today. He was convinced that Ben Callahan was a plausible
suspect in Aurora's troubles.

The volley of shots that ripped out of the trees to his right drove
those thoughts from his mind and replaced them with the need for sheer
survival. The bullets drove him from the saddle too, as one of the slugs
ripped across his back, plowing a shallow furrow in the flesh and clipping
his left shoulder blade. With a cry of pain, he twisted and tumbled from
the roan's back, barely thinking to kick his feet free of the stirrups as
he fell.

The roan bolted forward, breaking into a startled gallop. Longarm
heard the pounding of its hoofbeats mixed with the sharp crackle of gunfire
as he thudded heavily to the ground. Even hurting as he was, he kept his
wits about him and rolled toward the far side of the trail as fast as he
could. He was aware of bullets smacking into the ground around him, but as
far as he could tell, none of them struck him. So far, the wound he had
suffered in the first volley was his only injury.

Of course, that was enough, he thought as he slid down the narrow
grassy verge along the edge of the trail. The crease across his back
burned like blazes, and pain shot through his upper torso every time he
moved. Still, he knew he had to hunt some cover in a hurry, or within a
few moments he wouldn't be hurting at all. He'd be too dead for that.

A deadfall lay some ten yards away. Longarm palmed out his Colt,
which thankfully had not fallen from its holster when he tumbled off the
horse, and began triggering as fast as he could as he came up in a crouch.
The shots were directed toward the blank face of the woods across the
trail, where the other shots had come from. He had no real hopes of
hitting anything; he just wanted to distract the sons of bitches while he
scampered for some shelter.

The strategy worked. A couple of shots came his way as he dashed for
the fallen tree, but neither of them were close. Longarm threw himself
forward and sprawled behind the log. The tree had been a good-sized one,
with a trunk several feet in diameter. None of the bushwhackers' slugs
were going to reach him as long as he stayed behind the deadfall.

There was more than one hidden rifleman this time. Longarm was
convinced of that. He had heard the sound of at least three separate
rifles. He grimaced as he began thumbing fresh shells into the Colt. Even
though he was safe enough for the moment, they still had him in a damned
bad spot. If they had plenty of ammunition, they could wait him out. Or
some of them could just work around behind him and catch him in a cross
fire. He was pinned down good and proper.

The gunmen were still firing--he could hear the crack of their rifles
and the thud of bullets hitting the log--but their attack was more
desultory now. They wanted him dead, but they weren't in any big hurry
about it.

Longarm felt the sticky wetness of his blood soaking the shirt on his
back. He didn't think he was losing blood fast enough for that to be a
real concern. Chances were, the bushwhackers would get tired and rush him
to get it over with before he ever had a chance to bleed to death.

He looked around, searching for something that might offer him a way
out of this dilemma. The bushwhackers had picked the spot well for their
ambush. In many places along this trail, the woods came almost right up to
the path, so that a rider could have reached out and brushed his fingers
along the rough bark of the trunks. On the other side of the trail, where
the riflemen lurked, that was the case. On this side, however, there was a
clearing behind the spot where Longarm lay. The edge of the pine forest
was a good twenty feet away. If he tried to stand up and run into the
shelter of the trees, or even attempted to crawl across the clearing, the
would-be killers would have no trouble picking him off. It was pure luck
that they hadn't done worse than wing him so far.

With nothing in his surroundings offering any hope, Longarm turned his
attention to the thing closest to him: the log.

The tree had been well over a hundred feet tall when it was alive, and
he was lying near the base of it. Craning his neck, he looked along the
length of the fallen tree and saw that the far end was rotten and collapsed
on itself. Disease had claimed this giant, not the woodsman's ax. That
was why it had been left lying here. No doubt it was rotten clear through,
useless for lumber. In fact, there was a good-sized hole in the trunk a
few feet from him, and as Longarm looked at it, an idea began to form in
his head. He crawled over to the hole, wincing as the squirming motion
made his wounded back spasm in agony. The opening in the trunk was only
about a foot wide. Longarm grasped the edges of it and crumbled them away
in fist-sized pieces. As he had thought, the tree was mostly rotten. When
he had widened the hole enough for him to stick his head into it, he took a
deep breath and did so, twisting his neck so that he could look toward the
far end of the deadfall. Light. He saw light. Small animals had gotten
into the tree and hollowed it out at some time in the past, making a den of
it. Longarm could still smell a faint, gamy odor, a legacy of whatever
creature had made its home here. The varmint could still be up in there,
he supposed, but with all the shooting going on, that was doubtful. Any
critter with sense would have already headed for the tall and uncut. No,
there was probably nothing in that log except grub worms and other crawling
varmints. The thought of joining them made the skin on the back of
Longarm's neck prickle uncomfortably. He might not have any choice,
however. If those bushwhackers had a lick of sense, they would be working
their way around behind him even now.

He dug his clasp knife out of his pants pocket and unfolded the blade.
Then, with the knife and with his bare hand, he began enlarging the hole in
the log. It would have to be pretty big to accommodate his broad
shoulders. Ignoring the pain in his back, he worked feverishly. The
hidden riflemen wouldn't have as much time as he had first thought, he
realized. Those shots might be heard at the logging camp, and some of
Aurora's men might come to investigate.

Unless those bushwhackers worked for Aurora Mcentire.

Longarm didn't want to think about that possibility. It was never
pleasant to ponder that a woman he had recently bedded with such pleasing
results for both of them would try to have him killed, but it had happened
before and could again. Suspicion was just an occupational hazard, like
getting shot at, but that didn't mean he had to like either one of them.

When he judged that the opening was large enough, he wiggled his head
and shoulders inside. His shoulders scraped a little on the sides, but
they made it. Using his hands and his toes to push himself along, he began
making his laborious way toward the irregular circle of light that marked
the far end of the log.

He wasn't the only thing crawling in this log, as he had expected.
Gritting his teeth, Longarm ignored the many-legged touches of the insects
that scampered over him. Ants stung him until he thought he was going to
bellow in a combination of anger and fiery pain. His wounded back dragged
against the top of the log, and he knew he was damaging it even worse.

The price he was paying might well be worth it, though, because when
he was a little more than halfway to the far end of the log, he heard a
voice yell, "Hold your fire! He ain't over here!"

A grim smile plucked at Longarm's mouth. As he had expected, at least
one of the bushwhackers had circled the deadfall and come at it from the
other direction, from the clearing. And as far as they could tell, their
intended quarry had vanished.

Longarm had scattered the chunks of rotten wood he'd cut away and torn
from the hole in the log, and there was enough litter on the forest floor
that he hoped the signs of what he had done would not be too readily
apparent.

"What do you mean he's not there?" came another voice. "The
star-packin' bastard's got to be there! We saw him run behind that
deadfall, and he never came out!"

"I don't care, he's gone."

The hollowed-out passage inside the log suddenly narrowed down, and
Longarm felt his shoulders pinched. No matter how hard he shoved with his
toes, he couldn't make any progress. What if he got stuck in here? That
was a chilling thought.

His face was bathed in sweat as he pushed himself backward a few
inches. Exploring with his hands, he found the place where the tunnel grew
smaller. His fingers dug into the rotten wood and tore pieces of it away.
Worms were burrowing there, and his fingers grew slick with the juices of
the ones he crushed. At the moment, he didn't care. If some worm guts
helped him ease his way through the narrow passage, then he was glad for
the sacrifice they were making in his behalf.

He pushed forward again. For a second he thought his shoulders were
going to stick again, but then they slipped through. His hips were
smaller, and they cleared the bottleneck easily.

"Shit! I can't figure this out. You sure he didn't get past you,
Durkin?"

"Damn right he didn't get past me! What do you take me for, Avery, a
fool?"

"Keep your suspenders on! Hell, I didn't mean no offense. It's just
that I know the boss wanted this badge-totin' sidewinder dead, and we were
supposed to go along when the rest of the boys hit that lumber camp too."

"We'll be done here in plenty of time for the raid. I know that
jasper was wounded--I saw the blood on his shirt when he fell off his
horse. He can't have gotten very far. We just have to find him."

The words "raid" and "lumber camp" echoed in Longarm's head with a
sound just as hollow as this tree he was crawling through. Whoever these
bushwhackers were, no matter what the identity of the mysterious boss they
worked for, one thing was crystal clear to Longarm. There was going to be
an attack on the Mcentire lumber camp--and that would likely mean that
Aurora's life would be in danger.

Now more than ever, it was vitally important for him to get out of
there. He wasn't sure when the raid was planned, but the men he had heard
talking had sounded as if it wasn't too far off. He had to get away from
these men and make it to the camp so that he could warn Aurora of the
impending attack.

Suddenly, there was a thump behind him. Someone had struck the log
with a gun butt, or a clenched fist, or something. What it was didn't
really matter. What was important was the echo that resounded from inside
the fallen tree.

Longarm pushed himself harder, faster. The seconds were slipping
away.

"Hey! This tree's hollow. You don't think-"

"Son of a bitch! He's inside the tree!" Time was up.

Chapter 8

Longarm wasn't far from the end of the tree now, and this was where
the disease had been the worst, where the wood was the most rotten. He
pushed himself onto hands and knees, arching his injured back against the
trunk. Pain washed through him, a red-tinged agony that might have made
him pass out had his effort not been fueled by desperation. With a
splintering sound that he hoped was from the tree, he emerged with pieces
of rotten wood showering around him.

Dizzy from the pain, he threw himself to the side as guns began to
bang. The shots came from the other end of the tree, however, where he had
crawled into it. He twisted, catching his balance, and yanked his Colt
from the cross-draw rig. Firing as much from instinct as anything else, he
snapped a couple of shots toward the bushwhackers, and was rewarded by the
sight of one of the men doubling over and collapsing. Longarm stumbled
toward the trees.

The edge of the pine forest was only a few feet away here, and in a
matter of seconds, Longarm was among the towering trees. He careened along
in a staggering run, hoping that he wouldn't run into one of the pines and
dash his brains out on its trunk. Shots still rang out behind him, but now
they sounded slightly muffled. He didn't know if that was because the
thick growth deadened the reports, or because his hearing was going.
Either way, he had to keep moving.

Suddenly, his feet went out from under him. With a bone-jarring
thump, he sat down hard and started sliding. Realizing that he had fallen
into a gully, he reached out blindly in an effort to grab something and
slow down his slide.

His fingers hooked around the base of a bush. He closed them tightly,
and as the bush's roots held, Longarm came to an abrupt halt. He lay there
on the steep slope and looked around, blinking sweat out of his eyes. The
gully was a deep one, about forty feet, and he had slid about halfway down
the side of it. At the bottom of the gully, a small creek bubbled along
over a narrow, rocky bed. The noise it made sounded loud to Longarm, but
not so loud that he could not hear the voices shouting in the woods above
him.

"He headed over this way! I heard him!"

"Be careful, damn it! He may be trying to set up an ambush."

"Ambush, hell! The bastard was half dead when he busted out of that
hollow log. I saw him, and he could barely move."

A third voice said, "He moved well enough to kill Durkin."

Longarm felt a little tingle of satisfaction at the knowledge that he
had downed one of the bushwhackers. Evidently there were three of them
left, however, and they were in the process of hunting him down. If he
stayed here, it probably wouldn't take them very long to find him, and he'd
be an easy target perched here on the side of the gully like this.

Time to get moving again, he told himself grimly.

Now that he wasn't sliding out of control, he was able to slip down
the side of the gully without crashing through the brush. After a moment,
he reached the little stream, and he went to one knee beside it to scoop up
some water and splash it in his face and over his head. Fed by snow-melt
from the peaks of the Cascades, the water was icy cold and made Longarm
gasp and shiver. It drove back some of the mental cobwebs that threatened
to overwhelm him, however, and that was what he wanted. He cupped more of
the water in his free hand and sucked it down thirstily.

Longarm pushed himself back to his feet. The creek was so narrow that
he was able to step over it, even in his weakened condition. The slope on
the other side of the gully was not as steep. He angled along it,
gradually working his way upward, using the trees and brush that dotted the
ground as cover. He heard the searchers moving around on the other side of
the creek and stepped up his pace.

Catching a glimpse of movement from the corner of his eye, Longarm
knelt behind a clump of underbrush and went motionless. His eyes followed
a flash of color that he spotted on the other side of the gully, and after
a moment one of the bushwhackers stepped into clear view. Longarm had had
only a very fleeting look at them when he burst free of the log and traded
shots with them before dashing into the forest. Now he saw that this man
wore range clothes, including a high-crowned hat and a cowhide vest. Like
the man who had opened fire on Longarm and Wing when they were on their way
back to the Diamond K from Timber City, this gent was dressed like a
cowboy. And also like that other fella, this one was a complete stranger
to Longarm too.

The clothes didn't have to mean anything. Owlhoots, hired guns, were
generally much more likely to dress like cowboys than like lumberjacks.
These men could have been hired by Ben Callahan or even Aurora herself,
though Longarm had come to the conclusion that his suspicions about her
were unfounded. Aurora wouldn't hire gunmen to raid her own camp. That
wouldn't accomplish a damned thing.

Callahan was a different story. If he was bound and determined to
make things so difficult for Aurora that she would have no choice except to
sell her company to him, then an attack by these cowboys and other hired
guns like them might do the trick.

Personally, Longarm thought, Callahan--or whoever the boss was--had
underestimated Aurora. She was a proud, stubborn woman. He knew that just
by the way she had made the timber company she had inherited from her late
husband into even more of a success.

But all the pondering in the world wouldn't mean a damn thing, Longarm
reminded himself, unless he got away from these killers and made it to the
timber camp in time to warn Aurora of the attack. He stayed absolutely
still, watching the bushwhacker on the other side of the gully through a
tiny gap in the screen of brush.

The man poked around a little, started trying to make his way down the
slope, then changed his mind and pulled himself back up to the edge of the
gully. Like Longarm, he had a gun fisted in one hand. Only about thirty
feet separated the two of them, and Longarm was worried that his breathing
would give him away. Despite his best efforts, the pain of his wound lent
a harshness to every breath he drew. Evidently, though, the chuckling of
the creek was enough to cover up the slight noises.

Longarm learned suddenly that he was wrong. Either that or the fella
had spotted him somehow, because the gunman abruptly whirled toward him,
jerked up the pistol, and yelled, "He's over here!" as he squeezed the
trigger.

Longarm threw himself to the side, catching hold of the brush with one
hand to steady himself as the bushwhacker's bullet ripped through the
leaves about a foot away. Fighting off the blurriness that tried to take
over his vision, Longarm fired twice. The first slug chewed bark off the
trunk of a pine right behind the gunman, but the second bored into the
man's chest and threw him back against the tree. The gunman bounced off
the trunk, tried to stay upright, and failed. As the gun slipped from his
fingers, he pitched forward, falling into the gully and tumbling head over
heels down the slope until he came to a stop with his upper body in the
creek at the bottom. He lay motionless, tendrils of red seeping into the
water as it flowed around him.

That was two of them accounted for, Longarm realized as he pushed
himself to his feet. This was no time to congratulate himself, though.
Instead he turned and started for the top of the slope as fast as he could
force himself to move, no longer worrying about any noise he might make.
The bushwhacker's yell and the exchange of shots would bring the other two
killers on the run.

Shots banged behind him. He heard the whisper of bullets through the
leaves and the thud of slugs hitting tree trunks. Then he was at the top,
powering over and throwing himself once more into the shelter of the thick
forest.

In his pain-wracked state, it seemed like hours, even days, had passed
since the initial volley of shots that had knocked him out of the roan's
saddle. Surely he had been playing cat and mouse through these woods with
the killers for at least that long. But his brain told him that no more
than twenty minutes, half an hour at the most, had passed. He still had
time to alert the Mcentire camp to the raid if he could get away from the
remaining two gunmen.

And find his way out of the forest. That might not be easy, given the
shape he was in. Normally he had an extremely good sense of direction,
which had served to save his life on more than one occasion in the past.
That might not be the case today.

He ran blindly, darting this way, angling off in another direction,
zigzagging yet another way. He might even be running in circles for all he
knew. Distantly, he heard the men coming after him. Occasionally, a shot
resounded through the forest as one of them blazed away at something they
thought was him, but as far as Longarm could tell, none of the bullets came
anywhere close to him.

Unfortunately, his strength was deserting him. His run had turned
into a stagger, and he had to keep clutching at tree trunks to keep from
falling flat on his face. Once again, time was running out on him.

He stumbled forward, and it took him a moment to realize that he had
emerged from the trees once more.

Longarm stopped short, shaking his head and looking around. He had
been running in circles, because he was back on the trail. Not only that,
but when he heard a surprised whinny, he looked up and saw the roan about
fifty feet away. The horse had been calmly grazing on the grass at the
side of the trail when Longarm came floundering out of the woods.

Longarm held out a hand and called softly to the roan. He started
toward the animal, and it nervously backed away from him a few steps.
Longarm couldn't blame the horse. Covered with blood and smeared with
filth from the inside of the log, he probably looked bad and smelled worse.
But the roan was his one chance to get out of this mess and maybe salvage
something from it, so he wasn't going to let the horse get away.

One foot in front of the other, Longarm told himself. Steady, slow
and steady. He kept talking, nonsense intended only to soothe the horse's
jitters. It must have worked, because the roan stopped backing away. In
fact, it even came forward a few steps and nuzzled curiously against his
outstretched hand.

Longarm caught hold of the dangling reins and moved to the horse's
left side. As he reached up to grasp the saddle horn, he wondered how the
roan had gotten so tall. Pulling himself all the way up into the saddle
seemed like an almost insurmountable task. With a groan of effort, Longarm
got a foot in the stirrup and then hauled himself up. He settled down in
the saddle with a thump that made fresh waves of pain ripple through his
wounded back.

He slumped forward and jammed his heels into the roan's flanks. The
horse broke into a trot. Longarm gritted his teeth and hissed, "Son of a
bitch!" through tightly clenched jaws. Every step the roan took hurt him
like blazes.

He was moving, though, and that was the important thing. Longarm
lifted his head and peered around, trying to orient himself. He had been
on the trail to the Diamond K when he was ambushed, and that was still
where he was, he realized as he noted several landmarks. More importantly,
he was headed back toward the main trail, the one that would ultimately
take him to the Mcentire Timber Company camp.

Shouts ripped through the stillness of the forest behind him, followed
an instant later by the crash of gunshots. Longarm twisted in the saddle,
hanging on tightly with one hand while he used the other to empty his
pistol toward the surviving bushwhackers, who had also reached the trail.
He didn't know if he hit either of them or not, but he didn't feel the
impact of any fresh lead. That was all he cared about at the moment.
"Run, damn it, run!" he called to the roan as he drove his heels once more
into its flanks.

The bushwhackers were on foot, and they would have to find their
horses again before they could come after him. That would give him enough
of a lead, Longarm realized, that they would never catch up to him.

Of course, he had been convinced of things before and then had them
backfire on him, so it wouldn't do to get overconfident. He kept the roan
moving at a steady run until he reached the main trail.

Longarm reined in and paused to study the landscape, trying to
remember which way he was supposed to turn. Instinct told him to turn
right, toward the south, but for some reason his brain insisted that he go
north. He scowled as he tried to puzzle it out.

His gut feelings had saved his life in the past--but so had his mental
processes. At the moment, however, he put more stock in his instincts,
since his head was more than a little addled. He swung the roan's head to
the right and urged it into a run again. He realized he must have been
slipping in and out of consciousness. But he was in one of his lucid
moments when he reached the cutoff to the logging camp, and he swung the
horse onto the smaller trail with scarcely a reduction in speed.

He expected to be stopped by one of the sentries, as usual, but no one
stepped out of the trees to challenge him. Somewhere in the back of his
mind, Longarm knew that wasn't a good sign. He pushed on, the fear that he
might be too late clearing his head somewhat.

As he drew closer to the camp, that worry intensified. The guard
shack was deserted. He slowed the horse's mad dash for a moment, expecting
to hear gunfire up ahead. But silence was the only thing that greeted him.
When he rounded a turn in the trail and passed through an open spot in the
canopy of trees, he saw smoke curling into the sky, rising from a spot
higher on the mountain.

A spot just about where the Mcentire camp was located.

Longarm yelled at the roan and banged his heels into its sides, urging
more speed from the horse. The roan responded, lunging forward into a
gallop. Longarm had moved beyond pain now; his injured back was numb, and
he didn't feel the pounding of the roan's increased speed.

Sweeping wide around bends in the trail, the horse ran flat out for
several minutes before the timber camp came into view. As Longarm had
feared, that was the source of the smoke. Dark billows rose from the long
barracks-like building where the loggers slept. The structure was being
consumed by flames.

The fire wasn't the worst of it. Several men were sprawled around the
clearing where the camp was located. Longarm had seen enough corpses in
his life to know immediately that they were dead. Their bright-colored
shirts were stained a dark red with blood.

The sawmill and Aurora's new cabin appeared to be undamaged, as was
the cookshack. A line of men stretched from the creek beside the sawmill
to the burning barracks, passing buckets back and forth as they battled the
blaze. The efforts of the bucket brigade weren't going to be enough,
Longarm saw as he reined the horse to a halt. The fire was too far
advanced already. Wetting down the area around the building might keep the
flames from spreading, however, and that appeared to be what the loggers
turned their attention to as Longarm watched.

He was close enough to feel heat from the flames pushing against his
face. Despite that, a cold chill went through him. Nothing was more
deadly, or more feared, in the woods than fire. Luckily, the season had
been a fairly wet one, and the trees were green and healthy. Still, once a
forest fire got going, it was almost impossible to put out.

Longarm pushed that thought from his mind. The loggers were doing
everything they could to contain the fire. Right now, finding out what had
happened to Aurora Mcentire was of more compelling urgency to Longarm.

He looked around the camp as he dismounted awkwardly, his normally
smooth motions hampered by the injury he had suffered. He held on to the
reins for support and led the horse toward Aurora's cabin.

She emerged from the door before he got there, trailed by Jared Flint.
Aurora had her head turned and was giving orders to her harried-looking
foreman, so she didn't see Longarm right away. That gave him a chance to
look at her and assure himself that she was really all right. Her hair and
clothing were disheveled, and there was a smudge of something, either ashes
or blood, on her cheek, but other than that, she appeared to be unharmed.
Longarm lifted a hand and called, "Mrs. Mcentire!"

She turned quickly toward him and gasped when she saw the blood and
dirt covering him. "Marshal Long!" she exclaimed as she rushed over to
him. "What happened to you?"

"Ran into some fellas who ... tried to kill me," Longarm said wearily.
"I disabused 'em of that notion."

Aurora took hold of his arm, her touch soft yet firm at the same time.
"Come inside," she urged him. "We have some other wounded men in the
cabin, and I'm doing what I can for them." Her attitude was brisk and
businesslike, but Longarm could see shining in her eyes a concern for him
that had no doubt grown out of their passionate encounter earlier in the
day.

"I'll keep that bucket brigade going," said Flint as he started toward
the burning building. He echoed Longarm's concern by adding, "We've got to
stop that fire before it reaches the trees."

"Amen to that," muttered Aurora as she gently tugged Longarm toward
the cabin.

"Tried to ... get here and warn you," Longarm told her. "Sorry I
wasn't ... in time."

She paused and looked at him in surprise. "You knew this was going to
happen?"

"Heard the gents who ... bushwhacked me ... talking about it. Didn't
think it was supposed to happen ... this soon."

"They struck quickly," Aurora said. "There was no warning. No one
was in camp except the men working in the mill and myself." She helped him
step into the cabin. One man, probably the most badly wounded of the lot,
was lying in the bed Aurora and Longarm had put to such good use, while
half a dozen more injured men had been made comfortable on pallets laid out
on the floor. "Those cowboys rode in whooping and shooting," Aurora went
on, "and when the men in the mill ran out to see what was happening, the
raiders just shot them down in cold blood."

Longarm felt a fierce anger welling up inside him. He experienced the
same thing every time he encountered violence and murder and all the things
that went with one bunch of people thinking they could run roughshod over
another bunch. The rage he felt was not enough to counteract the weariness
and loss of blood, however, and he felt himself beginning to sag.

"Best get me ... into that chair over by the table," he said to
Aurora.

She had an arm around his waist now, being careful not to touch his
back. Carefully, she helped him sit down straddling the chair. Then she
reached for a knife that was lying on the table. "I'm going to cut that
shirt off of you," she said. "Then we'll have a look at what happened to
you."

"Best tend to ... these other fellas," said Longarm.

Aurora shook her head. "I've already done everything I can for them.
Mr. Flint sent a rider to Timber City to fetch a doctor."

Longarm nodded. Aurora's deft hands were using the knife to slice
through his bloody shirt and lay it back to expose the wound. He heard her
catch her breath. It had to be ugly.

"What happened?"

"Bullet creased me. Bastards were waiting for me. I think the slug
 ...  clipped my left shoulder blade ... too. But it didn't do worse than
 ...  chip it a little." He rotated his left arm and shoulder, wincing as he
did so. "I can still use this wing, so I reckon there's no real damage."

"Sit still. I'll clean this up."

She stepped away from him for a moment, then returned. He was
surprised when she came around the chair and lifted a bottle of whiskey to
his mouth. "Better swallow some of this," she said as she tilted the
bottle. "it won't hurt as much outside if you've got a healthy swallow of
it inside."

That was a reasonable attitude, Longarm decided, so he took a long
drink of the whiskey. Then Aurora went behind him and doused the stuff on
the bullet crease that he had torn up even worse by crawling through the
log, and he had to bite his lip to keep from howling in pain. After a
moment the burning subsided, and Longarm closed his eyes in relief.

That didn't last long. Aurora began dabbing at the wound with a cloth
soaked in whiskey, and the fiery pain came back. Longarm withstood it
stoically.

To distract himself, he thought about the attack on the camp. The way
those bushwhackers had been talking, the raid had been planned for later in
the day. Despite his befuddled state, surely it hadn't taken him that long
to reach the camp. No, the boss must have speeded up the schedule for some
reason, Longarm decided. Maybe when the bushwhackers hadn't returned right
away to report that Longarm was dead, their unknown leader had figured that
he couldn't take a chance on the big lawman turning into a wild card that
might ruin the play. It was a feasible theory, thought Longarm.

"The doctor may want to sew this up when he gets here," said Aurora.

Longarm shook his head. Something was eating at him, something he had
seen outside that was wrong, and as he sat there at the table, he finally
figured out what it was. The loggers working higher on the mountain should
have heard the gunfire, and they certainly would have seen the smoke. Yet
there had been only a relative handful of men fighting the fire outside,
and those were probably some of the sawmill workers.

He twisted his head to look up at Aurora. "Where ... where are the
rest of your men?"

Her lovely face was set in lines of hatred now. "They've gone to put
a stop to this once and for all. They're headed for the Diamond K, and
when they get there, they're going to burn it to the ground--just like
Kinsman's men tried to do to us."

Chapter 9

Longarm would have surged up out of the chair had it not been for
Aurora's hand on his shoulder pressing him down. "Damn it!" he exclaimed.
"They can't do that!"

"Why not?" asked Aurora, her voice a little chilly now. "Surely after
this you can't keep on making excuses for Kinsman, Marshal."

Longarm glared up at her. "I'm not making excuses for anybody," he
said. "I just don't want innocent folks getting killed."

"There's no one innocent on the Diamond K."

Longarm thought about Molly and Wing and felt a fresh surge of anger
at Aurora's attitude. She wouldn't understand that, though, not in her
current frame of mind, so he said, "What about your men? You don't think
Kinsman and his riders will just let them waltz in there and set fire to
the place, do you? I'll tell you what's going to happen. Kinsman will
fight back, and a lot of men will wind up dying--on both sides."

A look of concern appeared on Aurora's face. "Maybe you're right,"
she said grudgingly. "But there was no way I could stop them. Several men
were killed in the raid, and the rest of them were out to avenge their
friends."

Longarm reached for the bottle of whiskey, which Aurora had placed on
the table after soaking the cloth she had used to clean his wound. He took
another slug of the fiery stuff, then wiped the back of his other hand
across his mouth. "Tear up a petticoat or something and wrap the strips
around me to bind up that crease," he said curtly. "Then I want to borrow
a shirt if you've got one."

"I can find something for you to wear ... but you're not going
anywhere, Marshal. Not until the doctor's taken a look at you."

"The hell I'm not," growled Longarm. "I've got to put a stop to this
if I can." The anger he felt--and the restorative jolt of the whiskey, to
be honest--had given him back some of his strength, buoyed him to the point
that he thought he could ride again.

"Surely you don't actually think Kinsman is innocent," Aurora said in
a mixture of amazement and indignation.

"I haven't seen a lick of proof that he's guilty," Longarm shot back.
"I got a pretty good look at one of the gents who ambushed me today, and he
wasn't one of Kinsman's riders. Neither was the man who tried to kill me
yesterday. Somebody's spooked, Aurora, and is trying to get me out of the
way."

He still liked Ben Callahan for that role. Admittedly, he couldn't be
sure that Callahan even knew of his existence, let alone that he was a
deputy U.S. marshal, but it was possible, especially if, as Longarm
suspected, Callahan had at least one man here in the Mcentire camp who was
really on his payroll. Longarm's true identity was common knowledge among
the loggers, and if Callahan had an inside man, the information could have
been passed along easily to the rival timber company owner.

"Regardless of whether what you say is true or not, you're not going
anywhere." Aurora shook her head stubbornly. "You're in no shape to
ride."

"The hell with it," Longarm muttered. Roughly, he shook off her hand
and stood up. "I'll go like this."

Aurora looked shocked at his vehemence. "Wait a minute," she said
quickly. "If you're that determined  ..."

"We're wasting time," Longarm said grimly.

"I'll do what you asked." Hurriedly, Aurora tore an undergarment into
strips to bind up Longarm's wound, then produced a man's shirt from a
trunk. "it was one of Angus's," she said. "The sleeves may be a little
short."

They were, but Longarm didn't care. Whatever he was going to do, he
had to do it before he lost his second wind.

Because once that was gone, he likely wouldn't be able to do anything
for a while except collapse.

He left the cabin as he was shrugging into the shirt and fastening a
couple of its buttons. While he looked around for the roan, he thumbed
fresh cartridges into the Colt, then holstered it. The horse was nearby,
standing where Longarm had dropped its reins.

Aurora had followed him out of the cabin. "I'm coming with you," she
said.

Longarm looked at her in surprise. "You can't do that."

"The hell I can't, as you would say. I can be every bit as stubborn
as you, Marshal."

Longarm had already figured that out about her, and even as he drew a
breath to argue, he knew it would be useless. So he said instead, "All
right. But if there's trouble, you stay out of the way."

She made no reply, just headed for a small corral near the cookshack
where several saddle horses were kept.

The fire in the barracks was burning itself out following the collapse
of the structure, and the flames didn't seem to have spread, as Longarm saw
to his considerable relief. Jared Flint turned away from the ashes of the
building and then started quickly toward Longarm and Aurora, his brow
creasing in surprise and concern above his bushy eyebrows. "Miz Mcentire,"
he said as Aurora led a horse from the corral, "what are you doing, ma'am?"

"I'm going with Marshal Long," Aurora told him. "Will you saddle this
horse for me, Mr. Flint?"

"Sure, but--are you certain that's a good idea?" Flint inclined his
head toward Longarm. "No offense to the marshal, but he looks pretty
banged up."

"He is," said Aurora, "but we're going to do what we can to stop the
men from attacking the Diamond K. Marshal Long is worried--and I share his
concern--that some of our men may be killed when they confront Kinsman and
his bloodthirsty cowboys."

She just couldn't resist doing a little editorializing, thought
Longarm. But overall, he was glad she had decided to come with him. If
they reached Kinsman's ranch in time to stop the loggers from attacking,
the men would be more likely to obey Aurora's orders than his. If she told
them to give up their thoughts of revenge, they might go along with her
wishes.

Of course, it might already be too late, and that thought gnawed at
Longarm's gut. Just as he had worried that some harm might come to Aurora
in the attack on the camp, now he was concerned about the safety of Molly
Kinsman, not to mention the others on the ranch for whom he had felt an
instinctive liking, such as Wing and Joe Traywick.

Not surprisingly, Jared Flint saddled a horse for himself as well as
one for Aurora. When she saw that her foreman intended to go along,
Aurora's mouth tightened, but she didn't say anything. Together with
Longarm, they rode out of the camp, Flint taking the lead. Instead of
following the usual trail, however, Flint took a smaller path that curved
over the shoulder of the mountain.

"This is the way the boys went," he said. "It's a little closer to
the Diamond K this way than it is going all the way back to the main
trail."

So that explained why he hadn't run into the rampaging lumberjacks on
his way to the camp, thought Longarm. They had taken a different route.

Even so, it seemed to take a long time to reach Matt Kinsman's ranch.
Longarm rapidly became lost as the trail twisted and turned through the
woods. After a while, Aurora grew concerned too, and asked Flint,
"Shouldn't we be getting there by now?"

Before Flint could answer, the sound of distant gunfire came to their
ears.

Longarm bit back a curse, knowing that what he was hearing signaled
the beginning of the battle between the loggers and the cowboys of the
Diamond K. Grimly, Flint said, "Sounds like we're too late."

"Maybe not," Longarm grated. "Maybe we can stop it before too many
men get ventilated." He prodded the roan forward, not looking back to see
if Aurora and Flint were following. The horse was getting tired--but then
so was Longarm. The reserves of strength he had replenished earlier were
running out again.

Guided by the gunfire, Longarm made his way through the pines. They
grew closely together in places, so that he had to thread his way among
them. Aurora and Flint had to ride single file behind him much of the
time. The shooting grew steadily louder, and finally Longarm emerged on a
long ridge that was more sparsely wooded than the slopes behind him. The
ground fell away in front of him to the valley where the headquarters of
the Diamond K were located.

Down below, the loggers from the Mcentire camp were advancing on the
ranch, using trees and brush and rocks for cover as they fired Winchesters
toward the cluster of buildings. There weren't enough rifles to go around,
so the men who didn't have guns were armed with the double-bitted axes they
used in their work. Those deadly tools could fell a tree in a matter of
minutes in the skillful hands of their owners. In close fighting, they
could chop down a human being even faster.

A heavy return fire came from the ranch buildings. Longarm scanned
the slope below him, expecting to see that some of the lumberjacks had
already fallen. They had been lucky, though; all of them were still on
their feet.

That situation wouldn't stay the same. Sooner or later, some of the
bullets flying around down there would find their targets in soft flesh.

And those in the ranch buildings were in danger too. Longarm could
just imagine Molly Kinsman crouched near one of the windows in the house,
reloading for her father and Joe Traywick. Either that, or she might even
be wielding a rifle herself. A stray slug could find her just as easily as
anyone else.

Longarm pulled his Colt and aimed into the air. He squeezed off three
shots, then bellowed, "Hold your fire, damn it! Mcentire men, hold your
fire!"

As he expected, they pretty much ignored him, except for quick glances
that several of them threw over their shoulders before they went back to
fighting. They didn't ignore Aurora, though. She burst past Longarm,
gigging her horse into a breakneck run that carried her down the ridge
toward her employees. Longarm yelled, "Wait-" but he was too late. As
Aurora dashed downward into danger, Longarm said bitterly, fervently,
"Hell!"

"Stop it! Stop shooting!" Aurora's voice rang out clear and strong,
and even over the clamor of battle. Some of the men heard it. The ones
who did turned and looked in amazement at her, galloping down the slope at
such a pace that it seemed her horse was in imminent danger of falling and
pitching her off. Somehow she stayed upright as she shouted for the
loggers to put an end to the fight. Longarm and Flint were right behind
her, struggling to keep up. Longarm hoped none of the ranch's defenders
saw them and thought they were reinforcements for the attacking
lumberjacks. Aurora's dark hair had come loose from its usual bun, and
Longarm was glad of that. Streaming out behind her I as she rode, Aurora's
hair immediately marked her as a woman. Longarm kept one hand on the reins
and began waving the other over his head, hoping that those in the
buildings below would see him and realize he was trying to get them to hold
their fire. The loggers' rifles gradually fell silent, and so too did
those of the Diamond K. Longarm spotted several men scurrying around the
ranch buildings, no doubt spreading the word that a momentary cease-fire
had been called. What he had to do now was insure that the cessation of
hostilities was permanent, not temporary. He rode up next to Aurora and
said in a low voice, "That was a damn fool stunt."

"it got them to stop shooting, didn't it?" she replied with a defiant
toss of her head.

Longarm had to admit she was right about that. He looked along the
line of men who had been attacking the ranch. Now that he was closer, he
could see that they had not gone completely unscathed so far. One man's
left arm hung limp from a bullet that had bored through it, while several
others sported bloodstains on their clothes from creases much like the one
on Longarm's back. Such wounds were messy but seldom fatal. Didn't stop
them from hurting like blazes, though.

Longarm noticed as well that even though the guns had fallen silent,
the loggers weren't emerging from their cover. The battle could start
again in a matter of seconds if things didn't go well.

Jared Flint rode up beside Longarm and Aurora and said ominously, "I
don't trust those cowboys down there, Miz Mcentire. If they start shooting
again, you're right out in the open."

"Maybe that will be reason enough to keep them from firing," said
Aurora. She looked over at Longarm. "I'm going down there, Marshal."

"Well, then, I'm going with you," said Longarm.

"I figured you would. Your little masquerade as a cowboy may be
over."

Longarm shrugged. "I never expected it to last very long anyway, and
it wasn't paying any dividends."

Aurora glanced at her foreman. "Mr. Flint, I expect you to keep the
men in line. There'll be no trouble, no shooting."

Flint glowered a little, but after a moment he nodded and said, "Yes,
ma'am. No trouble--as long as you're down there."

Longarm and Aurora rode slowly, side by side, down the hill toward the
ranch. All movement had ceased around the buildings, Longarm noticed.
Kinsman and his men were hunkering down and waiting to see what was going
to happen too, just like the lumberjacks.

Matt Kinsman and Joe Traywick emerged onto the porch of the big house
as Longarm and Aurora drew rein in front of it. Longarm tried to look past
them for any sign of Molly, but he didn't see her. All he could do was
hope that she was somewhere in the house, unharmed by the bullets that had
been flying a few minutes earlier.

"Custis!" exclaimed Kinsman as he realized who was accompanying
Aurora. "What are you doing with that ... that Jezebel?"

"Well, now, we're going to have to talk about that, Mr. Kinsman," said
Longarm. "Is it all right if Mrs. Mcentire and I light and set for a
spell?"

"I'm a hospitable man," Kinsman said with a glower, "but I'll be
damned if I let that woman in my house!"
Aurora said coolly, "I feel the same way, Mr. Kinsman, so I'll say
what I have to say out here. Can I count on your men to honor the truce?"

"I don't see no white flag, Boss," Traywick put in. Like Kinsman, he
held a Winchester in his hands and seemed ready to use it.

"That don't make no difference, Joe," Kinsman said. Then he turned to
Aurora. "As long as those men of yours don't start shootin', neither will
we. Now, if you've got somethin' to say, woman, spit it out."

Longarm glanced over at Aurora, hoping she could keep a tight rein on
her temper. With a visible effort, she did so. "What I want to know, Mr.
Kinsman, is why your cowboys raided my camp earlier this afternoon and
killed some of my men."

Kinsman pulled his head back and squinted at her as if she had just
slapped him in the face. "Hellfire and damnation!" he exploded after a
moment. "What in blazes are you talkin' about?"

"I think you know," Aurora said tautly.

Longarm was watching Kinsman closely, and he was convinced that the
rancher didn't have the slightest idea what Aurora was talking about. The
accusation had come as a complete surprise to him. Beside him, Joe
Traywick looked just as shocked and baffled.

"None of my men have been off the ranch today," Kinsman insisted, "
'cept for Custis there." He waved a hand at Longarm, then narrowed his
eyes suspiciously at the lawman.

"And you still ain't explained what's goin' on, son."

Longarm didn't see any good way out of this, other than telling the
truth. He said, "Custis is just the first part of my handle, Mr. Kinsman.
The other part is Long. I'm a deputy United States marshal working out of
the Denver office. My boss sent me up here because the trouble between you
and Mrs. Mcentire is jeopardizing a government lumber contract."

For a moment, Kinsman stared at Longarm in amazement; then his flushed
face turned an even darker shade of red as anger surged up inside him.
"You lied to me!" he accused.

"More like I just ... left out a few things." Longarm went on
quickly. "And that ain't really important now. What matters is that Mrs.
Mcentire is telling the truth about the raid on her camp. A handful of men
are dead and a building's been burned down. There are plenty of witnesses
to say that the men who did the killing and burning were dressed like
cowboys."

"That don't make 'em cowboys," snapped Kinsman, "and it sure as hell
don't make 'em Diamond K hands."

"Could it have been some of your boys, not acting on orders, just
doing something they figured you'd approve of?"

Instead of answering Longarm's question directly, Kinsman turned to
Traywick. "You know the whereabouts of all the hands, Joe?"

"Of course I do," replied Traywick with a snort of disgust. "They're
all on Diamond K's home range. I'd stake my life on it."

Kinsman turned back toward Longarm and Aurora with a look of smug
satisfaction on his florid face. "Looks to me like the only attack around
here was the one your men just launched on my ranch, ma'am. And it was
mighty unprovoked, if you ask me."

"That's your story?" Aurora asked coldly.

"And I'm stickin' to it."

"Then who raided my camp?"
Traywick said, "Just cause some gents have range duds on don't make
'em real cowboys." He snorted again and waved toward the ridge overlooking
the ranch headquarters. "Hell, you could dress up those lumberjacks of
yours, and they might look like cowboys!"

That same thought had already occurred to Longarm. The raiders could
have been loggers from Ben Callahan's camp, disguised as cowhands to shift
the blame onto the Diamond K. If that was the case, the ruse had been a
stunning success, at least at first.

As Aurora considered what Kinsman and Traywick had said, Longarm
thought he saw something like doubt appear in her eyes for the first time.
That was a step in the right direction, he thought. If he could get both
Aurora and Kinsman to admit that someone else might be to blame for their
problems, he would have a better chance of getting to the bottom of this.
His investigation was bound to go more smoothly without having to worry all
the time about the loggers and the Diamond K hands trying to kill each
other.

"Well," said Kinsman, "what're we goin' to do about this? I don't
trust Miz Mcentire, and I don't much reckon she trusts me."

"You're right about that," said Aurora.

Kinsman turned a baleful stare on Longarm. "And I ain't overly fond
of what you did, Marshal."

"Just trying to do my job," said Longarm. "And as for what the two of
you are going to do, I figure the best thing would be to make this truce
permanent. Have your men steer clear of that lumber camp, Mr. Kinsman.
You tell your men to do likewise where the Diamond K is concerned, ma'am.
That way, if there's any more trouble, you'll know for sure that neither of
you is to blame."

"Well  ..." Kinsman said grudgingly, "I reckon that might work."

"It means we'd have to trust each other," Aurora pointed out.

"Or try to anyway," Longarm said.

Kinsman nodded abruptly. "I'll do it, leastways for the time bein'."

"My men won't like it," said Aurora, "but I'll make them listen to
reason."

Longarm felt a surge of relief. With both Kinsman and Aurora being
reasonable about things, he had a chance to actually do some good and find
out who was really behind the killings and the other trouble in these
parts. Whether it was Ben Callahan or someone else entirely, Longarm
intended to bring whoever had hired those owlhoots to justice.

Along with the relief came a wave of weariness. It had been a damned
hard day, and it was difficult for him to believe that only this morning he
had appeared before that coroner's jury in Timber City. Since then he had
bedded Aurora Mcentire, been ambushed and wounded by the men working for
that mysterious boss, fought his way out of that trouble, reached the
lumber camp too late to prevent more murders, and raced here to the Diamond
K in a desperate attempt to forestall an even more wholesale slaughter.
Along the way he'd lost a heap of blood and endured more pain than any man
ought to be expected to endure.

Yep, that was a full day's work, all right, he thought.

That was almost the last thing that went through his mind before
blackness reached out unexpectedly to claim him. He felt himself swaying
in the saddle and reached for the saddlehorn, knowing that he was about to
fall. His fingers clutched at the horn but slipped off it. As he tumbled
off the roan, he vaguely heard a voice--no, two voices, female voices, cry
out, "Custis!"

One of the voices belonged to Aurora, the other to Molly Kinsman.
Aurora and Molly ... that might prove to be interesting.

Too bad he wasn't going to be awake to see what happened.

That was his last thought as he slipped away into nothingness.

Chapter 10

Longarm woke to a soft, cool touch on his brow. Angels? he thought.
Not likely. Not after the life he'd led. A fella with a tail and a
pitchfork would be more like it.

But wherever he was now, it wasn't hot, and instead of brimstone, he
smelled the clean fragrance of a woman's hair. More of his senses began to
return to him, and he realized he was lying on his belly on soft sheets
with his face turned to the side so that it wouldn't be buried in the
pillow underneath his head. A sheet covered his lower half.

He was stark naked too. That discovery made Longarm open his eyes to
see what the hell was going on.

"You're awake. Good. I was worried about you, Custis."

It was Molly Kinsman's voice, hovering somewhere closely above him.
With a grunt of effort, wincing from sore muscles, Longarm pushed himself
up slightly so that he could look around. Molly was sitting on the edge of
the bed beside him, and he could see genuine concern in her green eyes. He
saw something else too ... anger maybe. "What  ..." he managed to say.

"You're in the spare bedroom in the ranch house," she told him. "I
figure where you are is what a man like you would want to know first. A
U.S. marshal."

Yep, she was definitely mad at him, he thought. Her voice had dripped
scorn when she mentioned his real identity.

"Deputy U.S. marshal," he corrected her. "My boss is the chief
marshal in the Denver office."

Molly stood up, making the bed's mattress bounce a little. Longarm's
injured back twinged.

"What does it matter?" she demanded. "You still lied to me, lied to
all of us. The only reason you came here is to spy on us!"

Longarm propped himself on his elbows and regarded her solemnly. "I
got the impression a few minutes ago, Molly, that you were worried about
me."

"I was," she snapped. Her voice softened a little as she went on.
"When I saw you fall off your horse outside, and when I saw the bloodstains
on your back, I knew you'd been hurt bad." She drew a deep breath. "But
that was before I thought about who you really are and why you came to the
Diamond K! You're just here to protect that ... that hussy!"

"You mean Aurora Mcentire?"

"Of course that's who I mean! All you care about is that government
timber contract I heard you talking about. I was right inside the parlor,
watching through the window. I heard the whole thing."

Longarm looked her over. She was wearing a dress again, a simple
dress of light gray cotton. It clung to her lithe young body. At the
moment, however, Longarm was less interested in her coltish figure than he
was in whether or not she had been hurt in the fighting before he got
there. He didn't see any sign of bulky bandages under the dress.

"Are you all right?" he asked her. "I was afraid you might catch a
bullet, the way they were flying around so."

Molly shook her head. "A couple of the hands were wounded slightly
when those loggers attacked the ranch, but that was all. No one was
killed--on either side." She sounded a mite disappointed as she added that
last part, thought Longarm. He breathed a sigh of relief. "Glad Mrs.
Mcentire and I were in time to stop that battle 'fore it was too late."

"She's the one you ought to arrest. We haven't done anything wrong
since this whole thing started."

Longarm didn't remind her of the ruckus in Timber City the day she had
arrived from the East. That brawl wasn't the only one that had broken out
between the cowboys and the lumberjacks either.

Fist-fights were one thing, though, and full-scale war was another.
If the truce between the two factions didn't hold long enough for him to
run the real rascals to ground, war was what they would have here in the
Cascades.

He put that thought aside for the moment and asked, "What time is it?

How long have I been in here?" A glance at the window had already told him
that night had fallen.

"It's about eight o'clock," Molly told him. "It was around five when
you passed out in the yard."

So he had been unconscious for three hours. And before that, the day
had been too busy for him to grab anything to eat. Breakfast in the hotel
dining room in Timber City had been over twelve hours earlier, so no wonder
he was suddenly ravenously hungry. And thirsty too, he realized.

"You think I could get something to eat and drink? My stomach thinks
my throat's been cut, and I'm so dry I'm spitting cotton."

"Of course." Molly started toward the door, but added over her
shoulder, "I'm still not sure you deserve it, but no one can say the
Diamond K is inhospitable."

Longarm didn't argue the point with her. He just sank back down on
the pillow and waited for her to return.

It wasn't Molly who came into the room a few minutes later carrying a
tray, however. Wing grinned at Longarm and said, "Mist' Custis feelee much
better now, yes?"

"Ah, hell, Wing, it's me, remember? I know how you really talk."

"Oh, yeah. I forgot. Once you get into a habit  ..." Wing set the
tray down on a bedside table. "I brought you some stew and some coffee.
Think you can handle that much?"

"Damn right." Longarm sat up and twisted around, wrapping the sheet
around him. His back was sore, but it didn't keep him from moving. His
stomach clenched in anticipation as he smelled the stew. He reached for
the tray, and Wing helped him get it situated in his lap.

"What happened to your back?" asked the cook. "I got those bandages
off of you, and it looked like somebody tried to plow a furrow across
there."

"That's what they did," said Longarm, "only they used a bullet instead
of a plow. It's just a deep crease."

"Well, you'll have a scar there, that's for sure." Wing gestured at
Longarm's bare torso, which was crisscrossed with dozens of other reminders
of past wounds. "Of course, it'll have plenty of company."

Longarm shrugged and swallowed a mouthful of stew, then reached for
the steaming cup of Arbuckle's. "I've been knocked around a mite," he
admitted.

Wing picked up a straight-backed chair, reversed it, and straddled it.
"Hear tell that you're a lawman."

"Deputy U.S. marshal," Longarm confirmed.

"And you're helping out that Mcentire woman, the one with the timber
contract."

Longarm shook his head and said, "You're jumping to the same
conclusion as everybody else around here. I work for Uncle Sam, not Aurora
Mcentire. All I'm trying to do is get to the bottom of all the trouble
that the Diamond K and the Mcentire Timber Company have been blaming each
other for."

"You don't think those lumberjacks rustled our stock and poisoned our
well?" Wing asked with a frown.

"No, I don't," Longarm said bluntly. "And I don't think anybody from
the Diamond K has been attacking that logging operation either. I reckon
somebody else is behind all of it, for reasons of his own." He didn't say
anything about his suspicions of Ben Callahan.

Wing's frown deepened as he thought about what Longarm had said.
"Maybe you're on to something," he said slowly. "Loggers and cattlemen
don't get along that well to start with. I don't reckon it'd take much for
some outsider to prod a grudge into outright fightin'."

"That's what I'm thinking too. Kinsman doesn't really want to believe
that, though, and neither does Aurora Mcentire."

Wing chuckled. "That Mcentire woman sure acts like she's slapped her
brand on you, Custis. She was mad as a wet hen when Miss Molly insisted on
bringing you in the house after you fell off your horse. Didn't do her any
good, though. Once Miss Molly makes up her mind about something, that's
the end of it."

Longarm knew what he meant. He had encountered Molly's stubbornness
himself. But Aurora was equally stubborn, and he supposed they were all
lucky a brand-new fight hadn't broken out over who was going to nurse him
back to health.

That thought reminded him that although his back was still sore, it
didn't hurt quite as much as he would have expected it to. When he
commented on that, Wing looked pleased and said, "I put some salve on
there. That's what's making it feel better."

"Some ancient Chinese remedy?"

Wing's grin widened. "How'd you guess?"

Longarm scraped the last of the soup out of the bowl and drained the
coffee cup. He felt pretty much human again, just extremely tired. His
weariness was growing by the moment, and he felt his eyelids beginning to
droop. "You best take this tray, Wing," he said. "I'm feeling a mite puny
again."

"Get some rest," Wing told him as he took the tray. "You'll feel
better tomorrow."

Longarm lay on his side, being careful not to put any pressure on his
injured back. Wing turned down the wick on the bedside lamp, leaving only
a small flame burning, then slipped out of the room. Longarm heard the
door closing softly behind the cook.

Eyes closed, Longarm waited for sleep. As he was drifting on the edge
of awareness, something brushed at his brain, a feather-light touch that he
knew was trying to alert him to something important.

But before he could grasp it, it slipped away, and so did he.

Longarm spent the next three days recuperating. Plenty of sleep,
Wing's good cooking, and the salve that the cook daubed on his back several
times a day hastened Longarm's healing. By the afternoon of the third day,
he felt restless, ready to be up and around and doing his job again.

The truce between the cowboys and the timber men was holding, at least
according to Matt Kinsman, who had come into Longarm's room at midday to
see how he was doing. The rancher still didn't have a good word to say
about Aurora, but he grudgingly admitted that the loggers had been keeping
to themselves.

"They're stayin' on their lease, and my boys are stayin' on Diamond K
range," Kinsman had said. "I got Joe ridin' close herd on all of 'em, just
to make sure none of the young hellions get any foolish ideas in their
heads."

That was a good idea, thought Longarm, and he told Kinsman as much.
The cattleman just grunted, his naturally combative nature chafing under
this enforced peace even though he had agreed to it.

Longarm's warbag and other gear had been brought into the house from
the bunkhouse, and when Molly came into the spare bedroom later that
afternoon, she found him standing up and buttoning the hickory-colored
shirt he had taken from his bag. He already had his pants and boots on.

"What do you think you're doing?" she demanded, putting her hands on
her hips, which were encased in snug denim trousers again today.

"Getting dressed so I can move around a mite," Longarm told her.
"Fella like me gets cabin fever when he's cooped up for too long."

"You're in no shape-"

"Wing says that crease on my back has just about healed up," Longarm
broke in, forestalling Molly's protest. "The bone and the muscles aren't
near as sore as they were. No reason I can't get back to what brought me
here in the first place."

"Only that you're liable to tear that wound open and bleed to death,"
said Molly bitterly.

Longarm grinned. "It ain't like I'm about to go out and wrassle a
grizzley or anything. I'll be careful, Molly. No reason for you to worry
about me."

She stepped closer to him, so close that he could almost feel the
warmth coming from her, and said, "I haven't even talked you into making
love to me yet, Custis. I don't want you going and dying."

Longarm cupped her chin and lifted her face so that he could look down
into her eyes. "I don't intend dying any time soon," he said quietly. He
moved his head closer, intending to brush his lips lightly across hers.

Instead, she grabbed him, her arms going around his neck and holding
him tightly as she mashed her lips against his. She opened her mouth and
her tongue slid boldly against his, exploring, probing, tantalizing.
Longarm put his arms around her and felt the softness of her belly prodding
urgently against his groin. Despite everything he had been through in the
past week, enough of his strength had returned to him for his manhood to
begin stiffening. Molly dropped one hand to it and began caressing and
kneading the heavy length of him.

Longarm took his lips away from hers and said, "This ain't the time
nor the place, Molly, but sometime  ..."

"You promise? Swear you'll do it." At that moment, she sounded more
like a pleading little girl than the full-grown woman she really was.

Longarm nodded. "I swear."

She took a deep breath and disengaged herself from him. "All right.
But I'll hold you to it, Custis. It was hard enough knowing that Mcentire
woman had bedded you when I thought I might never get the chance."

"Wait just a minute," Longarm said with a frown. "I don't know what
you're-"

"Don't bother trying to deny it," she said blithely. "A woman can
always tell. The way she was panting over you and wanting to take you back
to her place, it was obvious."

Once again, Longarm was a little sorry he hadn't been awake to see the
confrontation between Molly and Aurora. On the other hand, maybe it was a
good thing he hadn't. Billy Vail already accused him of having a swelled
head; seeing two beautiful women squabbling over him would've likely just
made it worse.

As he reached for his gunbelt, he said to Molly, "Your pa tells me
there hasn't been any trouble since the other day."

"That's right," said Molly. "But it's been like waiting for a storm
to break. You can tell something's going to happen. You just don't know
when or how bad it's going to be."

Longarm knew what she meant. That was one reason he wanted to resume
his investigation. He had to find out what was really going on around here
before that storm broke.

Molly insisted on saddling the roan for him herself. Longarm halfway
expected her to suggest that she go along with him, but she didn't, and he
was thankful for that. Arguing with Molly could be downright tiring, and
he needed all his strength right now.

Like Longarm, the roan was well rested and anxious to be doing
something again. He had to hold the horse back a little as it pranced
along the trail leading away from the Diamond K. Longarm knew what the
situation was on the ranch; now he wanted to pay a visit to the logging
camp and find out how things were going there.

He reached the main trail and swung south. The day was overcast but
mild, with gray clouds that promised rain later on scudding through the
sky. As Longarm neared the cutoff to the Mcentire camp, he paused and
listened for the sound of axes coming from higher on the mountain. The
ringing of metal against wood came faintly to his ear, telling him that
Aurora's men were hard at work.

He heard something else too--the squeaking of wagon wheels. A team of
horses appeared at a bend in the trail ahead of him, and behind them came
the wagon they were pulling. A lone man was seated on the wagon, handling
the reins of the team. Longarm recognized him as the cook from Aurora's
camp. That bald head was unmistakable.

Some instinct made Longarm rein his horse off the trail and into the
trees. He didn't know if the cook had seen him or not, but if not, Longarm
wanted to keep it that way. The wheels of his brain were clicking over a
lot more quickly than those of the slow-moving camp wagon.

If the cook had been to town for supplies, which was the logical
explanation for him being out in the wagon, where was he going now? He had
already passed the turnoff that led to the logging camp.

Longarm swung down from the saddle and led the roan even deeper into
the trees and brush. Suddenly it seemed very important that the cook not
spot him when the wagon passed by on the trail.

Standing very still, Longarm watched through the screening brush as
the wagon rolled past. He could keep track of its progress by the sound of
its wheels and the clopping of its mule team's hooves. Once it had gone by
him, Longarm turned and started making his way through the thick woods,
still leading the roan. He was moving almost as fast on foot as the wagon.

Several minutes later, Longarm heard a different sound. Hoofbeats,
but moving at a lighter, faster gait than the plodding of the mules.
Someone else was riding along the trail. The squeaking of the wagon wheels
stopped, and Longarm knew the cook must have halted the vehicle to let the
rider come to him. Longarm angled toward the trail again, anxious to see
just who Aurora's cook was rendezvousing with.

He didn't want the roan letting out a whinny at the wrong time, so he
tied the horse's reins to a young pine and left it there, slipping closer
to the trail on foot. He heard the hoofbeats of the rider's mount come to
a halt. In a careful crouch, Longarm moved closer. He lifted a hand to
ease aside some brush that blocked his view of the trail.

What he saw didn't really surprise him.

Ben Callahan, astride a big black horse, sat there talking to the cook
from the Mcentire logging camp.

Longarm felt his muscles tense. He had suspected almost from the
first that whoever was behind Aurora's troubles had a man working for him
in her camp. Now he had confirmation of that. There was no reason for
this clandestine meeting unless the cook was passing on vital information
to his real employer.

"What have you found out, Eli?" Callahan was saying.

The cook shook his bald head. "Not much, Boss. Miz Mcentire's still
all het up about something. Maybe because that marshal fella is still over
at the Diamond K, 'stead of with her."

Longarm saw Callahan's face harden at the mention of him. "That
lawman's caused nothing but trouble," growled Callahan. "It would've been
all right with me if that ambush had killed him. I don't need him
distracting Aurora right now."

"You plan on makin' a move soon?"

"It looks like I'll have to," said Callahan grimly. "Nothing else
I've tried has worked. All I can do now is come after her with what she
least expects."

The cook chuckled. "I reckon Miz Mcentire'll be thrown for a loop,
that's for sure. She won't know what hit her, Boss."

Longarm felt rage building up inside him as he listened to the
conversation. Callahan was behind all the mayhem that had infected this
part of the woods, and now he was plotting his worst strike yet against
Aurora. It was all Longarm could do not to pull his gun from its holster
and burst out of the trees to arrest the bastard right here and now. He
forced himself to keep listening, though, in hopes that Callahan would
reveal something else important.

That wasn't meant to be. The sound of more riders came to Longarm's
ears, and Callahan and the cook heard them too. Callahan's head lifted,
and he said, "Someone's coming. You get on back to camp, Eli. I'll talk
to you again another time."

"Sure thing, Boss." The cook began working to turn the wagon and the
team around. Callahan wheeled his horse and rode back the way he had come,
veering off the trail and into the woods before the approaching riders
could sweep around a bend in the trail and spot him.

Not knowing who the riders were, Longarm had no choice but to stay
where he was too. A couple of minutes later, they trotted past, about half
a dozen of them, and Longarm recognized them as cowboys from the Diamond K.
Seth Thomas was among them. Aurora's cook was still struggling with the
wagon and the mules, and as the cowboys moved over to ride past him, they
called out jeering comments. Even if they recognized the cook, thought
Longarm, likely none of them would think anything about him being on a
section of trail where he had no real business being. The cowhands rode on
out of sight, obviously bound for Timber City. A few moments later, the
cook finally got the wagon turned around and whipped the mules into motion.
The wagon rolled away toward the cutoff which would take it back to the
Mcentire camp.

Longarm straightened, wincing a little as muscles stiff from long
minutes of crouching twinged in his legs and back. Anger still smoldered
inside him. All that was left to do now was arrest Callahan, then gather
up the cook too, because old Eli would probably be glad to testify against
Callahan when he realized how much trouble he was in. With any luck,
Longarm could wrap up this case today.

He went back to the roan, jerked the reins loose, and swung up into
the saddle. He didn't know exactly where Ben Callahan's logging camp was,
only that it was north of Aurora's operation and the Diamond K. Longarm
thought he could find it fairly easily. All he had to do was follow the
sound of axes.

About an hour later, after checking a couple of smaller trails that
branched off the main one, Longarm found the path that led to Callahan's
camp. Not only the ringing of axes but also the growl of a steam engine
inside a small sawmill led him to his destination. Callahan's operation
was smaller and less impressive than Aurora's, but as Longarm rode up to
the camp, he noticed that the buildings and the equipment were well cared
for, and there was an air of brisk efficiency about the place. Callahan
had nothing to be ashamed of here.

Longarm noted another difference between Callahan's camp and Aurora's.
There were no guards here--or if there were, they were so well hidden that
Longarm couldn't spot them. But then, he reflected, Callahan didn't really
need any guards. He hadn't encountered any of the problems that had been
plaguing Aurora--because he was behind them.

That didn't stop a couple of the men who were working around the
sawmill from picking up axes and strolling over to meet Longarm as he
reined in. One of them, a burly fellow with a red beard, looked up at
Longarm and asked, "What would ye be wantin' here, boyo?"

"I'm looking for Ben Callahan," Longarm answered bluntly. "Is he
here?"

"Have business wi' him, do ye?"

"You could say that. I'm a U.S. deputy marshal, and I need to talk to
Callahan."

The two loggers exchanged a glance, then Redbeard said, "So ye're the
famous lawman we been hearin' so much about. Ye've come here t' put a stop
t' all th' troubles."

"That's the general idea," said Longarm, growing impatient.

"And ye think Mr. Callahan can help ye?"

Longarm fixed the man with a cold stare. "I'm sure of it."

Before the loggers could say anything else, Callahan himself emerged
from the sawmill. Longarm had expected Callahan to beat him back to the
camp, since Longarm hadn't really known where he was going. Callahan
glanced at Longarm in surprise, then said to the red-bearded man, "What's
going on here, Rory? Who is this man?"

"He's a badge-toter, he is, Mr. Callahan, an' he wants t' see you."

Callahan looked up at Longarm again. "You're that marshal I've heard
about, the one who's working for Aurora Mcentire."

Longarm suppressed a sigh of frustration. He wasn't surprised that
news of his presence had spread through the mountains. After his part in
stopping the battle between the Diamond K and the Mcentire loggers, that
was only to be expected. But it seemed like everybody around here was
determined to jump to the wrong conclusions about him.

"I'm not working for Mrs. Mcentire. I'm just trying to find out who's
been causing trouble for her and Matt Kinsman," said Longarm. "I've got a
few questions I want to ask you, Callahan."

The man shrugged his broad shoulders. "Sure. I don't know why you
think I can help you, but if I can, I'd be glad to."

Callahan was a cool-headed son of a bitch, Longarm had to give him
that. He had halfway expected Callahan to pull a gun upon being confronted
like this. He had to suspect that Longarm was on to him.

Instead, Callahan turned away and said over his shoulder, "Come on in
my shack, Marshal. We can talk there."

Frowning in puzzlement, Longarm swung down from the roan and handed
the reins to Rory, who reached out for them. "I'll take care o' yer horse,
Marshal," said the red-bearded logger.

Longarm wasn't sure what was going on here, but he remained confident
in his ability to handle whatever tricks Callahan had up his sleeve. He
followed the boss logger into a small cabin that evidently served as
Callahan's quarters.

The cabin was furnished with a table and a couple of chairs, a bunk,
and a sturdy trunk that sat at the foot of the bed. Callahan opened the
trunk and took out a bottle. "Care for a drink, Marshal?" he asked.

Longarm saw to his surprise that the label on the bottle proclaimed it
to be Maryland rye, Tom Moore to be precise. What were the odds that
Callahan would have a bottle of Longarm's favorite here in the middle of
the Cascades?

It had been a long time since he had asked too many questions of such
good fortune, however. He could arrest Callahan after they'd had a drink
just as well as before. With a nod, he said, "Much obliged."

Callahan dug a couple of glasses out of the trunk, blew dust from
them, and pulled the cork from the bottle of rye with his teeth. He
splashed liquor into each glass, then replaced the bottle in the trunk and
held out one of the glasses to Longarm. Longarm was about to toss off the
drink when Callahan lifted his own glass and said, "Here's to Aurora
Mcentire."

Longarm nodded curtly and said, "To Aurora." Then he downed the rye,
licked his lips appreciatively, and went on. "You always drink to somebody
you're trying to run out of business, Callahan?"

Callahan frowned, taken aback by the blunt question. "What are you
talking about, Marshal? I wouldn't want to hurt Aurora's business."

"No, you just want to make things so bad for her that she'll sell out
to you on the cheap, government contract and all."

Callahan's blunt fingers tightened on the empty glass he held.
"You're insane," he said. "I'd never hurt Aurora."

Longarm's right hand was close to the butt of his Colt, just in case
Callahan decided to try something funny. "That ain't the way I figure it,"
he said coldly. "You see, I was there a few days ago when you offered to
buy her out. You practically admitted you were behind all her troubles.
And I saw you meeting on the sly today with her cook, who's been helping
you with your scheme."

For a long moment, Callahan stared hard at Longarm. Then he shook his
head sadly. "You don't understand, Marshal," he said. "You just don't
understand."

"Then why don't you explain it to me?" Longarm snapped.

Callahan looked down at the cabin's puncheon floor and heaved a sigh,
then said, "All right. If I have to." His gaze lifted, and his eyes met
Longarm's. "I don't really want to buy Aurora out. I'm in love with her,
and I want to marry her."

Chapter 11

This time it was Longarm's turn to stare in amazement. Of all the
things Callahan might have said, that was one of the last ones Longarm
would have expected.

"Marry her?" he repeated. "You don't even like her. Aurora told me
how you broke up your partnership with Angus Mcentire because he decided to
marry her and you couldn't stand her."

A look of pure misery appeared on Callahan's face. "That's what she
thinks? I ended my partnership with Angus because I couldn't stand knowing
that Aurora was marrying him instead of me. I knew if Angus and I stayed
partners, I'd have to see her sometimes, and that was more than I could
take."

Longarm was flabbergasted by this agonized confession on Callahan's
part and not sure whether to believe the man or not. He said, "Didn't you
ever tell Aurora how you really felt about her?"

Callahan shook his head. "She was happy with Angus. I couldn't bring
myself to cause trouble for her. I suppose you could say I just ... loved
her from afar."

"Maybe you could say something like that," muttered Longarm. "I
couldn't." He glared at Callahan and went on. "What about that fella Eli,
that bald-headed cook? Like I told you, I saw the two of you-"

Callahan held up both hands, palms out. "I know, I know. And I admit
that Eli has been working for me. But not because I want to cause trouble
for Aurora. I just had Eli there to keep an eye on her, so that I would
know what was going on. When I first heard about the problems she was
having, I figured it was time to make my move. I offered to buy her
company from her."

"So, you don't want to cause trouble for her, but you don't mind
taking advantage of trouble she's already got, is that it?" asked Longarm
skeptically.

Callahan grimaced. "You make it sound pretty bad, Marshal, but you
don't know everything I had in mind. I thought it would be better for
Aurora if she didn't have to worry about the company anymore. I thought
too that if maybe whoever was behind the problems had a grudge against her,
he would stop if the company changed hands. Then I was going to ... to ask
Aurora to marry me, so that I could give the company back to her as a
wedding present."

That was one of the craziest things Longarm had ever heard, but he had
to admit that it was just the sort of thing a lovesick fool such as
Callahan professed to be might come up with. Still, he wasn't ready to
write off his suspicions just yet.

"I heard you tell Eli that you were going to try something new with
Aurora, since nothing else had worked, and that old cook said she wouldn't
know what hit her. What was that about?"

"I was talking about the way I've been trying to buy her out," said
Callahan. "If you were eavesdropping outside the cabin the other day, you
know I made my final offer to Aurora, and she turned me down flat."

Longarm nodded.

"So there's nothing else left to do," said Callahan with another
shrug. "if I can't buy her out before I propose, I guess I'll just have to
go ahead and ask her to marry me anyway. That was what Eli and I were
talking about, Marshal. You can ask him if you don't believe me."

Longarm wasn't sure why Callahan thought he was more likely to believe
the old cook. Callahan was either one hell of an actor, or he was really
telling the truth about his involvement with the situation. Longarm had
been counting on the man panicking when confronted with the knowledge of
his guilt. That hadn't worked out at all.

And Longarm was once again left with no solid proof of anything.

"All right, Callahan," he said abruptly. "I ain't saying I believe
this yarn you've spun for me, but I reckon you know I've got my eye on you
now. We'll just see what happens."

"I've told you the truth, Marshal." A trace of fire appeared in
Callahan's gaze. Now that he had gotten over the awkwardness of being
forced to confess his love for Aurora, his normal spirit was coming back to
him. "If you don't want to believe me, that's your problem."

"We'll see," said Longarm. "Thanks for the drink." He turned toward
the door of the cabin.

"That's it?" asked Callahan in surprise. "You're leaving?"

"Not much else I can do, is there? Not unless you want to confess
that you tried to have me killed and caused all that trouble around the
Mcentire camp."

Callahan shook his head vehemently. "I didn't have anything to do
with any of that."

Longarm just raised one eyebrow skeptically and stepped out of the
cabin.

The roan was tied to a hitching post nearby. Longarm untied the reins
and stepped up into the saddle. Callahan came out of the cabin behind him,
and although Longarm didn't look back as he rode away from the camp, he
could feel the boss logger watching him. Callahan's eyes seemed to bore
into his back.

He had put Callahan on notice, and if the man was indeed guilty, it
was now just a matter of giving the man enough rope to hang himself.

And of staying alive in the meantime, Longarm added grimly to himself.

He had been heading for the Mcentire camp when he had gotten
sidetracked on this Callahan business, so that was where he pointed the
roan when he reached the main trail once more. The skin on the back of his
neck crawled a little as he rode. Callahan might move fast to eliminate
him as a threat. Even now, some of those hired gunmen might be riding
through the forest to get in front of him and set up an ambush. Or they
might just come straight after him and try to ride him down. Either way,
Longarm knew he had to be alert for any sign of trouble.

Nothing happened on the way to Aurora's headquarters, however. When
Longarm rode up there, everything was evidently business as usual. The
sawmill was operating, and Longarm saw a boom of logs floating down the
creek. Some of the timbermen known as river pigs were controlling it with
long poles and ropes that had been attached to the iron spikes called dogs
that had been driven into the outer logs of the boom. Those outer logs
were strung end to end and attached to each other to form a ring that
contained the rest of the logs. The river pigs were good at their job and
floated the boom gently up to the big open end of the sawmill building that
extended out over the water. This boom was not going to get away and cause
trouble.

The only thing Longarm noticed that was unusual was the level of the
creek. It seemed to have dropped, though there was still enough water in
the stream to float the boom with no trouble. There wouldn't be if the
creek went down much more. Longarm resolved to satisfy his curiosity and
ask Aurora about that, but first he wanted to make certain she was all
right and that there had been no trouble here in his absence. He brought
the roan to a stop and dismounted, looping the reins around the hitching
post in front of Aurora's cabin.

Jared Flint answered his knock on the door instead of Aurora. The
foreman said, "Hello, Marshal. Finally get enough of Kinsman's
hospitality?"

Longarm had sensed all along that Flint didn't particularly like him,
so the man's attitude came as no surprise. Also, the hatred between the
loggers and the cattlemen ran so deep and strong that the slightest
appearance of favoring one side over the other was enough to make enemies.
Longarm didn't let it worry him. He just asked, "Is Mrs. Mcentire here?"

Aurora must have already heard Flint's greeting to him, because she
appeared at the foreman's shoulder and said, "Custis! Are you all right?

Have you recovered from that wound?"

"Pretty much," Longarm said. He stepped forward, and Flint had no
choice but to move aside and let him into the cabin. He ignored the
bushy-browed glower Flint gave him and went on to Aurora. "I figured I'd
better see how things were going here."

"It's been quiet," she told him. "If it stayed this peaceful all the
time, we wouldn't have any trouble meeting the terms of that contract.
We've already made up some of the time and timber we lost. And thanks to
some of Mr. Flint's ideas, we're gonna be able to make up the rest of it."

Longarm looked at Flint quizzically, and the man said, "You might not
understand, Marshal."

"I've been around a few logging operations before," Longarm said
mildly. "This wouldn't have anything to do with the way the creek's gone
down some, would it?"

"As a matter of fact, it does," said Aurora. "We've dammed off one of
the tributaries that feeds into the creek higher up the mountain. When it
forms a big enough pond, we're going to build a log flume from it down here
to the mill. We can still float booms down the creek from the lower slopes
the way we've been doing, but when we're finished with the flume we can go
ahead and start cutting on the higher slopes too, and shoot the logs down
that way. We'll be working on two sections of the mountain at once,
instead of just one."

"That'll take more men," Longarm pointed out.

"Already hired 'em," said Flint. "They built that dam, and they've
started the upper end of the flume."

Longarm nodded. If everything went as Aurora and Flint planned, the
camp's production would indeed increase. Pretty soon, the sawmill might be
running twenty-four hours a day.

That would make the Mcentire timber operation a mighty tempting target
for somebody who wanted to take it over. Somebody like Ben Callahan, say
 ... 

Longarm kept those thoughts to himself. He knew from experience that
Aurora didn't want to believe the worst of Callahan. Nor did he say
anything about old Eli, the cook, being on Callahan's payroll. He
preferred that Callahan's spy stay in place here in Aurora's camp--although
now that Callahan knew Longarm suspected him, he might order Eli to
hightail it out of there. Either way, Longarm was going to wait and see
what happened. He believed that Aurora and her people were relatively safe
for the moment. He himself represented the biggest threat to the
mastermind, be it Callahan or somebody else. He was more likely to be the
target of whatever happened next.

"And speakin' of that flume, I'd better go see how the boys are
doing," Flint went on. "I'll let you know later, Miz Mcentire."

"All right, Mr. Flint," said Aurora. She waited until the foreman was
gone, then turned to Longarm and said eagerly, "You're spending the night
here, aren't you?"

Longarm hesitated before saying, "All my gear's at the Diamond K, and
they're expecting me back. Under the circumstances, as long as you folks
are getting along, I don't want to give anybody any excuses for starting a
ruckus."

Aurora's lips thinned. "You think that if you don't go back to the
little redhead hellcat she's liable to bring some of those cowboys up here
looking for you?"

"I reckon it might sound a little immodest," said Longarm with a grin,
"but that could happen, all right."

"Very well," Aurora said coolly. "Go on back to the Diamond K. But I
want you to know what you're going to be missing."

She stepped closer to him, and her hand went to his groin, cupping and
caressing. Startled, Longarm said, "Hold on a minute."

Her fingers tightened on him through the fabric of his trousers.
"That's just what I intend to do," she said with a smile that was
half-angel, half-devil. She stroked his stiffening manhood for a moment,
until it bulged out against the front of his denims.

Longarm expected her to just tease him a mite to let him know how put
out she was with him for not staying at the lumber camp, but instead she
began unfastening the buttons of his trousers. Her hand delved inside, and
her smooth, cool fingers found the fevered length of him. Deftly, she
extricated his shaft, and Longarm growled deep in his throat as the pole of
flesh sprang free.

Aurora used both hands to stroke him now. She looked down and licked
her lips. "There's something I've always wanted to do," she said quietly.
"Angus was too stiff-necked for it, bless his heart. He was a good man,
but not the most adventurous lover."

At the moment, Longarm didn't particularly want to hear about Aurora's
late husband. Not with the swelling length of his manhood filling both her
hands. "You just go ahead and do whatever it is you want to do," he told
her hoarsely. "I was raised to be a gentleman, and a gentleman always
accommodates a lady."

Again she licked her lips. "You may not think I'm a lady when I get
through with you," she said.

Then she dropped to her knees in front of him, opened her mouth wide,
and closed her lips around the head of his shaft.

Longarm tried not to groan too loud as she started sucking. He could
believe that she had never given any French lessons, because she went right
for the final stretch instead of pacing herself. "No offense," he said in
a husky voice, "but I reckon it'd be more fun for both of us if you'd slow
down a mite."

She took her lips away, and his shaft throbbed with the loss of the
wet heat that had been enfolding it. Aurora whispered, "You mean ... like
this?"

Her tongue darted out of her mouth, flicking tiny, butterfly-like
blows against his burning flesh. She moved all around the head,
maddeningly slowly, then used the tip of her tongue to toy with the slit at
the end of his pole. Eagerly, she lapped up the clear juices that were
seeping from the opening. When Longarm thought he couldn't stand any more
of that without going completely insane, she stopped and began raining
kisses on him, trailing them down the veined underside of his shaft and
then back along the side. Her tongue came out again and licked him in
long, slatheing swipes.

Longarm wouldn't call any woman a liar unless she proved it to him.
So he was willing to give Aurora the benefit of the doubt and believe that
right now was the first time in her life she had ever done this.

But if that was the case, she sure as hell had a natural-born talent
for it.

Once again she took him into her mouth, and as she did so, he began
stroking her dark hair. Her head bobbed up and down over his groin. His
legs, spread wide on the floor for balance, shook as tremors of passionate
sensation ran through them. He felt as if his strength might desert him at
any moment, leaving him helpless to keep from falling flat on his face, but
somehow it didn't happen. The insistent embrace of Aurora's lips
strengthened him. As he felt his climax boiling up from deep within him,
he put one hand on her shoulder and the other on the back of her head. To
steady herself, she reached around behind him and clutched his backside,
digging her fingers into it.

It was as if both of them were aware of the explosion coming and knew
they had better hold on for dear life.

Involuntarily, Longarm's hips twitched as culmination shook him.
Aurora moaned and swallowed eagerly as Longarm's pearlescent seed raced
along the length of his shaft and burst out into her mouth. Spasm after
spasm rocked him as he spurted. The moment seemed to stretch out
endlessly. He wouldn't have suspected that he had that much to give her.

And she took it avidly, every drop, squeezing the last bit from him
and swirling her tongue around his softening shaft to make sure none had
escaped her.

Longarm closed his eyes and dropped his head forward. Blood thundered
inside his head from his racing pulse. In his life, many women had done
for him what Aurora had just done.

But few if any had ever done it any better.

"That was ... mighty fine," he said when he had recovered a little of
his breath.

Aurora looked up at him and licked her lips one last time. "I did it
all right?" she asked.

Longarm took hold of her shoulders and lifted her to her feet. "More
than all right," he told her. "If you were any better at it, you'd have
likely killed me."

Aurora gave a little laugh and hugged him. "I wouldn't want that."

She reached down, tucked him away, and buttoned his trousers again. "I
suppose if you really have to go back to the Diamond K now, at least you'll
remember me."

"I'm not likely to ever forget," Longarm said sincerely.

"But next time--and there will be a next time--it's going to be my
turn. Dear Angus was a bit squeamish about other things too."

Longarm could just imagine--and that was his problem. In his mind's
eye, he saw Aurora spread out there on that bed, splendidly nude, creamy
thighs flung wide open, the patch of dark hair and the inviting folds of
pink flesh that it framed calling out to him with an urgency that would not
be denied. That vision was probably exactly what she had meant for him to
see, he thought.

"Next time," agreed Longarm. "You've got my word on that."

"And I'll hold you to it," said Aurora. She kissed him, then said,
"All right. Go."

It was only as Longarm was riding away from the camp that he recalled
the conversation he'd had with Molly Kinsman earlier in the day, before
leaving the Diamond K. He had made a promise to her too, and she had
responded in exactly the same words as Aurora. I'll hold you to it.
Longarm shook his head in chagrin.

There were times when being a man of his word could be downright
tiring--and he suspected that where Aurora and Molly were concerned, this
was going to be one of those times.

Chapter 12

As Longarm more than halfway expected, Molly Kinsman was waiting for
him when he got back to the Diamond K. She came down rapidly from the
porch, where she had been standing with her hands on the railing, and
hurried out to meet him as he rode up. "Did you have any trouble?" she
asked anxiously.

Longarm shook his head. "Nary a bit." For the time being, he wasn't
going to mention his suspicions of Ben Callahan, or the confrontation he'd
had today with the man, to anyone on the Diamond K. There would be time
enough for that when he had proof one way or the other.

"Did you see her?"

Wisely, Longarm refrained from grinning. But it was difficult,
because the memory of what Aurora had done to him was still incredibly
vivid in his mind. Instead, as he dismounted he said noncommittally, "As a
matter of fact, I did. I talked to Mrs. Mcentire and her foreman and found
out they haven't had any trouble since the truce they called with your
father. Heard about their plans for expanding their operation too."

Molly rolled her eyes in disgust. "That's all we need, more trees cut
down on the mountains. Do you know what that will do to the runoff and the
soil erosion around here?"

"Well, from what I've seen so far, Mrs. Mcentire and her men are being
careful not to clear-cut too much land," said Longarm as he led the roan
into the barn. "A lot of those logging companies don't give a damn what
kind of shape they leave the country in behind them, but that ain't true of
Mrs. Mcentire and her men. I don't think you have to worry overmuch about
what they're doing ruining your range."

"I hope you're right," said Molly, "but I'll believe it when I see
it."

Longarm unsaddled the roan, rubbed it down, and turned it into its
usual stall. Molly pitched in to help him, forking up some hay and
carrying it over to the stall. They were alone in the barn at the moment,
but it was late afternoon and Longarm knew that wouldn't last. Soon, the
hands would be drifting in from their day's work, and they would want to
put their horses up. Longarm hoped Molly realized that.

If she did, she didn't care. She stepped up to him and put her hands
on his arms. "Custis," she said softly, "you made a promise to me."

"I know I did, Molly," said Longarm, his voice solemn, "but surely you
don't expect me to honor it right here and now! Hell, girl, anybody could
walk in on us--that young firebrand Seth, or Joe Traywick, or your daddy.
Any one of 'em would be liable to up and shoot me if they caught us."

Molly turned away, pouting. "You just don't want me because you
probably spent the afternoon romping with her."

She could pack an awful lot of scorn into one little word, thought
Longarm. But he wasn't just about to tell her how close to the truth she
was. Besides, it hadn't been all afternoon.

He put a hand on Molly's shoulder. I'm not trying to put you off," he
said gently. "It's like I told you-"

"I know, the right time and place." Her voice was dull now. It
became a little more spirited as she went on. "If you're not careful,
Custis, I might just decide that making love with you isn't such a good
idea after all."

"That'd be up to you," he said honestly.

Molly gave him a long, searching look, then turned and walked out of
the barn. Longarm waited a minute or two, giving her time to get back into
the house, then followed. He turned toward the bunkhouse rather than the
main house, though. He wanted to talk to Joe Traywick.

Traywick was out on the range somewhere, which came as no surprise to
Longarm. He sat down on a stool in front of the bunkhouse and picked up a
piece of branch from the ground. Drawing his clasp knife, he opened the
blade and began shaving thin curls of wood off the broken branch. To the
casual observer, it would look like he was simply whittling to pass the
time. In reality, though, Longarm was thinking, replaying and turning over
in his mind everything that had happened since his arrival in the Cascades
a week or so earlier.

Those rustled steers still bothered him. It had taken a cowboy to
pull that off. But the accidents that had struck Aurora's logging
operation had to have been carried out by a timber man. It was unlikely
any of the Diamond K hands would have known how to rig a high topper's
pulley so that it would plunge the timber cutter to his death. Nor would
they be overly familiar with the booms of logs floating down the creek and
know how to send one of them careening out of control.

Could there be two bunches of badmen causing trouble around here?

Longarm considered that possibility for several moments, then
tentatively discarded it. Everything pointed to the fact that someone was
trying to play the Mcentire Timber Company and the Diamond K against each
other. Longarm's instincts told him that one person was behind the
trouble, one schemer who was perfectly capable of hiring both renegade
loggers and drifting hard-cases with cowboy skills to carry out his plans.

The knife blade practically flew over the wood as Longarm whittled and
thought, thought and whittled.

He was on to something, he sensed. If Callahan was the culprit, he
could recruit some of his own men to attack the Mcentire operation, but he
would still need some place for the owlhoots he had hired to hole up
whenever they weren't creating more deadly mischief on the Diamond K. And
even if Callahan wasn't involved, whoever the boss was would still have to
have a hiding place for his men. Some place handy, where he could get word
to them fairly quickly.

Longarm turned his head, looking up at the peaks of the Cascades
rising above this lower valley. Somewhere up there was the place where the
troublemakers lurked, awaiting the word from their mysterious boss so that
they could ride out and bring death and destruction once more to those in
their path. Longarm's fingers clenched tightly on the clasp knife.

There was a little matter of a couple of bushwhackings too. The
attempts on his life had come before anyone on the Diamond K knew who he
really was. That was important, and he realized now that he had tried to
grasp that fact several days earlier, as he was going to sleep in the spare
bedroom of the ranch house following the meal Wing had brought to him. No
one on the ranch--not Kinsman or Traywick, or Seth Thomas, or any of the
other hands, no matter how young and hot-headed--had had any reason to try
to have him killed so early on in the game. Seth held a grudge against
him, sure ... but the young cowboy would have tried to settle it himself,
not hired a back-shooter. Longarm was sure of that.

Which left Callahan as the only logical suspect. Callahan had a spy
in the Mcentire camp; that was beyond dispute. Eli could have told
Callahan that a federal lawman was poking around, and Callahan could have
issued orders to have that potentially thorny problem nipped in the
bud--with a bullet.

But despite everything that pointed to Callahan, there was still one
problem: The man had an explanation for his actions, and one that could
even be considered halfway logical if you made allowances for how love
could addle a man's mind.

Longarm kept coming back to the fact that the gang, no matter who
their boss was, had to have a place to hide out. Those stolen cows had
gone somewhere. Why not up into the mountains, to some isolated high
valley? Some place above the Diamond K range, maybe along the border
between the timber leases of Aurora Mcentire and Ben Callahan. It was
possible. Longarm knew he was going to have to find out for sure.

He was deep in those thoughts when a familiar voice asked, "What you
carvin' there, Custis?"

Longarm looked up and saw Traywick standing there in front of him.
Then he glanced at the branch in his hand, which he had whittled down to
practically nothing while he was thinking. There was only a thin length of
pale white pine left. Longarm grinned and said, "Reckon it's an albino
snake."

Traywick hooked another stool with his foot, drew it over, and sat
down wearily. "You ought to see the things one of our hands named Hank can
whittle. Boy carved out a little bitty Studebaker wagon once. Wheels
turned and the wagon tongue went up and down, just like a real one." The
ranch foreman shook his head. "Boy's got a gift."

"I've been thinking, Joe," said Longarm, changing the subject.
"You've been in this part of the country for a long time, haven't you?"

Traywick nodded. "Man and boy, nigh onto thirty years. I've ridden
over most of it."

"Are there any places high up in the mountains, maybe just under the
timberline, where a group of men could hole up, maybe even keep a small
herd of cattle?"

"You're thinkin' of that stock we had rustled back when this whole
mess started, ain't you?"

"Those cows had to go somewhere," Longarm pointed out. "And those
cowboys who raided the lumber camp have to have some place to hide too."

Slowly, Traywick nodded. "I suppose there are some places that fit
the bill. We never really went lookin' because-" He abruptly fell silent.

"Because you just figured that Aurora Mcentire and her men were to
blame," Longarm finished.

"Made sense at the time," Traywick muttered with a shrug.

"Think I'll take a ride up into the mountains tomorrow," Longarm said.
"See what I can find if I look around a mite."

Traywick glanced over at him. "Want some company?"

"I'd like that, Joe," said Longarm. "Reckon I'd like that just fine."

As it turned out, though, Joe Traywick didn't ride with him. Longarm
planned to start early, before dawn, and as he walked toward the barn in
the grayness of approaching day, he heard yelling from inside the big
building. A moment later, Traywick came hopping through the open double
doors. Longarm hurried over to him to steady him.

"What happened?"

"Son-of-a-bitchin' horse stomped the hell out of my foot," Traywick
groaned. "My boot's full of blood, Custis."

"Come on, let's get you in the house."

Longarm helped Traywick to the back door of the ranch house, knowing
that Wing was already up and about in the kitchen. Wing took one look at
the foreman's gray, haggard face and exclaimed in Chinese. "Don't start
talkin' that gibberish," said Traywick as Longarm helped him sit down at
the table, "nor that pidgin English neither. I know you can talk as good
as anybody on the ranch, Wing, maybe better."

Wing gave a mock sigh. "Can a man have no secrets around here?" he
asked rhetorically. "What in Tophet happened to you, Joe?"

"Horse stomped my foot."

"Let's get that boot off and take a look at it."

As Traywick had said, his boot was full of blood from the ugly gash
that had been opened across the top of his foot. Wing examined the wound
after carefully working the boot off and cutting away Traywick's
blood-soaked sock. "You're going to be laid up for a good spell, Joe,"
said the cook solemnly. "I can sew up that cut, or we can take you to the
doc in Timber City if you want. You've likely got some broken bones in
there too."

Traywick shook his head. "You take care of it, Wing," he said. "I
trust you more'n I do any sawbones from town. You've been patchin' us up
for a long time around here."

"All too true," agreed Wing. "I'll need some whiskey."

"You and me both," grunted Traywick. A new voice came from the
doorway of the kitchen. "My God, Joe, what happened?" Molly Kinsman
rushed into the room, wrapped in a long blue robe. Her hair hung loose
around her shoulders, not yet brushed after her night's sleep, and Longarm
thought she looked mighty pretty.

He had other things on his mind besides appreciating how lovely Molly
was, however. As Traywick launched into yet another explanation of what
had happened to him, and Wing and Molly fussed over him, Longarm eased out
the back door of the house. He still had work to do.

During their conversation of the day before, Traywick had told him
quite a bit about the lay of the land higher up in the mountains. Though
he would have felt better about things with Traywick guiding him--and
backing him up in case of trouble--Longarm felt confident he could find the
places Traywick had told him about. He was sure he could get one of the
other hands to ride with him, but there were none of them he trusted as
much as he did Traywick. Besides, it was his job to run those badmen to
ground, and he didn't really have the right to expose anyone else to the
danger that might be awaiting him.

No, he would go it alone, he decided. Wouldn't be the first time he
had played a lone hand, and it probably wouldn't be the last.

In the dim light of the lantern he lit in the barn, he saddled the
roan and then led the horse outside. The sky was still just turning gray
to the east. The rest of the hands would be rising soon, and Longarm
wanted to be gone before then. He had plenty of riding to do today. He
swung up into the saddle and heeled the roan into a trot.

The rising sun found Longarm high on the mountain that loomed directly
above the Diamond K. He was cutting through part of the Mcentire timber
lease, but it was a section the loggers had not yet reached. He was far
enough away from Aurora's current operation that he couldn't even hear the
axes of the men as they began their day's work. In fact, he might as well
have been alone on the mountain, save for the birds that flitted from pine
to pine and the small animals that rustled away through the underbrush at
his approach. A chattering noise made him look up, and he grinned at a
squirrel that sat perched on a branch about twenty feet over his head,
scolding him. Suddenly, something bounced off Longarm's hat and rolled to
a stop on the forest floor.

"Better watch it, old son," he told the squirrel. "You keep throwing
pine cones at me, we're liable to have us some squirrel stew for supper
tonight."

With a defiant flip of its bushy red tail, the squirrel bounded off
the branch, leaping easily to another one and then vanishing among the pine
boughs.

Longarm chuckled and rode on. All of his problems should be so easily
solved, he thought.

As the sun rose higher, the vegetation began to thin somewhat. In
places, Longarm could look up and see the bare rock of the mountain peaks.
Nothing grew up there except some lichen and moss. It was always cold at
those elevations too, no matter what the weather was down below. In fact,
there was already a chilly breeze playing around him, but Longarm wasn't
bothered enough by it to reach into his saddlebags and pull out the jacket
he had rolled up and put there. He just tugged his Stetson down a little
tighter on his head and rode on.

Around mid-morning, he found himself at the lower end of a deep coulee
that ran almost straight up the side of the mountain. The slope was fairly
steep, but the roan was surefooted. Longarm felt confident that the horse
could make it. The floor of the coulee was littered with small boulders
and dead brush that had washed down during heavy rains. The sky was clear
today, with only a few white puffballs of cloud floating here and there,
and no threat of a storm. Still, Longarm felt a prickle of nervousness as
he started up the coulee. He had seen more than one flash flood in his
time, and he knew how quickly gullies like this could turn into raging
torrents.

He recognized the coulee from his conversation with Joe Traywick the
day before, though, and knew from what the ranch foreman had told him that
this was the quickest and best way to the upper reaches of the mountain.
Longarm kept the roan moving, letting the mount set its own pace and pick
its own way.

As he rode, Longarm kept an eye on the rocky ground. After a few
minutes, he reined the horse to a stop and swung down from the saddle to
kneel beside a small, silvery mark on the stone floor of the coulee. Only
a keen observer would have ever noticed it. Longarm touched the mark
lightly with his finger.

A horseshoe had scraped the rock here, Longarm knew. He looked a
little farther on, and saw a small stone that appeared to have been
overturned recently. Riders moving through this coulee, especially if they
were careful, would leave few if any tracks.

But even the most careful riders could overlook tiny signs of their
presence like these. It would take a sharp-eyed tracker to spot them  ... 
but Longarm had been taught to read sign by some of the best in the world:
Apaches, Arapahos, Crows. By the time he mounted again and rode another
half mile or so, he was certain that a good-sized group of horsemen had
ridden through this coulee several times recently.

His pulse quickened. He was on the trail of the hired killers who
worked for the man behind all the trouble down below. He was sure of it.

As he neared the upper end of the coulee, it began to twist and turn.
Longarm proceeded carefully around the bends in the natural passage. It
was conceivable that the hired guns would have posted guards, though he
figured they probably felt pretty safe way up here on the mountain like
this. Still, he didn't want to ride into another ambush.

Suddenly, the small sound of metal clinking on stone made him rein in
and stiffen in the saddle. The noise had come from behind him, rather than
in front of him, as he might have expected. He listened intently, and
heard a few more little sounds that told him he was definitely being
followed.

Grim-faced, Longarm slid down from the roan's saddle and led the horse
around another bend in the coulee. There was a good-sized boulder here
that jutted out from the side of the gully. Longarm hid the roan behind
it, then began climbing the rough, sloping face of the big rock. When he
got to the top, he would be able to look down on the primitive trail and
see whoever was following him.

The noises came closer, and he was able to identify them positively
now as hoofbeats. The mysterious tracker seemed to be trying to be quiet,
but he wasn't very good at it. Longarm waited patiently.

The rider came into view, wearing a sheepskin jacket and a
flat-crowned hat. Longarm caught only a glimpse of him before he started
around the big rock on which Longarm crouched. The lawman twisted around
and drew his Colt. If the rider kept moving--and there was no reason to
think that he wouldn't--in a moment or two he would emerge so that once
more Longarm could cover him.

That was what happened. Longarm straightened as the rider rounded the
upthrust rock. The sound of a shot would echo far up the mountain, so
Longarm didn't want to use the Colt unless he had to. Instead, he slid
down the rock face a short distance and used his momentum to launch himself
into space.

His dive carried him across the open space between himself and his
mysterious follower. Longarm crashed heavily into the man, knocking him
out of the saddle. They both fell, and Longarm grunted in pain as the
impact of landing on the hard, rocky ground sent flashes of pain through
his injured back. He didn't feel any wetness against his skin, however, so
he thought the gash across his back hadn't opened up and started bleeding
again.

The fellow he had jumped seemed to be stunned. Longarm scrambled up,
still holding the gun, and used his free hand to grab the man's shoulder.
As he rolled the follower over, the man's hat came loose.

And long red spilled out from under it.

Longarm bit back a curse. He was looking down into the face of Molly
Kinsman.

He should have expected that, Longarm told himself as he stood up.
Molly moved her head back and forth a little and moaned. She was stunned,
all right, but she was coming around. Her eyelids fluttered open, and she
looked up at Longarm in confusion.

"What ... what happened?"

He sighed and reached down to give her a hand as she struggled to sit
up. "Reckon I could ask you the same thing," he said. "What are you doing
here, Molly? How'd you come to be following me?"

Slowly, she got to her feet. "Joe told me what you were doing today,"
she said. "He even told me where I was likely to find you. I took a few
shortcuts."

"Blast it! I told Traywick I didn't want him blabbing to anybody
about what we had planned."

Molly smiled. "Oh. Well, that was a waste of time, Custis. Joe's
never been able to keep a secret from me."

Longarm grunted. He could just imagine. Molly probably had Traywick
wrapped completely around her little finger. Likely she hadn't even had to
try very hard to worm Longarm's destination out of him.

"Joe said you shouldn't have started up here by yourself," Molly went
on, "and since I've ridden over every foot of this mountain a dozen times
since I was a little girl, I thought I'd come lend a hand." She gestured
toward the upper end of the coulee. "There's a little valley up there,
just like you asked Joe about. Men could stay there, and they could hide
stolen cattle there too. And that's not the only place. I know several
more spots that might make good hideouts for somebody."

Longarm shook his head. "I want you to get right back on that horse
and head back down to the ranch," he told her sternly. "Hunting outlaws
and hired guns is no place for you."

"That's not fair," she protested, once again sounding like a little
kid. "I can help you, Custis."

"Don't want your help," he said flatly. He might have to offend her
in order to get her to leave, but it would be worth it.

Molly's face hardened as she looked at him. "You don't seem to want
any of the things I've offered you," she said slowly. "I practically throw
myself at you over and over again, and you keep shooing me away like I'm
nothing more than a bratty little pest!"

Longarm shrugged eloquently.

"Oh! So that is what you think of me! Well, I'll show you, Mr. High
and Mighty U.S. Marshal!" Her hands went to the collar of her flannel
shirt under the open sheepskin jacket, and a quick, hard tug popped several
of the buttons as she ripped the shirt open. "There! Does that look like
I'm a kid?"

She had bared her breasts, small, firm, pear-shaped cones that were
lightly dusted with freckles. They were tipped with pale brown nipples
that puckered from the chilly air, or arousal, or both. Longarm had to
admit that as breasts went, they were a mighty pert and appealing pair.

Still, he didn't think it would be wise--not to mention
comfortable--to lay her down on the floor of this rocky coulee and take his
pleasure with her. "Molly," he began, "I know I made you a promise-"

"Yes, you did," she broke in, "and it's time you kept it! You make
love to me, here and now, and ... and, well, I'll go back to the ranch like
you want me to."

"And if I don't?" Longarm asked ominously.

Calmly, Molly replied, "Then I start screaming. And sound carries a
long way up here, Custis. If the men you're looking for are really up
there higher on the mountain, they're liable to hear me, and then you won't
be able to sneak up on them."

Longarm stared at her for a long moment, his eyes narrowing in anger
at being blackmailed like this. Then, abruptly, a chuckle came from him.
He couldn't help but admire somebody with as much gall as Molly Kinsman
seemed to possess.

As if sensing that he was weakening, she added quickly, "Anyway, up
here you don't have to worry about anybody seeing us. No one will ever
have to know."

"All right," said Longarm. "But not right here. Too damn many rocks.
Is there any grass in that little valley you mentioned?"

Molly nodded eagerly. "Sure. Grass and trees. It's one of the
nicest spots you'll ever see, Custis."

"Let's go take a look then. If there aren't any outlaws hiding there,
I reckon we can see about getting what we both want. Just close up that
shirt until then, all right?"

Grinning, Molly pulled the ripped shirt together over her breasts. As
they mounted up, however, Longarm noticed that it didn't cover her very
well anymore. One or both of those hard nipples kept peeking out impishly.

It took another ten minutes to reach the upper end of the coulee.
Longarm made Molly stay back while he catfooted ahead to check it out,
Winchester held ready in his hands. The little valley ran crossways at the
top of the gully, like the bar of a letter T. It was perhaps a hundred
yards long and fifty wide, and Longarm could see the whole place as he
edged his head above the lip of the coulee. As Molly had said, there were
several clumps of pines and a thin coating of grass on the ground. Longarm
saw no signs of hired guns or stolen cattle or anybody else, for that
matter. He and Molly had the place to themselves.

"Come on up," he told her as he turned and gestured for her to
proceed. "If the hideout's up here, it must be in one of those other spots
you mentioned."

"I'll show them to you," she offered as she came up even with him.

"You'll tell me how to find them," said Longarm, his tone brooking no
argument. "You agreed to go back down the mountain, remember?"

"Only when we're through making love," she reminded him--as if he was
likely to forget.

He let her pick the place. She chose a little hollow beneath the
spreading branches of a cluster of pines. At this elevation, the trees
were somewhat shorter and not as thick through their trunks. The true
giants prized so highly by the loggers grew lower down on the slopes. But
these were good-sized trees, and they made a shady bower around Longarm and
Molly.

When they had tied their horses so that the mounts could graze on the
thin grass, she stood before him and gave a toss of her head that made her
long red hair swirl around her shoulders. "Undress me," she said.

"You're liable to get a mite cold," Longarm warned her.

Molly shook her head. "No. I'm already hot."

He knew what she meant. That torn shirt had spread open again, and
his eyes were drawn back to her breasts. He stepped closer to her and
reached up to push the jacket from her shoulders. It fell on the carpet of
pine needles behind her. Slowly, Longarm unfastened the remaining buttons
on the shirt and then drew it off of her as well, leaving her nude from the
waist up. The little freckles that were dusted so appealingly across her
breasts were scattered over the rest of her torso as well. Longarm lifted
his hands and cupped her breasts, moving the firm mounds of creamy flesh in
small circles. Molly closed her eyes as a look of sheer pleasure washed
over her face.

Longarm squeezed her left breast and lowered his head to bring the
nipple to his lips. He closed them gently over the brown nubbin and sucked
lightly. Molly took his hat off so that she could let her fingers play
through his thick dark hair as he suckled her. Little exhalations of joy
came from her lips as gradually Longarm took more and more of her breast
into his mouth. Finally he had almost all of it drawn in, and his tongue
circled the nipple in wet swipes.

While he was doing that, he reached down with his other hand and
unfastened her belt, then started working on the buttons of her denim
trousers. They opened under his deft touch, and a moment later the pants
slid down around her calves. She was wearing the bottom half of a pair of
long underwear, and Longarm pushed that down as well. As he did, he
abandoned her breast so that he could kneel in front of her as he lowered
the barrier between himself and her womanhood. The triangle of fine-spun
red hair came into view. It was long and silky and already sparkled in
places with the dew of her rising passion. Molly gasped in surprise as
Longarm buried his face in it.

She smelled clean and eager. As Longarm nuzzled her, he reached
around and caught hold of her buttocks, squeezing and kneading them. Molly
gasped again as he spread her cheeks apart and ran a fingertip lightly down
the cleft between them. "Oh, Custis," she moaned softly. Her thighs
spread instinctively.

Longarm rose in front of her, still cupping her bottom so that he
lifted her into the air. She seemed light, almost like nothing in his
arms. He bent and placed her carefully on the ground, laying her on the
jacket and the shirt he had dropped behind her. He grasped her boots and
pulled them off, and with a couple of kicks of her legs, she had shed the
trousers and long underwear as well. She was naked before him now, her
breath coming in sharp little pants from her parted lips.

Longarm liked to be undressed by a woman who took her time and knew
what to do along the way, but both of them sensed that this wasn't the
right time for such sensual languor. Their need was too urgent, too
sharp-edged. He skinned out of his clothes as quickly as he could. Molly
let out an exclamation of surprise and joy as he pushed down his trousers
and his shaft bobbed into view. It was iron-hard and throbbing as Longarm
dropped to his knees in front of her. He put his hands on her thighs and
spread them. Unresisting, she opened herself to him. He moved over her,
and she reached down to grasp him and guide him home.

With a thrust of his hips, Longarm entered her, sliding his shaft into
the slick grip of her womanhood. She was incredibly tight, and he paused
as she let out a small noise that could have been either pleasure or pain.

In a husky whisper, he asked, "Are you sure you've done this before,
Molly?"

She clutched at his back, her fingernails digging into his flesh.
"Oh, God, Custis, don't stop! Make love to me! Please make love to me!"

She reached up and drew his head down to her, kissing him with all the
passion and urgency in her body.

There was no turning back. Longarm drove ahead, feeling the momentary
obstruction that barred his path give way under the onslaught of his
burgeoning manhood. He was ready for Molly's reaction and clapped a hand
over her mouth before her scream could rip out. She had lied to him about
her past, and for the first time in he couldn't remember how long, he had
just deflowered a virgin. Luckily, he hadn't completely forgotten what to
do in a case like this. He held himself still, his shaft buried in her to
the hilt, as the pain faded and the pleasure she was feeling began to grow.
Only when her frenzied breathing had slowed a little did he take his hand
away from her mouth.

"Are you all right?" he asked.

Wordlessly, she nodded. The way she was beginning to clutch at him
again and move her hips back and forth was really all the answer he needed.
He began sliding in and out of her in a steady rhythm that was as timeless
as the stars.

Faster and faster, Longarm thrust into her. His breath rasped in his
throat. He was glad they weren't any higher on the mountain. If the air
had been any thinner, they might have both passed out. He felt his climax
building, and Molly seemed to be nearing her culmination too. She gasped
into his mouth as he kissed her, her breath warm and sweet.

Longarm thrust one last time, his great goad prodding deep into her
feminine recesses, and stayed there as his climax shook him. Shuddering,
he spurted into her, time after time. His arms pressed her tightly against
him as his fluids gushed into her, filling her chamber and spilling out
around his buried manhood. He worried again that she would scream, but
instead she let her breath out in a long, quavery sigh. Every muscle in
her body seemed to go limp as he gave one final spasm.

After a moment, Longarm rolled off her and flopped onto his back
beside her. Both of them were still breathing hard. Molly rolled toward
him, snuggling against his side and throwing a leg over his thighs. She
pillowed her head on his shoulder.

Longarm lifted his head and looked down into her face. "You should
have told me the truth," he said.

"Would you have done it if I had?"

"Well ... I reckon I might not have."

She closed her eyes and rested her head against him again. "Don't
worry, Custis. I'm not expecting anything from you other than what you
just gave me. It was the most wonderful moment of my life, and it's plenty
 ...  for now."

"Meaning  ... ?"

"Meaning I know you have to move on when your job here is finished. I
wouldn't ask you to stay, wouldn't expect you to. But now, when I settle
down and get married, I'll know that whatever happens in the future, I've
experienced the best lovemaking a woman could ever want."

Longarm didn't say anything. He figured she would find out soon
enough that she was wrong. When she found the right man and decided to
spend the rest of her life with him, it would be even better.

For now, he was content to lie there and enjoy her closeness. His
fingertips played along her back and stroked the curve of her hip, then
strayed back to the cleft of her bottom and toyed with it for a moment,
long enough so that she was starting to breath harder again and rub her
mound against his leg.

That was when they both heard the sound of a rider making his slow but
steady way up the coulee toward the little high country valley.

Chapter 13

"Somebody's coming," said Longarm as he sat up sharply. Beside him,
Molly gasped and rolled away from him, snatching up her clothes as she came
to her feet.

Longarm was up too, pulling his pants on and stomping into his boots.
He shrugged into his shirt but didn't bother buttoning it. Picking up his
gunbelt and hat, he said to Molly, "Let's get behind these trees. Whoever
that is, I'd just as soon he didn't see us."

Molly's face was red with embarrassment. "What if it's Joe?" she
said. "Or my father?" Those words came out of her almost in a wail.

Under other circumstances, Longarm might have chuckled. It was nice
to see that she wasn't quite the brazen hussy she liked to pretend she was,
even after what they had just done. Now, though, he just caught hold of
her arm and said, "Come on."

The trees here didn't grow densely enough to provide a hiding place,
Longarm knew. He and Molly caught up the reins of their mounts and started
toward the far end of the valley, moving quietly so that whoever was riding
up the coulee wouldn't hear them. There was a jumble of large boulders
there, and as Longarm and Molly led the horses among the rocks, they
quickly lost sight of where they had been only a moment earlier. That was
good, because it meant that whoever was coming wouldn't be able to see them
either when he reached the valley.

Longarm handed his horse's reins to Molly and said, "Stay here." He
turned back toward the valley.

"What are you going to do?" she asked.

"I want to find a place where I can get a look at that fella, whoever
he is. Maybe he was trailing us, maybe he wasn't. If he wasn't, then he
has to have some other reason for riding up into this high country."

Molly's eyes widened. "Maybe he's one of the men you're looking for."

"Could be," said Longarm. "That's what I'm going to find out." He
paused and added, "I mean it, Molly. Stay here. You go to blundering
around, you could get us both killed."

She nodded, her face pale. "I understand, Custis."

He hoped she truly did. Leaving her there, he made his way back
through the nest of boulders and found a tiny crack between a couple of
them where he could watch the valley without being observed in turn.

The sound of hoofbeats was louder now. Whoever the rider was, he
wasn't taking any pains to be quiet. Almost as if he belonged here and
didn't expect anyone to challenge him.

Longarm saw the horse's head first as the newcomer crossed the valley.
Then the rider himself came into view. He wore lace-up work boots, thick
canvas trousers, and a woolen shirt under a corduroy jacket. A
flat-crowned black hat was on his head. Longarm got a good look at his
hawk-like profile and bushy gray eyebrows.

Jared Flint.

"Son of a bitch!" Longarm breathed, hissing the words almost inaudibly
through his teeth. He felt like kicking himself. As the foreman of
Aurora's logging operation, Flint was in a perfect position to cause
trouble for her. Longarm knew he should have seen that before now. He
might have, he realized, had he not been distracted first by the hostility
between the loggers and the cowboys of the Diamond K, then by Ben
Callahan's words and actions, which couldn't have been any more suspicious
if Callahan had set out to make Longarm think he was behind the trouble.

With a grimace, Longarm reined in his wildly galloping thoughts.
Maybe he was jumping to conclusions yet again, he reminded himself. Flint
might have some legitimate reason for being up here. Maybe he was scouting
out the timber, seeing if it would be worthwhile for the Mcentire Timber
Company to extend their logging all the way to these upper slopes.

But that wasn't very likely, thought Longarm. An experienced man like
Flint would know that this close to the timberline, it would be more
trouble than the trees were worth to get them down to the sawmill. Longarm
tried to think of some other reason for Flint to be here, but he couldn't
come up with one.

Unless Flint was meeting with the killers he had hired to prod the
loggers and the cattlemen into open warfare that would ultimately ruin both
sides. Longarm didn't know what motive Flint might have for doing that,
but it was looking more and more likely that that was exactly what had
happened.

Longarm gave a little shake of his head. Flint had moved on out of
Longarm's view by now. The lawman carefully edged around the boulder so
that he could peer after the rider. Flint had crossed the valley and was
climbing still higher now, taking a trail so faint that Longarm could
barely see it. Longarm turned and hurried back to where he had left Molly
and the horses.

"Who was it?" she asked anxiously when he reached her hiding place
among the boulders.

"Nobody you know," Longarm told her. "A fella named Jared Flint.
He's the foreman of the Mcentire logging operation."

She looked confused. "What would someone like that be doing up here?

There's not enough trees this high up to make it worthwhile for the loggers
to cut them down."

Not only beautiful but smart too, thought Longarm. Molly was reaching
the same conclusion he had, following the same line of logic. He saw
awareness dawn in her eyes as she looked at him.

"Custis, he could be the one behind all the trouble!" she exclaimed.

Longarm nodded. "Yep. That's why I'm going to follow him. If those
hired guns are hiding up here, Flint must be on his way to meet with them,
maybe give them a new job."

"What are you going to do?"

"Follow him, try to find out just what he's up to."

Molly reached for her horse's reins. "I'm ready. Let's go."

Longarm caught hold of her arm and stopped her. "Not hardly," he
said. "You're going back down the mountain--now."

"No, I'm not," Molly said defiantly. "I'm going to help you."

"That's what I meant. Go back to the ranch and tell your pa and Joe
Traywick what's going on up here. Tell 'em to send some of the Diamond K
hands up that coulee, and have 'em be ready for trouble. I'm liable to
need reinforcements, Molly."

She looked doubtful. "I don't know  ..."

"It's the best thing you can do for me," he told her honestly.

"Well ... all right." Her agreement was reluctant, but Longarm hoped
she would go through with it.

"I just wouldn't mention anything else that happened up here," he
added, pulling the sheepskin jacket closed over her torn shirt and
buttoning it. He was aware of the soft pressure of her breasts against the
cloth, but tried not to think about what had gone on earlier. He didn't
need that sort of distraction right now.

"Don't worry," she said. "That was just between the two of us." She
came up on her toes and kissed him again, hard. "And I'll never forget it.
Custis. Never."

"Neither will I," he told her, knowing that was what she wanted to
hear. Knowing too that there was a grain of truth in what he said. The
memory might fade, but it would always be there, deep inside him. He
turned her around and patted her on the rump. "Now scoot."

She mounted up and walked her horse out of the boulders. Longarm
followed. Both of them moved carefully and quietly. The grass in the tiny
valley helped muffle the steps of the horses. When they reached the upper
end of the coulee, Molly paused and turned to give Longarm a brave smile.
He smiled and nodded, then waved her into motion once more. She started
down the coulee.

He turned and rode across the valley to the spot where the upper trail
began, the trail that Jared Flint had taken. It was little more than a
goat path. Longarm knew he was going to have to be very careful. The
vegetation up here was sparse, so there was little cover. If Flint looked
back at the wrong time, he was liable to spot Longarm following him.

That was a chance he was going to have to take, Longarm told himself.
Fortunately, the trail had a lot of twists and bends in it as it weaved up
toward the peak, and there were more of those good-sized boulders scattered
about, providing a few hiding places if necessary. His nerves taut with
anticipation, Longarm began climbing once more.

Once again, he was thankful for the good fortune that had led him to
rent such a trustworthy mount from the livery stable in Timber City. The
roan never faltered as it made its way up the steep slope. It placed each
hoof carefully, so that no stones rolled underneath its feet. Such a slip
could have led to a bad fall; at best, the clatter of rocks bouncing down
the mountain might alert Flint that someone was following him. But with
the help of the roan, Longarm was able to proceed steadily up the slope.
Every so often, he caught a glimpse of Flint several hundred yards above
him. When that happened, he slowed down a little, dropping back so that
Flint couldn't see him should the timber company foreman happen to glance
behind him.

The two men continued up the mountain, and Longarm had to wonder just
how high Flint intended to go. Those stolen cattle couldn't have been
driven this far up the peak, he decided. They had been disposed of in some
other fashion, maybe taken through a pass to the other side of the
Cascades. Either that, or they had been driven in the opposite direction,
into the ranchlands of the broad Willamette Valley. Getting rid of them
there might have attracted more notice and raised more questions, but it
wasn't inconceivable.

Maybe his whole theory was wrong, thought Longarm. Maybe there wasn't
a hideout up here after all.

That was when he caught sight of a tendril of almost colorless smoke
curling into the sky from somewhere several hundred yards above him. From
the lower slopes of the mountain, the smoke would have been practically
invisible.

Longarm grinned. Somebody had a campfire burning up here, and he
figured that camp was Jared Flint's destination.

Longarm dismounted. Despite the roan's surefootedness, he would have
to go the rest of the way on foot. Couldn't risk letting whoever was up
there know that Flint had been followed. The wind had gotten stronger and
chillier the higher Longarm climbed, so before he left the horse he took
his jacket from the saddlebags and put it on.

"Sorry there's no graze for you here, old son," he said quietly as he
patted the horse on the neck. "We'll be back down in grass country after a
while."

He left the roan tied to a scrubby pine and started up the trail once
more. His hand hovered near the butt of his Colt as he climbed. His heart
was slugging heavily in his chest from the elevation, the exertion, and
maybe a little bit from anticipation. He didn't know for sure what he was
going to find, but he sensed he was drawing near the end of this case--one
way or the other.

This high up the mountain, he thought it unlikely there would be any
guards posted, but he kept his eyes and ears wide open just in case. He
hadn't seen any sign of Flint for several minutes now.

Suddenly, a bench opened up in front of him. This shelf of fairly
level land was several hundred yards long and half that deep. Longarm
dropped into a crouch behind a boulder that was perched next to the rim.
From there, he could see that the bench was much like the valley down below
where he and Molly had made love, only somewhat larger. The ground had a
thin cover of grass on it, and a few trees were clustered around what was
evidently a spring of some sort. A little creek meandered off to the right
end of the bench, where it spilled over the side in a waterfall. Longarm
was willing to bet that water was mighty clear and mighty cold. It made
him thirsty just thinking about it.

But his attention was focused much more on the trio of ramshackle
cabins built around the spring. Old prospectors' shacks, more than likely,
he thought, left over from the days when folks had hoped to find gold up
here. Somebody had repaired the cabins and built a pole corral, in which a
couple of dozen horses grazed.

The horse Jared Flint had been riding was tied up in front of one of
the cabins. There was no other sign of the timber company foreman.

Flint had to be inside the cabin, thought Longarm, no doubt conferring
with the men who were hiding out here. The men he had hired to raid the
lumber camp, to rustle cattle from the Diamond K ... and who knows what
other deadly errands he had planned for them to carry out?

He had to get closer, Longarm knew. Had to find out just what the
next step in Flint's scheme was going to be. He hoped that Molly had
reached the ranch without any trouble, because he was going to need help
rousting these outlaws from their den.

A foot scraped on rock behind him.

Longarm twisted, his hand flashing to the Colt on his hip. He palmed
the gun from the cross-draw rig and started to bring it up, his finger
tightening on the trigger. He expected the crash of a shot or the impact
of a blow at any instant, and he cursed himself for getting so caught up in
his thoughts that he had let someone sneak up on him. Such carelessness
was probably about to be the death of him, but at least he would go down
fighting.

He froze, finger taut on the trigger, as Molly stepped back sharply
and gasped in fear and surprise.

"Son of a bitch!" Longarm hissed. "Girl, I almost blew your head
off!" Tremors of reaction went through him.

"I ... I didn't mean to startle you," Molly stammered. "I saw you up
here, and I knew you must have ... must have found something."

"Damn it, I sent you back down the mountain!"

"I ... I decided to follow you. I was afraid you'd get in trouble-"

"Oh, I'm in trouble, all right," grated Longarm. "I've got a nest
full of killers sitting right in front of me and no help on the way thanks
to you."

Molly's features grew tight with anger. "All I wanted to do was
help!"

The conversation was being carried on in whispers. Longarm wasn't
worried that their words would carry to the hard-cases he was sure were in
those cabins conferring with Jared Flint. He was worried, though, that he
and Molly might be spotted if there were any sentries posted around the
hideout. He had planned to stay there, keeping an eye on the place until
help arrived from the Diamond K.
But now he knew that no help was coming. The only thing he and Molly
could do was slip away as quietly as possible and return to the ranch.
With luck, maybe he could still thwart whatever Flint was planning to do
next.

He took hold of Molly's arm. "Come on, we've got to get back down the
mountain-"

"Freeze, mister!"

The shout came from Longarm's left. He twisted in that direction, the
Colt he had drawn a moment earlier still in his hand. He pulled Molly
behind him, prepared to shield her body with his own. His eyes spotted the
man crouched behind a rock, the rifle in his hands trained on the two of
them.

"Drop that gun, you bastard!"

That yell came from the other direction, and Longarm felt his heart
sinking. They were trapped in a cross fire. He might have been able to
swap lead with one man and come out of the exchange alive; two men with
rifles, one to each side of him, meant that he and Molly would both die if
any shooting broke out. He turned his head to glance over his shoulder,
and saw the second guard covering him with a Winchester from about thirty
yards away. Longarm wasn't sure where either of them had been hiding until
now, but that didn't really matter. What was important was that he had
been spotted while he was trailing Jared Flint up here.

"Take it easy on those triggers, gents," he called out to the two
outlaws as he lifted both hands, the Colt still in his right.

"Put the gun on the ground," yelled one of the men. Longarm complied
with the order, bending to carefully place the Colt at his feet.

The other guard said, "Move away from it." He came out from behind
the rock that had sheltered him and advanced toward Longarm and Molly,
keeping the rifle trained on them. Behind him, Longarm heard the second
guard approaching too. Longarm took several steps away from the Colt, and
Molly moved with him.

"Custis  ..." she said, fear in her voice. Her arm was against his,
and he could feel her trembling.

"Don't you worry," he said quietly. "We'll get out of this somehow."

He hoped he sounded more confident than he felt.

"Shit, I know you," said the guard in front of them as he came closer.
"You're that U.S. marshal we tried to bushwhack a couple of times." The
hired killer's lips pulled back from his teeth in an ugly grimace. "You
killed a couple of friends of mine, Marshal."

"They were aiming to kill me," Longarm pointed out. "I didn't have
much choice."

The second man came up behind them and laughed harshly at Longarm's
comment. "Sure you did," he said. "You could've just gone ahead and died
and saved us all a lot of trouble."

The first guard jerked the barrel of his Winchester toward the cabins.
"Come on. We'll let Flint decide what to do with the two of you ... though
I reckon I've got a pretty good idea what he's going to say."

"Me too," the second man put in. "I figure we're goin' to kill you,
mister--and then this pretty little gal's goin' to entertain us for a
while."

More than ever, Longarm wished that Molly had gone on down the
mountain like he'd told her to. Now there was nothing he could do for her,
for either of them, except wait and watch for an opportunity to make a
desperate bid for freedom. Maybe if nothing else, they would die quickly
that way. They walked ahead of the two guards across the bench toward the
spring and the cabins. When they were about fifty yards away, one of the
outlaws lifted his voice and shouted, "Hey, Boss, come out here and see
what we found!"

The door of the largest cabin opened, and several hard-cases emerged,
followed by Jared Flint. The timber man stopped short when he saw Longarm.
"Damn you, Long!" he exclaimed. "You just had to keep poking around,
didn't you?"

"It's my job," Longarm said coolly as he came to a stop in front of
Flint and the gunmen.

"So I suppose you're proud of yourself now. Finally found out what
you wanted to know, didn't you?"

Longarm nodded. "I reckon so. You and these fellas you hired have
been behind the trouble down below all the time, haven't you?"

"Of course. That government timber contract's going to make us all
rich once I'm running things."

"You're already Mrs. Mcentire's foreman. What more do you want?"

Flint snorted in contempt. "Angus Mcentire was supposed to leave me
in charge of the company when he died. I never dreamed that ... that woman
would come in and start trying to run things."

"Rubbed you the wrong way, did it, taking orders from a woman?

Especially since she had the company doing so well?"

"It would have done even better with me in charge," said Flint. "And
without Mrs. Mcentire around, there wouldn't be anybody to stop me from
taking all the profits. That's just what I'll do once she finally realizes
she's not cut out for life in a lumber camp."

Longarm's eyes narrowed. He had run up against his share of grandiose
criminal schemes in his time, some of which could have had pretty
far-reaching implications for the entire country. Not this case, though.
At the heart of it was nothing more than a venal, greedy embezzler--albeit
on a fairly large scale, if Flint had his way.

"If that's all you wanted," said Longarm, "why didn't you just kill
her and be done with it?"

Flint shook his head. "There are some things I won't do, Marshal. I
wasn't above arranging an accident so that Angus Mcentire would die, but
I'm not going to murder a woman in cold blood. Besides, that still
wouldn't necessarily leave me in charge of the operation. I want Mrs.
Mcentire alive and trusting me--at least until I get my hands on enough
loot to make it all worthwhile."
One of the gunmen said, "That's enough jabberin'. Let's kill this
badge-totin' skunk and be done with it." He leered. "I want to make the
acquaintance o' that gal with him anyway."

"Shut up, Barcroft." Flint turned to Molly. "You're Molly Kinsman,
aren't you?" he demanded.

She managed to nod, and her chin trembled only slightly as she did so.
For the moment, she was holding on to her self-control with an iron grip,
Longarm thought, but sooner or later that grip was going to weaken.

"Sorry you got mixed up in this, Miss Kinsman," said Flint, and he
sounded as if he meant it. "Wish there was some way around what's going to
have to happen, but I don't reckon there is."

Longarm knew he'd be wasting his breath if he pleaded for Molly's
life. Now that she knew Flint was the mastermind, she would have to die
too, though Longarm had no doubt the hired killers would keep her alive for
a while before disposing of her. It wouldn't be a reprieve for her. They
would take turns assaulting her until she was more dead than alive.

Flint turned to the burly gunman called Barcroft, who seemed to be the
leader of these hired gunmen. "We'd better get moving," he said. "Get
that dynamite loaded. I want to reach the dam just after dark."

Barcroft nodded, but instead of following Flint's orders, he jerked a
thumb at Longarm and Molly. "What about them?"

"There'll be plenty of time to deal with them later. Put them in one
of the cabins and leave a couple of men to guard them."

"Likely be better to kill the lawman now," said Barcroft, fingering
the butt of his gun.

Flint shook his head firmly. "Not yet. I want Long to see some of
what's in store for Miss Kinsman before he dies."

Longarm's jaw tightened. So Flint wasn't just an ambitious crook. He
had a cruel streak in him too, a streak of pure meanness.

But that was all right, Longarm told himself. As long as he was still
drawing breath, there was a chance for him and Molly to get out of this.
Mighty slim, to be sure, but a chance nonetheless.

Whatever hopes Longarm had were quickly stifled. He and Molly were
trussed up and shoved into one of the shacks, and Longarm knew without
struggling against his bonds that their captors had done a professional job
of tying them up. He might be able to work enough slack into the rope to
worm his hands free--with a considerable loss of blood and hide in the
process--but it would take too long. The outlaws who were preparing to
leave the hidden camp planned to return before the coming night was over.
Then they would have their fun with Molly and kill Longarm.

In the dimness of the shack, Longarm could see the pale blur that was
Molly's face. "I really ruined things, didn't I?" she said miserably.

"Nope," Longarm told her. "Those fellas would have jumped me anyway.
I knew I was walking into a lion's den right from the start, Molly. That's
why I didn't want you along."

"But if I'd gone for help like you told me  ..."

Longarm sighed. There was no denying that their situation would look
at least a little brighter right now if they had hopes of a bunch of
Diamond K cowboys riding to their rescue. Unfortunately, it wasn't going
to happen.

Molly had fallen silent, overwhelmed by the predicament in which they
found themselves. They heard the sound of a lot of horses leaving the
camp, and Longarm knew Flint, Barcroft, and the other gunnies had set out
on their latest mission of destruction. After a few minutes, Molly said,
"What was that Flint said about dynamite? And a dam?"

"I've been thinking about that too," replied Longarm. "The loggers
built a dam on one of the upper creeks so that a pond would back up and
give them enough water to run a flume down the mountain to the sawmill. I
reckon Flint's going to blow it to kindling."

"A flume?" repeated Molly. "What's that?"

Longarm searched his mind for a way to explain the apparatus. "It's
sort of like a creek on stilts," he said after a minute. "It's a big
trough lined with pitch so it's watertight, set up on poles so that it runs
in an elevated line down the mountain. The loggers let water into it
through a sluice gate in the dam on a lake or a pond, and of course the
water runs downhill. If you roll a log into the flume, it floats down too.
It's a quicker, easier way to move the logs than hauling them out with
mules or a donkey engine and cables. Timber companies use it when there's
no stream nearby that's big enough to float booms of logs."

"Well, I'll take your word for it," said Molly, trying to inject a
note of lightness into her voice despite their situation. "I was raised on
a cattle ranch, and none of this logging business really makes sense to me.
But if Mrs. Mcentire's men built that dam, why would Flint want to blow it
up?"

"That much water, turned loose all of a sudden like that, will flood
the logging camp and maybe drown some of the men. Maybe Flint's hoping
that'll be the last straw for Mrs. Mcentire. All he really wants to do is
run her off without hurting the operation too much. Of course, he don't
seem to care how many men he kills along the way."

"He's a horrible man," Molly said with a shudder.

"Yep," agreed Longarm. "That he is."

"And ... and ... he's going to kill us." Molly's voice began to
quaver, and Longarm could tell that her self-imposed calm was about to
shatter.

He was trying to come up with something to tell her when he heard one
of the guards who had been left outside the cabin say abruptly, "Hey, who's
that old man? Hold it right there, mister! What're you doin' up here?"
Another of the guards said scornfully, "Aw, take it easy, Jed. It's
just an old Chinaman. Prob'ly a peddler."

"On top of a mountain? Not damn likely." Longarm heard the lever of
a Winchester being worked. "I said stop, mister. What do you want?"

Longarm had felt his pulse jump when he heard the word
"Chinaman," and
now his hopes rose even more as a familiar voice said, "No pointee gun,
please. Mist' Flint send me, tell you hurry down mountain. Much trouble
below."

Wing. That was Wing out there, Longarm realized.

"What'n hell? Why would Flint send you with a message for us? I
ain't never even seen you before, Chinaman."

"This humble one is cook in logging camp," Wing lied. "Helpee Mist'
Flint much times before."

"Well ... I don't know. I still ain't sure we ought to trust you.
What do you think, Pete?"

The other guard was about to say something when Longarm heard a meaty
thunk. Somebody yelled, "Son of a-" but then the startled shout died away
in a hideous gurgle. Inside the cabin, Longarm and Molly looked at each
other, wide-eyed with hope and surprise.

The door opened and Wing stepped inside, shaking his head so that his
queue swung back and forth. He looked down at Longarm and Molly and said,
"Missy Molly ver' naughty girl. Lucky old Chinese man follow in case she
get in trouble."

"Oh, hell, Wing, stop talking like that and get these ropes off us,"
Longarm said urgently. "Are those guards dead?"

Wing nodded. "Yep, both of 'em. Are they the only ones Flint left
behind?" He knelt beside Longarm and began using the knife he held in his
hand to saw at the ropes binding the lawman's wrists. Longarm noticed that
the slender blade was stained with blood.

"As far as I know," Longarm said. "I think all the others went with
Flint to blow up a dam on a creek down the mountain." He grunted in
satisfaction as the ropes came free. While Wing moved to his legs to cut
those bonds, Longarm began rubbing the circulation back into his hands.

"Wing, what are you doing here?" asked Molly in amazement.

Wing finished freeing Longarm's legs and moved over to start on
Molly's bonds. "As soon as Joe told me what he had told you," he said, "I
knew you'd be following old Custis here. So I followed you."

"You came up that coulee on the side of the mountain?" asked Longarm.

"Yeah, but somebody was ahead of me. That fella Flint. I recognized
him from that time the loggers attacked the ranch. You and him and that
Miz Mcentire came riding up in time to keep anybody from getting hurt too
bad."

"Flint led us on a so-called shortcut that day," Longarm said
bitterly. "I figure he was really delaying us in hopes we'd be too late to
stop a full-scale battle from breaking out. Luckily he didn't slow us down
quite enough."

"You ... you followed me," said Molly, still stuck on that point.
Longarm wondered if she was worried that the Chinese cook had seen the two
of them making love. Now that they weren't both about to die, she could
spare some concern for something like that. Longarm didn't care overmuch,
but he was pretty sure Wing knew nothing about that part of the afternoon.
Wing had come up the coulee behind Flint, and by that time, Molly's
deflowering had long since been accomplished. If Molly had gone on down
the mountain as Longarm had told her to, in fact, doubtless she would have
run right into Wing on his way up.

"That coulee was a busy place with folks coming and going today,"
Longarm commented as Wing helped Molly to her feet. "Now we've all got to
get down the mountain again, as fast as we can. Maybe we can still stop
Flint."

Wing slid a finger along the edge of his blade. "I'd like that," he
said, and Molly stared at him, as if seeing him for the first time.

She was even more surprised and horrified a moment later when the
three of them stepped out of the cabin and she saw the bodies sprawled
face-down on the ground. One of the outlaws had a hatchet buried in the
back of his head while the other was lying in a pool of rapidly drying
blood that had gushed from his slit throat. Longarm looked at the corpses
too, and said to Wing, "I reckon in your earlier days, you must've done a
little work for some of those tongs down in San Francisco."

"Tongs?" repeated Wing, his face and voice emotionless. "This humble
one is but a cook."

Longarm grinned tiredly and shook his head, knowing there was no point
in carrying on with this conversation. No matter what Wing had been in the
past, he was a good friend now. Hell, he had saved their lives, pure and
simple, and he was going to help Longarm put an end to Jared Flint's
schemes too.

Flint was going to be one surprised son of a bitch the next time he
saw Longarm.

And Longarm hoped fervently that next time was going to be over the
barrel of a gun.

Chapter 14

The horses ridden up there by Longarm and Molly had been brought up to
the camp from where they had been left and put into the corral. Wing
retrieved the mounts while Longarm helped himself to a six-gun and some
extra shells from one of the dead guards. Then the three of them started
back down the mountain. At the bottom of the coulee, they split up, over
Molly's objections. Longarm sent her to the Diamond K with orders to bring
as many men as possible to the headquarters of the Mcentire timber
operation. "Your pa might not believe me if I told him what's going on,"
said Longarm, "but I'm betting he'll believe you."

"I'll make sure of it," she promised grimly. Longarm turned to the
cook. "Wing, you head for the logging camp and warn them about what
Flint's planning to do. Maybe if they know a flood's on the way, they can
avoid the worst of it. Once the punchers from the Diamond K get there,
bring them and Mrs. Mcentire's men up the mountain to that dam. Even if I
can slow down Flint and his men and keep them from blowing up the dam, I'm
liable to need a hand by then."

"You can't stop them by yourself," protested Molly. "There are too
many of them!"

Longarm grinned. "Reckon I'll just have to make do. Now git, both of
you!"

Reluctantly, Wing and Molly galloped away on different trails.
Longarm took yet a third path, sending the roan down a narrow trail that he
hoped would take him where he needed to go.

He had only a vague idea of where the dam was located, and he didn't
have a lot of time to spend searching. A glance at the sky told him that
the sun was lowering toward the peaks of the Cascade range. Flint had said
he wanted to reach the dam just after dark. That was a good time for the
explosion he had planned. None of the loggers would be there, because they
would all be down in the main camp, sitting down to supper. The torrent of
water that would race down the Mountainside following the blast would take
them completely by surprise unless Wing got there in time to alert them to
their danger. They might have a little warning, Longarm corrected himself,
because they might hear the explosion that destroyed the dam. But that
would be too little, too late, especially since the loggers would have no
way of knowing what had caused the blast.

There was a lot riding on him, Longarm realized--not only justice for
a clever criminal, but also the lives of innocent men.

And possibly the life of Aurora Mcentire as well.

Despite Flint's high-flown statements about not wanting to kill
Aurora, he had come close before, when he or one of his henchmen had set
free that boom to come crashing into Aurora's cabin. The flood that would
wash down the mountain after the dam was destroyed wouldn't differentiate
between its victims either. As long as she was in the camp, Aurora was in
deadly danger.

As shadows gathered, Longarm had to watch the trail closely. From
landmarks on the mountain and in the valleys below, he estimated that he
was almost directly above the timber camp now, which meant he should be
reaching the dam soon. Despite the fact that any delay chafed at him, he
slowed the roan to a walk so that the pounding of its hoofbeats wouldn't
advertise that he was coming. If he was going to have any chance to stop
Flint's plan, he had to take the men at the dam by surprise.

Suddenly, he heard voices, and he reined the horse to a quick stop.
He swung down from the saddle and tied the roan to a nearby bush. "Stay
here, old son," he whispered to the horse as he patted it on the neck.
Then he started on foot along the path, which had all but disappeared in
the thickening dusk.

Through a screen of brush and trees, he saw the dam looming ahead of
him. It was built of logs, naturally enough, and had a sluice gate in its
center, several feet below the top of the dam. A surefooted logger could
walk out there on the dam, bend over and grasp a handle, and pull the gate
up to release the water into the flume, which was already partially built.
Longarm's gaze followed the steeply inclined, elevated trough as it ran
down the Mountainside and disappeared into the shadows. He didn't know how
much of the flume had been completed, but if that dynamite went off as
Flint planned, it would be destroyed along with the dam.

The flume and the dam itself could be rebuilt, though, once Flint had
succeeded in running off Aurora Mcentire. After all, the money wouldn't be
coming out of his pocket.

Longarm crouched behind the thick trunk of a pine and searched the dam
and the area around it for any sign of Flint and the man's hired gunmen.
Surely he hadn't beaten them to the punch and gotten there first. That
wasn't possible.

Nor was it the case, Longarm saw a moment later. A couple of men
emerged from the shadows on the far side of the dam and began walking
carefully out onto the wall of logs. No doubt the rest of the gang were
over there too, in the trees beyond the big pond that had been formed by
the dam. Stars were beginning to twinkle into existence in the darkening
sky above, and Longarm could see the pinpoints of light reflected in the
calm surface of the pond. "Lake" would have been a better word to describe
the recently formed body of water, he thought; it was already larger than
any pond he had ever seen. The surroundings reminded him a little of Lake
Tahoe, down in Nevada, where a couple of cases had taken him in the past.

In the gloom, Longarm couldn't see the two men on the dam that well,
but he thought they were Flint and Barcroft. They had just about reached
the center of the dam. Longarm edged closer, using the brush for cover,
and saw one of the men strike a match. The sudden glare of the lucifer
revealed the craggy features of Jared Flint. Flint extended the match
toward the other man, who was indeed Barcroft, Longarm confirmed. Barcroft
held several sticks of dynamite that had been tied together. A single long
fuse ran from the deadly bundle.

"I'll light it," said Flint, "and you wedge it down there behind that
sluice gate lever."

Barcroft nodded. "All right, but don't waste any time gettin' off of
here once the fuse is lit. It ought to burn for several minutes, but you
can't never be sure about such things."

Longarm drew his gun as Flint held the match to the fuse. It caught
with a sharp, serpent-like hissing sound. Barcroft knelt to place the
dynamite.

Longarm knew he couldn't wait for them to leave the dam, then run out
there himself and pull the fuse. That would be cutting it too fine. He
did the only thing he could.

He shot Barcroft.

It was getting too dark for any fancy marksmanship. Longarm aimed for
the gunman's bulky body and squeezed the trigger. As the Colt bucked
against his palm, Barcroft let out a howl of pain and flew backwards,
driven off the dam by the impact of the slug. He fell into the waters of
the pond with a huge splash, the dynamite going with him just as Longarm
had hoped it would. The water put out the fuse and rendered the explosives
harmless.

Flint twisted toward the sound of the shot and yelled a curse. He
brought up a gun and blazed away at the spot where Longarm crouched.
Longarm threw himself flat as bullets whipped through the brush above him.

"Somebody's over there!" shouted Flint to his men. "Get him! Get the
son of a bitch!"

More yelling came from the rest of the gunmen. Some of them started
shooting across the water, their muzzle flashes winking like giant
fireflies in the dusk, while others began running around the pond in an
effort to close in on Longarm.

Meanwhile, Flint turned and dashed off the dam with the ease of a man
who had spent quite a bit of time on such structures in the past.

Longarm thought bleakly that the foreman was probably going back for
more dynamite.

On his hands and knees, Longarm crawled rapidly toward the dam. He
didn't want to shoot at Flint's men because his own muzzle flashes would
just give them something at which to aim. When he had almost reached the
dam, he slid down the steep slope and wound up in the thick shadows
underneath the flume.

Longarm moved under the flume in a crouching run and came out on the
other side. Craning his neck, he looked up at the top of the dam looming
above him. As he had feared, Flint was starting out onto the dam once
more. Longarm was convinced he had brought more dynamite with him.

The hired killers were still throwing lead into the place where
Longarm had been a few minutes earlier, but they weren't hitting anything
except some tree branches. Longarm knew it wouldn't take them long to
realize he had gotten out of there once some of the gunmen reached the far
side of the pond. He went to one of the thick logs that supported the
framework of the flume and wrapped his arms and legs around it. He began
shinnying up the pole toward the flume itself.

As he climbed, he heard the sudden pounding of hoofbeats in the forest
nearby. Someone yelled, "Over there!" Longarm thought it might have been
Matt Kinsman. A moment later, more guns began to bang. The dusk was lit
by near-constant flashes of exploding gunpowder.

The help he had sent Molly and Wing for had arrived--and just in time
too.

Longarm kept climbing. He leaned his head back and looked up,
spotting the dark figure of Jared Flint atop the dam. Flint was fumbling
with something, and it didn't take a genius to figure out what it was.
Longarm lost sight of the man as he reached the flume itself. He reached
up and caught hold of the trough's edge with one hand, then two. Pain
shrieked in his back as he pushed off from the framework with his legs and
dangled there for a moment. That bullet crease was not yet fully healed,
and Longarm figured he had just torn it open again.

Pulling himself up with a grunt of effort, he swung a leg over the
flume's edge and caught his heel on it. He was able to lever himself up
and roll over, landing in the still-dry flume. The angle was extreme, but
he began scrambling toward the top, even as Flint struck another match and
moved it toward the fuse of the second bundle of dynamite.

"Flint!" Longarm bellowed, trying to startle the man into dropping the
match or the dynamite or both. Instead, Flint jerked his head around to
peer down into the flume, and in the light of the match, his features
contorted with hate as he saw Longarm climbing toward him. With a sneer,
he reached down for the sluice gate handle with the hand holding the match.

Longarm's eyes widened, and he threw all of his strength into lunging
upward toward Flint. There was no time for gunplay now, only for a
desperate grab. Longarm's hand shot out and closed over Flint's ankle just
as the timber company foreman pulled the sluice gate.

Water slammed into Longarm and rocketed him back down the flume, but
his fingers were still wrapped around Flint's ankle in a grip of iron.
With a yell, Flint was jerked off the dam and crashed down into the flume
just above Longarm. The force of the water carried both of them down the
mountainside in a mad, careening ride.

Longarm's mouth was full of water. He spit out as much of it as he
could and coughed up some more. The racing water, which was moving with
enough force to carry huge logs down the flume, slammed him into the sides
of the structure. He bounced off and kept going. He had ridden the rapids
of some raging rivers in his time, and this experience was somewhat
similar. There was nothing he could do except let himself go limp and hope
the wild ride wouldn't kill him.

Something hit him in the head, but it wasn't the side of the flume.
It was Jared Flint's work-booted foot. Flint kicked at Longarm again as he
slid down alongside the lawman. The flume was wide enough for both of them
to go flying down it side by side. Through the turbulent water that
splashed in his face, Longarm saw Flint reaching for him, felt the man's
fingers close around his throat.

Longarm was already gasping for breath due to the fact that his head
was constantly going in and out of the water. Flint had caught him at a
bad time, when there was little air in his lungs. Desperate, Longarm
struck out at Flint with his fists, hoping to knock Flint's grip loose.
Instead the fingers only tightened. A gray haze that had nothing to do
with nightfall began settling over Longarm's vision. He knew he was very
close to losing consciousness, and if he did, Flint would kill him.

Then, suddenly, there was nothing underneath him. The water fell
away, leaving Longarm and Flint shooting through thin air.

Of course, thought Longarm. The construction of the flume had only
started.

They had reached the end of the line.

Instinctively, Longarm grasped Flint's shirt and twisted in midair as
they traveled through a long, graceful curve toward the ground. Tree
branches caught at them, slowing them slightly, then with a crash that
jolted all of Longarm's teeth, they slammed into the earth. Longarm's
quick thinking had put Flint on the bottom, though, and he bore the brunt
of the impact. Flint's fingers were torn from Longarm's throat as their
landing knocked the two men apart and sent them rolling separately down the
slope.

Water was gushing in rivulets around Longarm when he finally came to a
stop. The torrent pouring off the end of the flume was washing down the
Mountainside. The cold water revived the stunned lawman, and he lifted his
head to look toward the flume. As he watched, the flood came to a halt,
dying away to a trickle. Someone up above had thought to lower the sluice
gate once more. There were no more shots coming from up there either. The
fight was over.

Longarm wondered who had won. For the time being, he was more
concerned with Jared Flint. Here under the trees, the shadows were even
thicker and darker, but after a moment he spotted the sprawled bulk that
could only be Flint. Longarm pushed himself to his feet, groaning at the
pain shooting through his battered body. He stumbled toward Flint, and as
he did, he checked the holster on his hip. The gun he had taken from the
dead guard at the outlaw camp was gone, which came as no surprise.

He didn't need it, he told himself. If Flint put up a fight, Longarm
would kill the son of a bitch with his bare hands.

Flint wasn't going to be putting up a fight, though, not ever again.
Longarm dropped to one knee beside the man, who lay on his back staring up
sightlessly at the stars now appearing through the spaces in the canopy of
trees. Slamming into the ground at such high speed with Longarm on top of
him like that had probably busted up Flint inside. When Longarm grasped
Flint's shoulder and turned him onto his side, even in the faint starlight
he could see that the damage was much worse. The whole back of Flint's
skull was caved in. He had to have died almost instantly.

With a sigh, Longarm pushed himself to his feet. The threat of
Flint's schemes was over. Now he had to hope that Flint's hired gunmen had
been dealt with as well.

"Custis! Damn it, Custis, where are you?"

Longarm lifted his head. That was Molly Kinsman's voice. She
wouldn't be up here unless the forces led by her father had won the battle.
Longarm began trudging wearily up the Mountainside toward the dam.

When he reached it a few minutes later, looking no doubt like a
half-drowned rat, he saw that several lanterns had been lit. Matt
Kinsman's cowboys and some of the loggers from Aurora's camp were standing
together around several prisoners, covering the captured gunmen with
rifles. Molly, Matt Kinsman, Joe Traywick, Wing, Aurora Mcentire, and Ben
Callahan, of all people, stood near the dam. Molly spotted Longarm and ran
toward him, shouting excitedly, "Custis!" She threw her arms around him,
ignoring his soaked clothing.

Kinsman strode after her, followed by Traywick, who limped along being
supported by Wing. Traywick's injured foot hadn't stopped him from being
in on this showdown.

Aurora and Callahan joined the group clustering around Longarm.

"You all right, Marshal?" Kinsman demanded gruffly. "Or is my
daughter about to squeeze you to death?"

"I reckon ... I'll be fine once I catch my breath," said Longarm.
Actually, every muscle and bone in his body ached, and the old wound on his
back hurt like blazes. He was going to need some time to recuperate from
this job.

Kinsman jerked a thumb at the prisoners. "We rounded up this bunch,
them that didn't make us kill 'em. Found one floatin' in the pond too.
Reckon that was probably your doin'."

Barcroft, thought Longarm. He nodded wearily. Molly wasn't hugging
him anymore, but she still had an arm around him as she stood beside him.
Longarm looked at Kinsman and then at Aurora and said, "Glad to see that
you two finally decided you could work together."

"Once this Chinese gentleman showed up at the camp and told us what
you'd found out, there wasn't much choice," said Aurora.

"When I first got to this part of the country," Longarm pointed out,
"you never would've believed him since he works for Kinsman."

"Well ... I hope that such distrust is behind us now." Aurora looked
at Kinsman.

"Far as I'm concerned it is," the rancher grunted. "I still ain't
overly fond of what you've been doin' up here, but I'll make an effort to
get along if you will, ma'am."

Aurora stuck out her hand toward him. "Of course."

Kinsman took her hand, and they shook on it. Longarm felt a surge of
satisfaction that gave him some renewed energy. One of the things he had
set out to do had been accomplished. With luck, there would be peace
between the cattlemen and the loggers from here on out.

He looked at Callahan and asked, "What are you doing up here?"

"I was at Aurora's camp," Callahan said rather awkwardly, "explaining
myself to her."

"Asking me to marry him, he means," Aurora said, with a laugh. "You
could have knocked me over with a feather, Ben. I always thought you
couldn't stand me."

"I hope you know now that's not true."

"Certainly I do." She linked her arm with his. "And I'm very tempted
to take you up on your offer to merge our companies."

"I don't think that's all he wants to merge," Molly blurted out.

Kinsman glared at her, but the others all laughed. After a moment,
even the rancher gave a rueful chuckle. He said, "We'd better gather up
those prisoners and all the bodies and cart 'em into town. Deputy
Bullfinch'll have to make room in his jail for the live ones."

"Plenty of room at the undertaker's for the dead ones," Joe Traywick
put in.

Aurora stepped closer to Longarm. "Custis, where is Mr. Flint?"

Longarm inclined his head down the Mountainside. "Back yonder at the
end of that flume. Both of us went shooting off there, but Flint hit
headfirst." Longarm shook his head. "He won't be causing any more trouble
unless he's already trying to take over from the Devil down there in
Hades."

Tugging gently on his arm, Molly led Longarm away. "I'm going to take
good care of you," she said. "We'll have you back on your feet in no
time."

"Sounds good to me," said Longarm.

"And then we'll have you on your back."

He looked over at her quizzically.

"I want to be on top next time," she whispered.