typical for an Easterner. They always assumed places like Kansas City were the same as cities in more civilized parts of the country, relatively safe.

To be fair, even Eastern cities had their share of two-legged wolves, but the farther west one went, the more violent the wolves were prone to be. As Draypool would, no doubt, soon find out.

Fargo quickened his pace. The man in the dark suit was matching Draypool stride for stride, and as yet not ready to close in. Fargo figured the man would wait until they came to a section of street where there were fewer lights.

Draypool passed a dance hall. Every window blazed, and tinny music blared to the heavens. A constant flow of men and women entering or leaving forced Draypool to slow yet again and thread through them.

The man in the dark suit had to do the same. As he passed under the large lamps on either side of the entrance, Fargo got his first clear glimpse of his quarry, and he was surprised by what he saw.

The would-be robber did not have the seedy, predatory air of most of his kind. In fact, he looked perfectly respectable. His suit was clean and pressed, and while not immaculately tailored like Draypool’s, it was a cut above what most other men were wearing. To Fargo it indicated the man was good at his illegal trade. Fargo did not see evidence of a weapon, but the robber was bound to be a walking armory.

A woman came out of the dance hall. She was looking down and did not notice the man in the dark suit until she nearly collided with him. Startled, she drew up short, and the man doffed his hat and said something that brought a smile. He let her go on past before resuming his stalk of Draypool.

Now Fargo had seen everything. A gentleman footpad. And why not? he asked himself. He knew men who would knife or shoot others at the slightest provocation, but who were as polite as polite could be the rest of the time.

Fargo reached the dance hall. The music was so loud it nearly drowned out the babble of voices. He tucked his chin to his chest so if the man in the dark suit happened to look back, it would give the impression that Fargo had no interest in him.

Just then, out spilled a rowdy crowd of ten to fifteen people. Joking and laughing and having a grand time, they enveloped Fargo like a human cloud, and before he knew it, he was surrounded and hemmed in. He tried to press through them, but a brunette in an invitingly tight dress and a floral hat hooked her arm through his and held on.

“Whoa there, handsome! What’s your hurry?”

Fargo smiled and tried to pry her arm loose. “I have something to do.” But she would not let go.

“It can wait. My name is Nanette. What would yours be?”

“I don’t have time for this.” Fargo glimpsed the man in the dark suit, the gap between them widening with every second of delay.

“Oh, posh.” Nanette squeezed tighter and brazenly pecked him on the cheek. “I’ve taken a shine to you. What do you say to the two of us going off to have a few drinks together?”

In Fargo’s estimation she had already had enough. The whiskey on her breath was enough to gag a mule. “I really must be on my way,” he insisted.

“What’s the matter? Aren’t I pretty enough for you? I’ll have you know men pay me compliments all the time.”

Fargo didn’t doubt it. She had nice eyes and a lovely mouth and a body most men would drool over, but once again he gently tried to pry her hand off. She dug her fingers into his sleeve, and he applied more force, none too gently twisting her wrist until she had no choice but to release him.

“Owww!” Nanette squealed, and flushed with anger. “What’s the big idea? A girl tries to be friendly and you break her arm off!”

To explain would be pointless. Fargo started to go around her when a heavy hand fell on his shoulder and he was spun halfway around.

“Where the hell do you think you’re going? That was no way to treat a lady. Apologize or else.”

Confronting Fargo were two men in their early twenties. Like Nanette, they had been drinking heavily and were at that stage where belligerence replaced reason. “This has nothing to do with you,” he said.

“That’s where you’re wrong, mister,” the shorter of the pair declared. He was built like a block of wood, with shoulders a bull would envy. “Nan is our friend, and we don’t take kindly to her being mistreated.”

The rest of their party had stopped and were awaiting developments. If Fargo wasn’t careful, he would have a fight on his hands. Not that he minded a good, healthy brawl, but he had Draypool to think of. Touching a hand to his hat brim, he said to Nanette, “I hope I didn’t hurt you.” He turned to go, only to have the same heavy hand clamp on his arm.

“That’s not good enough,” the bull-shouldered youth said. “Not by a long shot.” He slurred a few of his words. “Say you are sorry and mean it.”

“You tell him, Phil!” Nanette cried.

Fargo glared. There was only so much abuse he would take. “Don’t lay a hand on me again.”

“Or what?” Phil mockingly demanded.

“Or this.” Fargo hit him. He swept his right fist up from below his waist and planted it solidly on the cocky idiot’s jaw.

The blow jolted Phil onto his heels. He staggered and fell to one knee. His companion sprang to help and paid for his eagerness with a punch to the gut that doubled him over.

Thinking that was enough, Fargo swiveled to run after Draypool and the man in the dark suit, but he had taken only two steps when iron fingers locked onto his wrist and he was spun around a second time.

“I will bust you, mister!” Phil raged. Blood trickled from the left corner of his mouth, and bloodlust was in his eyes. He drew back his other hand, his fist balled. “Bust you good!”

The Colt was in Fargo’s hand before any of them could blink. “Bust this,” he said, and slammed the barrel against Phil’s temple. Phil collapsed in an unconscious pile. The rest turned to ice. “Anyone else?”

Nanette put her hands on her hips and stepped up to him, eliciting gasps from a few of her friends. “You had no call to do that! Pulling a gun on someone who is unarmed! I have half a mind to fetch the marshal.”

Fargo had half a mind to throw her over his knee and spank her, but he settled for twirling the Colt into his holster with a flourish to impress her friends and convince them they were better off dropping the matter. “Yes, you do,” he said, and headed up the street before she figured out what he meant.

Arthur Draypool and the man in the dark suit were nowhere to be seen.

Cursing under his breath, Fargo broke into a jog. The slap of his boots and the jangle of his spurs forewarned most of those in front of him, and they took one glance and got out of his way. He covered two blocks with fewer lights and ripe opportunity before he spied the skulker in the dark suit. Fargo immediately slowed to a walk.

Fargo wondered if maybe he was wrong. The man was the same distance between Draypool as before, and showed no inclination to get closer. Then Draypool stopped to admire a new carriage passing by, and the man in the dark suit stopped and pretended to be interested in the window of a general store he was passing. When Draypool went on, so did his shadow.

Up ahead the Sunflower appeared. It was set back from the street, along a tree-lined pathway. The moment Arthur Draypool turned up the path, the man in the dark suit halted and slid a hand under his jacket.

Instantly, Fargo’s hand was on his Colt. But the man did not pull a gun. He produced what appeared to be a pencil and a small notebook and scribbled in it after consulting his watch.

“What in hell is going on?” Fargo wondered aloud. The man’s behavior was a complete mystery.

A doorman admitted Draypool. As soon as the door closed behind him, the man in the dark suit replaced the pencil and notebook in an inside pocket and resumed walking in a leisurely fashion past the hotel.

Curiosity compelled Fargo to follow. He had to find out what the man was up to. At the next corner they turned right. At the corner after that, left. Another hotel, the Imperial, was the man’s destination. It catered to those who liked a decent room for a decent price. Fargo had stayed there a couple of times himself. The rooms were plain, the furnishings simple, but a man could enjoy a good night’s sleep free of lice and mice and rats of the human variety.

Fargo waited a while to give the man time to get to his room, then shoved his hands in his pockets, plastered a smile on his face, and ambled inside.

The desk clerk was getting on in years. He had a neatly trimmed speckled beard and speckled hair cut off above the ears, and apparently he was hard of hearing in one ear, because as Fargo approached he tilted his head

Вы читаете Backwoods Bloodbath
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×