any kind, not riding full out.

“Within an hour, we’ll see their tails. Then we will know for sure,” Dixie Jim said.

“Know what?” Josiah asked.

“Whether this is your Badger or not.”

Scrap was sitting on Missy next to Josiah and Clipper. It was late afternoon, and the sun still burned in a wide, cloudless sky. It was as blue as Pearl’s eyes, and Josiah continued to feel like they were all being watched, but he had nothing but gut instinct to prove his feeling. The land all around was desolate and quiet. They had not seen a ranch house, a longhorn, or any animal or human for that matter since Dixie Jim had found the tracks and they’d headed due west. Could have been Apache or Kickapoo scouting them out, or one of O’Reilly’s men, keeping an eye on them. Either way, Josiah would have bet his life that somebody was staring straight into the back of his neck.

Scrap cleared his throat and scowled at Dixie Jim. “If those tracks do belong to O’Reilly, then why ain’t he tryin’ to hide himself?”

Dixie Jim stood up. “Seems to me he don’t think he has anything to be worried about since Juan Carlos was shot in Brackett. If he knows you fellas, then he knows you ain’t no trackers.”

“Makes sense,” Josiah said.

Scrap continued to scowl. “I can track.”

“Sure you can, boy,” Dixie Jim said.

Josiah ignored both men. A couple of vultures circled the sky just to the south of them, silently riding the air, not flapping a wing. “You might be right,” he said to Dixie Jim, staring at the vultures.

“Am right.” Dixie Jim walked to his horse, slid his crutch into the scabbard, then mounted the paint with a hop and a pull, all in one fluid motion. “What you gonna do when you find them two men? You got a plan?” he asked Josiah.

Josiah stared at Dixie Jim, then glanced over to Scrap. “Elliot here is probably one of the best long shots I know. He can hold the high sight, stay back. We can get closer, circle around them, confront them if there’s an opportunity, give O’Reilly a chance to come in easy.”

“We?” Dixie Jim laughed.

Josiah nodded.

“Not gonna be a we. I find them. That’s all I agreed to do,” Dixie Jim said. “Just gonna be you and the boy when it comes to that duty. Juan Carlos is a friend, and I owed him a favor, but no sirree, I sure don’t owe him my life. If he was here, I’d be gone now. But as it is, once we sight those two and make sure they’s the men you be lookin’ for, then I’m back off to Fort Clark.”

“I have your whiskey,” Josiah said.

“I have my own.”

Scrap pushed Missy past Josiah. “Told you there wasn’t no trustin’ a half-breed, Wolfe. Looks like it’s just me and you. We can head back if you want, try and get the rest of the boys to help us take these two in.”

“We’re not going back,” Josiah said, urging Clipper on, catching sight of the tracks Dixie Jim was looking at, and taking the lead.

Night was about to fall before Josiah caught the first sight of the two riders. The sun had already dropped below the horizon, but gray daylight still reached up from beyond the curve of the earth. Pinks and reds pulsated on the underside of a few wispy clouds in the sky, drops of fading blood on a growing black curtain. Nary a star dared show itself yet as the day fought its last battle with the overpowering pull of darkness and the coming of night.

It was almost like the colors of the clouds had reached down and touched the head of one of the riders—it glowed red, without a hat. There was no question the man was Liam O’Reilly. But the other rider’s identity was not so easy to discern from the distance they were at, and neither Josiah nor Scrap had possession of a sighting scope. For a moment, Josiah thought he recognized the second rider’s horse, a tall black stallion, but he was too far away to see any of the markings, so he turned to ask Dixie Jim, who had been riding behind the two men, to see if he had a scope, and discovered that the Negro-Seminole had left their company without saying a word.

“I’ll be . . .” Josiah said.

“What?” Scrap asked, looking over his shoulder.

“Dixie Jim’s gone.”

“Well, it ain’t no big surprise to me.”

“He could’ve said something,” Josiah said.

“He did. Said as soon as we caught sight of O’Reilly he was out of here. What more you need, Wolfe, a big good-bye?”

Josiah shook his head no. “Just thought he’d be more friendly after spending a few days with us.”

“Speakin’ for myself, I’m glad to be rid of him. He smelt like he was carryin’ a dead fish in his pockets. You notice that?”

Josiah wasn’t paying attention to Scrap. The light on the horizon was nearly gone, and the bottoms of the clouds were losing their color so they were almost black. “Damn it,” he said. “I’ve lost sight of them.”

They eased their horses next to a large reach of limestone about a hundred feet tall. Might have been taller, but now that night had fallen completely, it was hard to tell exactly how high the rocks and mountains around them really were.

Josiah felt a little out of his element, not knowing the ways of the land this far southwest. He was a long way from the piney woods of Tyler, out among the prickly pear, mesquite, and a host of unknown creatures. Especially at night.

Luckily, the wispy clouds of the evening had pushed on, and the sky was full of pinprick stars, tiny silver orbs twinkling overhead. Half of the moon was hidden. It would be another week or two before it would show itself completely. Still, even with half of its brightness, there was light to navigate by and plenty of moon shadows to be leery of.

Both men dismounted as quietly as possible. They couldn’t see a fire, but Josiah could smell it, and he was sure Scrap could, too. O’Reilly and the other rider were close. Hidden, but close.

There was nothing to hear, no crackle of a fire or voices on the wind. Even far-off coyotes, yipping only minutes before, had gone silent.

“We need to stick together,” Josiah whispered to Scrap. He put his index finger to his lips.

Scrap nodded and motioned for Josiah to take the lead. Both men had their six-shooter in one hand and their rifle in the other. As Scrap passed by Missy, he rubbed her rump quickly and gave her an open-handed tap. There were few times Josiah had witnessed Scrap showing the horse affection, but the boy cared deeply about his horse and was always nervous about leaving her behind—especially since his capture by Big Shirt and Little Shirt.

Josiah smiled briefly at this demonstration, then carefully made his way forward, edging along a tall stone face that still held heat from the day.

This was not how he had hoped to come upon O’Reilly, but there was no choice now but to follow the scent of the fire and surprise the two men. Good thing was, Josiah had seen them both from far enough away to know they were riding alone—most likely, considering the direction, heading to Mexico to make contact with Cortina. That, of course, was all supposition on Josiah’s part, but he couldn’t figure out anything else, or know the whys and hows of what was going on. All he knew was that he intended to put a stop to O’Reilly once and for all. So he would be safe. So Lyle would be safe. So Pearl would be safe.

He had tried to think little of Pearl since he’d left Austin, but every time he closed his eyes, she was fully in his mind’s eye, begging him to come back home.

It was a nice feeling to have, a welcome development over the pull of loneliness and grief that he had held tight for so long after Lily and his three little girls had died. It was far too soon to make too much out of his intimate moment with Pearl . . . but Josiah wanted nothing more than to complete his assignment and personal mission so he could return home to those he cared about.

The rock curved, and Josiah edged along slowly, a tiny glimmer of firelight reflecting off the side of the

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