“Nawww, he’s a big-boned lad, Scratch. Just like me,” Kinkead reminded. “Don’t you worry none ’bout Josiah Paddock. You best remember I know the nigger what taught that big lad how to hang on to his hair in these here Shining Mountains. Any man what learns from Titus Bass sure as hell gonna keep a keen eye on his back trail. Ain’t no pepper-belly I know of gonna have the huevos to go scratching round, makin’ trouble for Josiah Paddock!”

Bass handed the jug on to Joseph Manz, then turned back to Kinkead. “You ask the lad if’n he wanted to move north to the Arkansas with you?”

“I did,” Kinkead confessed. “But he told me he was staying ’cause he’d come to know them Mexicans and didn’t figger ’em to raise no truck with him. ‘Sides, Josiah said he had a big stake already made down to Taos, didn’t wanna lose if he closed up and walked away from his shop. Said he didn’t fear they’d do him no harm—no matter how mean they made it for some others we knowed of.”

Bass rocked back and asked, “Them Texians ever show?”

“Not that none of us ever heard. Maybeso it was just cheap talk,” Mathew declared, wagging his head with regret. “Damn shame of it, here at our Pueblo we’re sitting right where Armijo’s soldados or them Texians either one could jump us real easy.”

“If’n you hear either one’s comin’—where’s a man like you to go?” Scratch inquired.

Kinkead gazed at him squarely. “Nowhere, Titus. Nowhere. Some men you can push out of one place after ’nother. As for me, I decided folks pushed me off from one place already. I ain’t gonna let any nigger push me outta my home again. I figger the Arkansas’s my home now, where I plan on livin’ out the last of my years.”

“Just like Josiah’s figgering on lastin’ out his years in Taos.” Bass worked at calming his fear. “After all this time, I’ll wager the lad talks purty good Mexican.”

Kinkead roared, “Good as any natural-born pepper-belly!”

When out of the darkness a loud voice suddenly bawled, “To hell with ever’ last pepper-belly, I say!”

The men at the fire whirled to find Bill Williams striding up, accompanied by two more of the raiders.

“That whiskey in them jugs?” Williams asked as he stepped right into the corona of warm firelight. “Three of us just been over to see how the herd’s grazing—”

His words dropped off in midsentence as Jim Beckwith stood and turned to face his old nemesis.

“How you been, Bill?” the mulatto stated with a flat, dispassionate voice.

The old trapper’s face went hard as slate, glaring at Beckwith. “I’ll be jiggered, boys. Seein’ how this Neegra shows his face to me here sure sours my milk, it does. Never thort he’d have the nerve to stay in the same territory I’m in—”

“Goddamn your eyes!” Jim snarled, muscles tensing along his jaw. “You’re the child just dropping right outta the hills. This here’s my home!”

“Y-your home, Beckwith?” Williams scoffed. “I say a low-down sack of Digger droppings like you don’t deserve no home! Maybeso you best crawl back under some shit-covered rock you come from!”

Of a sudden, Bass reached up and grabbed Beckwith’s wrist, stopping the mulatto in his tracks. But he asked his question of Williams, “Bad blood still atween you two, Solitaire?”

Bill’s eyes flicked to Titus, then back to the mulatto’s face. “Been some, it has. This here mongrel dog of a Neegra allays sided with Peg-Leg on ever’thing that first ride to California.” He grinned cruelly, saying, “Wish’t Beckwith been along so’s I could leave him dry up in the goddamned desert with Peg-Leg.”

“That what you done to Smith?” the mulatto demanded, his fists clenching and unclenching. “Leave him in the goddamned desert?”

“We give him plenty of horses to eat,” Bass said, releasing Beckwith and standing at the black man’s elbow. He took a step backward to place himself almost halfway between the mulatto and the old trapper.

Beckwith’s black eyes bore into Scratch. “You was part of this, Titus Bass?”

Before Scratch could answer, Williams grumbled to the others, “What with you boys ’llowing this here p’isen-brained Neegra to make his home here with you, our outfit gonna be pulling out come first light.” He sniffed the air. “Can’t stand this smell of half-dead yellow-bellied dog—”

“You sure mighty big on calling a man bad things when you got all your friends at your side!” Beckwith snarled, his fists flexing as he glanced a hateful glare at Bass.

“Better’n talkin’ bad behind a man’s back—just what a snake-belly black-ass like you does!” Williams snapped, his right forearm sliding up across his belly, the hard-knuckled, slender fingers coming to rest around that elk-antler knife handle. “Never you had any backbone to say a mean thing to a man’s face!”

“You ain’t bound to change, are you, Bill?” Beckwith shot back. “Still the same ol’ soft-brained idjit you allays was. Still runnin’ off at the tongue like a ol’ woman—”

“An’ you’re never gonna be a white man, are you, Neegra?” Williams interrupted, his bony shoulders drawing up threateningly. “No matter how hard Jimmy Beckwith tries to be white—”

The instant Beckwith lunged for him, Williams started to yank his belt knife free of the sheath, but Kinkead snagged that arm just above the elbow.

“No stickers, you sonsabitches!” Bass hollered as he jerked backward on Beckwith’s arm, stumbling at the edge of the flames.

The mulatto twisted, wrenching his arm free as the rest of the men at the fire bolted to their feet. Williams whirled around on one foot, surprising Kinkead when he jammed a hickory-hard knee into Mathew’s groin and pushed himself free of the big man’s hold on him.

“Watchit!” someone cried as Williams lurched between two of the raiders who were attempting to block his way.

Scratch suddenly hopped in front of Beckwith, screaming at Williams, “I’ll kill you my own self, you go an’ pull your sticker, Solitaire!”

“Best get out of my way, Bass!” Williams shrieked as he lumbered around the side of the fire, traders and raiders dodging out of the fray. “Gonna gut ’im with my bare hands!”

Just as Titus raised his arms out before him and started toward Williams, Beckwith shoved Bass from behind, hurling Scratch aside as the mulatto leaped around him. Landing on his knees, Bass jerked around to find Beckwith yanking his pistol from his belt.

“Goddamn you, Beckwith!” he shouted. “Don’t shoot!”

Williams was already under a full head of steam, his neck tucked into his shoulders as he closed on the mulatto.

But instead of pointing his pistol at Williams, Beckwith suddenly whirled the weapon around in his hand, gripping it by the barrel, swinging it backward at the end of his arm before he slashed downward the instant before the old trapper collided with the mulatto. The resounding crack reminded Titus of the dull thud a maul made as it drove an iron wedge into an old hickory stump.

Williams went down like every bone had been ripped from his body.

His heart pounding in his ears, anger at both men rising near the boiling point, Titus got to his hands and knees, crawling back to kneel over Williams.

“He breathing?” Rube Purcell asked as he came up, bent at the waist.

“Yeah, he’s alive,” Bass grumbled as he stood, not taking his hard glare off the mulatto.

Before any one of them, much less Beckwith himself, saw it coming—Titus lashed out with the back of his hand, the oak-hard knuckles slashing across the mulatto’s, mouth.

“You stupid bastard!” Scratch growled menacingly. “You pulled your goddamn pistol, ready to kill a man!”

“By dogs, he was gonna kill me if I didn’t lay him out first!” Beckwith protested, then licked at a trickle of blood seeping from the corner of his mouth.

“Maybe he should have kill’t you outright,” Titus said, a rumble of warning in the back of his throat.

Jim’s eyes grew wide with confusion. “You takin’ his side, Scratch?”

“I was willing to give yours a listen—till you knocked him in the head,” Bass said, tearing his eyes away from Beckwith so he could glance down at Williams. “Maybeso, you’d better go back to your Pueblo now while you got the chance.”

“Trouble is,” Beckwith admitted, “this ain’t finished ’tween him and me—”

“You gone mad with whiskey?” Titus demanded.

That appeared to bring Beckwith up short. “No. No, I ain’t so drunk I don’t know ’sactly what I’m doing when

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