Motioning for the Utes to follow him, he marched back down the empty street to the center of San Jardine.

In the windows of each adobe house, he saw as he drew close, were statues, figures carved from rock or molded from mud, sitting or standing behind small burning candles. He had not noticed them earlier, and they looked to him to have been placed there to guard the homes and protect the inhabitants within.

From him?

He felt a stirring of anger. As he knew from his wife, Mexicans proclaimed themselves Catholic, but this was even more pagan than that. It was bad enough worshiping all those graven images, all those “saints.” Hell, they’d even turned Jesus’ mother, Mary, into some kind of goddess that they prayed to. But what they had here had no connection to Christianity. It was primitive even beyond the religions practiced by Indians, and the figures in the windows looked like little monsters: creatures with oversize heads and spiky teeth, triangular bodies and multiple claws. From inside one of the homes, he heard the whimper of a woman, then a slap to shut her up, then silence.

The Utes were right. These Mexicans deserved to die.

He’d known it the moment he emerged from the cabin, but the feeling grew stronger as he looked at the various statues in the windows, those little blasphemies against God.

There was the thundering of hooves from far away, faint yelps of exhilaration that grew louder and closer by the second. As instructed, if he did not return by sundown, the volunteers were to come after him. And they had. Horses galloping, torches flaring, voices hollering, they came riding into the village from the opposite end, and Kit met them in front of the mercantile. He bade them dismount, then explained what they were to do.

A man emerged from the store, the man he had spoken to earlier, the law. The man had his gun drawn, and Kit shot him where he stood. The man fell, not dying right away, screaming in Spanish, and then the shooting really started. Other men came out of their homes, and volunteers took them down, moving quickly on to other houses and busting in doors, guns blazing.

In the end, they surrounded the remaining villagers, herding them into a corral, women and children mostly, but a few old men as well. The younger men, the husbands and fathers, were all dead, and their families were crying, screaming, wailing. A young girl, no more than twelve, tears streaming down her face, raised her arms to him, begging for mercy for herself and her mother. The volunteers paused, looked at him questioningly.

Kit glanced back at the tumbledown cabin at the far end of town.

“Open fire, boys,” he ordered.

1921

New Mexico had been a state for nearly a decade now, but the civilizing influence that should have come with the change had not made it to Jardine. As sheriff, Luther Dunlop was in a perfect position to judge such things, and in his considered opinion, the town was more lawless now than it had been while still part of a territory.

Particularly on Rainey Street.

Sitting at his desk, Luther thought about the murder that had just occurred there, about the man whose body had been taken away to the mortician’s. He had never seen such savagery before. And the fact that a beautiful young woman had done it—to her own husband, no less—made his blood run cold. For when they had found the gentleman, his manhood had been severed and shoved into a sort of pouch that she had carved into his stomach. His nipples had been sliced off and placed there as well. Apparently, the man had bled to death, but what none of them could yet figure out was why he had not fought back against his wife, why he had allowed her to do such a thing. For he had not been restrained in any way, and even the worst of the injuries might not have been fatal if treated in time.

The fact that she had been able to do this at all defied common logic.

Luther sighed. He didn’t like Rainey Street. He would never admit that to any man alive, but it was true. Something about the road made him feel uneasy. There’d been three killings and fifteen fights resulting in injuries on Rainey over only the last three months, a statistic that would give even lawmen in Chicago pause.

But it wasn’t just the violence that bothered him. He could handle violence; it came with the job. No, it was the feel of the place. Sometimes when he drove down that street, he grew nervous for no reason, and more than once, when no one else was in the motorcar, he purposely took a detour down another street, when taking Rainey would have been more convenient.

The telephone rang just as Luther was taking his flask out of the bottom drawer of his desk. He quickly unstopped the cork and took a quick drink before answering: “This is Luther Dunlop.”

There was no one on the other end of the line.

“Hello?” he said, but was greeted by silence.

Luther hung up immediately, jerking his hand away from the telephone as though it were contaminated, convinced that the call had come from the murder house, though there was no evidence to even suggest such a thing.

Had it been silent on the other end of the line, or had he heard whispers? The more he thought about it, the more he was certain that someone had been whispering, though he could not for the life of him figure out who or why.

The young wife who had committed the murder, Angie Daniels, had been arrested and was safe in a cell, but just to make sure, he went back into the jail to check on her.

He stopped at the edge of the doorway, shocked.

Mrs. Daniels had taken off all of her clothes and was standing in the center of her cell, completely naked. There were two other prisoners in the jail—both men, both drunks—and he would have expected them to be whooping it up, egging her on, or, at the very least, staring. But they had both turned away and were backed into the far corners of their own cells, facing the walls as though frightened.

She turned her head to look at Luther, and what she said made no sense, though it scared him.

“I was in the room where things grow old.”

She did seem older to him now than she had when he’d arrested her, and though ordinarily he would have given her a stern warning and ordered her to put her clothes back on, this time he turned around, closing and locking the jail door behind him.

The telephone rang again, but he was afraid to answer it, and let it ring.

He walked outside to clear his head. In his mind, he went over the way Mrs. Daniels looked at the house and the way she looked just now in her cell, trying to figure out what seemed different about her, why he thought she now looked older. Was it because of what she’d said? That bizarre nonsensical statement?

I was in the room where things grow old.

Or was it because she was naked, because, without her dress and girdle, parts that had been held in were allowed to fall out?

No. It wasn’t just her body. Her face looked more lined. And her hair seemed grayer. Luther had no idea how that was possible, but it was true, and the fact that the other prisoners were afraid of her made him think that they’d noticed the same change in her that he had.

Inside the station, the phone stopped ringing, and moments later, his deputy returned from accompanying Mr. Daniels’s body to the mortician’s. Jim Sacks wasn’t much of a deputy and was as dumb as dirt, but Luther was sure happy to see him now. He explained what was going on in the jail, and Jim had a reaction that was completely and utterly normal: he grinned and said, “I want to see that!”

The deputy’s response gave him courage, and Luther followed Jim into the building. Jim got his eyeful, then turned official and ordered Mrs. Daniels to put her clothes back on, which she did. Out in the office, the deputy winked, slapped him on the back and said, “Thanks for waiting for me. That’s some woman, huh?”

Luther had a difficult time sleeping that night. He had no dreams, but he kept waking up, and each time he did, he was filled with the growing certainty that he had done something he should not have or had forgotten to do something that he should have. It was a vague worry but a very real one, and he awoke in the morning tired and unrested, the feeling still hanging over him.

Later that week, Mrs. Daniels was transferred to the county seat at Amarejo, and for that Luther was grateful. She’d kept her clothes on after that first incident and hadn’t done anything strange since—he even thought she looked young again—but he was glad to see the last of her just the same, and around town things began to seem calmer, more pleasant.

Until the following Tuesday.

Jim was the one to take the call. Luther was eating lunch at Bob’s Diner, and he knew from Jim’s face when

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