What a family, Fargo thought. He laid back down. He must be a glutton for punishment, he told himself, to go through all this when he didn’t have to.

Fargo recollected hearing that pride went before a fall. Maybe so, but he couldn’t look at himself in the mirror if he quit.

One thing was certain. The two people who had died so far wouldn’t be the only ones. There wasn’t a shred of doubt in his mind that before the hunt was over more would be bucked out in gore.

Just so he wasn’t one of them.

13

Fargo was up early. He splashed water on his face and shrugged into his shirt, wincing from the bruises. Shoving his hat on his head, he went to strap on his gun belt, and remembered—no weapons were allowed. Reluctantly, he left the Colt on the bed. He left the Arkansas toothpick in its ankle sheath. No one knew he had it and he might need it before the twenty-four hours were up.

Fargo thought he would be the first outside but he was mistaken. Too much was at stake. They were all there, waiting for the shot that would start the hunt.

Tom and Cletus Brun were at the bottom of the steps and glared at him when he stepped into the rosy light of the chill dawn. Charlotte was nervously pacing, her cousin at her side. Apparently Amanda had changed her mind about taking part. Charles stood alone, wrapped in his thoughts. Roland was gazing over the woodland.

Samantha wore a coat. She greeted him with, “Good morning, Skye. I hope you slept well.”

“I wish.”

Sam looked around as if to be sure she wouldn’t be overheard and said, “It’s a shame we were interrupted yesterday. After this is over maybe we can take up where we left off.”

“Fargo was studying Cletus Brun. The big backwoodsman wasn’t wearing a revolver or a knife—that Fargo could see. But Brun’s clothes were loose and bulky and could easily conceal a weapon.

Sam stared in the direction Fargo was looking. “I heard about the fight. A servant found Mr. Brun lying in the stable. He refused to say what happened but we’ve all guessed. Tom was furious. He told Pickleman that you shouldn’t be allowed to take part in the hunt but Theodore said you hadn’t broken any of the rules.”

At that moment the lawyer emerged. He stifled a yawn, then said cheerfully, “Good morning. Is everyone ready for the day’s excitement?” He grinned, but no one else did. “Yes, well.” He consulted a pocket watch. “The hunt begins promptly at six. Another ten minutes yet.”

“Why not start it now?” Tom said. “We’re all here.”

“Your father stipulated six o’clock and six it will be. The conditions in the will must be met.”

“Leave it to you to be a stickler for Father’s nonsense.”

Pickleman tsked-tsked. “Really now. You can’t fault me for going by the letter of the law.”

“This whole thing is a farce,” Charles said. “Father has set it up so that we’re pitted against one another like roosters in a cockfight or dogs in a pit. He hated us so much, he wants to tear us apart from the grave.”

“It’s despicable,” Samantha said.

Pickleman sniffed and declared, “Whether anyone is harmed is entirely up to all of you. Conduct the hunt fairly or be underhanded and mean. It’s your choice.”

“Too much is at stake to be fair,” Tom said. “This isn’t an inheritance hunt. It’s a death hunt.”

Sam stepped forward and raised her arms to get their attention. “I want everyone to know that I don’t intend to fall for Father’s ruse. I refuse to harm any of you.”

Tom laughed. “You expect us to believe that?”

“Why wouldn’t you? I’ve always treated every one of you with the utmost respect. You know that, Thomas.”

“I know that with millions of dollars at stake I’d be a fool to trust you or any of the others. Siblings or not, it’s every man, or woman, for him- or herself, and the devil take the hindmost.”

“Exactly the attitude Father wanted to provoke.”

Tom smirked. “Then he’s succeeded. Make no mistake, dear sister. I want to win. I want the inheritance. If I lose, I lose everything. I’ll be left with the clothes on my back and nothing more. I can’t have that.”

“Nor I,” Charles said. “But I refuse to conduct the hunt like some animal. I won’t harm any of you if you don’t try to harm me.”

Sam smiled and nodded. “That’s two of us. How about you, Charlotte? Roland?”

Roland answered first. “I intend to keep to myself and expect the rest of you to do the same. Should I run into you in the woods I won’t lift a finger against you unless you lift one against me.”

Charlotte stopped her pacing. “I’d like to believe that none of us will hurt one another but Tom is right. Too much is at stake.” She looked at her brothers and her sister. “It’s not just that I want to win. I need to win. I need to find that damn chest because I refuse to be poor. I refuse to live like the common people do. I was born into luxury and I am going to go on living in luxury, the rest of you be damned.”

“Thank you for being honest with us,” Charles said dryly.

“Spare me your sarcasm,” Charlotte shot back. “You’re the same as me, what with your expensive men’s club and your expensive clothes and your expensive food and drink. You need to win as much as I do.”

“True,” Charles conceded. “But I refuse to stoop to Father’s level and resort to violence to do it.”

“Sweetness and love. Isn’t it glorious?” Tom laughed his brother to scorn. “All this is well and good but you’re forgetting a few things, dear brother, as Fargo pointed out yesterday. You’re forgetting Emmett, murdered by a killer who must have been hired by one of us. You’re forgetting that other pair of assassins who are undoubtedly out there somewhere right this minute, waiting to do us in.”

“I certainly didn’t hire them,” Samantha said.

“So you claim,” Tom rejoined. “But how can we be sure? Charles and Roland have both said they will play nice but how do we know one or both of them hasn’t paid to have the rest of us killed?”

“The same applies to you,” Charles said.

“That it does,” Tom agreed. “So it won’t do me any good to give you my word that the assassins aren’t my doing.”

“As if we would believe you anyway,” Charlotte said.

A strained silence fell, broken only when Sam turned to Theodore Pickleman. “I have a question about the hunt.”

“Anything I can answer, I will,” the lawyer assured her.

“Father said the chest is buried within half a mile of the lodge. Is that correct?”

“It is,” Pickleman verified.

“I’m not much good at judging distances. How will I know when I’ve gone half a mile? I could end up going farther and waste a lot of time I could put to better use.”

“Ah,” Pickleman said. “I forgot to tell you, didn’t I?”

“Tell us what?”

“Your father, as usual, thought of everything. Since he couldn’t very well have a fence built to mark the boundary, he stipulated the next best thing. Yesterday, servants rode out half a mile in every direction and marked trees and boulders and logs with red paint. Spot those and you’ll know to turn around.”

Charles said, “You can’t have marked every tree and boulder. We could easily miss them.”

“True,” Pickleman said. “As an added precaution, servants have been stationed at various points along the perimeter and will yell to any of you they see going past the half-mile mark.”

Charles gave a sudden start and blurted, “I’ll be damned.”

“What?” Pickleman asked.

“Nothing,” Charles said. “I was thinking of poor Emmett, is all.”

The lawyer consulted his pocket watch. “Five minutes. Any of you who want a last drink or bite to eat should get it quickly.”

No one moved.

“Very well. Remember, the hunt is to last twenty-four hours. Not a minute longer. If none of you have found

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