Venom glanced at him sharply. The twins tended to keep to themselves and rarely poked their noses into what anyone else did. “What do you care?”
“Seph and me think he was askin’ you about the white girl, and we don’t like it much.”
About to answer, Venom noticed that Jeph’s ear had a small nick out of it. Apparently he’d been cut once. “I’ll be damned.”
“What?”
“I finally found a way to tell you two peas apart.” Venom chuckled, then sobered. “Now what’s this about the white girl?”
“Seph and me don’t cotton to the notion of white girls bein’ hurt. Redskins, greasers, darkies, it don’t matter with them. White girls it does.”
“How come you never said anything before? Don’t tell me Seph and you grew scruples all of a sudden.”
“Rubicon was sayin’ as how this one is real pretty.”
“Oh. So it’s all right for Logan to carve up the ugly ones but not the good-looking ones.”
“White is white. We held our tongues before because you let him and you’re the boss. But it festered some, and we have to speak our piece.”
“I’m glad you came to me and didn’t confront him.” Venom could see Logan getting riled and the Kylers making worm food of him. Logan was tough, but when it came to being deadly the twins had him beat all hollow.
The smoke from the campfires continued to writhe into the sky. Venom took out his spyglass. He counted ten wagons drawn up in a circle near a tract of trees. They were prairie schooners, red and blue with canvas tops. Men with rifles were herding oxen toward the trees, possibly to let them drink at a spring. “Unless I miss my guess it’s a bull train.”
“Freighters?” Jeph said. “They must be on their way to Santa Fe.”
“Could be.”
Through the spyglass Venom saw a man posted outside the wagons cup a hand to his mouth and point in their direction. Others came out of the circle, each bristling with weapons. “Remember to smile and be nice.” He grinned at his use of the word.
A thick man with powerful shoulders came to the front and planted his stout legs. He put his hands on a pair of pistols wedged under a brown belt and regarded them with the eyes of a wolf. His chin was covered with stubble and he had a short-brimmed hat pushed back on a brown thatch of hair. “What do you want?” he demanded as Venom drew rein.
“We saw your smoke and thought maybe you might have coffee on.”
“Indeed we do, but we’re not inclined to share. If it’s a warm welcome you’re looking for, find yourself a pilgrim train.”
Venom saw why the freighters had stopped; one of the wagons had a busted wheel. A pair of brawny freight men had used a jack to raise the bed and were busy replacing broken spokes. “You’re not very neighborly, friend.”
“No, I’m not. Nor am I your friend.” The man nodded at the circle. “This is my train. I’m the captain, Jeremiah Blunt. You will notice there are twenty-two of us and only eight of you. If any of you so much as lifts a gun, you will all die in your saddles.”
“Damn, you’re a mean cuss,” Venom said with genuine respect.
“I’ve never lost a wagon,” Jeremiah Blunt declared. “Never lost a man, either. I don’t intend to start now.”
“All we wanted was to share your fire and some coffee.”
“I don’t make a habit of repeating myself, but your ears must be plugged with wax. Our coffee is ours. Our fires are ours. You have come as close as you are going to and now you will leave.”
“I can see you treating redskins this way, but we’re white.”
“You say that as if skin matters. It doesn’t.”
Venom’s admiration was changing to anger. “I don’t like being treated as if I’m no account.”
“Do I look as if I care what you like?”
“We’re buffalo hunters.” Venom tried a new tack. “We thought you might have seen—” He got no further.
Blunt cut him off. “When trees grow fur.”
“What’s that?”
“You’re no more hide hunters than I am.” Blunt sniffed a few times. “You don’t have the stink.”
“You can tell what a man does by how he smells?” Venom sarcastically asked.
“Some, yes. A miner smells of the dust and the earth. A cowhand smells of horses and cows. Buffalo hunters smell of blood and gore. Your stink is different. You stink of death.”
It was such a remarkable statement that Venom was left speechless for one of the few times in his entire life.
“I don’t know what you men are and I don’t care. All I care about is my train. Be on your way and don’t come anywhere near us, or the next time we’ll shoot you on sight.”
“You’re awful rude.”
Blunt drew a pistol and pointed it at Venom. The click of the hammer was ominously loud. “Talking to you is like talking to an infant. Make yourselves scarce or we’ll make you dead.”
The other freighters raised rifles and pistols.
Venom was fit to explode. It was bad enough to be treated this way. It was worse that his men had to see him humiliated. All he’d wanted was to jaw a spell, maybe find out if the freighters had come across Indian sign. He reined around but paused to say, “I won’t forget this. I won’t forget how you’ve treated us for no reason.”
“Mister, I have all the reason in the world,” Blunt responded, the pistol rock-steady in his hand. “The freight in those wagons has been entrusted to me. Those who hired me know I’ll get it where it has to go. Neither Indians nor brigands nor Nature itself will stay me in my course.”
Potter cleared his throat. “Why are we wasting our time with this cantankerous bastard when there’s that white girl and her friends to find?”
Jeremiah Blunt glanced sharply at him.
Venom swiveled to give Potter a look that made him recoil as if he’d been hit. Swearing under his breath, Venom turned back to the freight captain. “Thanks for nothing, you grumpy goat.” He rode off and didn’t look back. He didn’t want his men to see how mad he was. He must always give the impression he was made of iron. Any hint of weakness, and one of them might take it into their head to challenge his leadership. Logan, for instance.
Suddenly the Kyler twins were on both sides of him.
“What the hell do you two want?”
“We can fix him for you. One shot is all it would take.”
Venom glanced at their ears. “He’s not worth the bother, Jeph. His men might come after us, and like Potter said, we have that white girl and her Injun friends to think of.”
“I’d never let anyone talk to me the way Blunt did to you,” Seph remarked.
“No, you’d have shot him and gotten the rest of us killed.” Venom was about to add that they should fall back in line when the rest of his men came up alongside.
“Say the word, boss,” Potter said.
“You’re lunkheads, the whole bunch of you.”
“We could wait until tonight and jump them,” Potter persisted.
“Maybe lose half of us, and for what?” Venom said gruffly. “To punish them for their insult? Then what? We sell their freight? Because we sure as hell can’t turn in their scalps for bounty money. Hardly any of them had hair dark enough or long enough to be mistook for Injun hair.”
Logan snorted in what could only be contempt. “If it’d been me the bastard treated that way, I wouldn’t slink off with my tail between my legs.”
Venon reined up so abruptly that Calvert, who was behind him, nearly rode into his horse. Everyone else also came to a stop. “What did you just say?”
“A man has to stand up for himself or he’s not much of a man.”
“You’re suggesting I’m yellow?”