Longarm 396 longarm and.., p.4
Longarm #396 : Longarm and the Castle of the Damned (9781101545249),
p.4
Not that Longarm knew just what Moses was a witness to, but still and all. It was a federal offense, and he had not only the right but a sworn duty to pursue the matter.
He lengthened his stride.
Chapter 10
“Say, you’re the U.S. marshal, aren’t you?”
Longarm stopped. He was on his way out of the hotel, carpetbag in hand. “I am. Do you need me for something?”
“I most surely do,” the tall, neatly dressed fellow said. “I need to know who will pay for Moses Arthur’s burial. I’m an undertaker, you see, and I have the old man laid out nice and peaceful with not a bullet hole in sight. But I need to know where to plant him and who will pay for it.”
“What do you usually do when somebody dies a pauper?”
“We have a county-owned plot of ground. That’s for folks with no family and no money left behind. But Moses had a daughter.”
“You knew him well?” Longarm asked.
“Oh, no. I mean, everybody knew him, sort of. I saw him from time to time, but I never spoke to him that I recall.”
“But you know he had a daughter?”
“Just from her letter. Girl named Netty.”
Longarm set his carpetbag down on the hotel porch and tipped his Stetson back a mite. “Letter?”
“Sure. In his pocket,” the undertaker said. “Naturally I removed his clothes before I, um, worked on the corpse. Replacing fluids and so on. So I had to take his things off. The letter was in his pants pocket. Right front if you really want to know.”
“Where is this letter now?”
“In my front room,” the undertaker said.
“Wait here a minute while I put my bag inside. Then I want you to take me over to your office and show me that letter.”
“Marshal, I don’t mean to be pushy, but what I need to know is who will pay for the burying. I have expenses, you know. Professional fluids. A box. The hire of a laborer to open a grave. I have expenses.”
“What does the county pay?”
“Only four dollars. That’s barely enough to cover my direct cost. I was thinking . . . the federal government and everything . . . I was thinking you should pay six dollars for me to take care of Moses.”
“I’m not authorized to commit the government of the United States to such an amount. But you can submit your request for payment to the attorney general’s office in Washington City.” Longarm struggled to suppress a grin when he said that. If this fellow waited for payment out of Washington for a request like this . . . The expression “until Hell freezes over” came to mind.
“You’ll give me that address?”
“Be glad to,” Longarm said, pulling a cheroot out of his inside coat pocket. “And you will give me the letter Moses was carrying, right?” He nipped the twist off the end of his cheroot, struck a match, and got his smoke alight.
“Yes. Yes, of course. Follow me, please.”
The undertaker led the way with Longarm striding behind.
Chapter 11
“Medicine Bow. Next stop Medicine Bow. Ten minutes while we take on water. Medicine Bow. Next stop Medicine Bow. Ten minutes . . .” The conductor passed on through the car and beyond, delivering his message as he went.
The train began to slow, the cars clanking and clattering as their momentum caused each to crash into the coupling of the car ahead. Longarm waited until the train had slowed to a crawl before he stood and got his bag down from the overhead rack.
The mixed freight and passenger train stopped, backed up a few feet, stopped again, and inched forward as the engineer aligned the water sluice with the open receiver on the engine. Once he was sure the train was stopped for good, Longarm made his way down to the covered platform beside the tiny shack that served as the depot at Medicine Bow, Wyoming Territory. He was the only passenger who left the train at the little community.
Medicine Bow consisted of half a dozen or so businesses—two of those being saloons—and perhaps two dozen houses, plus what looked to be five or six acres of cattle pens and loading chutes.
Longarm displayed his badge to the fellow who served as both telegrapher and ticket seller inside the depot building. “Mind if I leave my bag here for a spell?”
“Be glad to oblige, Marshal, but you should know that I lock up at six. No one will be here until six tomorrow morning.”
“Not even a telegraph operator?” Longarm asked.
The clerk, a young man who was struggling, with rather limited success, to raise a mustache crop under his nose, shook his head. “I’m all there is. Six days a week. I’m here from six to six.” He grinned. “More or less.”
“What happens if you get sick?”
“Then they send a relief operator down from Evanston. But that’s only happened once. Was there something else I could do for you, Marshal?”
“No, that’s fine. Thanks.” Longarm started to turn away, then paused and asked, “Do you happen to know a woman named Netty?”
“Any idea what that would be short for?”
“No, sir,” Longarm said. “All I know is Netty. Where do you get your mail here? Do you have a post office?”
“What we got is a postal contractor,” the helpful clerk said. “That would be Seth Greaves, over to the grocery.”
“The post office is in a grocer’s store?” Longarm asked.
The clerk grinned and said, “Politics. Who knows who and all that sort of thing.”
“Politics I understand,” Longarm said. “You don’t have to say more.” He thanked the clerk and left the depot for the short, wide business street of Medicine Bow. Short because there just were not all that many businesses to accommodate, and wide because this was essentially a cow town with its commercial affairs coming from either the railroad or from cattlemen loading their beeves onto railroad cars. The animals needed plenty of room when they were hazed through town to the pens.
Greaves Greengrocers, Fine Meats and Seafoods was easy enough to find. The building was a large, two-story clapboard affair with a sign over the porch overhang declaring all the wonderful things Seth offered to his customers. Including in smaller print at the bottom of the sign, UNITED STATES POST OFFICE.
Longarm crossed the wide street and walked the half block west to Greaves’s store.
A middle-aged man with a paunch and a splendid mustache that must surely have been the envy of the young railroad clerk greeted the newcomer. “Afternoon, sir. How can we help you today?”
We? There was no one else visible in the store. But perhaps, Longarm thought, the man had a mouse in his pocket.
He approached the counter and again displayed his badge. Seth Greaves stood a little straighter and took on a more serious expression when he saw that. “Yes, Marshal?”
“I’m lookin’ for a woman . . . I don’t know how old . . . who goes by the name of Netty. I figure if she lives anywhere around here she’ll be getting her mail through you, so mayhap you would know who she is and where I can find her.”
Greaves frowned in thought for a moment, then shook his head. “I don’t have any patrons with that name. Sounds like somebody’s pet name though. Any idea what it’d be short for?”
“No, sir, I don’t,” Longarm admitted.
“Important that you find her?”
“Yes, it is.”
“Got a last name?” Greaves asked.
“No, sir. Far as I know, that could be it.”
“Well I can tell you certain sure that we got no postal patrons with Netty for a last name. If you could give me the right first name, I might be able to put a last name with it, but I’d have to have more than just the nickname.”
“All right,” Longarm said. “How about the last name Arthur?”
Greaves shook his head. “Sorry. I don’t know of anyone with that name, but if you think of anything else, I’d be proud to help you,” he said.
Longarm touched the brim of his Stetson by way of a thank-you and went back outside.
With only that name to go on, finding Moses Arthur’s Netty might not be as simple as Longarm had hoped.
Chapter 12
Longarm checked his Ingersoll. There might yet be enough time for him to find Mose Arthur’s Netty—He just did not know where to look.
What he did know was that someone had had a reason to murder the old man. Good, bad, or just plain stupid—there was a reason behind it. Longarm wanted to know that reason, first because Arthur had been a potential witness before a federal peace officer, and second, perhaps even more compelling, because the murder had taken place practically under his nose, which just plain offended the shit out of Deputy United States Marshal Custis Long. That was the long and the short of it.
Mindful that the railroad depot would close in a few hours, he headed down the street, and turned in at the first of Medicine Bow’s two saloons.
It was nearly dark inside the place and cool after the heat of the sun. The scents were pleasantly familiar. Sawdust and suds. The yeasty smell of beer and the sharper smell of cheap whiskey. Traces of perfume hung in the air too, suggesting that a man could buy more than a drink in the place.
Longarm suspected the saloon would be a beehive of activity once the beef shipping season got under way. Now, however, there was only a portly man wearing a no-longerwhite apron and one customer propped up on the brass rail that ran in front of the bar.
“What can I get you, mister?”
“Got rye whiskey?”
“Course I do. Glass or a bottle for you, friend?”
“Just a glass will do me, thanks.” Longarm dug out a quarter and got back a small glass of golden rye and ten cents change.
The bartender slid a bowl of peanuts down the bar so Longarm could reach them, and said, “Funny thing. Two strangers in one day. Cowhands and cattle buyers we get, but not generally two strangers passing through.”
“How do you know I’m not a buyer?” Longarm asked.
The bartender shrugged. “You don’t got the look. Besides, it isn’t the time of year for the buyers to come in.”
“Ship a lot of beef out of here, do they?” Longarm asked, taking up his rye. He held the glass under his nose to take in the scent, then allowed a small quantity of the whiskey to trickle past his lips, held it on his tongue for a moment before he swallowed. Damn, but it was good.
“I have a question if you don’t mind,” Longarm said.
“Sure. Anything.”
The other patron tapped his mug on the bar, and the bartender held a finger up to Longarm. “Just a moment.”
Longarm nodded and took another small sip. After his overindulgence in Cheyenne, he wanted to go slow with the liquor this time.
The barman plucked the empty mug off the bar, tugged on a tap, and filled it. Longarm noticed that he let the suds overflow so that the mug was filled to the rim with dark, foaming beer. Full measure. The deputy U.S. marshal liked that. The bartender came back to stand in front of him. “Now, what is that question?”
“I’m lookin’ for someone named Netty. That’s all I know. Just Netty. Would you know anyone like that?”
“Now, that is the strangest damn thing,” the bartender said. “Remember I said you’re the second stranger in town today? Well that other fella asked the same question. He’s looking for somebody called Netty too.”
“What did you tell him?”
The man shrugged. “Same thing I got to tell you. I don’t know anybody by that name.”
“Shit,” Longarm grumbled.
“Have you asked Sam Greaves over at the post office?”
Longarm nodded. “That was my first stop. Mr. Greaves said the name was new to him. Now, I’m thinking it must be a nickname. Something like that.”
“Excuse me,” the man standing nearby said. He was tall, with full whiskers but neatly trimmed, and he was not dressed like a saddle bum. Did not look much like a town merchant either. His voice was friendly enough though. Very polite.
“Do you want a refill already, Chuck?” the barman asked.
“No, I’m still good here. I was talking to that other fellow.”
“Me?” Longarm asked.
“That’s right. You asked about somebody called Netty, right?”
“I sure did.”
The man moved closer, dragging his mug with him. He took a peanut out of the bowl and carefully took the meat out of the shell, his fingers busy with that task while he spoke. “I heard such a name,” he said.
Longarm’s interest quickened.
“I’m trying to remember where that would’ve been.”
“Would it help your memory if I was to set you up to a drink?” Longarm asked.
The fellow smiled. “I’m not trying to cadge drinks off of you, mister. I can buy my own. No, I’m really trying to recall . . .” He snapped his fingers and grinned. “Now I recollect. It was out at the Birdwell ranch. The missus was saying something to her hired help. Called her Netty. I never heard what her right name might be, but I’m sure about that much.”
The bartender tipped the bottle of rye over Longarm’s glass to refill it and said, “If Chuck says it, you can take that to the bank. I’ve never known him to be wrong.”
“I wouldn’t go that far,” Chuck said modestly. “It’s just that I get around a lot. Meet plenty of folks. Pretty much everybody around here actually.”
“That’s the truth,” the barman injected. “Chuck here is a vet’rinarian. Doctors just about every horse or cow in the county.”
“Only those that need it,” Chuck said. “I keep trying to find a way so I can charge my fees for every animal, but for some reason the cattlemen don’t much cotton to that idea.” He laughed and took a deep pull on his beer.
“I’d be happy to buy you another of those,” Longarm offered.
“Thanks, but I have to go. There are some sick sheep over south a way.”
“Before you go, would you mind pointing me to this Birdwell place you mentioned?”
“I’ll be glad to. Step outside with me and I’ll tell you how to get there.” He looked at the bartender and nodded, “Thanks, Jerry. I’ll see you this evening, right?”
“Right,” the barman said, taking Chuck’s mug down from the bar and dropping it into a basin of soapy water. Longarm noticed that he left the glass of rye where it was, rather than assume Longarm would be leaving after he got directions to the Birdwell ranch. Longarm definitely liked this place.
“Now about this Birdwell place . . . ?” He followed Chuck out onto the boardwalk that fronted the saloon.
Chapter 13
It looked like he would not be in and back out of Medicine Bow in one day, but duty trumped comfort in Longarm’s view, so he retrieved his carpetbag from the railroad depot and asked the clerk there where he could put up for the night.
“Oh, we got a hotel. It isn’t much of a place, but it serves the purpose. Cheap this time of year too. When the buyers are in and the cattlemen are shipping, that’s another story entirely. The price goes up, but the place fills up anyhow. Let me tell you how to get to it,” the clerk offered.
Five minutes later Longarm was standing at the counter of a small and rather shabby hotel a block off the wide main street.
“Will you be staying long?” a skinny kid with freckles and big teeth asked. Probably the proprietor’s son, Longarm guessed.
“No idea,” Longarm told him. “When I leave, I’ll give you a voucher for payment.”
The kid scowled. “I don’t think we can do that.”
“Sure you can. It’s a U.S. government pay voucher. Good as gold anywhere.”
“I’ll have to ask my mom about that.”
“Fine, but in the meantime just give me my room so I can get on about my business.”
“I suppose I can do that.” The youngster turned toward the board where a dozen or so keys were hanging on small nails. “Front room or back?” he asked.
“Whichever is quieter,” Longarm said.
“That would be in the back then. We sometimes get some rowdy folks in the streets. Not so much right now, but there are times.” He took a key down from the wall and handed it to Longarm. “Room four,” he said. “Upstairs in the back. Do you want me to carry your bag up for you?”
Hoping for a tip, Longarm thought. “No, thanks. I got it.” He accepted the key and thanked the boy.
Going up the stairs in the ramshackle little hotel was one of the more dangerous things he had done lately, he was sure. The steps were warped and creaked alarmingly when he put his weight on them. He stayed close to the banister so he would have something to grab on to should one of the treads give way underfoot. As it happened he was able to reach the top without plunging to his death. That was a relief until he remembered that he would have to take those same steps to get down again.
Room number four was tiny, with a narrow iron bedstead and a small washstand that held a basin and an empty pitcher. There was a thunder mug beneath the bed. Hooks on the wall served in place of a wardrobe. Still, the room was spotlessly clean, the pillow fluffy, and the sheets smelling—he sniffed them to be sure—of laundry soap and sunshine. He had stayed in far worse places than this.
Longarm deposited his bag by the foot of the bed and immediately hazarded the staircase again. The kid was sitting on a ladder-back chair in what passed for a lobby, a book open in his lap and a pad on foolscap and a sharp pencil in his hand.
“Studying something?” Longarm asked.
The boy smiled. “Yes, sir. I’m going to be an engineer. Come fall, I’ll be away to college.”
“Good for you, son. Your mom must be proud of you.”
The boy shrugged. “Truth is she’s kind of mad about it. I won’t be here for the fall shipping, so she’ll have to take on hired help.”
Longarm grinned. “Hired with actual money, is that it?”
“Yes, sir. But I’m set on what I want. I’m going to lay track and build bridges. I’m going to build wonderful things.”
“With that kind of attitude, you will indeed do those things,” Longarm said. “Not to change the subject, but could you tell me where I can hire a horse?”











