Page 5 of Come the Spring (Claybornes' Brides (Rose Hill) 5)
âWas there something else?â Ryan asked.
âIt seems to me ⦠and a lot of folks in town ⦠that I ought to be in charge of this investigation.â
Ryan cast Cole a quick glance to see how he was reacting to the sheriffâs claim.
âHow do you figure that?â Ryan asked.
âIâm the sheriff in Rockford Falls, so this is my jurisdiction, not yours. Like I said before, I ought to be in charge and you two should be taking orders from me.â
âYou think you could do a better job?â
âI maybe could.â
âYou canât even look at the stains on the floor,â Ryan said. âWhat makes you think you canââ
âItâs my jurisdiction,â Sloan stubbornly insisted.
Ryanâs patience was all used up. âMarshal Clayborne and I are here by special appointment, and I donât particularly care if youâve got a problem with that or not. Stay out of our way,â he ordered harshly. âNow, go get your posse together.â
Cole listened to the exchange without saying a word. He waited until the sheriff left, then crossed the lobby to the windows and opened one. A clean, sweet breeze, tinged with the scent of pines, brushed over his arms and neck. He took several deep breaths to rid himself of the metallic smell of blood inside the bank, and then turned around and leaned against the ledge.
He stared at Ryanâs back. âIt rained hard last night and most of this morning,â he remarked.
âYeah, I know. I got soaked.â
âThere isnât going to be a trail this afternoon. Itâs been washed away.â
Ryan glanced over his shoulder. âI know that too. I just wanted to get rid of Sloan.â
Cole folded his arms across his chest and leaned back. âThe men who did this are long gone.â
Ryan nodded. âWires were sent to every lawman in the territory yesterday. By now all the main roads are being watched. There are also men at the train stations and the river. The bastards will still get through the net, though. Theyâre slick, real slick.â He let the paper heâd been reading drop down to the desk and turned around to face Cole. âYou know what I used to be worried about?â
âWhatâs that?â
Ryanâs voice lowered. âThat theyâd stop and I wouldnât be able to catch them.â
Cole shook his head. âThey arenât going to stop.â Nodding toward the bloodstains, he added in a whisper, âTheyâre having too much fun.â
âYeah, I think youâre right. Theyâve developed a real taste for killing.â
âHow many banks have they robbed?â
âThis makes almost a dozen.â
âTheyâve gotten away twelve times?â
âTheyâre either very lucky or very smart.â
âWhere and when was the first robbery?â
âIt happened late spring two years ago. They robbed a bank in TexasâBlackwater, Texas, to be exact. Thatâs how they got their name.â
âThe Blackwater gang,â Cole said.
âYes,â Ryan said. âAnyway, they went in during the night with kerosene and burned the building to the ground when they left. No one saw anything.â
âWas anyone killed?â
âNo,â Ryan answered. âThen, two weeks later, they hit another bank in Hollister, Oklahoma. Once again, they went in during the night, but they didnât use kerosene.â
âDid they tear up the place?â
Ryan shook his head. âThey were nice and tidy. They didnât touch anything but the money, and they didnât leave any evidence behind.â
âHow do you know the two robberies were related?â
âGut feeling mostly,â Ryan said. âThere were a couple of similarities. As I said before, they went in during the night, and in both cases, government money had just been deposited for the army salaries at the nearby forts.â
âWhere was the third bank?â
âPelton, Kansas,â Ryan answered. âThey changed the way they did things with that robbery. They went in at closing time, just like they did here. There were seven people inside. Two were killed. The shooting started when one of the employees went for his gun. He died gripping it in his hand, but he didnât get a shot off.â
âSo you did have witnesses?â
âYes, but they werenât helpful. They said the men wore masks and that only one did all the talking. They said he had a southern drawl.â
âHow many men did they say came into the bank?â
âSeven.â
âAnd they were after army payroll again?â
âYes.â
Cole filed the information away. Then he asked, âWhere did they strike next?â
âThey went back to Texas,â Ryan answered, âand robbed a bank in Dillon.â
âThatâs your hometown, isnât it?â
Ryan looked startled. Cole quickly explained. âI did a halfhearted search for you when you took the compass from my mother.â
âWhat else did you find out?â
Cole shrugged. âNothing much. Was anyone killed in the robbery in Dillon?â he asked, switching the topic back to the more pressing matter.
âYes.â His voice turned harsh, angry. âToo damned many.â
Cole waited, but Ryan didnât give him any particulars. When Cole prodded him for details, he became agitated.
âLook, itâs all in the files. Iâve gone through them at least a hundred times, but maybe when you read the reports, youâll find something I missed. The bank in Dillon was the last one they hit that year. They lay low in the fall and winter months, then start in again in the spring and summer months. Itâs sporadic, yet consistent,â he added. âLast year they moved north and became even more violent, and this year, all three banks theyâve robbed have been in Montana Territory.â
âProbably because there are so many places to hide.â
âYes. I think so too. Theyâve stayed away from the big cities.â
âSheriff Norton told me about the witness you had in Middleton.â
Ryan nodded. âLuke MacFarland was his name. He happened to be walking past the bank during the robbery. He told me he heard gunshots, but that he was already looking in through the space between the window and the shades because of something else he heard.â
âWhat was that?â
âLaughter.â
Cole wasnât shocked. âI told you they enjoy their work. Itâs going to get much worse unless you stop them.â
âUnless we stop them,â Ryan corrected. âYouâre in this now.â
âYeah, I guess I am. Did Luke tell you how the people inside died? Did they make them kneel down?â
âNo, they were taken into the back room and killed there. The kneeling ⦠thatâs new. So is the knife.â
Ryan reached up and began to rub the knot in the back of his neck. âDamn, Iâm tired.â
Cole could see how exhausted Ryan was. âYou shouldnât have slept outside in the rain. Youâre too old for it.â
Ryan smiled. âIâm only a year older than you are.â
âHow do you know my age?â
âI know everything there is to know about you.â
If Cole was surprised by the comment, he didnât let it show. âWhy didnât you protect your witness in Middleton?â
âI sure as hell tried to protect him. Honest to God I did, but another robbery was reported over in Hart-field, and I left to check it out. Marshal Davidson was put in charge of Luke MacFarland and his family.â
âBesides telling you that he heard laughter, what else did Luke say?â
âHe could only see two men through the seam. One of them took his mask off, and Luke got a glimpse at his profile. He didnât think he could point him out in a crowd, though. He did say he was tall, lean.â
âAnything else?â
âNo.â
âWhat was Marshal Davidson doing while his witness was being killed?â
âHeâd already gotten hit. Heâs going to recover, but it will take a long time. The doctor dug three bull
ets out of him.â
âThey wouldnât have left him unless they thought theyâd killed him.â
âYes, thatâs what I think.â
âSheriff Norton told me how MacFarland and his wife were killed. A knife was used on both of them. He thinks they murdered his wife to send folks a message. He says youâre going to have a hell of a time getting anyone to admit he saw anything. Word travels fast in the territory.â
âDid Norton happen to tell you anything about his background?â
âNo, he didnât. Why do you ask?â
âJust curious. Have you ever heard of a gunslinger named the Laredo Kid?â
âSure,â Cole answered. âHe was a legend when I was growing up. Everyone knew what a daredevil he was ⦠crazy, but fast with a gun. Real fast. Heâs probably dead by now. Did Norton kill him?â
Ryan smiled. âThe Laredo Kid isnât dead. Fact is, he became a sheriff.â
âNorton is â¦?â Cole was incredulous.
âI swear itâs true.â
âHe should have been killed years ago. Thereâs always someone faster with a gun waiting to prove himself. Heâs lucky heâs still alive.â
âI agree, especially with that wife of his cooking for him. Did she make you eat her fried chicken? It damn near killed me.â
Cole burst out laughing. He was surprised how good it felt. The tension in his gut eased up a little. âShe tried,â he admitted. âBut I didnât touch it.â
Ryan also relaxed, until he looked at the bloodstained floors again. It was a sobering sight.
âYouâve had time to look around. Tell me what you think happened.â
The laughter was gone from Coleâs eyes when he answered. âIâll tell you what I know didnât happen. None of them fought. There arenât any signs of a struggle. Hell, they were as meek as sheep. There are guns in all three cash drawers behind the windows,â he said with a tilt of his head toward the tellersâ stations. âTheyâre loaded, but they havenât been touched. Now, you tell me something, Ryan. Why did you come after me? There are better men out there to wear this badge.â
âI wanted you.â
âWhy?â
âItâs complicated.â
âThatâs an excuse, not an answer.â
Ryan sent the chair flying backward when he stood up and leaned against the desk. Both men ignored the crash that followed as the chair struck the wall; their gazes were fixed on each other.
A long minute passed in silence before Ryan made up his mind. âAll right, Iâll tell you why I chose you for the job. A long time ago I started getting curious about you when I heard about the trouble you ran into down near Abilene and how you handled it.â
âIâm sure the story was exaggerated.â
âNo, it wasnât. I checked it out. You knew what they were going to do to that woman, and youââ
âLike I said,â Cole interrupted, âthe story was exaggerated.â
âYou shot through her to get him.â
âI shot through her arm, thatâs all. The bullet didnât touch bone. She only got a nick.â
âBut that same bullet killed him.â
âHe needed to die.â
âI can give you at least twenty other examples.â
âIâm good with a gun. So what?â
âYou want the best reason of all?â
âYes.â
âYou think like they do.â
âLike who?â
âThe bastards who came in here and killed all those people.â
âSon of a bitch!â Cole roared. âDo you think I could do something like this?â
Ryan diffused his anger. âNo, I donât think you could do something like this. I said you think like they do. You can get into their minds, Cole. Iâve tried, but I canât do it.â
âYouâre nuts, Ryan.â
âMaybe, but I need a man who wonât hesitate and who doesnât mind bending the law in certain situations. I also have to trust him, and I trust you.â
âHow do you know you can trust me?â
âAll the stories you say didnât happen. I rode with your mother on the train to Salt Lake, and she told me all sorts of saintly things about you only a mother could believe. Does she know how ruthless you can be?â
Cole refused to answer the question.
Ryan plunged ahead. âShe thinks youâre headed in the wrong direction. Thatâs why she gave you the compass.â
âThe compass you kept for over a year.â
Ryan shrugged. âShe also told me the compass was to remind you to stay on the right path. The way I see it, Iâm helping you do just that.â
âIâm not ruthless.â
âWhen the situation calls for it, you are. I also heard about Springfield.â
âAh, hell.â
âAre you going to help me or not?â
Cole had already made his decision. The sight of those bodies would stay in his mind for a long, long time, and he knew he wouldnât be able to sleep at night unless he helped find the men who had committed this atrocity. He simply couldnât walk away.
âI want to get all of them,â he whispered. âIâll keep the badge, but as soon as this is over, Iâm giving it back.â
âYou might decide to stay on.â
âMaybe,â was all he would allow. âAre there any special rules for marshals? I never was one for rules,â he warned.
âMarshals are assigned to territories, but you and I are the exception because weâre on special duty. As for the rules, you donât need to worry about them. Itâs all common-sense stuff anyway. Marshals canât be tried for murder, you know.â He told the lie with a straight face.
Cole laughed. âThat rule will come in handy.â
Ryan stood up and rolled his shoulders to work the stiffness out. âWhy donât you go through this box while I go in the back and look through the drawers again.â
Ryan had already headed toward the presidentâs office when Cole called out to him. âWhat am I looking for?â
âThe names of the people who did their banking yesterday. Sloan told me that the president insisted his tellers keep accurate records. They were ordered to write down the name of every customer they helped.â
âOnce we make the list of the names, then what?â Cole asked.
âWe talk to all of them because one might have noticed something out of the ordinary.â
âHas that ever happened before?â
âNo, but we still have to ask. Those bastards are going to slip up one of these days. Maybe one of them came into the bank earlier to look it over.â
âThatâs wishful thinking, Ryan.â
âYeah, I know, but we still have to go through the routine. We have to cover all the possibilities. From the looks of all these stacks of paper, there were quite a few customers yesterday. Itâs going to take us the rest of the day to go through them.â
They divided the stacks between them. Ryan went back into the presidentâs office to work there. Cole stayed out in the lobby. He searched through the top drawer of the ink-stained desk for a notepad and pencil so that he could make his list, found what he needed, and put them on the desktop. He was on his way to get the chair Ryan had kicked over when a glimpse of blue on the floor under the deskâs kneehole caught his attention.
âWeâre going to have to go through everything in here at least three times,â Ryan warned. âJust in case we miss something the first and second time around.â
âWeâll be here a week,â Cole shouted back as he bent down on one knee and reached inside the kneehole. He pulled out a pale blue bag with a blue-and-white satin string.
He opened it and looked inside. There wasnât anything there, just blue satin lining. Cole stared at the thing for several seconds, then called out, âHey, Ryan, do you know who works at this desk?â
âYes,â Ryan shouted back. He was seated at the presidentâs desk, methodically going through the contents in the top drawer. âIâve got the name written down in my notes.?
??
âDo you remember if it is a man or a woman?â
Something in Coleâs voice caught Ryanâs attention. He glanced up, saw him down on one knee, and called out, âA man sits there.â
âWas he one of the men killed?â
âNo. He was home sick yesterday.â
Cole stuck his head into the opening. âWell ⦠well,â he whispered.
âDid you find something?â Ryan shouted.
âMaybe,â Cole answered. âThen again, maybe not.â He stood up and turned to Ryan. âDo you happen to know how often this place gets cleaned?â
âThatâs the first question I asked Sloan, since we also have to go through the trash. According to him, MacCorkle was obsessed about keeping the place spotless. He had it cleaned every night and inspected every nook and cranny in the morning. All the trash in the bins is from yesterdayâs business.â
âYouâre positive it was cleaned Tuesday night?â
Ryan stopped what he was doing and walked back to the lobby. He spotted the wad of blue fabric in Coleâs hand.
âYeah, Iâm sure. Why? What have you got?â
âA possibility.â
âA possibility of what?â
Cole smiled. âA witness.â
Seven
Three women had been inside the bank between the hours of one and three oâclock in the afternoon on the day of the robbery. Cole and Ryan knew that was fact, not speculation, because of Sherman MacCorkleâs taskmaster rules. Just as the sheriff had told Ryan, the president of the bank had demanded that every transactionâeven change for a dollar billâbe recorded by name on a piece of paper and filed in the cash drawer. If the figures on the papers didnât balance with the money in the drawer, the teller had to make up the difference. MacCorkle had also insisted that each dayâs tallies be separated into the morning and afternoon hours. The receipts for Wednesday morningâs transactions were still on MacCorkleâs desk in three neat piles. There was also an open filing cabinet behind MacCorkleâs desk filled with documents, loan applications, mortgages, and records of foreclosures. Every piece had a date on top.
God love Sherman MacCorkle for being such a stickler for details.
With all the interruptions, it took until evening to sort out all the names. In all, twenty-nine men and women had come into the bank that day. Eighteen had taken care of their business during the morning hours, and none of them were women. The bank had been closed for lunch from noon until one oâclock, and that afternoon, eleven people had come inside, and of those eleven, three were women.