Bill Sewall said, “Nobody here. Not even Van Driesche.” Van Driesche managed the offices for De Morès. Despite his name Van Driesche was very British: originally, it seemed, he had been De Morès’s valet and butler. Van Driesche was an exceptionally private man and no one knew much about him, or cared to; he looked like a skeleton with white hair pasted on top, and invited no affection.
At any rate neither Van Driesche nor his employer was about. They went on toward Joe Ferris’s store. Wil Dow ducked his face against the frigid wind; the temperature was dropping sharply.
Joe let them in. Roosevelt said, “I hope we’re not intruding?”
“No sir. Always happy to see you.” Joe took them through to the rear of the store and added lumps of lignite to the fire. The isinglass window of the cannon stove glowed furiously but it wasn’t enough to keep out the blasts of winter that came in through chinks in the boards.
Then again, Wil Dow thought, winter was at worst a mixed curse, for at least it held at bay the smell of the abattoir.
Uncle Bill Sewall was examining the stock of boots on the shelf. He complained, “You know I can’t get any boots here that will wear at all. Ten- or twelve-dollar boots don’t last much more than two months. Sometimes not more than one.”
“It’s rough country on footwear,” Joe Ferris agreed. “I buy the best quality I can obtain. I’m trying to find a better supplier.”
Roosevelt said, “Is Mr. De Morès in town, do you know?”
“Afraid I don’t keep tabs on him. We’re not exactly made of the same leather.”
“I ask because no one ever seems to know when he may be at home. He has a mighty restlessness, that fellow—it seems at any moment he may be off impatiently rushing to Helena or Miles City or Chicago—”
“Pursuing his visionary dreams,” said Arthur Packard, entering and slamming the door behind him against the bitter wind. “The Marquis is at home—I saw him an hour ago. Why?”
“He’s trying to seize possession of my ranch.”
“Now there’s a surprise,” said Joe Ferris, showing no surprise but plenty of irony, and fixing his glare on Packard.
Wil Dow was confused; he had thought the two men to be friends.
Joe turned his attention back to Roosevelt. “Sir, where you’re concerned you may as well know the Markee has got a hate that won’t go away—like the stink of something that died under the floor of the house.”
“Joe!” snapped Pack. “Mind your tongue.”
“They’ve got a right to know what’s going on.” Joe’s eyes were crowded with a bright blue tension. He said to Roosevelt, “The Markee’s lawyers are throwing every delay they can think up, but it’s plain sooner or later he’s going to stand trial for murdering Luffsey. He blames you for the arrest warrant, even though it’s common knowledge the letter to Judge Bateman must’ve been writ by Huidekoper or Eaton. And meantime Luffsey’s Irish friends are talking high and heavy against the Markee, and that includes Redhead Finnegan and Frank O’Donnell running around loose—and Dutch Reuter out on your ranch. All in all it does seem to make the Markee see red, doesn’t it, Pack.”
“They’re riffraff. Low dogs. They deserve what comes to them—they endangered Madame’s life,” said Arthur Packard. He seemed to be watching to see how Roosevelt would react to that, but the New Yorker took another route:
“You may put it in your newspaper that Dutch Reuter was not one of the riflemen who shot up Mr. De Morès’s house.”
“How do you know that?”
“I asked him. I have his word on it.”
“And you believe it?”
“I have every reason to place my faith in Dutch’s honesty.”
“There are some who’d say you were a fool, then.”
Roosevelt removed his glasses, polished them and put them back on, hooking them over one ear at a time. Then he looked Arthur Packard straight in the eye. “Are you one of those?”
“I’m a newspaperman. I’m impartial. But I’ll say this much—I know Dutch well enough to know he’ll lie when he wants to.” He pointed an accusing finger toward Joe Ferris. “You know that better than anyone. You rode with him.”
“I did,” said Joe Ferris, “and I know him to be a man who would not shoot from ambush.”
Arthur Packard shrugged. “As I say, I must remain objective.”
Wil Dow made a face. The damned editor was a weasel—a fence-sitter.
Roosevelt said to Joe Ferris, “It appears Mr. De Morès has done a rash thing—he’s thrown fifteen hundred head of cattle onto my ranch. He must have known it would bring me straight to his lair. I should like to know as much as I can about his frame of mind. Is he susceptible to reason? Or is he too angry for that? I realize his temper must have been rising because some of his vaunted business ventures have been collapsing. His sheep have been dying by thousands—”
Joe Ferris said with marked displeasure, “Seven thousand dead Merinos out there, sir. Come spring the buzzards will have a banquet. I hear some mutton-packer filed an enormous suit against him for breach of contract and you’re right, it hasn’t sweetened his temper any. The Markee even hauled Jerry Paddock on the carpet but Jerry knows how to curry favor with him …”
“To coin a phrase,” said Arthur Packard dryly.
Joe ignored it. “It was Jerry convinced him there was money in raising sheep and once he decided, he was too stubborn to admit he’d made a mistake. He believed he’d bought fifteen thousand head but I think Jerry only brought in about seven thousand—they took a turn around the mountain during the tally—”
Roosevelt said, “Meaning they were counted twice?”
“Yes sir. In any case they were the wrong breed for the climate and they’ve all been winter-killed. Naturally Jerry Paddock won’t admit that. He’s been claiming Finnegan and Reuter and the boys have been murdering the sheep out of spite.”
“I believe he’s right about that,” said Arthur Packard.
Bill Sewall snorted. “There isn’t that much ammunition in all Dakota.”
Arthur Packard said, “Nobody wants to make excuses for Jerry Paddock’s petty soulless tyranny. But he’s a hard worker. He manages a store and a saloon and several other enterprises. You can hardly accuse him of indolence. And it’s quite possible he made an honest mistake about those sheep. He’s never raised sheep, any more than the Marquis has. If what you say about Merinos has any truth in it, I’d be inclined to believe they both were misled.”
Joe Ferris pinched his lips together and kicked the stove repeatedly until the fire glowed brighter. “You want to know about business ventures ready to fall down? The Markee’s sunk a fortune in that damn fool Deadwood stagecoach line and it’s got no future at all.”
“On the contrary,” said Packard. “It provides a vital link between Deadwood and the railroad, and it will increase the commerce through this town threefold within the next year. The line will have a United States Mail contract by summer, and—”
“It won’t last half that long.” Joe Ferris said it without exceptional heat—he was smiling at Pack with a kind of amusement that suggested a private ongoing joke between them—but his words were uncompromising. “The stagecoach line will fail because the Markee has put his stupid faith in Jerry Paddock, and Jerry’s milking the scheme for all he can. The Markee paid him good money to buy trained teams. Jerry bought wild horses and put the difference in his pocket.”
“Prove it! Prove it!”
“When they start their runs to Deadwood, I wouldn’t care to predict the kind of safety record they’ll chalk up. There sure as hell won’t be any mail contract, Pack.” Joe flapped a hand at the editor in arch dismissal. He went on: “And his cattle business is not what he says it is. I have had the word from businessmen down the line—people I buy drygoods from. Nobody is buying De Morès beef. Of course the Markee makes excuses for that. He claims his cars keep getting shunted off the main line and held aside until the ice melts inside them and the meat spoils. He says the railroad’s in cahoots with the Jews on the Chicago Beef Trust—”