During the night Gault came suddenly awake. Wompler was snoring. Far to the north a spring storm was passing. Silent lightning blinked in the distance.
Lightning …
Frowning, Gault rubbed his hands over his face. He sat for a long while, thinking, as a damp chill worked its way into his bones. Had it been a dream that had shocked him awake? He could remember no dream—and Lord knew he had no trouble remembering the nightmares of the past. No, he was convinced that it had not been a dream.
He pulled the blanket around him and continued to sit there beside the dead fire. Had it been a noise that had wakened him? Something, or someone, coming up on their camp?
No… He shook his head, staring at the distant lightning. Then, very faintly, he heard the thunder, rolling over the prairie so far away that it was hardly a sound at all.
Thunder … For a moment the thought hung there.
"It wasn't thunder that night," he said aloud. "It was a gun."
Wompler rolled over and raised himself on one elbow. "You talkin' to me?"
"No. I was thinkin' out loud." Then, still thinking it out in speech, he said, "The next mornin' there was Shorty Pike comin' out of the arroyo with the shovel. He killed him, and down there somewhere is where he buried him."
Wompler threw off his blanket. "Shorty Pike killed somebody and buried him in an arroyo?"
"An express agent named Wirt Sewell." Gault was trying to pull together the loose ends. "I was talkin' to Sewell that night. He had his suspicions about the new deputy and his possemen, so when Deputy Finley and his sidekicks followed me out of New Boston, he followed all of us. And we all wound up at the Garnett place. Me with a bullet graze and a busted rib. But I never saw him after that talk…" He could still see that lanky figure hunkered in the dark corner of the shed.
"Never saw who?"
"The express man. After I went back to sleep there was another thunderstorm. But next mornin' the ground was dry, so I figgered it was a dream. But it wasn't a dream, it was a gunshot. Not thunder. And that morning Shorty Pike was comin' out of the arroyo with a long-handled shovel in his hand."
Harry Wompler gave a snort of exasperation, and Gault went back to the beginning, back to the moment when Wirt Sewell had first appeared in the doorway of the shed. He recreated the scene word for word, as well as he could remember it, and Wompler did not interrupt until he had finished. Then he said, "I think we better have a drink."
The former deputy brought the bottle to the dead fire and the two men drank silently. Wompler shook the bottle sadly; it was almost empty. "It sounds loco," he said. "Maybe that's why I believe it. Folks told me I was loco, too, when I tried to convince them I had nothin' to do with cattle rustlers."
"What did the cattlemen think about it?" This was something that Gault had wondered about for some time.
Wompler turned up the bottle, had another swallow and corked it. "Cowman is a contrary critter. Sometimes he goes off on a short fuse. Sometimes, if you get his suspicions up, he'll dog you like a Kiowa tracker. But there's one thing you can bank on—if the cowmen was sure I was in with rustlers, I'd of been hung months ago. I figger they've turned it over to Torgason and his Association, to find out for sure."
"Can Torgason get to the bottom of it?"
"If anybody can." Wompler shrugged.
At first light they rolled their beds and started upstream.
They topped the grassy rise near the place where Gault had been shot by Shorty Pike. For several minutes they sat their horses, studying the placid scene before them. A young cowhand, his pony tied to a fencepost, had stopped off long enough to chop a few rows of cotton. The fields were neat and sparkling. The yard and sheds appeared well kept.
"One thing about Esther," Wompler said ruefully, "she never had no trouble keepin' the place in shape. Always a cowhand or one of the sheriff's men stoppin' by to help out." Then, as they watched, Esther Garnett stepped out of a shed and began scattering feed to a small flock of chickens. Wompler came erect in his saddle, his face stiff and cold. Then, slowly, he began to relax. "The wrong kind of woman," he said flatly, "is a good deal like the wrong kind of whiskey. Poison to the system. But," he added with a cold smile, "a man gets over it in time." He pointed toward the deep wash behind the farmhouse. "Is that where you figger the express agent is?"
"That's where I saw Shorty comin' from."
They put their horses down the slope, out of sight of the house, and walked the rest of the way to the arroyo. They stood for several minutes on the edge of the gully. The bottom was strewn with casual rubbish, along with the cleanings of the barn and chicken house, waiting for the next spring flood to wash it away. There was nothing that looked like a grave.
"You sure this is the place?" Wompler asked doubtfully.
"Maybe it's farther down toward the river." He started to climb down into the wash when the former lawman caught his arm.
"One thing I learned settin' in the Day and Night for almost a year, and that's to be suspicious. If you're goin' to scout the gully, I'll keep watch up here with the rifle."
Gault didn't like parting with his Winchester, but he handed it over and accepted Wompler's .45 in exchange. "Keep an eye on the house, in case Deputy Finley's put on more possemen." He slid into the wash.
For the best part of an hour Gault explored the arroyo. At last, beneath a stinking pile of straw from a cow stall, he found freshly dug earth. He looked up at Wompler. "I think we've found Wirt Sewell."
Wompler didn't look convinced, but he said, "Find somethin' to dig with. I'll keep an eye on the Garnett place."
With a broken plow-handle Gault began gouging at the loose earth. Soon the jagged tip of the plow-handle struck something foreign to the loosely packed clay. It was a sensation that set Gault's skin crawling; he had experienced it once before while digging in the graveyard west of New Boston.
Wompler crouched on the lip of the wash. Slowly, Gault began clearing away some of the loose clay. What he had unearthed was not the missing express agent but the brown and white flank of a spotted calf.
Wompler slid into the wash for a closer look. "Well," he said, breaking an uneasy silence, "maybe Shorty wasn't buryin' the express agent after all."
"Why would he go to the trouble of buryin' a calf? When a cow gets itself killed on the prairie, you leave it where it falls. Unless it's diseased, then you bum it."
"That's what a cowman would do. These are farmers— and sometimes there's no explainin' the things a sodbuster will do." The former deputy began kicking dirt back into the hole. "Maybe Esther took the calf as a pet, and couldn't bear to leave it for the buzzards. There's no explainin' women, either."
Gault smiled grimly. "It still doesn't tell me what happened to that express agent."
The two men finished filling the hole and climbed out of the wash. Wompler built himself a smoke and said, "You want to turn around and see if we can find Torgason and the Circle-R branding crew?"
Gault was reluctant to leave the farm, but he could think of no good reason for lingering there; he was no pink-cheeked cowhand looking for excuses to moon over Esther Garnett.
Wompler tramped into the river underbrush where he had tied the horses. In a few minutes he came back leading the animals, and Gault was quick to notice the pinched look of apprehension about the ex-deputy's eyes. "Might be," he said quietly, "we got ourselves some trouble. Somebody's watchin' us. Back there in the brush."
Gault studied the thicket from beneath the brim of his hat. "I don't see anything."
"He's there." Wompler wiped the back of his hand across his mouth. "You think it's Shorty Pike? He's already had one try at killin' you; maybe he's lookin' to finish the job."