Clayton could not stand still and watch anyone, man, woman, or child—or animal for that matter—abused. The little girl was screaming, begging for mercy, but still the riding crop whop . . . whop . . . whopped on her back.
Clayton’s long stride thudded on the boardwalk.
As he got closer he heard Lee yell, “You yanked my hair in there, you stupid little—” She raised the crop again, but Clayton’s arm shot out and his strong hand closed on the woman’s wrist.
“Enough,” he said. “She’s had enough.”
Events were cartwheeling past Clayton at a dizzying speed, but his overloaded brain had time to register a strange fact—the street was crowded, but no one stopped. People quickly passed the scene on the boardwalk, their eyes averted.
Did Lee Southwell instill that much fear?
He had no time to seek an answer. Displaying amazing strength, the woman had already wrenched away from him.
A split second later, the crop slashed across his left cheek and Clayton felt blood splash hot on his skin.
“How dare you!” Lee shrieked. “You laid hands on me.”
“Leave the girl alone,” Clayton said.
“Why, you . . . you piece of trash!” The riding crop swung again, this time aimed at Clayton’s eyes.
He had never struck or abused a woman, but there’s a first time for everything. Avoiding the blow, he moved in quickly, effortlessly picked Lee up, and stepped off the boardwalk. Under the saloon hitch rail, there was a deep puddle of dung and horse piss. He carried the woman there and dumped her in the middle of it.
Lee slapped facedown into the pungent mess, tried to rise, slipped, and tumbled onto her back. Now the woman was beyond rage, beyond reason. Her hands dripping filth, she opened the small purse she carried and came up with a Remington derringer.
“You bastard!” she screamed, and fired.
The bullet missed.
Using both hands this time, Lee cocked the derringer, her killing eyes never leaving Clayton’s face.
She fired at the man from Abilene again.
Another miss.
Frustrated, the woman threw the gun at Clayton’s head. He dodged it easily.
“Lie in the piss, Mrs. Southwell,” he said. “Cool off for a spell.”
“My husband will kill you for this,” the woman said, no longer screaming, her voice flat, an ominous sound, like a copperhead rustling through dead grass.
“If he does, I’ll hang him for murder.”
Nook Kelly stood, stone-faced and terrible, his eyes moving from the woman to Clayton and back.
Kelly raised his gaze to the boardwalk. “Minnie, pick up those packages and help Mrs. Southwell get home.”
The black girl shook her head. “I sure won’t, Mr. Kelly,” she said. “She’s done beat me for the last time. I ain’t nobody’s slave.”
The marshal looked at Clayton, at the bleeding cut on his cheek.
He nodded to Lee. “She do that?”
“Cut myself shaving,” Clayton said.
“Uh-huh.” This time Kelly nodded to the woman sitting up in the piss puddle. “You do that?”
“She needed to cool off, was all,” Clayton said.
“I could lock you up for assault,” Kelly said. “And you, Mrs. Southwell, for attempted murder.”
Lee got to her feet. Her expensive silk morning dress dripped and she reeked of piss and dung.
“But you won’t,” she said to Kelly. “Unless you want this town burned down around your ears.”
“Your threats wouldn’t stop me, Mrs. Southwell,” he said. “But I think enough damage has been done for one day.” He looked at Clayton. “Do you wish to press charges?”
Clayton said he didn’t.
“And you, Mrs. Southwell?”
“My husband will press his own charges—at the point of a gun.” Her blazing eyes fixed on Clayton. “You’re already a dead man.”
Kelly smiled. “Good. Now that it’s all been settled amicably, I suggest you go home, Mrs. Southwell.”
“Minnie, get my boxes and come with me,” Lee said.
“No, Miz Southwell, I’m done with you.”
“You ungrateful wench, I could—”
“Home, Mrs. Southwell,” Kelly said. “I’ll send someone to the ranch with your purchases.”
“I don’t want them now,” Lee said. “Give them to charity or burn them. I don’t care.”
After Lee Southwell left, Minnie stepped beside Clayton. In Kelly’s hearing, she said, “Mister, thanks for what you done for me, but you had better get out of town. Shad Vestal will kill you for sure.”
Clayton smiled without humor. “You’re the second person to tell me that today.”
“Good advice is worth repeating,” Kelly said.
He wasn’t smiling.
Chapter 13
“You think Parker Southwell is the man you’re hunting?” Nook Kelly said. He sat down on the hotel bed and made the springs squeal.
“He could be,” Clayton said. “I don’t know.” He smiled. “I’m clutching at straws.”
“Either way, Southwell won’t forgive you for what you done to his wife.”
“Figured that.”
“He thinks the sun rises and sets on Lee.”
“Heard that.”
“And Shad Vestal is hell on wheels on the draw-and-shoot.”
“Heard that too.”
“I think you should get out of Bighorn Point, Mr. Clayton. I mean the whole town is talking about what you did to Lee Southwell. Everybody was glad to see that uppity snot get her comeuppance, but Park will kill you for it.”
Kelly reached out, took the makings from Clayton’s shirt pocket, and built himself a cigarette. He waited until the other man lit it for him, then said, “I enjoy having you around, but I don’t want you to die for my amusement.”
“You told me yesterday that I wouldn’t make it out of the territory alive. I think after what happened this morning, my chances are even thinner.”
“I can ride with you as far as the Kansas border,” Kelly said.
“If Parker Southwell is the kind of man you say he is, he’ll track me all the way back to Abilene and kill me there. Or try to.”
“If Shad Vestal is after you, he won’t try. He’ll do.”
Clayton made no answer and Kelly said, “Anyway, why I’m here, the mayor wants to talk with you.”
“Now?”
“Good a time as any.”
“What about?”
“Probably to tell you what a good job you did throwing Lee Southwell in a puddle of horse piss and endangering the whole damn town.”
The marshal smiled. “Maybe he’s gonna give you a gold medal.”
“Kelly,” Clayton said, “you got a sense of humor buried somewhere, but I’m damned if I can find it.”
“A bad business, Mr. Clayton. Parker Southwell is a vengeful man and I fear the worst.”
Mayor John Quarrels leaned back in his chair and talked to the end of his cigar, not Clayton.
“Marshal Kelly told me he’s given you a week to find the fugitive murderer and rapist you seek.”
“Now it’s six days,” Kelly said.
“It’s not an arrangement I care for, but I will not countermand my city marshal’s decision.”
Now his cold blue eyes lifted to Clayton. “You know that Mr. Southwell, like your . . . ah . . . employer, is a cripple?”
“Yes, I heard that.”
“He tangled with a longhorn three years ago, stove him up badly.”
Quarrels, tall, slim, his black hair graying at the temples, was a spectacularly handsome man. He had an air of genteel prosperity. His well-cut gray suit had been tailored in Boston, his spotless linen mail-ordered from Savile Row in London. He spoke softly, a man used to command and the obedience of others.
“The question is, Mr. Clayton, what do we do with you?”
“Help me find the man who was once known as Lissome Terry,” Clayton said.