Part 3 (1/2)
”I told you, first one's on the house.” Anjanette set the beer on the table, straightened, and swept her hair behind her shoulder. Her b.r.e.a.s.t.s swelled up from the low-cut s.h.i.+rtwaist that she'd donned for the evening trade, and her cheeks were flushed. ”You hungry?”
”Maybe later. I'll enjoy the beer first. Been a while since I've had anything to imbibe with.”
”Let me know. Antoine has split-pea soup and bacon sandwiches. Gotta cover some ground. Friday night!” The girl turned and strode back through the tables toward the bar, her skirts billowing out from her full hips and thighs.
Yakima sat down and watched her round a.s.s as she swerved around a ceiling joist from which a lantern and ristra ristra hung. He wasn't the only one appreciating Anjanette's wares. Nearly every table she pa.s.sed fell silent while the mule skinners and drovers hung their jaws and stared. hung. He wasn't the only one appreciating Anjanette's wares. Nearly every table she pa.s.sed fell silent while the mule skinners and drovers hung their jaws and stared.
Yakima sipped the beer and grunted ironically. He ought to come to town more often. . . .
He crossed his boots on a chair and settled back in his seat, enjoying Old Antoine's yeasty ale and rolling a cigarette from his makings sack. When he'd finished the drink, Anjanette brought him a bowl of soup, a sandwich of grilled, b.u.t.tered bread piled with thickly sliced bacon, and a mug of freshly drawn ale.
”That's some kind of service,” he told the girl as she collected his empty mug.
”You looked hungry.”
Yakima reached into his pocket, but she waved him off. ”Your money's no good here, Yakima Henry.”
She flashed a smile as she wheeled and headed toward the bar, carrying the tray high on her right shoulder. He felt his pulse in his neck. He didn't know why he was tormenting himself. He had no future with Anjanette, as he'd had no future with Faith, the lovely blond doxie in Colorado.
Really, he had no future with any woman. Having been raised in the tall-and-uncut, he was at home only in the far, lonely reaches. It was no life for a woman-at least no woman he'd met so far.
Still, he entertained a brief fantasy of finally settling down with a woman, of waking up to one every morning, going to bed with one every evening. Sitting down to table with a woman for b.u.t.tery soup and a thick sandwich like the one he was eating now. Having someone to talk to about what he'd done or was going to do, or about how he felt or what he was thinking about.
That might be a nice way to live. Maybe, when he was older and didn't mind giving up his freedom, he'd give it serious consideration. . . .
He was half done with the soup when he glanced up to see Speares enter the saloon with a dapper little man in a three-piece suit, black bowler, round-rimmed gla.s.ses, and gray muttonchops. The pair headed for a table that three mule skinners had just vacated, and they immediately hunkered down in serious discussion.
Given the dapper gent's appearance, he was no doubt the president of the local bank, and he and Speares were no doubt discussing the gold s.h.i.+pment the U.S. marshal had thought Yakima was after. The marshal was another reason Yakima had better get back on the trail first thing in the morning. When the man got free of his bindings, he'd likely track Yakima to Saber Creek. There were laws against a.s.saulting lawmen, even those who deserved it.
As he ate and sipped his beer, enjoying the meal, Yakima kept an eye on the sheriff. He and the banker ordered beer and shots, and Anjanette came back with both, setting the gla.s.ses on the table before the men. Speares spoke to the girl, grinning, but the girl stared at him icily, her cheeks drawn in.
When she held her hand out for money, Speares grabbed her wrist, pulled her toward him, and spoke harshly through gritted teeth. He cast a quick glance at Yakima. The girl looked at Yakima then, too, her sun-tanned cheeks flus.h.i.+ng. She pulled her hand from Speares's grip, wheeled, and headed back to the bar, her jaw set hard.
Yakima held his spoon in front of his mouth, frozen in his chair, s.h.i.+fting his gaze between Anjanette and the sheriff. Something told him that the girl was the reason Speares hadn't wanted Yakima patronizing Charlier's.
Well, he'd be d.a.m.ned. Letting a man know he wouldn't be ordered around was one thing. Getting between the man and his girl was like dancing between a diamondback and a scorpion.
He felt foolish, and that made his gut burn with anger.
Yakima swallowed his last bit of soup and dropped the spoon into the bowl. He glanced up to see Speares staring at him from twenty feet away. The lawman had his back to Yakima, but he'd craned his neck around to stare across his right shoulder. The man's eyes beneath his s.h.a.ggy bangs were dark, his face flushed.
Yakima lifted his beer gla.s.s in salute, and sipped. Speares turned away, jaws moving as he said something to the dapper gent lifting a shot gla.s.s to his mustachioed mouth.
Yakima finished his beer and set the mug on the table. He'd best not push his luck tonight-especially since the sheriff had obviously set his sights on Anjanette. Besides, Yakima had made his point. He wouldn't be pushed around. Now he'd better spread his hot roll in the ravine behind the livery barn and lay low until morning, then get the h.e.l.l out of town as fast as Wolf could carry him.
He grabbed his Winchester and saddlebags, but before he could stand, someone put a hand on his shoulder. Anjanettecrouched beside him. She wore a strange smile as she said tightly, only inches from his face, ”Please don't go, Yakima.”
”Sorry, miss, but it's been a long day and I'm-”
”I think he's going to kill me.”
Yakima stared at her. She held a tray full of empty gla.s.ses in her right hand. Her half-exposed bosom rose and fell.
”The man's crazy,” she said, just loudly enough for Yakima to hear above the din. ”He knows I don't want him near me. He says he's going to kill me so no one else can have me.”
Yakima stared at her skeptically.
Anjanette opened her mouth to speak, but a voice booming above the din cut her off. ”Well, well, I hate to break up this little powwow, but what the h.e.l.l did I just get done telling you, girl?”
Towering over Yakima's table, Speares grabbed Anjanette's arm and jerked her around behind him so quickly that she dropped the tray of empty gla.s.ses, tripped over a chair, and fell with a yelp against the wall.
She gave an enraged scream and, whipping up a razor-edged pearl-handled knife from behind her belt, bolted toward Speares. The sheriff stuck out his hand to grab the knife, and the blade sliced across his palm.
”You little b.i.t.c.h b.i.t.c.h!” Speares shouted, glancing down at his b.l.o.o.d.y hand, then lunging forward and grabbing the girl's right wrist as she swung the knife toward him once more.
He squeezed her wrist until, giving a defiant scream, she opened her fingers and the knife clattered onto the floor. Speares backhanded her, sending her flying.
At the same time, he stepped back from Yakima's table and raked one of his big Remingtons from its holster. A grin pulled up the corners of his mouth, revealing his big yellow horse teeth. His mustache was flecked with beer foam, and a lock of silver hair hung down over his forehead.
The smile did not reach Speares's brown eyes. ”Breed, you're gonna wish like h.e.l.l-”
Yakima bounded up out of his chair, lifting his table like a s.h.i.+eld and throwing it into Speares. The sheriff cursed as the Remington popped, the bullet blasting a hole through the table six inches to the right of Yakima's thrusting arm.
Yakima put his head down and laid his forearms flat against the underside of the table, pus.h.i.+ng Speares straight back against the wall. Speares gritted his teeth and yowled.
The Remy belched once more, and a bullet slammed through the table, raking across Yakima's left side with an icy burn.
As Yakima flinched, Speares lowered his own head, and the table rammed against Yakima, shoving him back the way he'd come. He fell onto another table and rolled sideways across an ashtray, scattering beer and shot gla.s.ses, coins, and playing cards. Men scuttled away like mice from a pitchfork, bellowing.
As Yakima hit the floor on his right shoulder, he looked up.
Speares stood over him, backing away from the two tables and bringing his Remy to bear. ”As I was sayin'-”
Kapop!
The bullet carved a stinging line across Yakima's left cheek as he threw himself sideways. Hearing the snick-click snick-click of the hammer being c.o.c.ked once more, he kept rolling. of the hammer being c.o.c.ked once more, he kept rolling.
The Remy barked two more times, both bullets cras.h.i.+ng into the stone floor as Yakima rolled to his left. The Remy barked again, the bullet plowing into the leg of a table as Yakima rolled under it. The next bullet slammed through the tabletop.
As Yakima rolled out the table's far side, he grabbed a chair. Speares was thumbing back the Remy's hammer and lowering the barrel once more.
Yakima slung the chair. The edge of the seat clipped the sheriff's forehead, then shattered against the adobe wall.
Speares dropped the revolver and stumbled back and sideways, grabbing his b.l.o.o.d.y head. Yakima bolted off his haunches. Speares got his feet beneath him, squared his shoulders, and swung his right fist at Yakima's face. Yakima ducked, and the fist sliced the air with a dull whistle.
He came up and buried first his left fist and then his right into Speares's belly.