Chapter 23
Preacher was standing behind and to one side of
Beaumont. When Beaumont said Casey’s name, Preacher felt a wave of
cold hatred go through him. The hell with this, he thought. His
hand moved toward the pistol tucked behind his belt.
Jessie’s eyes widened in apprehension as they
flicked toward Preacher. He saw pleading in them, pleading for him
not to give the game away. Beaumont must have been too caught up in
the evil thoughts filling his head to notice Jessie’s reaction,
because he didn’t look around at Preacher.
With a supreme effort of will, Preacher pulled his
hand away from his gun before he ever touched the butt of the
pistol. He felt the muscles in his arm tremble from the suppressed
urge to kill Beaumont.
He wasn’t made this way. The whole plan had been a
mistake. He could see that now, but unfortunately, he wasn’t the
only one involved. The lives of Jessie and Cleve might well depend
on him carrying on with the masquerade.
Relief shone in Jessie’s eyes as she saw that he
wasn’t going to kill Beaumont right here and now.
“That’s not a good idea, Shad,” she said.
“Cassandra is . . . indisposed.”
“Oh? I’m disappointed.” Beaumont sounded like he
could barely comprehend the idea that someone would dare to
disappoint him.
“It’ll be better if you come upstairs with me,”
Jessie went on as she rested her hand on Beaumont’s arm
again.
“I suppose.” Beaumont turned to look at Preacher.
“We’ll be here for a while, Donnelly. You can feel free to amuse
yourself. After the day you’ve had, I’m sure you can use some
diversion.”
“Sure, boss,” Preacher said.
Jessie moved to link her arm with Beaumont’s, and
for a second, he couldn’t see her face but Preacher could. She
mouthed the words thank you at him, then turned to go arm in
arm toward the stairs with Beaumont.
Preacher heard laughter and talking from the parlor
and knew he could go in there and pick any of the girls who were
available to take upstairs. Right now, however, that wasn’t what he
wanted. He waited until Jessie and Beaumont had disappeared up the
elegant, curving staircase, then turned to look for Brutus.
He didn’t have to search. The big man must have
been somewhere close by, waiting for his opportunity. He was
already there in the hallway. He rumbled, “Mr. Cleve wants to talk
to you.”
“And I want to talk to him,” Preacher said.
“He’s in one of the card rooms. This way.”
Brutus led Preacher to one of the small rooms that
opened off the corridor. Inside was a round table covered with
green felt, lit by a lamp that hung from the ceiling above its
center. The light was concentrated on the table and the chairs
around it, leaving the rest of the room cloaked in shadows.
Only one of the chairs was occupied at the moment.
Cleve sat at the table laying out a hand of solitaire. As Preacher
and Brutus came in, he used his hands to sweep the cards together
and left them in an untidy pile in front of him.
“I told you Beaumont would come here,” Cleve said
with a smile as he looked up at Preacher.
Brutus closed the door and remained in the room,
leaning against the panel and crossing his arms over his massive
chest. That was one more indication that he was aware of the plans
Jessie and Cleve had made, as well as Preacher’s involvement in
them. Cleve wouldn’t have allowed him to stay, otherwise.
“You figured he was so mad over what happened on
the river he’d have to let it out by thrashin’ some poor whore?”
Preacher said.
“That’s right. Who did he choose? Not Cassandra
again, I hope. She’s just now getting back to something approaching
normal.”
Preacher pulled out one of the chairs and sat down
at the table without waiting for an invitation. “That’s who he
picked,” he said, “but Jessie wouldn’t allow it. She went with him
herself.”
Cleve had been idly straightening the cards. At
Preacher’s words, he stopped and frowned. “Jessie?” he murmured. He
started to get up from his chair, then sank back down and went on,
“Nothing to worry about. She won’t let him get away with any ugly
behavior.”
“How’s she gonna stop him if he loses control of
himself ?”
“She’ll kill him,” Cleve replied with a shrug.
“We’d rather keep him alive, of course, so that we can ruin a few
more of his plans and steal some more profits out from under him,
but if she has to, she’ll cut his throat, or perhaps blow his balls
off with that little pistol she carries. That would be most
appropriate. The one thing she won’t do . . . is let him
hurt her again.”
“So he did whale on her before, the way he
did on Cassandra?”
“That’s right. What do you think turned her against
him?”
“I don’t know. Greed?”
Cleve shook his head. “Jessie’s not a greedy
person. Me, on the other hand . . .” His voice trailed off into a
laugh.
“What does she want, then, if it’s not the
money?”
“Revenge? Power? Simply to be free of Beaumont,
which she knows she never truly will be as long as he’s alive?”
Cleve went back to straightening the cards, picking up the deck in
his long, slender fingers and tapping it on the table to even the
edges. “I’d say that all of those things play a part in her
actions.”
“That’s why she was willin’ to have that riverboat
crew murdered so they couldn’t tell anybody about me
double-crossin’ Beaumont?”
“You found out about that?” Cleve seemed surprised.
“The men we hired weren’t supposed to take care of that part of the
job until after you were gone.”
“They didn’t wait quite long enough,” Preacher said
in a grim, flinty voice. “I heard the shots and went back, saw the
riverboat burnin’.”
Cleve shrugged again. “Well, you have to admit, it
was effective.”
“Was the fire Jessie’s idea?”
“What?” Cleve shook his head. “Jessie didn’t know
anything about that, Preacher. It was all my idea.”
Preacher felt relief go through him. He hadn’t
wanted to believe that Jessie was capable of such a thing, but
truly, he didn’t really know.
“You didn’t think Jessie came up with that, did
you?” Cleve went on. The gambler shook his head. “Even if it had
occurred to her that your secret needed to be protected, she
wouldn’t have given the order for those riverboat men to be
killed.”
“Then why did you?” Preacher asked.
Cleve sat up straighter. “Because someone had to!
When I threw in with Jessie on this, I knew I might have to make
some of the difficult decisions that she couldn’t make.”
“Like murderin’ innocent men?”
“Beaumont has murdered innocent men. At least, he’s
been responsible for it, many times. And you saw what he did to
Cassandra. A man like that is worse than an animal, because he
knows what he’s doing. He just doesn’t care.”
Preacher couldn’t argue with any of that. He knew
Cleve was right about how bad Shad Beaumont was. He still wasn’t
sure that justified sinking to Beaumont’s level.
There was no way to go back and change things now
though. He just said, “I don’t like it,” and left it at that.
Cleve chuckled. “Then it’s a good thing you’re not
in charge here, isn’t it?”
Preacher let that go, although it wasn’t easy, and
said, “What’s next?”
“Jessie and I haven’t decided yet. We were thinking
that some of Beaumont’s warehouses might just happen to burn
down.”
Preacher shook his head. “You do somethin’ like
that, you’ll risk burnin’ down the whole town, includin’ this
place. You don’t want to take that chance. You’d be better off
cleanin’ out those warehouses instead and movin’ the goods
somewhere else.”
“That would involve killing the guards. I thought
you were opposed to that much bloodshed.”
“I ain’t gonna lose any sleep over somebody who
takes money from Beaumont, knowin’ the sort of varmint he is,”
Preacher said. “Anyway, you wouldn’t have to kill the guards, just
knock ’em out.”
Cleve looked across the table at him. “Do you know
anyone stealthy enough to accomplish something like that?”
“I might,” Preacher said. “I just might.”
Cleve thought about it for a moment and then began
to nod. “I’ll talk it over with Jessie, but it’s not a bad idea.
That way the merchandise isn’t destroyed. The profits from it go
into our coffers instead. Which makes me wonder . . . just how big
a share are you expecting out of all this, Preacher?”
“I ain’t all that interested in the money, either.
I’m after a different payoff.”
“Making Shad Beaumont’s life a living hell and then
killing him?” Cleve guessed.
Putting it like that made it sound even worse,
Preacher thought, and yet that was exactly the goal that had
brought him to St. Louis. Never again, he vowed. From here on out,
whenever he had a score to settle with a man, he would do it right
out in the open.
“Let’s just figure out which of those warehouses
you want to clean out first,” he said.
Three nights later, in the dark of the moon,
Preacher stole through an alley near the riverfront. He had a
bandanna tied over the lower half of his face like a damned
highwayman, which he didn’t like, but it was necessary to conceal
his identity because it was possible someone might see him and
recognize him if he didn’t wear it.
His destination was a warehouse full of stolen
goods supplied by a ring of thieves working for Beaumont. Jessie
had agreed with the plan Preacher and Cleve hatched, and now
Preacher was carrying out his part of it.
He had waited until after midnight to slip out of
his quarters at Beaumont’s house and make his way here. According
to what Jessie had been able to find out, there were two guards
outside the warehouse and two more inside. She knew this because
Beaumont’s men sometimes patronized her house when they had been
lucky at cards and were particularly flush. A whore could always
find a way to make a man talk and never even realize just how much
information he was spilling.
Evidently things had gone well three nights earlier
when Jessie took Beaumont upstairs. Preacher didn’t like to think
too much about that, but clearly Beaumont hadn’t given in to his
rage while he was with her, and that was the important thing. Since
the ambush during the attempted riverboat robbery, Beaumont had
resumed his normal routine for the most part, although he spent
some of the time asking questions in waterfront dives, trying to
find out who was behind what had happened. Preacher accompanied him
on those trips and saw firsthand how Beaumont wasn’t having any
luck with his investigation. Jessie and Cleve had done a good job
of covering their tracks.
For a man who had crawled into Indian camps and
slit the throats of several warriors without any of the other
Indians knowing a thing about it until morning, sneaking up on
these warehouse guards didn’t pose much of a challenge for
Preacher. Even though it was late, raucous laughter and the
scraping notes of a fiddle came from a nearby tavern, helping to
cover up any sounds he might make as he approached the big double
doors of the warehouse. Two men sat on kegs near the doors, one on
either side, and while they might be tough gents, their senses
didn’t come anywhere near being as keen as those of a Blackfoot or
Crow warrior. Preacher slipped along the brick wall of the building
until he was close enough to reach out and touch the nearer of the
two guards.
He struck swiftly and without warning, his left arm
shooting out to loop around the guard’s neck and jerk the man to
his feet. Preacher’s arm closed so tightly that the guard couldn’t
let out a yell, couldn’t even croak. The sound of the keg
overturning alerted the other guard, though, so Preacher didn’t
waste any time. He rushed the guard he held across the twenty or so
feet separating him from the second of Beaumont’s men and rammed
the first guard into the second one as that man leaped to his feet.
Their heads cracked together, and both men went limp and slumped to
the ground.
That left the two inside. Preacher knew the doors
were barred on the inside, so he had to get the other two guards to
open up. He left the two he had knocked out lying on the ground and
used his fist to pound on one of the doors.
When he heard footsteps approaching inside the
warehouse and saw the glow of lantern light seeping through the
narrow crack between the doors, he bent and hoisted one of the
unconscious men to his feet. He knew their names were Tompkins and
Rice. There was a viewing slot cut into the warehouse door, and
when it was thrust back and a bar of light shone through it,
Preacher stood halfway behind the man he held, so that the guard
inside the warehouse couldn’t get a good look at him. He saw the
gray-shot beard jutting out from the chin of the unconscious man
and knew this was Rice he held.
“Something’s wrong with Rice,” he rasped, muffling
his voice a little against the man’s shoulder. “He just moaned and
fell over. Might be his heart.”
“Son of a—Hold on,” the guard on the other side of
the door said. Preacher heard the bar being lifted, and then the
other door opened a couple of feet.
“Bring him in here. Maybe one of us ought to fetch
the sawbones.”
Preacher kept his head ducked down as he lugged the
limp form through the narrow opening. One of the inside guards
swung it closed behind him and lowered the bar again.
“Better not tell the boss about this,” he said. “We
ain’t supposed to open up for any reason. Rice still owes me two
dollars from that last poker game, though, and by God, I don’t want
him dyin’ before he pays me!”
A smile tugged at Preacher’s mouth. Greed, like
lust, was something that could bring a man down without much
trouble.
“Well, here, see if he’s got it on him,” Preacher
said. He gave the unconscious figure a hard shove toward the man at
the door, then whirled and kicked the man with the lantern in the
belly. The man doubled over and started to fall. Preacher grabbed
the lantern before it could drop to the floor, shatter, and start
that fire he wanted to prevent.
A harsh curse came from behind him. He swung around
in time to see that the second guard had gotten tangled up with the
man Preacher had knocked out, just as Preacher had hoped would
happen. The guard had gone to one knee and was trying to get up.
Preacher met him with a hard, looping right that stretched him out
on the warehouse floor, out cold.
The man Preacher had kicked in the belly was still
gasping for breath, but he was also trying to work a pistol out
from behind his belt. Preacher brought the barrel of his pistol
crashing down on the man’s head, knocking him out as well.
The whole thing, start to finish, had taken less
than three minutes.
Preacher set the lantern down on a crate, lifted
the bar holding the doors closed, and went back outside for the
other guard. When he had all four of them inside, he used some rope
he had brought with him to tie their hands and feet, then pulled
some more bandannas from his pocket and blindfolded them as well,
so they wouldn’t be able to see what was going on if they regained
consciousness before the men hired by Jessie and Cleve finished
cleaning out the stolen merchandise from the warehouse.
Then Preacher opened the door a little, stuck the
lantern out, and waved it from side to side three times. That was
the signal. A few moments later, he heard the creak of wheels as
several big freight wagons rolled toward the warehouse. He swung
the doors wide open to let them in.
He was surprised to see that Cleve himself was at
the reins of one of the wagons. The gambler grinned at him and
said, “Good work. You didn’t have to kill any of them.”
“Said I wouldn’t,” Preacher replied.
Cleve nodded and lifted a hand in farewell. “We’ll
handle it from here.”
“Those fellas better be alive when you leave. They
ain’t any threat to you now.”
“Fine,” Cleve said as he hopped down from the wagon
he had brought to a halt. “You have my word.”
Preacher wasn’t sure what that was worth, but for
now he had to accept it. He nodded and left the warehouse, trotting
away through the shadows.
A few blocks from the warehouse, he stopped in an
alley and pulled the bandanna from his face. It felt good to have
it off. He just wasn’t cut out to be a thief, even though he was
helping to steal from a thief and a murderer.
As he walked away into the night, he wondered how
long he would have to be back in the mountains before he started to
feel clean again.