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Authors: J.A. Johnstone

Tags: #Fiction, #Westerns

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BOOK: The Loner
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“Oh,” Lasswell said. “Some kind of ruckus. Gun work, more’n likely. I can see Morgan bein’ mixed up in something like that.”

Moss said, “California’s too close. I wish he was over in Texas, or way the hell and gone up in Montana or the Dakotas.”

“It’ll be all right,” Lasswell said. “The whole thing won’t last long. It’ll be over and done with, and we’ll be gone before Morgan can ever get here.”

“You hope,” Moss said.

“Damn right I do.”

“All right, it’s settled,” Sinclair said, not bothering to try to keep the impatience out of his voice. “I’ll do my part. You do yours.”

Lasswell poured himself a drink. “You can count on us.”

“One last thing…Under no circumstances is Mrs. Browning to be hurt in any way, shape, or fashion, do you understand? No one lays a finger on her except to restrain her and bring her along.”

“Sure, sure,” Lasswell said. “We know we got to be careful with her.”

“Good.” Sinclair gave them his best steely-eyed glare. “Because anyone who harms her will answer to me.”

 

When Sinclair was gone and Lasswell and Moss were sitting there polishing off the whiskey, Moss chuckled and said, “That young fool don’t have any idea what’s really goin’ on, does he?”

Lasswell shook his head as he emptied the last drops from the bottle into his glass. “No, he don’t,” he said. “Not one damn bit.”

Chapter 4

Conrad enjoyed dinner with Rebel, as he always did. A cloth of fine Irish linen covered the table in the dining room. The china and the crystal sparkled. The meal prepared by Mrs. O’Hannigan was delicious. But of course, it was Rebel’s company that really made the meal special. She sat at the other end of the table in a white blouse and dark gray skirt, with her blond hair pulled up on top of her head in an elaborate arrangement of curls this evening.

Conrad could hardly wait to pull loose the pins that held Rebel’s hair and allow it to tumble freely about her shoulders.
Bare
shoulders by that time, he hoped.

But of course, he had to show some restraint and decorum. He wasn’t an animal after all, consumed by his lust. Almost, but not quite. And he had brought home that pile of work from the office, he reminded himself. He needed to get at least some of it done before he and Rebel retired for the evening.

He mentioned that as he lingered over a snifter of cognac following dinner. “If I don’t take care of some of it, I’ll be too far behind when I start in the morning,” he said. With a smile, he added, “Then I’ll never get caught up.”

“You should have had Edwin come over to help you with it,” Rebel said. “I’m sure he wouldn’t have minded. He’s such a hard worker.”

Conrad hesitated. Over the past few years, he had learned a great deal about the sort of natural caution that most Westerners practiced. Living in an often harsh and unforgiving land ingrained that in a person. Rebel was no different. She was probably more suspicious of people as a rule than he was.

Like everyone, though, she had her blind spots, and Edwin Sinclair was one of them. She seemed never to have seen the things that Conrad had, and he had never mentioned them to her.

Now, he said, “He offered to help, but I told him it wasn’t necessary.”

“Why would you do that?” Rebel asked with a frown. “Helping with paperwork is part of his job.”

“Not after office hours it isn’t.”

“Yes, but if he doesn’t mind…Anyway, you could always pay him a little bonus for extra work like that, if he’s not too proud to accept it.”

“I suppose.” Conrad didn’t want to argue with her, not tonight, so he smiled and promised, “I’ll certainly keep that in mind next time.” He swirled the cognac left in the snifter, then tilted it to his lips and drank the last of it. As he got to his feet, he said, “I won’t work for more than an hour or so.”

“I suppose I can be patient,” Rebel said. “I’ll clear away these dishes and then go upstairs to read for a while.”

On several occasions, Conrad had suggested that they ask Mrs. O’Hannigan to stay in the evenings until after dinner, but Rebel had insisted that she was perfectly capable of cleaning up. Not only that, she said, but Mrs. O’Hannigan needed to get home to her own family as well.

That was another point Conrad hadn’t argued. He knew that Rebel would be just as happy sitting next to an open campfire out on the trail as she was in the dining room of this big, two-story house on the outskirts of Carson City. Maybe even happier. So it was best, he thought, to let her do just as much as she wanted to do.

As he left the dining room and started down the hall toward his study, the image of Rebel in boots and jeans and a buckskin shirt drifted through his mind. Maybe if he could get ahead on his work, he could take some time off and they could head up into the high country on an extended trip. They could go on horseback, just the two of them, taking along enough supplies to last for a week or two. They wouldn’t have to worry about fresh meat; the mountains were full of game, and Rebel was a superb shot with a rifle. Conrad could handle a long gun fairly well, too. They would be fine.

It was such an appealing prospect that Conrad stopped just outside the door to his study and sighed in anticipated pleasure.

A knock on the front door broke that reverie and put a puzzled frown on Conrad’s face. They weren’t expecting any visitors tonight. He had no idea who could be at the door.

“I’ll get it,” he called to Rebel as he started toward the front of the house. He didn’t know if she had heard the knock, but in case she had, she would know that he was answering it.

When he swung the door open, the light from the foyer revealed Edwin Sinclair standing there on the porch, his hat in one hand and what appeared to be a yellow telegraph flimsy in the other. Conrad was surprised and not very happy to see Sinclair, especially after he had told the man not to come to the house this evening. But the telegram in Sinclair’s hand meant that something important might have happened, so Conrad supposed he had to hear him out.

“Hello, Edwin,” he said. “What are you doing here?”

Sinclair held up the yellow paper. “I received this wire that was intended for you, sir. I’m not quite sure how the messenger boy managed to make a mistake and deliver it to me instead, but that’s what happened.”

Conrad took the telegram and scanned the words printed on it in a bold, square hand. “Your name is on it as well as mine,” he pointed out. “I’m sure that’s what caused the mix-up.” He continued reading as he spoke, then exclaimed, “What? Has Kirkson lost his mind? Did you read this, Edwin?”

“I did, sir. I was worried about the news, too.”

“If Kirkson goes ahead with this plan, he’ll cost us thousands of dollars.” Ronald Kirkson was the manager of a steel plant in Pennsylvania owned largely by Conrad and his father. Conrad was no engineer, but even he could see that the changes in the manufacturing process Kirkson proposed would be tremendously inefficient.

“I imagine you’ll want to wire him first thing in the morning to hold off on implementing the changes,” Sinclair said. “In the meantime, since I’m already here, I’d be glad to help you go through some of that paperwork—”

“In the morning, hell!” Conrad broke in. “I’m going to wire Kirkson tonight. Right now, in fact. I’m going to write out a message, and you can take it to the Western Union office and send it as a night letter.”

“That will cost more,” Sinclair said.

“Penny-wise, pound-foolish,” Conrad quoted. “Come with me.”

“Where are we going, sir?”

“To my study. I want to sit down while I’m figuring out the best way to tell Kirkson that he’s a damned fool.”

“Oh. All right.”

Conrad closed the door and then stalked down the hall toward his study. Sinclair was close behind him.

“What about that other work?” Sinclair asked as they entered the study. “Those reports?”

“They can wait,” Conrad snapped. “They’re nothing but an annoyance. This is a crisis, or at least it will be if we don’t avert it.” He went behind the desk. “Pull up one of those armchairs, Edwin. This may take a little while.”

“Perhaps I should go out to the kitchen and brew some coffee for us.”

“No, that’s all right,” Conrad said. Rebel was probably still in the kitchen, and the last thing he wanted was for her and Sinclair to spend even a few minutes alone in such an intimate setting. He was probably wrong to distrust Sinclair, but wrong or not, he wanted to keep the man where he could see him.

He sat down behind the desk, pulled a blank sheet of paper in front of him, took up a pencil, and started composing a strongly worded message. “What do you think about this?” he asked Sinclair, then read the sentences to the secretary as he scrawled them on the paper. He might not fully trust Sinclair where Rebel was concerned, but the man was a good secretary and knew the business.

“That’s very good, sir.”

“Do you think it’s clear enough that Kirkson will regret it if he goes through with this?”

“Oh, I think so, Mr. Browning. Quite clear.” Sinclair paused. “I hope all this uproar doesn’t disturb Mrs. Browning.”

Conrad shook his head. “It won’t. She’s upstairs.” He didn’t know if she had gone up or not, but he wanted Sinclair to think she had.

Sinclair started to look uncomfortable, shifting around in the chair like a man with something bothering him. Conrad frowned at him and asked, “What’s wrong?”

“I’m sorry, sir, but, I’m not feeling well. If I could use the, ah…”

Conrad waved a hand toward the door. “Of course, of course. You know where it is.” Despite not fully trusting Sinclair, Conrad couldn’t deny him the use of the facilities. He stood up and began to pace back and forth, reading the message over to himself as he did so. “I’ll have this ready to go by the time you get back.”

“Of course.” With a vaguely embarrassed expression on his face, Sinclair slipped out of the room.

The thought crossed Conrad’s mind that Sinclair might run into Rebel while he was gone, but he decided that was unlikely. When she was finished cleaning up in the kitchen, Rebel would probably use the rear stairs to go up to their room. She’d said she was going to read while Conrad worked on the reports from the office.

He didn’t care about the reports now. As he’d told Sinclair, they weren’t really urgent. This telegram from Kirkson had upset him, and he wasn’t going to worry about the paperwork anymore. As soon as he’d sent Sinclair off to the Western Union office with the scorching reply, Conrad intended to do his best to forget all about work for the rest of the evening.

He went back to the desk, stood in front of it, and leaned over to cross out several words and substitute others. There, he thought as he straightened. That made the message even stronger. All he needed to do now was recopy it with all the corrections made. Or perhaps he’d get Sinclair to do that. The man had excellent handwriting.

Suddenly, Conrad frowned. He put down the message he’d been writing and picked up the telegraph flimsy he had dropped on the desk. Something about the printing on it was familiar. He had assumed that a telegrapher from the Western Union office had printed the message, but something about the bold strokes of the letters reminded him of Sinclair’s writing.

That made no sense. Sinclair had said that the message was delivered to his room at a boardinghouse several blocks away. He couldn’t have written it.

The secretary had left the door partially open when he left the study. Conrad heard it swing open behind him now, and he started to turn so that he could ask Sinclair what was going on here.

He didn’t make it. A swift step sounded behind him, and something crashed into his skull. The blow’s impact sent Conrad slumping forward. He dropped the telegram and caught himself by slapping his hands down flat on the desk. Groggy, half-stunned, he tried to push himself upright again.

The intruder hit him a second time, and this time his knees buckled. He couldn’t hold himself up. The floor leaped up to smack him in the face. Conrad felt the rough nap of the rug in front of the desk scraping his cheek. He let out a groan that sounded to his ears as if it came from far, far away.

Then the sound faded out entirely, along with everything else, as Conrad lost consciousness.

 

It would have been easy to finish him off, Edwin Sinclair thought as he stared down at Conrad Browning, who lay on the study floor, out cold. A few more blows from the bludgeon he had carried into the house, concealed under his coat, and Browning’s head would be a shattered, misshapen mess. He would never have Rebel again.

But he wouldn’t be able to pay the ransom either, and without that, Lasswell, Moss, and the other hired gunmen wouldn’t carry out their part of the plan. It was vital that Conrad Browning live through this night. That was why Sinclair had gone to the trouble of forging the message from Kirkson on a telegraph flimsy he had lifted from the Western Union office.

He didn’t think that Browning would recognize his hand if he printed the words in as blocky a style as he could manage, and sure enough, the ruse had worked. Browning had accepted it as a genuine message from Kirkson. For a while, Sinclair had worried that there wouldn’t be an opportunity for him to strike down Browning without being seen, but in the end, luck had been with him.

Now all that was left to do was to let Lasswell and the others into the house through the rear door. Sinclair slipped his watch out and checked the time. Five minutes until eight. He had almost shaved it too close.

As he put his watch away, he glanced down at Browning. Maybe it would be a good idea to tie him up. That was what real kidnappers would do, wasn’t it? Of course, Lasswell and the others
were
real kidnappers, he reminded himself. They just had help that no one else would ever know about.

Sinclair yanked down one of the cords from the drapes and used it to bind Browning’s hands behind his back. He wasn’t any too gentle about it either, jerking Browning’s arms around without worrying about whether or not he injured the bastard. He had hit Browning twice, so he didn’t think there was any chance he’d regain consciousness any time soon, but just in case he did, this would take care of the problem. Sinclair used Browning’s own handkerchief to gag him, tying the ball of cloth in place with another piece of drapery cord.

There, Sinclair thought as he straightened from his work, all trussed up like a pig on its way to market.

But now there was really no time to waste. He almost broke into a run as he hurried from the study and down the hall. His heart pounded heavily in his chest as he pushed open the door into the kitchen. He didn’t know if it was from fear or anticipation or just sheer excitement at being part of something so audacious. He stepped into the room…

And his heart seemed to leap into his throat and freeze there as he saw Rebel standing at the foot of the rear stairs.

“Edwin!” she said, obviously surprised to see him. But then she smiled, like the sun coming up and chasing away the shadows of night, and went on. “I didn’t know you were here. Did you come to help Conrad with all that paperwork after all?”

Before he could answer, a soft knock sounded on the rear door.

Judging by Rebel’s expression, she was even more surprised by that than she was by Sinclair’s unexpected appearance in her kitchen. She said, “Who in the world can that be at this time of night? Maybe Mrs. O’Hannigan forgot something.”

She started toward the door, clearly intending to answer it.

Sinclair sprang forward. “Let me,” he said. “You seemed to be on your way upstairs. You should go ahead. It’s probably a tradesman at the door. I’ll deal with him.”

BOOK: The Loner
5.83Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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