Prodigal Gun

 

Coming NOV. 20, 2014, in paperback and ebook.



Chapter One


April 1877

A red-tailed hawk circled in the cloudless sky, dipping one wing in a silent salute before plunging to the earth like a bullet. Twenty feet from the gelding’s hooves, a jackrabbit barely had time to shriek.

The horse tossed his head and danced a few steps. Calhoun pressed his knees against the saddle’s fenders and drew the slack from the reins.


“Easy, fella.” He patted the chestnut’s neck. “You’re too big for him to carry off.”


Tugging the brim of his Stetson closer to his eyes to block the afternoon glare, Calhoun settled into a lazy slouch. His gaze kept moving, restless, as eager as the rest of him to take care of whatever Boggs wanted and get the hell out of Texas. The state hadn’t changed—still big and open and empty. A man could ride for days with no company but his own. Normally, that suited him just fine.


But this was Texas. Unease had dogged Calhoun from the moment he stepped across the state line at El Paso. Now, deep in the Hill Country, an army of ants crawled along the fringes of his nerves. Damn pesky, those ants.


He scanned the horizon. Rocks and scrub littered the sand on both sides of the dry wash. Occasional stands of oak and mesquite interrupted the grama grass and prickly pear toward the skyline, but nothing moved. No insects. No birds. Not even a breeze. Only the gelding’s hooves thudding against parched dirt and the creak of saddle leather violated the silence.


Rubbing eyes dried out by heat and fatigue, he sucked a lungful of scalding air. Two weeks of hard travel could prey on a man’s mind, especially in contrary weather—and the weather couldn’t get much more contrary. Cold one minute, hot the next, spring in the Hill Country was as fickle as a woman’s mood.


Unless his memory failed him, a watering hole and some blessed shade lay just over the next rise. Odd how some memories persisted despite a man’s best efforts to forget.


He released annoyance on a gust of breath. Boggs better have a damn good reason for yanking him away from the high-dollar comfort of Miss Lavinia’s in Silver City. A wry twist pinched one corner of Calhoun’s lips. Now there was a memory to savor. The heat in parts of the New Mexico Territory could burn a man clear to his bones and never leave a mark.

Texas’s heat left scars.


The horse brushed through a patch of wild lavender, and the soft, sweet fragrance puffed at an old spark. Dammit. He’d doused that fire more than a dozen years ago, stayed the hell out of Texas to avoid the ashes. And now, with a vague summons Calhoun couldn’t ignore, Boggs had dragged him much too close to—


Sunlight winked in his peripheral vision. The hairs on the back of his neck jumped to attention mere seconds before the sharp crack of rifle fire fractured the still air.


Reflex pushed Calhoun against the chestnut’s neck at the same time his boot heels jabbed the animal’s ribs. The horse leapt forward and, within a few strides, flattened into a dead-man’s run over uneven ground.


A second shot. The gelding screamed and dropped, pitching Calhoun over its head. Hard contact with the ground sent a rush of air from his lungs. Pinpoints of light flickered before his eyes.


Don’t lie here, you damn fool. Move!


Ripping both Colts from leather, he rolled to a crouch and scrambled for cover. A third report bounced off the surrounding rock, and a sharp, hot bite knocked one leg from under him. Shit. He slammed facedown into the baked earth and lay still, his left arm trapped beneath him. The gun in his other hand skidded out of reach.


Fine. Cowardly bastard wanted a piece of him, let him come get it. Calhoun willed twitchy muscles to go limp.


Eyes closed, he counted the seconds while he corralled his galloping pulse and reined in the ragged gasps racing into and out of his lungs. Short, shallow breaths wouldn’t stir the dust. The sun scorched his back, his hair, while the coarse sand beneath his left thigh grew sticky. Sweat slid in itchy beads down his face and neck.


Only the horse’s pitiful moans and occasional thrashing disturbed the stifling air until a jingle of spurs approached. Cautious steps scraping rocky ground said the sharpshooter was heavy, either well-fed or just plain big, and more comfortable mounted than on foot. The scuff of one too-heavy hoof punctuated the gait of a horse tagging along behind.


One man, one horse. No problem.


A shadow fell across Calhoun’s face an instant before the pointed toe of a boot jabbed him in the ribs and flipped him onto his back. His eyes snapped open, and the Peacemaker that had been gnawing at his gut fired an un-aimed shot.


The bushwhacker toppled backward and lay still.


By the time Calhoun dragged himself upright, the man’s chest no longer rose and fell. Blood sprawled across the front of his shirt around a hole to the left of the third button. Wide, dull eyes fixed on the heavens in an eternal stare. One hand clutched a battered Winchester in a literal death grip.


“Jubal Delaney. Wondered when you’d show up.” Calhoun kicked the rifle from the dead man’s grasp. Stupid ran bone-deep in some families. “Give my regards to your no-account brothers.”


The last he’d heard, the only formerly surviving Delaney was doing time in Colorado Territorial. None of the Delaney boys had been known for his smarts. How the hell had this one tracked him to the middle of nowhere? Those damn pesky ants gathered between his shoulder blades, sparking an itch.


The bushwhacker’s sorrel horse swished his tail and blinked at Calhoun from the other side of the body.


“What the hell’re you starin’ at?” he growled.


The horse snorted but didn’t move or look away.


He holstered the Colt on his left, retrieved the gun he’d dropped and examined the sand-covered barrel. Probably sand inside, too, dammit. The gun slid into the sheath on his right. He’d clean it later. Pent-up energy made for shaky hands, and one hole in his hide was enough.


His injured leg didn’t hurt—yet—but chunks of lead had a way of interfering with muscle. A quick swipe against his shoulder wiped the grit from the side of his face as he limped to the stricken chestnut. Eyes alive with panic and pain begged for help, but the creature no longer thrashed. The way one foreleg dangled, the horse was down for good.


Damn. In the short time they’d traveled together—only since El Paso—the beast had proved smart and fast. He didn’t deserve to die like this.


“Sorry, fella.” A single bullet ended the animal’s misery.


After replacing the spent rounds in the Peacemaker, Calhoun picked up his hat, whacked it against his uninjured thigh, and settled the Stetson on his head. He snagged the carbine, saddlebags, and canteens from the carcass. Bedroll, saddle, everything else he could replace, and the bushwhacker’s horse would do, for now.


He turned to the unflappable sorrel, and the world spun with him. Off-balance, he staggered backward a step. Damn imbecile. You’re bleedin’. What’d you expect?


The last of his pent-up energy drained into the sand. His knees gave way, and Calhoun sank onto a boulder. He let the saddlebags slide from his shoulder as he yanked the black kerchief from his neck. Gritting his teeth, he jerked the sweaty fabric into a tight knot over the bloodstained hole in his denims.


When he straightened, a knife-sharp pain lanced through his side. Breath hissed between his teeth as his hand automatically sought the source…and came away sticky.


A red smear marked his palm. He stared, then forced his gaze to a dark stain blossoming low across the blue chambray of his shirt. Son of a bitch. When the hell did that happen?


Near-panic sent buttons flying as he ripped the shirt from the waistband of his britches. Crimson oozed from a small hole above his hipbone. An inch to the left and the bastard would have missed him.


He swiped the other palm behind his back. Clean. The damn slug stopped halfway through.


His breath caught on the serrated edge of a stabbing pain as he peeled the sweat-drenched chambray from his skin. The bloody shirt, twisted into a rope, would suffice for a bandage. He knotted the sleeves over the bullet hole to slow the bleeding, then withdrew another shirt and a silver flask from the saddlebags.


With the uncorked flask, he offered Delaney a sardonic salute. “Can’t blame a man for tryin’, can you, hombre?” A long swig of whiskey slid down his throat, the draught’s smooth fire burning away the pain and the dust. “Better men than you have failed.”


And every one of them had sorely vexed Calhoun. Living was a habit he intended to continue. If the Yankees couldn’t plant his ass in four hellacious years, a horse thief and road agent looking for revenge sure as hell hadn’t earned the right.


But the bushwhacker might get lucky if Calhoun sat here much longer. Already heaviness weighted his limbs, and a dry cold crept upward from his boots.


One more gulp from the flask, and he shrugged into the clean shirt, blue chambray like the first. He let the tails hang and forced unwilling legs to hold his weight. Damn Boggs to hell. He ought to charge the old coot double for the sheer aggravation.


Thirty feet to the sorrel. Calhoun let mounting resentment wind through him and bolster waning resolve. There might be a doc in Uvalde…a hard day’s ride behind him. Boggs’s spread lay farther than that ahead. He’d be dead before he reached either place.


The Hard Eights.


A heavy breath snaked out through his teeth. Yeah…he could make the ranch. The main house perched along Cimarron Creek, only a couple of hours away.


The mere thought of swallowing his pride and a dozen years of bitterness shortened Calhoun’s fuse. Even now, the bile rising in his gullet forced a sour taste into his mouth. Between that and the blood and the reception he expected, something was bound to explode.


The twin irons hugging his thighs were sure to raise a ruckus at the Eights, but truth be told, he didn’t care what the conniving Caine clan thought. More a part of him than his own skin, the .44s could do his talking, if necessary.


Calhoun’s jaw tightened. At least when his guns spoke, they didn’t lie.