About this ebook
D.D. Lang
Derek Doyle who writes under various psyseudonyms including D.D. Lang and Will Black, and has had over 40 BHW Westerns published. He lives in Hawarden, North Wales.
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Long John - D.D. Lang
PROLOGUE
The Wells Fargo stagecoach pulled into the stage depot, the driver slumped forward, then fell ten feet to the ground.
The shotgun rider was missing. The rear of the coach was peppered with arrows. It was a miracle he’d escaped the Indian war party at all, let alone as a survivor.
A tall, lean man got out of the passenger compartment and looked down at the fallen man. The driver was dead, he knew that. The driver’s sightless, brown eyes stared up at the dark-clad passenger with a look of complete surprise. His mouth was open, and from one corner a trickle of blood meandered down his chin and plop-plopped into the dust. His shirt front was soaked in blood, as was his back.
There were no other passengers. The man clambered aboard the stagecoach for the last time and grabbed the handles of his carpetbag and, without a word or backward glance, strode off into town.
Questions by the stage depot manager were fired at him as he left, but the man didn’t even turn around to acknowledge them, so the manager went for the sheriff.
The tall man made an imposing picture. At least six-foot five inches in his stockinged feet, he walked down the centre of Main Street. Dressed in a black jacket with matching trousers and Stetson, his white shirt was pristine as if he’d just put it on. The bootlace tie round his neck bore a silver bull’s head, his waistcoat, a bright-red satin. The boots, of the best quality and highly polished.
A scar ran down the left side of his face and curved under his nose, hidden by a large, black moustache that was neatly trimmed. His sideburns were long and equally black.
Piercing, dark-brown eyes stared neither to the left, nor the right as he sought his destination.
The hotel, like all small-town hotels, was next door to the saloon. Probably owned by the same man, he thought, as he climbed the wooden steps that led onto the boardwalk.
The town was relatively quiet at this time of the day, four in the afternoon. He checked his watch and put it back in his waistcoat pocket. He painted the very image of a Mississippi gambler, except for his guns.
Strapped to both thighs were a pair of silver and pearl Colts, hung low, gunslinger-style. The handles reflected the late afternoon sun as he stood on the boardwalk and surveyed the town.
Medicine Head was indeed a small town. One street, Main Street, ran from east to west, on either side stood single storey buildings, wooden, except for the bank and the sheriff’s office.
He looked up at the hotel. It was the only two-storeyed building in town. Symmetrical in design, a wide, double-door entrance, and three windows on either side. The first floor had a balcony that ran all the way around; it was empty.
Opposite the hotel was a general store, closed. Next to that the bank and the sheriff’s office.
On this side of the street, the saloon and various private houses lined what was left of the main street.
The livery stable was next to the bank and he crossed the street.
A huge, black man was hammering away with a large hammer in his right hand. In his left, a large pair of tongs held a red-hot horseshoe he was aiming to fix to the bay in the stall.
The tall man looked in the stable and saw several horses, turned, and without saying a word, he re-crossed the street to the hotel. Dan Briggs, the livery owner cum blacksmith, watched as he crossed the street, the huge hammer in mid-air.
The tall man looked around over his shoulder, he eyed Dan and turned back again. The hammer came down on the shoe.
Entering the hotel, he walked to the desk and hit the bell.
Nobody answered.
He hit the bell again. From the office at the rear he could hear movement, papers being shuffled, a chair knocked over. Whoever was in there had obviously been asleep.
The door opened and an old man, well into his sixties, wearing a grimy-grey vest that had once been white, dishevelled hair and two day’s stubble, emerged.
‘Yeah?’
‘Room.’
‘You want one?’
The tall man just stared. His sharp, deep eyes obviated the need for the old man to ask further questions.
‘Sign here,’ the desk clerk pointed at the register.
The tall men picked up the pen and wrote a name. ‘Welcome, Mr— hell, I can’t read your writin’.’
The tall man picked up the key to his room and climbed the stairs.
The room was as he would have expected. A single bed in one corner with a small table to the side with an old oil-lamp. A chest of four drawers, with a jug and washbowl on top against one wall, a large window in another, and a tallboy and a rickety wooden chair completed the furnishings. The ceiling might well have been white once, now it was stained by tobacco smoke and matched the drab colour of the walls.
Throwing his saddle-bags on the bed, he took his Stetson off and hung it on the back of the chair. The jug was full of water so he emptied some into the bowl and splashed his face. Even though the water was tepid, he felt better.
Pouring some water into his hand, he swilled the inside of his mouth, trying to get the dust out and spat into the bowl.
He took a wooden comb from his inside pocket and ran it through his thick, black hair, replaced his Stetson and left the room. The saloon was his next port of call.
The wind had begun to pick up again, dust blew and settled on everything. The yellow clouds swirled and at times had been known to block out the sunlight.
The street was deserted. Opposite the saloon, a flat-back with a four-team stood impatiently pawing at the ground, their cargo of straw bales being attacked by the wind and sand sending wisps into the air.
There were only a dozen people in the saloon. The bat-wing doors squeaked as he pushed them open. As usual, most people in the saloon turned as he entered. When they saw it was a stranger, nobody made eye contact. It was the sort of situation he’d been in many times before. If the piano player had been playing – he would have stopped – adding more atmosphere.
He walked up to the bar and threw down a dime. ‘Whiskey.’
The barkeep brought a bottle up from beneath the counter, the silver pouring spout caught the light as he tilted it into a one-shot glass, filling it to the brim.
The tall man picked the glass up, held it up to the light, to check there was nothing in there he hadn’t paid for, and, bringing it to his lips, knocked it back in one.
Slamming the glass back on the counter, indicating he wanted it filled, he took out a silver cigar case from the inside pocket of his jacket. Opening it, he took out a long, narrow cigar and placed it between thin lips. He closed the case and returned it to the pocket.
The barkeep struck a match. The man, without raising his head, looked the barkeep full in the eye. Then he leant forward and drew on the cigar, blowing out a cloud of blue-grey smoke.
‘Thanks.’
The barkeep nodded and filled the glass. This time, he left the bottle on the counter, then took out a cloth and went through the time-honoured barkeep job of wiping down an already clean bar-top. It was more habit than necessity.
Downing his second glassful, he picked up the bottle, looked at the label – it was a brand he’d never heard of – and poured another glass.
After the fifth drink, he relaxed some. He began to look around the saloon. The room was square and the bar filled up one entire wall. There was a full-length mirror behind it which had seen better days, but it managed to make the saloon look far bigger than it actually was.
With his back to the bar, the bat-wing doors were in front of him, to his left a blank wall. No window, or pictures broke up the monotony of the plain, brown, painted surface.
To his right, a staircase swept from the wooden floor up to a landing which disappeared back over the bar.
The tables, old and rickety, were circular. Covered in stain rings from whiskey and beer, the edges marked where cigars or cigarettes had burned.
At the table nearest the staircase sat four cowboys. They were playing poker quietly. Between the staircase and the bar, another game was in progress, this one was noisier; it was obvious the participants had had a lot to drink.
A hand was won and a flurry of activity took place as the man with his back to the bar began to pull the nickels and dimes and dollar bills that were his prize, towards him.
It looked as if the winner hadn’t won in a long time. Judging by the way he tried to stand, he’d been drinking longer than he’d been playing.
Drunkenly, the man staggered towards the bar intent on buying a round of drinks. His sense of balance was only matched by his clumsiness. Turning towards his card-playing friends, he backed into the tall man.
Not content with knocking the stranger’s drink all down his vest, in an effort to make things better, he only made them worse. As he tried to dry the man off, losing his balance completely,