Blood Gold Read online




  Contents

  Title Page

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  By the Same Author

  Copyright

  CHAPTER 1

  ‘Pick up the gun!’ Jack Wolf roared.

  For long moments Patrick Grady glared at Jack, then slowly lowered his head.

  Ten feet before him on the rocky outcrop above Hangman’s Gulch lay two guns. Twenty feet away stood his partner, Rusty Anderton.

  Patrick snorted and stood tall.

  ‘I ain’t doing that,’ he muttered.

  Jack sauntered three slow paces to stand over the guns. A gust of wind blowing down the gulch whipped his coat as he glanced around the circle of bandits surrounding Patrick and Rusty. His single eye darted back and forth, the ruined wasteland of his other orbit red and angry.

  Encouraging nods and eager grins rippled round the circle.

  Jack kicked Patrick’s gun. The weapon slammed into Patrick’s right foot, but Patrick kept his gaze on Jack and smiled defiantly.

  Jack snorted and kicked the other gun. It slid to a halt two feet in front of Rusty.

  From the corner of his eye Patrick glanced at Rusty, who clutched his arms to his chest and stopped running his tongue through his moustache so that a timid smile could emerge.

  ‘Like Patrick said,’ Rusty murmured, his voice shaking, ‘I ain’t taking my gun either.’

  ‘One way or another,’ Jack muttered, pointing a firm finger at each man in turn, ‘you two will entertain me. This way, one of you lives. The other way, you’ll both be praying to die by sundown.’

  The circle of bandits chuckled, the sound low and humourless.

  ‘I’d sooner die the man I am,’ Patrick spat, ‘than kill my partner.’

  Patrick glanced at Rusty, searching for more defiance, but Rusty had slammed a shaking hand over his eyes.

  Jack backed three paces to stand beside the four saddlebags he’d just seized from Patrick and Rusty.

  Inside the saddlebags were dozens of smaller bags, which, after nine months of successful prospecting, bulged with gold dust. But Patrick’s and Rusty’s streak of luck had ended when they’d taken what they thought was the safer route to Black Rock through Hangman’s Gulch.

  There, the bandit Jack Wolf had ambushed them.

  After a short chase and skirmish, Jack had captured them and their gold. After some shoving and taunting, Jack had decided to have some fun. He’d returned Patrick’s and Rusty’s guns to them, each loaded with a single bullet, and ordered them to face each other in a fast draw showdown. And, as a torturous enticement, he’d promised them that the one who killed the other would go free, albeit substantially poorer than before.

  ‘So,’ Jack said, chuckling, ‘you want a way out, do you?’

  Patrick shrugged. ‘Yeah.’

  Jack kicked a bag on its side, then glanced around his circle of men.

  A cry started, low at first then growing with each repeated shout.

  ‘Cards, cards, cards!’ each bandit intoned, accompanying each cry with a clap of hands. ‘Cards, cards, cards.’

  Jack laughed. ‘Sounds like it’s time to ask the cards.’

  Patrick and Rusty shared a bemused glance.

  ‘What’s that mean?’ Patrick muttered.

  Using two outstretched fingers, Jack extracted a battered pack of cards from his top jacket pocket and held them aloft.

  ‘You draw a card. And that card decides your fate.’ Jack patted the pack of cards, then tapped his chin. ‘A non-face card says you fight the showdown. A two-eyed face card says you don’t have to fight.’ Jack glanced around, smirking. ‘A one-eyed card says you keep your gold dust.’

  ‘Hey,’ Brady Hagen whined, ‘we ain’t siding with—’

  Jack pointed a firm finger at Brady.

  ‘Quiet. We live by the cards.’

  ‘And I ain’t siding with that either,’ Patrick said as Brady lowered his head. ‘Those ain’t good odds.’

  Jack ripped his gun from its holster and lifted it high, sighting Patrick’s kneecap with his one good eye.

  ‘If you don’t take them, you can just die.’ Jack licked his lips. ‘And I’ve just thought of a way that’ll take till long after sundown.’

  Patrick gulped, but then jutted his chin and stood tall.

  ‘As I said, I’ll die the man I am rather than die entertaining scum.’

  ‘Patrick,’ Rusty said, rubbing a quivering hand over his damp brow. ‘Just take a card.’

  Patrick snorted. ‘I ain’t.’

  ‘Just do it.’ Rusty glanced down at the gun at his feet, then held his hands wide and flashed a half-smile. ‘You might get lucky.’

  Patrick hung his head a moment, then took a deep breath. With a last glance at Rusty, and an encouraging nod from his partner, he strode up to Jack and extended an arm, then drew it back.

  ‘So if I draw the king of diamonds, the jack of spades, or the jack of hearts, we keep our gold?’

  Jack nodded and fanned the cards out, his one eye gleaming in the light from the high sun.

  With his hand shaking with the slightest of tremors, Patrick half pulled a card from the pack.

  He lifted a corner and snorted. While staring at Jack, he ripped the card from the pack and twisted it over.

  Jack chuckled. ‘So you get to fight that showdown, after all.’

  Patrick flicked the three of spades on the ground and slammed his hands on his hips.

  ‘What did that prove?’

  ‘It put your fate into the cards. And the cards said that one of you lives and one of you dies.’ Jack grabbed the card from the ground and slipped the pack into his pocket. ‘The gun can decide which one.’

  Patrick turned his back on Jack and edged towards his gun, shaking his head. He rolled his shoulders, then toed the gun to the side towards Rusty’s gun. Still shaking his head, he shuffled to it and toed it another foot.

  As a murmured grumbling started from Jack’s men, Patrick bent and extended a hand to grab the gun, but he stopped with his fingers just brushing the metal.

  Rusty gulped and knelt beside his gun.

  Jack and his men chuckled at Patrick’s and Rusty’s submission. Bets changed hands, most backing Patrick to win the showdown.

  But as Rusty grabbed his gun, Patrick fumbled with his gun and as he rooted on the ground for it, he leaned towards Rusty.

  ‘That Jack Wolf ain’t living long enough to enjoy our gold,’ he whispered to Rusty. ‘I’ll take him. You take whoever you like.’

  Rusty winced. ‘And then what? We’ve only got one bullet apiece.’

  ‘We take our chances.’ Patrick looked around the solid circle of grinning bandits. He counted fifteen. ‘But whatever you do, do it fast and keep moving.’

  ‘That’ll just get us killed.’

  ‘Everything we do will just get—’

  ‘Be quiet, you two!’ Jack roared. He folded his arms and grinned. ‘It’s time for the showdown.’

  Patrick darted a last harsh glare at Rusty, then stood and holstered his gun. He paced back to leave five clear yards between himself and Rusty, then hunched down, hoping that he was adopting a gunslinger crouch.

  Facing him, Rusty matched his actions, but his hands were shaking even mo
re than before and his gaze darted around the circle of grinning men. Patrick stared at Rusty until he looked at him. While moving his lips as little as he dared, he mouthed a countdown.

  Ten.

  Patrick directed an encouraging smile at Rusty.

  Nine.

  Rusty frowned so deeply his face seemed to cave in.

  Eight.

  Patrick rolled his shoulders and blew on his fingers.

  Seven.

  Rusty gulped and rubbed his sweating palms on his jacket.

  Six.

  Patrick settled his stance.

  Five.

  Rusty jabbed his shaking fingers through his thick red beard.

  Four.

  Patrick glanced to the side, noting Jack’s exact position ten yards to his left.

  Three.

  Rusty closed his eyes a moment, his mouth moving feverishly as he mouthed a benediction.

  Two.

  Patrick stood tall and took a deep breath.

  One.

  Rusty stared deep into Patrick’s eyes. His head waggled in the shortest of shakes.

  Zero.

  Patrick whirled his hand to his holster and turned on the hip towards Jack. But then hot fire punched into his guts, knocking him back and around, his pained finger-twitch gouging his only bullet into the earth scant inches before Jack’s feet.

  He staggered a pace, then dropped to his knees, clutching his guts, and toppled on to his side. Through pain-racked eyes, he looked up.

  In his outstretched hand, Rusty had aimed his shaking gun straight at Patrick. A flurry of smoke rose from the gun barrel.

  Rusty shook his head, his eyes wide and beseeching.

  ‘It wasn’t me,’ he screeched.

  Patrick opened his mouth to scream a denial, but darkness claimed him.

  CHAPTER 2

  Light ripped into Patrick’s eyes, then faded to oblivion. Pain besieged Patrick, but stayed.

  The fire in his guts burned, enveloping his mind.

  He tried to shout for help, but he couldn’t force words from the blasted desert that was his mouth.

  But that wasn’t the worst of it.

  Whenever he almost dragged himself back to reality, he thought that someone had bound him and hung him upside down. And worse, he steadily swayed back and forth.

  Through intense willpower, he forced himself awake to find he was lying over a horse, the ground just feet below him. But the apparent swaying of the ground forced a vomiting attack from his tortured body.

  The muscle spasms ripped his insides and this time, he welcomed the darkness that came and stayed.

  ‘How are you feeling?’

  The question came from a woman.

  Patrick tried to croak an answer, but no words emerged. With a gritty gulp, he cleared his throat and forced his eyes to open.

  A plain face peered down at him, but the eyes were kind and young.

  Patrick instructed his head to turn, but his vision remained fixed on the face. With just his eyes, he glanced around.

  He was in a room, ornately furnished, but decayed and reeking of incense. He glanced down. He lay on a bed, dressed in just his underclothes, a single blanket folded back across his midriff. Bandages encased his chest. They were clean with no blood showing.

  ‘Who are you?’ he croaked.

  ‘Hannah, Hannah Foster. And how are you feeling?’

  Patrick forced his hand to lift from his side and tentatively poked his bandages.

  ‘I don’t know. How am I feeling?’

  Hannah provided a kind smile. ‘If you don’t know, I’d better let Gideon advise you.’

  ‘Just tell me the truth.’ Patrick raised his eyebrows. ‘You are a nurse, aren’t you?’

  ‘No. I’m a …’ Hannah’s eyes appeared to glaze a moment. She shook her head with the barest of movements. ‘I’m not a nurse.’

  Patrick lunged and gripped Hannah’s arm.

  ‘Just tell me if I’ll live.’

  Hannah flinched, but instead of attempting to remove his hand, she laid her other hand on his brow.

  ‘I reckon so. If anyone can help you, Gideon Law can.’

  ‘Is he a doctor?’

  ‘Yeah. He’s the best.’

  ‘Glad you think so,’ a man said from Patrick’s side.

  Patrick released Hannah’s arm and forced his head to turn.

  A man, far younger than Patrick expected, smiled at him from the doorway – Gideon Law.

  ‘What happened?’ Patrick asked.

  ‘Someone shot you. That’s what happened. But I removed the bullet without too much trouble.’ Gideon smiled. ‘And to answer the question you were asking Hannah – you’ll live. The bullet cracked a rib, but it didn’t cause as much damage as it might have. If you rest for a week or two, you’ll mend. In a month, you’ll be back to your old self.’

  ‘I can’t rest.’ Patrick looked to the ceiling and breathed deeply through his nostrils, forcing down the burst of anger that threatened to cloud his vision. ‘I have to … to find someone.’

  Gideon sauntered to Patrick’s bedside and busied himself with prodding at Patrick’s dressing.

  ‘Good work, Hannah. You have a real skill here.’ He flashed Hannah a smile, then glanced down at Patrick. ‘You can do all the finding you need to do once you’ve healed. For now, you aren’t going anywhere.’

  Patrick thrust an arm down to his side and tried to lever himself up, but as he only shifted an inch, he flopped into the cushions and decided to accept advice.

  ‘And where is here?’ he asked, now enveloped in the cushioned bed.

  ‘This is Destitution.’ Gideon glanced around the room. ‘And you’re in the Belle Starr.’

  ‘A hotel?’

  Gideon winced. ‘No. A whorehouse.’

  ‘Thanks for reminding me,’ Hannah said. She forced a thin smile and turned to the door. ‘I have to go.’

  CHAPTER 3

  Deep within his mind, hatred burned Patrick’s soul with one desire – Kill Rusty. That thought blasted and echoed in his mind, drowning out all rational considerations.

  But after two failed attempts to roll out of bed and two sharp pains ripping through his chest, he relented and let sleep overcome him.

  From time to time he awoke and, from the passage of the rectangle of light cast by the window on to the floor and the varying levels of commotion beyond the door, he could tell that another day started, passed, and ended.

  On a regular basis, Hannah and Gideon called in on him. They changed his dressings and fed him, but they studiously ignored his repeated questions about when he could move on.

  Early in the afternoon, Hannah returned.

  ‘How can I pay for my care?’ Patrick asked, broaching the subject of when he could leave from a different angle.

  ‘You don’t have to. It’s been paid for.’

  ‘Who?’

  Hannah winced. ‘Perhaps I should fetch Gideon to explain.’

  ‘No. Just tell me. Who’s paying for my care?’

  Hannah backed a pace, but then glanced to her side and frowned.

  The door swung fully open to reveal Rusty Anderton standing in the doorway. He paced into the room, nibbling on his bottom lip.

  ‘I’m paying,’ he said. He wrung his hands, then held them wide. ‘And it took everything that Jack Wolf and his bandits didn’t take.’

  ‘You!’ Patrick roared, flinging up a hand to point at Rusty.

  Rusty shrugged and hung his head a moment. He glanced at Hannah, then at the door.

  Hannah nodded and edged around Rusty to the door and outside, but her footfalls halted three paces down the corridor.

  ‘Glad you’re mending,’ Rusty said. ‘When I looked in on you yesterday, you looked terrible.’

  ‘That’s because you shot me,’ Patrick grunted, ‘you low-down—’

  ‘I didn’t shoot you.’

  ‘You fired. I got lead in the guts.’

  ‘We’ve been through too much over th
e last year.’ Rusty paced across the room and leaned on Patrick’s bed. He peered at the bandages and smiled. ‘I’d never hurt you.’

  ‘Then how come I had a bullet in me?’

  ‘One of Jack’s bandits shot you. It wasn’t—’

  ‘Liar!’

  Patrick lunged, his clawing swipe grabbing Rusty’s throat. With all his strength he squeezed, but Rusty just placed his hand over Patrick’s hand and lifted it from his neck.

  ‘Rest, Patrick. You’re still far weaker than you think you are. We’ll talk about this when you get your strength back.’

  Rusty turned and paced from Patrick’s bed. In the doorway he glanced back, a wan smile splitting his thick red beard, then shuffled outside.

  From the corridor, Patrick heard Rusty’s and Hannah’s low voices muttering. With a supreme effort, Patrick threw back the blanket covering him and swung his legs to the floor. He stood, but his legs folded and he plummeted to the floor, landing in a sprawling heap.

  Rusty dashed in, Hannah at his heels.

  ‘Get away from me,’ Patrick muttered from the floor.

  Rusty rocked on his heels, but Hannah shook her head.

  ‘Just get Gideon,’ she said. ‘We’ll sort him out.’

  One last time, Rusty glanced down at Patrick, then nodded and dashed outside, leaving Hannah staring at Patrick, shaking her head.

  ‘You’re a bull-headed idiot, Patrick,’ she said.

  ‘You ain’t the first to say that.’

  Patrick threw out a hand and dragged himself a clawed yard nearer to the doorway, but pain ripped through his chest and, unable to control his movements, he flopped on his side.

  When Gideon clattered into the room, he and Hannah levered an arm under each armpit and helped him into bed. Throughout, Patrick listened to their admonishments, and replied with sullen agreements. But Rusty’s treachery had taken root in his mind and was thrusting revengeful tendrils into every fibre of his being.

  When his two carers eventually trusted him enough to leave him, he lay back and stared at the ceiling. But he’d started counting.

  When he judged that thirty minutes had passed, he pushed back the blanket and swung his legs to the floor.

  He sat a moment, willing the dizziness to depart, then rolled forward. On his feet, he straightened as much as he could then tottered back and forth, but his legs supported him. Smiling now, he shuffled across the floor to the window and peered outside, confirming that he was on the first floor.