Travers hesitated. “There’s more to this than you realize, Mr. Jackson—”
“Show me the goddamned bodies!”
Kit was on his feet, as well. “Easy, Skeeter,” he said, voice low. Then, to Travers, “You’d better show us. I take it you didn’t send the bodies back with the courier?”
“I thought I’d better wait until the search party got back. I was hoping to find our deserters and send them back together, but the trackers haven’t shown up yet, so I sent a rider on ahead to Denver. I wanted him to get there before the gate cycled, but if you didn’t run across him, he obviously didn’t make it.” Travers nodded toward a doorway at the rear of the room. “We embalmed ’em from the medical kits and put ’em in body bags, back in the saloon’s storage pantry. It’s the most secure place in town. Didn’t want the local wildlife getting to them, after all. Our surgeon went with the search team, just in case.”
“Paula Booker?” Kit asked sharply.
Travers nodded. “After what happened on the trail, there was no stopping her. Said she could’ve saved one of ’em, if she’d gotten to him in time. I’ve never seen a woman so upset in all my born days.”
Kit sighed, weariness etched into his grizzled features. “Open it up, please. Let’s get this over with.”
Skeeter and Kit followed Travers into the next room, leaving Kaederman to bring up the rear. None of the tourists volunteered to go with them. A sickening, sweet stench met them when the heavy door groaned open. A moment later, zippers went down on the body bags and Skeeter found himself staring at two dead men. One was a stranger, thank God. The other . . .