Without warning, Kit had Skeeter by the arm. “Easy, Skeeter, you’re awfully white around the mouth. Let’s get you outside, get some fresh air into your lungs. I know what a terrible shock this is . . .” The former scout was literally dragging him across the saloon’s warped floor, past the gawking tourists, outside into the hot sunlight where the air was fresh and a slight breeze carried away the stink of death. An instant after that, the scout thrust a metal flask into his hand and said a shade too loudly, “Swallow this, Skeeter, it’ll help.”
Whatever Kit was up to, Skeeter decided to play along, since it had taken them out of Kaederman’s immediate presence for the moment. Whatever was in the flask, it scalded the back of his throat. Skeeter swallowed another mouthful as Kit steered him down toward the livery stable, one hand solicitously guiding him by the arm, as though taking a distraught and grieving friends away from curious eyes. When they were far enough from the saloon, Kit muttered, “What the hell did you see in Sid Kaederman’s face, Skeeter, that caused you to come out of shock so fast? One second, you were falling apart, ready to bawl, and the next you looked like you were ready to kill Kaederman where he stood.”
Skeeter glanced into Kit’s hard blue eyes. “That why you hustled me out of there so fast?”
Kit snorted. “Damn straight, I did. Didn’t want Kaederman to notice the look on your face. Left him staring at the bodies.”
“Huh. Well, that’s exactly what stopped me in my tracks. The way he was looking at those bodies. Got any idea why the senator’s pet bloodhound would go into shock, looking at a dead drover? Because for just a split second, Sid Kaederman was the most stunned man in this entire camp. Like he knew the guy, or something, and didn’t expect to find him dead on a pantry floor.”