The Iron Marshall by Louis L’amour

“Well … I’d been movin’ a lot. Hadn’t slept much, that’s true. I was dead beat.” He scowled, thinking back. “I woke up now and again but it seems the train was always movin’. One time I looked out and there was nothing but four or five buildings across the street and some riders … I don’t know where that was.”

“Least, you had you an outfit.”

Shanaghy offered no reply. He was growing increasingly uneasy. The best thing he could do was get to a station and buy a ticket for New York. There, at least, he knew what was going on.

“Those lads back yonder,” he said suddenly, “what were they going to hang you for?”

“I stole a horse. That’s hanging out here. But this one I stole back. Belongs to a girl-kid. That Drako … he wanted the horse.” “The girl got the horse now?”

“Uh-huh.”

Shanaghy looked at the saddle. “That’s a heavy piece there. That saddle, I mean.”

“Stock saddle. It’s a work saddle. A man handlin’ cattle and rough stock needs a good saddle to work from and this here’s the best. Most cowhands spend most of their lives settin’ in saddles just like this.

“I seen some of those eastern saddles … like postage stamps. They’re all right for somebody who spends an hour or so in the saddle, but a cowhand is up in the leather sixteen to eighteen hours a day. He’s roping stock from the saddle and needs a pommel where he can either tie fast or take a turn, depending on how he was raised and where he learned his business. A saddle is a cowhand’s workbench.”

Lundy pulled up. “ ‘Bout time you took a turn, although I ain’t much at walkin’.”

Shanaghy mounted and settled himself in the strange saddle. It felt good. The seat was natural, and although the stirrups were longer than he was used to he did not take time to shorten them.

“Town up ahead,” Lundy commented, after a while. “You keep that gun handy. Drako may be around. That’s a rough crew he runs with and they don’t like anybody messing with them.”

“What about you?”

“When we get close to town I’m goin’ to cut an’ run. I’ve got friends there, somebody who’ll lend me a gun. I ain’t huntin’ trouble. You being a stranger … you be right careful. From what I’ve heard they fight with fists back east. Well, out here it’s like in the South. We settle our troubles with guns.” Shadows were long when they rode into town. Shanaghy was again in the saddle when they reached the town’s edge and he stepped down. “Here’s your horse, Lundy,” he said. “See you around.”

“Shanaghy?” Lundy hesitated a moment as if reluctant to speak. “Better keep that shotgun out of sight. Somebody will recognize it.” “Recognize it? How?”

“I don’t know how you come to have it,” Lundy said, “but that shotgun is known by sight in at least twenty towns out here. That shotgun belonged to Marshal Rig Barrett.”

“I never heard of him.”

“Well, ever’body out here has. Rig was his own army. When he moved into a place folks knew he was there. He cleaned up towns, outlaw gangs, train robberies, whatever. And he never let anybody even handle one of his guns.” “So?”

Josh Lundy gathered the reins and stepped into the saddle. “Marshal Rig Barrett had a lot of enemies, Shanaghy. He had a lot of friends, too. And they are going to be asking questions and wanting answers.”

Lundy looked up the dusk-filled street. He wanted to be away, but he stalled. “Shanaghy,” his tone sharpened with irritation, “don’t you see? They’re going to want to know how you came by Rig’s shotgun. They’re going to tell themselves the only way you could lay hands on it would be over Rig’s dead body, and they just aren’t going to believe any eastern pilgrim could kill Rig in a fair fight.” “I didn’t kill him. I never so much as saw him.”

“Who’s going to believe that?”

“Nobody will have to. I’ll be out of town on the next train. This town will never see hide nor hair of me again.”

“If they see that shotgun and figure you killed Rig, you’ll never get a chance to leave. They’ll hang you, boy. They’ll give you the rope they planned to use on me.”

“When’s the next train leave? You know this town.” “Nothing out of here in either direction until tomorrow noon, and that one is westbound. There will be an eastbound train tomorrow evening about nine o’clock.”

Lundy turned his horse and rode off. When he had gone about fifty feet he called back. “Was I you I’d not wait for that evening train.” Tom Shanaghy stood alone in the dusty street and swore, slowly, bitterly. Then he unrolled the blankets, took down the shotgun, and rolled it up again. He would get something to eat, then a ticket and a bed.

FOUR

It was suppertime in town and the streets were almost empty. Not that there was much to the town, only a row of stores, saloons, gambling joints and a hotel or two facing a dusty street from either side. Here and there were hitching rails and there were boardwalks in front of most of the buildings. He walked to what looked like the best hotel and went in. The clerk, a tall young man with a sallow face and hollows over his cheekbones, pushed the ledger toward him. He signed it Thomas Shanaghy, New York, and pushed it back. “That will be fifty cents, Mr. Shanaghy. Will you be staying long?”

“Until the eastbound train tomorrow night,” Shanaghy said.

He paid for the room with a ten-dollar gold piece and received his change. “If you are interested in a little game, Mr. Shanaghy,” the clerk suggested, “there’s one going in the back room right here in the hotel.” “Thanks.” Shanaghy had been a shill himself and was not to be taken in. “I never gamble.”

“No? Then perhaps-“

“I don’t want a girl, either,” Shanaghy said. “I want something to eat, some rest, and a New York newspaper if you’ve got one.” The clerk did not like him very much. He jerked his thumb toward a door from which there was an occasional rattle of dishes. “You can eat in there.” He indicated the opposite direction. “And there’s a saloon over there. As for a New York newspaper … “

He shuffled through some newspapers on the desk, all well read by the looks of them. “I am afraid we haven’t any. Occasionally some drummer leaves one in the lobby, so you might look around.”

Shanaghy considered that and decided against it. He took his key, listened to the directions of the clerk and took up his blanket-roll and went up the stairs. Chances are there would be nothing about the New York gambling war in the paper anyway, he decided. There were always brawls, gang fights and killings, and the newspapers reported only a small percentage of them. John Morrissey was a popular figure, of course, but Eben Childers was scarcely known away from the Five Points, the Bowery and a scattering of places in the vicinity of Broadway. The room offered little. A window over the street, a bed, a chair, a dressing table with an oval mirror, and on the table beneath the mirror a white bowl and pitcher. There was water in the pitcher. On a rack beside it there was a towel. On the floor there was a strip of worn carpet. Shanaghy removed his coat, rolled up his sleeves and bathed his face and hands, then put water on his hair and combed it.

He studied himself critically. At five-nine he was a shade taller than average, and he was stronger than most, due to the hard work in the smithys. The girls along the Line were always telling him how handsome he was, but that was malarkey. They knew he was a friend of Morrissey’s and the Morrissey name stood for power and influence in the world they knew, so they were always buttering him up. Not that he saw much of them. He had always been on the gambling, roughneck side.

Brushing his coat with his hands, he put it on and picked up his hat and went down the stairs. The restaurant was open, and he went in, ordered some beef and beans and began to relax.

The waiter was a portly man with slicked-back hair who wore a candy-striped shirt and sleeve garters. He filled Shanaghy’s cup and slopped a liberal portion into the saucer.

A screened window was open on the street and Shanaghy heard the clang of a blacksmith’s hammer. He jerked his head toward the sound. “Workin’ late, ain’t he?”

“Lots of work,” the waiter put down the coffeepot. “Soon be time for the cattle drives, too. There’s always riders who need horses shod when the drives are on. He keeps busy.”

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