them," Longtree maintained. "If there was anything they might have had in common."
"You aren't suggesting that this beast picked these men to kill, are you?"
"Could be," Longtree told him. "I just don't know yet. I won't overlook anything at this point."
Bowes shrugged and talked at some length about the victims.
He covered a lot of the same ground as Wynona Spence had. Abe Runyon had been a railroad man, quick with his temper and fists. Not well liked. Cal Sevens had worked at the livery where he was killed. He was a newcomer to town, been there only a few years and kept mostly to himself. Charlie Mears lived at the Serenity Motel. He was a miner and had been fired from the mines for drinking. But he always seemed to have plenty of money and some suspected he was a highwayman. Pete Olak was a woodsman who cut firewood for a living. He had contracts with a few hotels and the railroad. He had been married with two kids and was well-liked. George Reiko was little better than a drunk. He lived with the Widow Thompkins and never seemed to do much but drink and gamble. Nate Segaris had a little spread outside town and had gone to seed since the death of his wife. He had a few horses. Gambled a bit. Drank with the miners and ranch hands on Saturday nights. Curly Del Vecchio was an ex-con, a veteran gambler and drunk, and pretty much just a plain nuisance.
Longtree mulled this all over. Despite the fact that a few of them tended to drink and gamble, there was no thread that tied them together. And drinking and gambling hardly made them members of an elite club.
"Nothing more?"
"Well...they all hated the local Indians. I know that much. Most folks around here do," Bowes said, unconcerned. "I didn't know all of them that well, but I've dealt with them in my job. None of 'em really seemed to associate together. I've heard all of 'em talk about what they'd like to do with the injuns more than once." Bowes shrugged. "But there's a lot of folks around these parts with the same leanings. Those men were just like a lot of 'em."
"There's a Blackfeet reservation outside town, isn't there?"
"Yeah, but I wouldn't advise going up there. They don't like white folks much. Especially ones that carry badges."
"I'll keep it hidden."
"You're crazy, Marshal."
"Maybe, but I'm going."
"Well don't expect me to drag yer body out come morning."
Longtree just grinned.
4
----
Dewey Mayhew looked down on the sheriff. "Had yourself a good toot, did ya?" he said.
Lauters grimaced. "What the hell do you want?"
"To talk. Nothin' wrong with old friends talkin' is there?"
The sheriff tried to sit up but his head was pounding. An oil lamp was going in the corner. Darkness was pressed up against the little window. God, how long had he been out? Hours? Last thing he remembered was some run in with that Longtree fellow.
"What do you want to talk about?" Lauters grumbled.
Mayhew looked very solemn, scared almost. "About the murders."
"Ain't nothing new to say."
"There's been seven killings, Sheriff. Seven killings."
Lauters rubbed his eyes. "I'm aware of that."
"Those men--"
"I know."
"There's only three of us left," Mayhew said desperately.
"Keep your voice down."
Mayhew was trembling. "That thing won't stop till we're all dead."
"That's enough, Dewey."
"Tonight it'll come for me or you or--"
"Enough," the sheriff said with an edge to his voice. "You just keep quiet about things. If you don't, I'll kill you myself."
5
----
Longtree rode into the hills with only the vaguest of directions from Deputy Bowes as where to find the nearest of the Blackfeet encampments. The wind had died down from what it was earlier in the day and the temperature was above freezing. Longtree'd experienced things like that before in Montana and Wyoming. Blizzards and freezing winds followed by a brief warming trend, a thaw that would turn everything to slush and then to ice a week later when the temperature took another dive below freezing.
The
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