~I will seize fate by the throat; it shall certainly never wholly overcome me.~ âLudwig van Beethoven
Jake kept his eyes and ears open as he walked with Bessie through the town. He remembered the time, during the war, when his officer had sent him on a scouting mission behind enemy lines. Somehow, that hadnât been nearly as nerve-racking as walking beside Bessie, knowing that at any moment some hooligan could jump out at him with a shotgun.
Bessie seemed to sense his nervousness and tried to put him at ease by prattling on about nonsense.
Jake didnât hear a word she said. He was too busy trying to come up with some sort of plan in case the sheriff didnât make it in time.
Jake knew he was treading hot coals, but desperate times call for desperate measures, and sometimes you just had to put your life on the line, and hope fate would prove to be kind.
There! Jake caught a glimpse of a shadow. Someone was following them.
They had gotten out of the town by now. The houses and buildings were some distance away, the only landmark being two large boulders. One was a few feet behind them, and the other a few feet ahead. They rose from the ground, signaling the end of Hopewing and the beginning of the Arizona wilderness.
There was no one in sightâno âbrother,â not a single soulâand Jake wondered if perhaps the little lady was going to try and kill him on her own.
Well, before she tried to pull any sort of trick, there was one question he would like answered. Jake halted and faced Bessie, his back to one boulder, his face to the other.
âTell me somethinâ,â he said. âHow come Calhoon always has someone else come and do his dirty work?â
The copper-headed beauty blinked at him in shock. âWhat are you talkinâ about, Jake?â she said, faking ignorance.
âYou know darn well what I am talkinâ about,â Jake retorted. âI know who you work for. I know youâre Calhoonâs little siren. Yer one job is to seduce and destroy any man he needs gone.
âI fell for your trap once, Bessie. Did you really think I was going to fall for it a second time? If ya came here to drag me to the edge of town and quietly finish me off, then sorryâI ainât going down without a fight, a loud fight.â
Jake reached for his gun, but before he could pull it out, he heard a click behind him.
âDonât even think about it,â a heavy voice said in a thick Texan accent. Jake felt something cold pressing against his head. He berated himself for letting his guard down.
Of course, the only place to hide out here was behind either of the two boulders, and he had turned his back to his enemy, giving him the opportunity he was waiting for.
Getting angry at his stupid mistake was pointless, so Jake let a smile come to his face.
âBrother or lover?â he asked Bessie.
âNeither, actually,â Bessie retorted. âHow did you know I was workinâ for Calhoon?â
âFigured it out. Iâm not as stupid as you all think me to be.â
âAnyone who dares cross paths with Calhoon is stupid,â the man behind him stated.
âWhen I want your opinion, mister, Iâll ask for it,â Jake snapped. âYou might not have noticed, but I was speakinâ with Bessie here. The two of us got a history together, while I have no idea who the hell you are.â
âThink a couple months ago, cattle drive, rustler attack,â Bessie offered.
âAh, youâre that fellow who couldnât even finish his job all the way. Or maybe you just donât know what a dead man is supposed to look like. I was breathinâ when my partners found me. Donât you know a dead man ainât supposed to breathe?
âI have to say, Calhoon seems to be a lot more forgivinâ than I suspected. Both of you failed miserably, and yet he let you live. Even gave you a second chance. What a nice man he is. No wonder the two of you follow him so faithfully.â
âShut up!â The gun pressed harder against Jakeâs head.
âJust finish him off, Jem,â Bessie said. âNo point in standinâ out here gabblinâ âbout nothinâ.â
âI would pull the trigger, Bessie, âcept Calhoon gave orders to bring Jake to him alive if we found him.â
âAh.â The grin on Jakeâs face widened. âYer boss finally decided to face me man to man. Wonder why it took him over five years to get around to it? You donât suppose it was âcause he was scared of me?â
âYou keep quiet.â Bessie turned toward Jake. âYouâre startinâ to get on my nerves.â
Jakeâs smile became patronizing. âOh my, Iâm terribly sorry, I didnât realize how frail your nerves were.â Jake was hoping that if he stalled enough, the sheriff would finally get here. âSo where is Calhoon supposed to meet me? Maybe Iâll just travel there and confront him, save us all some time and energy.â
âCalhoonâs location is none of your business, cowboy,â Bessie replied fiercely as she pulled a blindfold from her pocket.
âUh, Bessie.â Jemâs voice had suddenly gotten tense. âYouâll never believe this, but there is an Indian with a gun standing behind you.â