hand.
âIâll have another chance at Lassiter,â Krinkle said and gave a hitch at his gun belt.
âThat son of a bitch is just plain lucky. Deverax anâ Bolin shootinâ at him in a two-by-four shack anâ by God, both of âem missinâ the bastard. Then Lassiter puts a bullet in Deverax anâ kills Bolin.â
âLuckâs like sand in an hourglass. It runs just so long.â
âSomebody told you that. You never thought it up by yourself.â
âI read it somewhere,â Krinkle admitted. It rankled that heâd had Lassiter right in his rifle sight. And in all the confusion of the vaquero gettingkilled and the yelling, he could have gotten away with it. But at the last minute Lassiter had turned his head. Talk about luck. Then Lassiter had given him a cold stare that chilled his backbone.
âIâll have to get Lassiter before he gets me,â Krinkle said after a minute. He swished some whiskey around in his glass, then drained it. âHe knows damn well I was tryinâ for him at roundup.â
âWell, for Chrisâ sakes, next time make sure of him.â
âMaybe you oughta make a try for him yourself, Brad,â Krinkle suggested slyly, but he was ready to duck in case Sanlee swung his hand at him, which he was known to do when his temper exploded. But today Sanlee accepted it with a tight grin.
âIf it comes to the point where fellas I pay to do a job canât get it done, then Iâll face up to the bastard. Itâll be the end of the legend of Lassiter. Iâll blow him outta his boots.â
âYou can do it, Brad.â
âIâm damn sure of that. But meanwhile . . .â Sanlee gave Krinkle a hard look.
âYeah, yeah, Iâll figure somethinâ out.â
â
Do
it!â Sanlee snapped. âI pay good money for you anâ Doane to run risks, which you two didnât earn the day you tried to corral him on the east road.â
Memory of the suddenness of Lassiterâs attack that day caused Krinkleâs freckled face to redden. And to have had Isobel Hartney witness the humiliation was almost too much.
âHey, Doug, you olâ son of a bitch you!â
Krinkle swung around at the sound of a familiar voice. âCuz!â he cried, laughing, and he and the tall, scar-faced man gave each other the
abrazo.
It wasKrinkleâs cousin, Sam Busher. Krinkle broke out of the embrace of his kin and introduced him to Sanlee, who acknowledged it with a jerk of his head. He was eyeing Busherâs gun in a cut-down holster. Then he studied the scars on his round face. There were four scars, two of them deep.
âSome gal use a knife when you had your britches off?â Sanlee asked thinly, referring to the scars.
âNope,â Busher said. âI had a fair-sized poke on me. Four hombres held me while a fifth used his blade.â
âDid they get your poke?â
âYeah. But later I got them and the money they was carryinâ.â
âAll five of âem?â Sanlee was interested and put his back to the bar, elbows hooked over the lip.
âAll five,â Busher admitted modestly. âAnâ what they had on âem was a sight moreân they took off me.â
âDid the law ever get after you for it?â
âNot for that. A few other things, though.â Busherâs smile was hard. His clothing was worn and dusty as if heâd traveled hard and far. Sanlee matched his grin, then nudged Krinkle.
âI figure you anâ your cuz just might handle Lassiter.â
âPoint him out,â Busher said. âIâll handle him alone.â
Sanlee shook his head. âWhen it happens, I want Krinkle to face up to him. Anâ I want you at Lassiterâs back. Heâs fast anâ I donât want any slip-ups. I saw him work once anâ I know.â
âI rode down this way figurinâ maybe Doug could point me
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