Shoot-Out at Sugar Creek (A Caleb York Western Book 6) Mickey Spillane (i can read book club .TXT) đ
- Author: Mickey Spillane
Book online «Shoot-Out at Sugar Creek (A Caleb York Western Book 6) Mickey Spillane (i can read book club .TXT) đ». Author Mickey Spillane
âCan I stop you?â
âYou can. I do not mean to intrude in your . . . affairs.â
York didnât like the sound of that, but he said, âGo on.â
âOne option is to bolster that young woman of yours in rebuilding her fatherâs ranching business. Youâll have money to help her, after all.â He poked the air with the cigar. âYou told me once that you came from farming stock, but also that youâd sooner be dead than plow. But you could plow money into her spread, and help run the place, without fixing a fence post or punching a cow or digging up a turnip out of the ground, for that matter.â
âTurn in my badge and gun for a ledger book.â
Parker tossed a hand in the air. âFrankly, yes. Youâll be in a position to invest in businesses here in town, and youâll want to keep an eye on them. Youâll learn about every one of them and soon be advising the proprietors as to what theyâre buying and what theyâre selling.â
âSounds like a dream. The kind you wake up from in a cold sweat.â
Parker shrugged. âOr . . . you can hang onto that badge and gun. I happen to know the mayor will be trying to convince you of doing just that. Now, times are changing. Thereâs no doubt of that. And in some respects, the Wild West will soon exist only in memory and in Buffalo Bill Codyâs circus.â
âWhich is why,â York reminded the banker, âI was on my way to San Diego.â
âA big modern city, yes, where your detective skills would be needed no matter what changes God and Man might visit upon us. But you, Caleb, are in a unique situation.â
âAm I.â He had the distinct feeling he was being sold somethingâsnake oil perhapsâthough he wasnât sure just what that something might be. But Parker had never been one to take advantageâeven giving advice came rare from the man.
âIn the next few years,â Parker said, glancing out the window between hazy curtains at a dusty street, âthis town will be inundated not only with new business but the old businesses that come with it: saloons, brothels, thieving, killing. The Victory will have rivals, and Miss Rita Filleyâs good efforts to drive prostitution out from under her roof will come up against the efforts of far less scrupulous entrepreneurs. Men with guns and badges will most definitely still be needed.â
âThatâs more of the same, not changinâ times.â
Parker raised a palm, as if balancing some invisible object. âTimes will change for the better and for the worse, Caleb. If you stay a lawman, in a town that booms, youâll be more of a police chief than a sheriff or marshal, whatever term they may hang on you. And youâll have a staff consisting of far more than the redoubtable Deputy Tulley.â
The waiter came over and refilled their coffee cups.
York drank from his. âIf I am to keep at the lawing, Raymond, I mean to make of it a professionâlike a doctor, a lawyer.â
âAnd well you should. After all, think of the business you bring to both!â A grin bristled the white mustache. âCaleb, I have no opinion in this other than a desire for whatâs best for my business partner . . . my friend.â
âI appreciate that.â
Again the banker shrugged. âYou will soon be a man of means. If you choose to join that sweet girl on her ranch with her dream of making her dead father happy, God bless you. If you choose to retire from enforcing the law and lean back and count the money coming in, thereâs no shame in that eitherâit will bring its own responsibilities.â
Now Parker leaned in, eyes narrowing shrewdly.
âBut if you stay a lawman, Caleb, in this part of the country? You may be able to practice your profession and even manage not to get killed doing it.â
âDoesnât that sound promising.â
âYouâll have a staff of your own experienced men, probably in blue uniforms with nightsticks, to take the chances for you. You can sit at your desk. You can ride in parades and cut the ribbons on businesses, as the famous Southwestern lawman who helped tame the West.â
York frowned. âA tourist attraction.â
âYes, and why not? It would be a small but important part of who you are. Who youâll be. Bill Cody goes around playing himself in a show. Thatâs fine for himâhe was always something of a fraud anyway. But Caleb York? People can point to him and say, âThatâs him! Thatâs the legend!â â
âDo you really think I care about that?â
Parker shook his head soundly. âNo. In New Orleans they call it a lagniappe. Itâs just something you bring along, something extraâthe way those who hire you throw in perquisites.â
In the double doorway between the lobby and the dining room, the mayor of Trinidad appeared. Jasper Hardy was also the town barber and York suspected the manâs good grooming had encouraged his appointment by the Citizens Committeeâelections werenât being held yet in Trinidad.
The mayor, perhaps forty, was small and slight but dignified in his gray frock coat, his black slicked-back hair and elaborate handlebar mustache a splendid advertisement for his tonsorial parlor. He hung up his derby on a wall peg and paused to nod at the rest of his already seated party at the table by the window.
They nodded back, and the mayor sat next to the banker. The waiter materialized and took their orderâeveryone had oyster stew, the specialty of the house.
âI have something for you, Sheriff,â the mayor said in his reedy tenor, âwhich I hope will please you. Which I hope you will accept.â
Parker was watching the barber with faint amusement; clearly he knew what was coming.
Hardy dipped his hand into a coat pocket and placed what heâd withdrawn on the linen tablecloth, near Yorkâa shield-type badge.
âThank you,
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