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
Tulley wouldnât have believed half of it if he hadnât suffered through most of it.
Still, it werenât like the man couldnât handle hisself. Nothing to worry about.
Tulley picked up a piece of pickled herring and tossed it in his pie hole and chewed, then swallowed. Not a thing to worry about. Nossir.
Then he noticed Miss Rita, leaning against the bar like just another cowboy, watching him. This time of day she rarely was seen in one of them fancy gowns. Wearing no face paint whatsoever, she was covered up, neck to floor, in a light blue blouse with puffy sleeves and a black walking skirt.
His mouth full of yellow cheese, Tulley smiled and nodded to the proprietess, and she came over, walking nice and easy, smiling the same way. Minus the cheese.
Miss Rita pulled a chair out and sat herself down. In that silky voice of hers, she said, âI bet youâre wondering whatâs become of Caleb York.â
Tulley felt his face go red. Lunch wasnât the only reason heâd come, and in fact he was in here an hour earlier than was typical. Caleb York having a way with the ladies included Miss Rita Filley, and the sheriff had spent more than one night upstairs in the quarters where this beauteous saloon gal lay herself down at night.
But that hadnât happened for a while, not since Caleb York and Miss Willa let word out they was preparing to wed. The sheriff had standards and morals and such, and that was among the virtues Jonathan P. Tulley admired in the man, near as much as he admired the way Caleb York could put bad men in the ground.
She folded her hands, which had long, tapering fingers, and leaned forward, confidential-like.
âCalebâs fine, Mr. Tulley,â she said.
Tulley let out a sigh that began at the tips of the toes of his boots. âI am right glad to hear that, Miss Rita. Right glad.â
âHeâs upstairs now, as it happens,â she said, with a nod in that direction. âSleeping it off.â
The deputy frowned at her in puzzlement. âSleepinâ what off?â
That seemed to amuse her. âI would think you, of all people, would know what it means to sleep it off, Mr. Tulley.â
His frown dug deeper. âYe shorely cannot mean that the sheriff drank hisself under the table.â
She pointed past the deputy. âNo, he stayed upright in a chair at that table right there . . . where he was playing with the mayor and a few others. He was losing, by the way.â
Tulley cocked his head. âLosinâ what?â
âMoney. At poker.â
He reared back a tad. âI suppose that happens to the best of âem.â
Her eyebrows rose. âCaleb York lose to the likes of Clem Davis and Newt Harris? And banker Burnell?â
Tulley thought about it. âProbably jesâ gettinâ their guard down, âfore he pounced.â
Rita smirked. âIf by âpouncedâ you mean losing several hundred dollars to them, then yes. He sat there drinking and losing all evening, until I walked him upstairs and he flopped on the bed, asleep or passed out. Either way, heâs still out.â
The deputy was shaking his head. âJesâ had hisself a bad night.â
She bobbed her head toward the bar. âItâs been slow here, but a few cowpokes stopped by. Funny how after getting a few beers in âem, those boys do talk. Worse than a bunch of gossiping old women.â
âAinât they, thoughâthey go on âbout anythinâ tickler?â
She nodded, her pretty dark eyes half-lidded now. âYouâve heard the rumors about hired guns signing on with both Willa Cullen and the Hammond woman?â
He nodded back, forcefully. âI have. I be the very one tolâ the sheriff! Thatâs why he headed out to the Circle G yesterdee.â
She sighed, and there was no sign of amusement in that pretty face now. âThat goes along with what I heard from those cowhands. Talk is, small armies from both camps were lined up yesterday along the opposite banks of Sugar Creek . . . and that one of the Bar-O riders was shot and killed.â
âOh my.â
âSomeone called Clements, a gunfighter.â
Tulley grunted. âNot much of a one, tâwould seem.â
âWell, he was up against the best.â
âOh my!â Tulley squinted at her. âCaleb York shot one of Miz Cullenâs hirelings! Why would he do such a thing?â
âApparently Clements shot first.â
â. . . Thatâd do it.â Tulley mulled some. âSo after that sad state of affairs, the legend sits down and punishes hisself, losinâ to his lessers, and then gets soused to the gills like there werenât no tâmorrow.â
Her eyes were wide now. âWell, there is a tomorrow, and this is itâbut he still hasnât come down.â
The deputy pushed away his plate, which was empty, and got to his feet. âWal, some foolâs got to be the law in Trinidad till he gets hisself up and around.â
Tulley started to stalk out, but reaching the batwing doors, he paused and looked back at the lovely saloon owner. âYou inform that Caleb York that Jonathan P. Tulley was in! That I will be at my post. You tell him so!â
She smiled gently. âI will, Deputy. I will.â
Back inside the adobe jailhouse, Tulley stewed and paced, and paced and stewed. His general pattern in the afternoon was to take a nap in one of the cellsâhe lived out of the kind of beat-up old suitcase cowboys called a cooster, which he would transport to whatever accommodations might be free in the little cellblock. He preferred the lockup right off the office, and mostly used that as his casa, but sometimes Caleb York had a prisoner in-house who he wanted to keep a close eye on.
Having somewhere warm to sleep with a roof over his head, other than hay in a stall over at the livery, was a perquisite Tulley quite relished. The cots were right comfortable, and most
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