The world's last wizards protect the 19th century from their lost parents' nemesis. |
Heath Burnley watched the stranger step through the bat-wing doors of Rattlerâs Fang, Coloradoâs only remaining saloon, the Frisky Piebald. Their eyes met and, after a quick flick down to the star on Heathâs cowhide vest, locked. The stranger had the hard look of a gunfighter, but wore the clothes of a gambler dandy. His slim body was dressed out in a white shirt with one of them tab collars, a dark cravat with little stripes on it and a diamond stick-pin through it, a vest, trousers and suit jacket all made of a thin-looking, dark brown cloth â silk, maybe. The only things he wore that seemed sensible to Heath were his black boots and the two-gun rig he had strapped on beneath the suit coat, the muzzle-ends of the holsters tied to his thighs with leather jesses. His hands, hidden by a pair of gray leather gloves, hovered nearby, where they could flick back the coat and draw in less than a heartbeat. Not wanting to spook him into an unnecessary exchange of bullets, Heath kept his hand away from his Colt â but not too far away. The man was stock-still, though dressed like he was, he should have been shivering. His face was weathered and flushed red from the cold wind blowing through the Rockies, but his expression was rock hard and stone cold. A dark brown bowler hat was pulled low over slate gray eyes. The dust of the trail covered him, dulling his colors, blending them together so that as he stood there motionless for a long moment, he looked like a statue. The strangerâs eyes drifted from Heath to take in the rest of the saloon. The Piebald was doing a good business for a Saturday night in Rattlerâs Fang. All the regulars were here: all three of them. Like as not, the stranger was on his way up to Leadville, where Thaddeus Gadsden had his big-time silver mine. Heâd abandoned Rattlerâs Fang, along with most everybody else, when his claim here had played out back in â79. Gambler or gunfighter, the stranger wasnât going to find much action around here, that was certain. He seemed to relax a touch, probably because none of the three occupied chairs was being kicked back as an angry man rose to shoot him. He tipped his hat to Heath and headed for the bar, where Heath stood leaning back on his elbows. Heath watched him walk across the room. His stride was confident, smooth; every move was controlled, no wasted energy. Heath noticed that the barmaid, Millie, watched him, too. She seemed almost hypnotized. They were the movements of a natural-born killer; a mountain lion dressed up like a politician. Which, now that he thought about it, wasnât that far a stretch. He bellied up to the bar and a silver dollar clicked as he placed it on the polished surface. Mel Sampras, who had just been polishing it, set down his bar rag and asked, âWhatâll it be, mister?â âWhiskey, please,â replied the stranger. Melâs limp, a souvenir from the Comanche war, was noticeable even in the few steps it took him to get a glass and fill it from a bottle on the mirror-backed shelf behind him. A gloved finger slid the shiny coin across the bar. âKeep the change and leave the bottle, if you please.â âYes, sir.â Mel took the coin and put it in the till. âAnything else I can get for you?â The stranger drained his glass before he answered. âYou can tell me where I might find Miss Lily Ambrosius. I believe sheâs the owner of this establishment, isnât she?â Surprised, Mel glanced over at Heath, who asked, âWhat business do you have with Miss Ambrosius, stranger?â As he peeled off his gloves, the gunslinger looked at Heath, and his eyes were sharp as ice picks. âI beg your pardon, Sheriff, but my business with Miss Ambrosius is a private matter, and no concern of yours.â âThat may be so, stranger, but Iâm sorry to inform you that Miss Lily Ambrosius is dead.â âWhat?â The strangerâs reaction was immediate; his gray eyes widened in shock. He cared for Lily Ambrosius; that was obvious. Then they narrowed threateningly as he frowned. âHowâŚâ âConsumption took her nigh onto six months ago,â Heath told him, and his shoulders sagged. âShe willed this place to her friend and head barmaid, Sally Calico. A wedding gift, she called it, though Sally had been married for some time by then.â âI see. The lucky bridegroom received a sizable dowry, then. Heâs a lucky man, whoever he is.â âEven if she came to him with nothing, the man who married Sally Calico would still be the luckiest man on earth. And he just happens to be me.â He held out a hand. âHeath Burnley.â The gunslingerâs face softened with a grin that didnât quite thaw the ice in his eyes. He gripped Heathâs hand firmly and gave it a shake. âCongratulations, Sheriff. My name is Trevor Ambrosius. Lily is⌠was my sister.â âThank ye kindly, Trevor. Itâs a pleasure to make your acquaintance. Miss Lily was one of the finest people who ever set foot in Rattlerâs Fang.â âSeems that I remember the name Burnley from Lilyâs letters⌠Pete, wasnât it? I believe that she and he were quite close.â âYeah,â Heath said. âPete was my brother. He and my other brother, Jack, and I came to Rattlerâs Fang back during the rush in â74. When it turned out that Thaddeus Gadsden had staked the only claim to silver-bearing land around here, we ended up workinâ in law enforcement.â âYes,â said Trevor, âLily wrote in one of her letters about you â well, mostly about Pete â rescuing Gadsdenâs little boy from kidnappers who stole the boy during the Centennial celebration. The way she tells it, it was quite a feat of bravery.â âYeah, well,â Heath replied, âyou know how tales grow in the telling.â âYouâre too modest, Sheriff,â said Trevor, as he poured himself another drink and offered the bottle to Heath. Heath nodded, and Mel set up another glass, which Trevor filled. âLily, though she may have centered her account on the Burnley she found most interesting, was never one for embellishment of that kind.â âWell, anyhow,â said Heath, waving off the praise as he picked up his drink, âwe come through that all right, even if the worst of the bunch, Leroy Sykes, got away. We got appointed the local peacekeepers.â He held up his glass, saluting the strange man, the brother of his friend, who did the same. Then they drained them. With a sigh and a smack of his lips as the warm liquid rolled down his gullet, he continued. âBetween the three of us, we did a pretty good job of it, too. Then Pete got himself shot in the back, right outside that door. 1877, that was. June. It about destroyed Miss Lily. He had just been in here, talking about their wedding. She heard the shot and come running. Pete was already dead by the time she got to him. Never did find out who killed him.â âIâm sorry.â He refilled their glasses. These they sipped at a more leisurely pace. âYeah, well, whatâre you gonna do, right? Pete knew all about the risks. They come with the job.â âStill, you have my condolences, for what theyâre worth.â âThanks. So, Trevor, where do you come from and,â Heath turned the subject in the direction his own interests lay, âwhat brings you to Rattlerâs Fang?â âWell, Sheriffââ âYou can call me Heath.â âOh, thank you. Well, Heath, Iâve lived something of an itinerant life since Lily and I parted in St. Louis, though Iâve maintained an address there, at the post office, to which Iâve regularly returned to receive her correspondence. Iâve always been interested in what she was doing, though disinclined to accept her invitations to come and join her here. Iâm afraid that Iâve seldom responded to any of it.â âCanât say as I ever heard Miss Lily mention you.â âNot at all surprising. We had a⌠disagreement concerning the use to which the inheritance she received from our parents should be put. I left her in a bit of a huff. Iâve come to regret that.â âSo you came here to, what, kiss and make up?â âSomething like that.â He sipped his drink. âA bit late, though, I reckon.â He was quiet for a long moment. âYes,â he said at last. âWell, the Frisky Piebald is legally Sallyâs, andâŚâ Trevor Ambrosius straightened up and said, âOh, Sheriff â Heath â donât misunderstand. I have no interest in acquiring my sisterâs establishment.â âOh.â Heath looked at him for a moment. âI wonder⌠where is she buried? Iâd like to pay my last respects.â âWhy, she had a crypt dug for herself right here, under the saloon.â Something sparked in Trevor Ambrosiusâs eyes. âIâll take you down, if you want.â âPlease.â They drained their glasses and Trevor grabbed the bottle by its neck and followed Heath through the back room and into a door off to one side that led down. These steps had always been a real mystery to Heath. They went down forty, maybe fifty feet, and had been carved into the solid rock. So had the room they stepped into at the bottom. It had a tall, arched ceiling with stone rafters and a floor polished bright as a brand new silver dollar. A thing like this would have taken a hell of a lot of work to hollow out. It would have been as big a project as Gadsdenâs silver mine. Thing was, Heath didnât remember any dig like this happening in Rattlerâs Fang. That mystery aside, there was still the torches that didnât never go out, standing at either end of the big stone coffin on the waist-high platform in the middle of the big room. The gunslinger went right to it and laid his hand on the big letter âAâ in raised carving on the lid. Heath thought he saw a trace of some kind of blue light pulse around the gunslinger for an instant, and then he gripped the edges of the lid and heaved upward. âHey,â cried Heath, shocked at the gunslingerâs nerve. âYou canât be disturbingââ The sheriff stopped, though, and let the ladyâs brother get his last look at her. If their positions had been reversed, he thought, he might have done the same thing himself. The heavy lid seemed to rise up easily, swinging on hinges as if it weighed no more than the batwing doors on the front of the Frisky Piebald. Inside the box lay the drawn, wrinkled corpse of Miss Lily Ambrosius. She looked just the same as she had the day she died, which, now that he saw it, seemed mighty strange to Heath. The gunslinger stood there for a long time, his head bowed low. Finally, he gently lowered the lid. He turned to Heath, blinking back tears. âItâs really her. I couldnât believeâŚâ he trailed off, and stood still for a long moment, shaking his head. Then, he seemed to get hold of himself. âNo, Sheriff. I didnât come here to claim the saloon.â âThere is something, though, right?â âWell⌠yes. Not something with much intrinsic value, of course, beyond the few ounces of silver of which it is composed,â the dandified gunslinger hastened to assure him. âIt is an item of purely sentimental value to our family â of which I am now the last surviving member - that she had in her possession. I had thought that she would have been wearing it, evenâŚâ âWhat is it?â âA small, silver locket, patterned with a labyrinth.â âA laby-what?â âLabyrinth. A maze. Also, the locket is suspended from a chain with links so cunningly wrought that they blend together, almost indistinguishable from one another.â âOh, I know what you mean. That necklace with the swirly lines all over it.â âYes,â Trevor said, his voice betraying excitement. âDo you know where it is?â âWhy, yes. Miss Lily always wore it. When she was on her deathbed, not five minutes before she passed, she gave it to Sally, and made her promise never to take it off, until its true owner came to claim it. Thatâd be you, would it?â âI donât know who else she might have meant.â âWell,â Heath said, and paused to take a long look at the stranger who called himself Trevor Ambrosius, âshe said Sallyâd know the right one when he showed up. I donât know why the blazes Lily wouldnât just say it was her brother, but I guess that means we need to give her a look at you.â |