Алистер Маклин - Breakheart Pass

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A train is barreling through a blizzard across the desolate Nevada territory of hostile Paiute Indians toward Fort Humboldt in 1873. Nevada’s Governor, the fort commander’s daughter, and a US marshal escorting an outlaw are onboard. No one is telling the truth, and at least one person is capable of murder. Who will make it to their destination?

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Four shots rang out in swift succession followed, at once by the screaming ricochet of bullets as they struck the ironwork of the cab and went screaming off into the darkness and the snow; none, almost unbelievably, ricocheted about the interior of the cab.

‘Down!’ Deakin shouted. In unison they threw themselves to the floor of the cab and tender – all except Banlon. Banlon’s life was already forfeit. A heavy eighteen-inch wrench miraculously appeared in his hand, sliced down in a murderous arc and struck the prone Rafferty a crushing blow on the side of the head. Banlon wrenched the rifle from the already powerless hands and swung round. He said to Claremont, who had his revolver pointing towards the rear of the tender: ‘Don’t move,’ and to Deakin, whose gun was still in his belt: ‘I wish you would.’

Neither man moved.

‘Lay down your guns.’

They laid down their guns.

‘On your feet. Hands high.’

The three rose, Deakin and Claremont with raised arms. Banlon said to Marica: ‘You heard.’

She didn’t appear to have done so. She was staring unbelievingly down at Rafferty. Quite clearly, he was dead. Banlon shifted the rifle slightly. ‘Last chance, lady.’

Like a person in a dream world she slowly lifted her hands. Banlon transferred his attention to Deakin and as he did so Marica’s right hand moved slowly until it was behind one of the suspended oil-lamps. If Deakin had seen the stealthy movement no slightest hint of it showed in his face or eyes. Her hand gradually closed on the lamp.

Banlon said: ‘I don’t know why you brought those white sheets but they’re going to be mighty useful. Climb up on the cordwood there and wave one. Now!’

Marica’s hand lifted the lamp clear and her arm jerked convulsively forward. Out of the corner of his eye Banlon saw the blur of light come towards him. He whirled, moving sideways, but was too late to prevent the lamp from striking him in the face. He retained hold of the rifle but was off-balance for all of two seconds, more time than a man like Deakin would ever need. His headlong dive caught Banlon in the midriff, sending the rifle clattering to the floor and Banlon staggering back to crash with stunning force against the boiler. Deakin followed like a big cat, caught Banlon by the throat and smashed his head twice against the metalwork.

Deakin’s face was no longer without expression. As his eyes shifted to the left and down and rested momentarily on Rafferty’s body his face was savage and bitter and almost inhuman and for the first time Marica looked on him with fear. Deakin returned his attention to Banlon. Banlon could already have been dead but Deakin neither knew nor cared. Once again Banlon’s head thudded against the boiler, almost certainly crushing the occiput. Deakin lifted the man high, took two steps and threw him out over the side of the cab.

Pearce and O’Brien, guns in hands, were on the leading coach’s front platform. Suddenly, both their gazes jerked sideways and they had just time to identify Banlon’s tumbling body before it disappeared into the darkness. They stared at each other, then moved hastily off the platform inside the coach.

In the cab, Deakin’s temporary expression of implacability had been replaced by the habitual mask of impassivity. He said to Marica: ‘Go on. I know. I shouldn’t have done it.’

‘Why not?’ she said reasonably. ‘You said you couldn’t prove a thing.’

For the second time that night Deakin’s expression slipped. He stared at her in total astonishment. He said carefully: ‘We may have more in common than you think.’

She smiled at him sweetly. ‘How do you know what I think?’

In the officers’ day compartment O’Brien, Pearce, Henry and the Governor were holding what appeared to be a council of war. At least, the first three were. The Governor, a brimming whisky glass in his hand, was staring at the wood stove; the expression of misery on his face was profound.

‘This is terrible!’ His voice was a low moan. ‘Terrible. I’m ruined. Oh my God.’

O’Brien said savagely: ‘You didn’t think it terrible when I found out what kind of man you were, that you’d rigged elections and spent a fortune in bribes to become Governor and suggested you come in with Nathan and myself. You didn’t think it terrible when you suggested Nathan here would be the ideal agent and appointed him personally to deal with the Indian reservations. You didn’t think it terrible when you insisted on your share of half of all we made. You make me feel violently ill, Governor Fairchild.’

‘I didn’t think we’d get involved in anything like this,’ the Governor muttered drearily. ‘All this killing. All this murder. What peace of mind is there in this for an honest man?’ He ignored or did not hear O’Brien’s incredulous exclamation. ‘You didn’t tell me you wanted my niece as a hostage in case there was trouble with her father. You didn’t tell me–’

Pearce said with feeling: ‘God knows what I’d like to tell you. But I have more to think of.’

‘You’re supposed to be men of action.’ Fairchild tried to be scathing but only succeeded in sounding depressed. ‘Why don’t you do something?’

O’Brien looked at him in contempt.

‘Do what, you old fool? Have you seen that barricade of cordwood they’ve erected at the back of the tender? It would take a cannon shell to go through it, while they’re probably peering through a chink, gun in hand, ready to pick off the first of us to go through that door. At six feet,’ he added with gloomy finality, ‘they can hardly miss.’

‘You don’t have to make a frontal attack. Go to the back of this coach, climb up and make your approach over the roof. That way you’ll be able to look down on anyone in the tender.’

O’Brien pondered, then said: ‘Maybe you’re not such an old fool after all.’

While Deakin acquainted himself with the controls, Claremont stoked the fire and Marica, sitting on some cordwood with a tarpaulin over her shoulders to protect her from the snow, kept a close watch on the front of the leading coach through a strategically placed chink in the cordwood barricade. Claremont closed the fire-box and straightened.

‘So Pearce it was?’

‘Yes,’ Deakin said. ‘Pearce it was. He’s been on our suspect list for a long time. It’s true he was once an Indian fighter but he moved over to the other side six years ago. But to the world at large he’s still Uncle Sam’s man keeping a fatherly eye on the reservations. Whisky and guns. Fatherly!’

‘O’Brien?’

‘Nothing against him. Every detail of his military record known. A fine soldier but a rotten apple – remember that big reunion scene in Reese City with Pearce, recalling the good old days at Chattanooga in ‘63? O’Brien was there all right. Pearce was never within a thousand miles of it – he was an Indian scout for one of the six cavalry companies raised by what became the new State of Nevada the following year. So that made O’Brien a bad one, too.’

‘Which must go for the Governor as well?’

‘What else? He’s weak and avaricious and a manipulator of some note.’

‘But he’ll hang from the same tree?’

‘He’ll hang from the same tree.’

‘You suspected everyone.’

‘My nature. My job.’

‘Why not me?’

‘You didn’t want Pearce aboard. That put you in the clear. But I wanted him aboard – and me. It wasn’t hard – not with those splendid “Wanted” notices the Service provided.’

‘You fooled me.’ Claremont sounded bitter but not rancorous. ‘Everyone fooled me. The Government or the Army might have taken me into their confidence.’

‘Nobody fooled you. We suspected there might be something wrong at Humboldt so it was thought better to have two strings to the bow. When I joined this train I knew no more about what was going on at Humboldt than you did.’

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