The Bounty Hunter - The Bounty Hunter Part 31
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The Bounty Hunter Part 31

Indeed, Catherine Douglas stood outside the door.

"Why did you leave?" Lily pulled her into the kitchen, studying her face for additional bruising and cuts.

Catherine glanced around. "Get dressed quickly, Lily. I need you to come with me."

"What is it?"

"I don't have time to tell you-just hurry!"

Lily ran back up and pulled on clothing and shoes and tied her hair back with a scarf. She joined Catherine, and the woman led her along the back alley to the corner, then across the street.

"Where are we going?"

"To my house."

"Are the children all right?"

"They're fine." Catherine guided her to the Douglas house and in through the rear door. A lamp burned in the kitchen.

"Isn't your husband going to be angry if he finds me here with you?" she whispered.

"He won't be objecting."

"Catherine, I insist you tell me why you brought me here."

Catherine pushed her into a room and closed the door behind them. It was a small bedroom, like a servant's quarters, and it held a narrow bed and a few furnishings.

Amos Douglas lay on the bed, eerily still. His eyes were closed.

"Is he sleeping?" Lily whispered.

"No. He's dead."

"What?" Her heart threatened to stop. "What's happened to him?"

"He was gone when I returned from your place. I went up to our bedroom and later I heard him down here. I came down and found him on the kitchen floor."

"Dead?"

"No. Holding his stomach and moaning something terrible. His face was white. He told me to help him get in here to lie down, so I did. He wouldn't let me go get help. I was going to go for the doctor, but he grabbed my wrist and told me not to leave the house. I got rags and tried to stop the bleeding, but I couldn't. He got weaker and weaker. I was afraid to leave and afraid to stay. Then-" she pressed her fingers to her mouth and a tearful sob escaped "-it didn't take very long. He sort of gasped and then he stopped breathing."

Lily stared in horror, absorbing Catherine's description of the recent events.

The woman clutched at Lily's arm. "What if someone thinks I did this to him?"

"Of course they won't."

"Look at me, Lily. I could have shot him for what he did to me."

"He's shot?" At those words, everything became crystal clear. "In the belly?"

"And he has burns on his hands. Look."

Lily didn't want to look, but she did. She knew without a doubt. "He set fire to the hotel tonight."

"What?"

"The sheriff brought a mother and her children to the hotel," she explained. "They were staying there when someone came in and set a fire. Naomi surprised him, and he pulled a gun on her. She shot him. Twice."

Catherine's eyes widened. "There are two bullet holes. And he's wearing a revolver." Her grasp on Lily's arm trembled. "Why would Amos do such a thing?"

"He'd been making me loan offers for the past couple of years," Lily told her.

"And those papers I saw on his desk had something to do with it. He wanted you to lose your property to him."

"If the hotel burned, I'd have to default on the loans in order to keep all my irons in the fire."

Catherine gave Lily a long look, then she picked up a ring of keys on a table and brushed past. Lily followed her to another room. The woman went directly to a set of walnut doors and turned a key in the lock. Inside, she lit a lamp and began a methodical search of the desk.

"Here," she said, taking a deed from a ledger book. "Ownership of the hotel. As his widow it belongs to me now, and I'm giving it to you."

"Catherine, you might need-"

"No. I own it all now. It's mine to do with as I see fit."

"You might need it for your children. I'll pay you a fair price for the hotel."

"Whatever he held of yours, you'll take it back."

"All right, Catherine." She took the piece of paper and placed it in her skirt pocket. "I'd better go get the sheriff now."

"No!"

Lily stared at her. "Why not? He's not going to think you killed your husband."

"If word gets out about what he did, it will destroy my family. My children are already without a father. But a father with a bad name will haunt them their whole lives."

Lily understood Catherine's fear, but she didn't know what choice they had. "What are you going to do? You have to do something. He'll have to have a burial."

"I don't want John and the girls to know the kind of man he was. He's dead now, what does it matter, truly?"

"Catherine, what do you suggest?"

She thought a moment. "We can make it look as though he died some other way. Place him at the bottom of the stairs as though he fell."

"The undertaker would notice the bullet holes."

"What if we changed him ourselves and laid him out?"

"Wouldn't that look pretty suspicious? The first thing we should have done was to go for the sheriff."

"Then let's do that. And we'll tell him a story to make it look as though Amos died some other way."

"How?"

"What kind of description did the woman at the hotel give?"

"She just said it was a man. That's all she could make out in the dark."

"Then I'll say a man tried to force his way inside our house." She ran from the den and Lily followed.

"What are you doing?"

Catherine took a hammer from the pantry and struck the knob on the back door.

Lily stopped her. "You'll wake your children."

Catherine glanced at the ceiling. "We'll say a man was breaking in and he had a gun. He shot Amos and then he ran away. I only caught a glimpse of him. Who's to know?"

Lily took Catherine by the shoulders and turned her to face her. "And you could live with that lie?"

Catherine let the hand holding the hammer drop to her side. "For my children's sake-yes."

Lily leaned back against a counter, weary and confused. She didn't have a problem with lying to protect Catherine's children. But there was another problem that kept her from agreeing. An insurmountable one. "I won't lie to the sheriff," she told Catherine.

The other woman's lip was swollen and scabbed. Lily's heart went out to her. Amos Douglas didn't deserve protecting. But his children did.

"What, then?" Catherine asked, hopelessness in her eyes now.

"Let's tell him the truth. All of it. And let's trust him to protect your children."

"He's a lawman, Lily."

Lily nodded. "But he's a good man. I trust him."

"All right. I don't have a choice, do I? I'm putting the future of my children in his hands."

Lily nodded. "I'll go get him."

She walked the dark street, nearly numb after the shocking events of the night, wishing she could turn back the clock and fix things. Wishing there was some other way.

His house was dark when she reached it. She turned the bell knob, pounded a few times and waited.

She heard movement inside, saw a light behind the curtain on the glass, and then Nate opened the door.

"Lily? What're you doing out this time of night?"

He was bare-chested and barefoot, but he'd strapped on his holster over his trousers.

"Something has happened. I need your help."

"What is it?"

Just like Catherine had with her, Lily preferred to show him before saying anything. "Come with me."

"Let me get my boots and a shirt."

A few minutes later they were hurrying along Main Street in the dark of night.

"Where are we goin'?"

"To the Douglas house. Many times over the past few years, Catherine Douglas has come to me for help. She's often been beaten pretty badly."

"That son of a bitch," Nate replied.

"You're not getting an argument from me on that one."

"Is she hurt badly?"

"No. Well, he hit her earlier this evening, and she came to me then, but she's all right. It's not her I'm taking you to see. Well, not entirely."

They reached the house, and Lily led him through the back door to where Catherine waited in the kitchen. Catherine led Nate into the small room where the body of her husband lay.

Nate looked at him, then at the two women. Finally he stepped forward and touched Amos's neck, then raised the blanket to look at the wounds. He turned back to the women. "What happened here?"

"It didn't happen here," Catherine explained. She went on to tell him the story of how Amos had arrived home and wouldn't allow her to go for help. "Then I got Lily and she filled in the rest, so we figured out what happened."

"He started both fires," Nate said. "The livery and the one tonight."

"That would be my guess, too," Lily replied.

"Do you know why?"

"He was obsessed with getting his hands on Lily's property," Catherine said. "He spoke very strangely about her, and he had papers from the assayers about her real estate."

"Burning your property was sure to put you in debt to him eventually," he said to Lily.

"Sheriff Harding, I'm pleading with you as a mother," Catherine said. "Please keep this knowledge from the townspeople and the authorities."

"What?"

"I don't want my children to know what their father did. I don't want them to grow up with everyone looking down on them because of him. John will be going to university in a year or so. I can't let his father's actions keep him from being accepted. Amos will not be hurting anyone anymore. What difference will it make that no one knows, as long as he's dead?"

Catherine explained the story she wanted to tell.

Nate met Lily's eyes. She remembered the talks they'd had, the side of him he'd revealed to her in private. "I asked you once if you always saw everything in black-and-white," she said. "Right or wrong. You told me you were a lawman and that you got paid to sort out the difference."

"That hasn't changed."