Silver Lies
Ann Parker Poisoned Pen Press
Copyright 2003 by Ann Parker First Electronic Edition 2008 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 ISBN: 978-1-59058-546-7 (e-book) All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book. Poisoned Pen Press 6962 E. First Ave. , Ste. 103 Scottsdale, AZ 85251 www.poisonedpenpress.com info@poisonedpenpress.com Printed in the United States of America
Acknowledgments If I were to thank properly all who offered encouragement and shared their expertise, suggestions, and ideas, this acknowledgment would begin to approach the length of the book. Instead, Ill try to be brief. For any who dont appear here, please know Im grateful. First of all, my family. Bill for his love, support, and critical readers eye. Ian and Devyn for understanding (or at least tolerating) my mind-fades into the 19th century at the dinner table. My father, Don, and mother, Corinne, and sibs and their partners for abiding interest. Special thanks to my Colorado relatives including Walt, Bette, Dorothy (bless you for stockpiling the family history!), and Dave for his reference books, network of experts, and great homebrew. I owe much to those who shared their time and expertise including Roger Neuscheler for historical assaying techniques; Ed Raines for mining history, maps, and assays; Roy Marcot for arming Inez appropriately; and Larry Hamby for information on guns and knife-fighting techniques. Any inaccuracies, slipups, or wild flights of fancy are mine alone. This book would never have been if not for Leadville and its people, past and present. Im grateful to Bob Elder for answering my many questions and for sharing his grand-fathers letters, to Hillery McCalister and the Apple Blossom innkeepers for tours of their historical abodes, and to the Honorable Neil Reynolds for sharing his expertise on historic Leadville. Thanks also to the staff at the Lake County Public Library, the National Mining Hall of Fame & Museum, and Leadvilles Historical Society, who keep the spirit of the past alive for those who seek it. Along the Front Range, the Colorado Historical Society and Denver Public Library deserve special mention. Their historical collections provided invaluable fodder for my fiction, and their staff were always helpful and patient. On the writerly end of things, I am indebted to Camille Minichino and Penny Warnerfriends, authors, teachers and to the every-other-Thursday-night critique group including Claire Johnson, Kay Barnhart, Carole Price, Janet Finsliver, Mike Cooper, Rena Leith, Gordon Yano, Mignon Richards, and Colleen Casey. Thanks to Jane Staehle for her quick and eagle eye, as well as to the folks down on the cubicle farm for music, musings on Milton, and moral support. Members of the Northern California chapter of Mystery Writers of America and Women Writing the West provided advice and encouragement. I also wish to acknowledge the e-communities of DorothyL, CrimeThruTime, HistRes, and Prock-research (now carmelsloop), where Ive mostly lurked and learned. Im indebted to all the folks at Poisoned Pen Press who have helped bring Silver Lies to light. And finally, to the original Inez Stannert, thank you for lending me your name.
For Walter Underwood Parker, who set me on the road to Leadville. And for Bill, Ian, and Devyn, who walked every step beside me.
Prologue If there was an arctic version of hell, Joe Rose was living it in Leadville , Colorado . Hugging the ten-thousand-foot mark in the Rocky Mountains , Leadville in December 1879 had winter air cold enough to freeze a mans lungs, if he wasnt used to it. A light, white snow, soft as angel wings, descended to the black mud of Tiger Alley in Leadvilles red-light district. The icy pastemixed with a seasons worth of animal excrement and human garbagehad been churned up by beasts of burden, carts, and lost souls. In some spots, it lay knee deep. At 2:30 in the morning, Tiger Alley was no place to fall down. Joe knew that as he flailed about, trying to regain his footing and his dignity. Raucous voices and honky-tonk music blasted through the saloons half-open back door, the door through which hed been unceremoniously ejected moments before. On his feet at last, Joe reached for his pocket handkerchief to wipe the filth from his face. His fingers touched the slime coating his favorite waistcoat. "Damn!" He tried to scrub the mud off the silver and gold threads. "Ruined!" The word reverberated in his head, and Joe pictured it all again. The dealer raking in his last gold eagle across the waxed cloth of the faro table, the bouncer closing in on him to haul him away. "Im ruined," Joe whispered. Money, gone. Reputation gone as well, thanks to Harry. He owes me, Joe thought. We had a deal, we shook on it. I risked my neck meeting my side of the bargain, and he backs out. As if through a haze, Joe remembered the curses hed screamed at Harry just hours before, the cold, dismissive look on Harrys face, and, most frightening of all, Harrys silence. Panic welled up, bitter and black, in Joes throat. There was no future for him in Leadville. For him, his wife Emma, or their son. Joe closed his eyes in anguish. An image of Emma, her face pale and serious, rose before him. He spoke as if to a ghost: "I did it for you." Even as he said the words, he realized they werent entirely true. Hed tried to protect her, true, but his troubles had really started when he tried to be someone he wasnt. Someone whod gamble a fortune on a hunch at the poker table or a promising claim. Now, with the last of his five thousand dollars gone, any hope of making that elusive fortune in silver had disappeared. Worse, he could see no way of extracting himself from the mess hed created. The only money he had left was a fifty-dollar bill he dared not gamble. It all whirled around in his brain: his debts, the fifty, Emma, the deal gone bad between him and Harry, Denver.The bleakness of his situation penetrated his whiskey-induced fog. "How will I ever explain to Emma?" he said to the night. His hand automatically strayed to the waistcoat pocket where he kept the pocketwatch shed given him six years ago on their wedding day. It was gone. Heart sinking, he searched his trouser pockets frantically and tried to strike a deal with God: Just let me find the watch. Ill go straight home, tell Emma everything. Ill use that damn banknote to buy three stagecoach tickets and well start over with a clean slate. I swear Ill never touch cards or another glass of whiskey. The lack of moonlight made it difficult to see in the alley. Crouching, Joe scrabbled through the frigid muck. His fingers felt, then closed on a familiar metallic disk. He clutched the watch to his chest in relief and thought, now I can go home. Everything will work out. A slight vibration in the ground. A soft "whuff," barely heard. Something was behind him. Joe sprang to his feet and turned to see a monstrous dark shape. Too tall for a man. Joe heard a jangle of bit and bridle, an equine snort. The shape moved, became a horse and rider. The rider urged the mount forward. Straight toward Joe. "Hey!" Joe shouted, trying to get out of the way. The horse jerked its head up with a snort and pranced backward. It unexpectedly lunged forward as the rider applied the whip. Joe stumbled to one side. Mud sucked at his boots, slowing his escape. The horses bulk slammed into him, knocking the breath out of his body and nearly toppling him backward. The rider pulled up short with a vicious rein. Breathing hard and cursing, Joe grabbed a stirrup leather, staying well to the side to avoid being stepped on. He peered up, trying to discern the rider. The voice that floated down to him was filled with menace. "Well, well, if it isnt Joe Rose." Fear crawled over Joe, freezing the sweat on his back, choking the curses in his throat. Oh Jesus, he thought. Not here. Not now. He couldnt force his thoughts any further, couldnt frame a reply. Words poured over him with increased fury. "Looks like Lady Lucks deserted you for good this time. Are you short on silver again? Greenbacks? Or are you cheating at cards now?" The rider leaned over, seized the dangling fob, and yanked. The pocketwatch flew from Joes grip, a comet streaking beyond his reach. Joe let go of the stirrup leather and made a futile grab, desperate to recapture the watch. The rider shifted athwart the saddle, away from Joe. The next instant, a booted foot smashed into Joes face, sending bright daggers of pain streaking through his vision. Joe cried out and fell backward, breaking through a thin icy crust into the scum below. Blood, warm and wet, poured from his battered nose and bathed his lips and chin. The pain loosened his tongue at last. He struggled to raise himself, searching purchase in the slime. "Wait! I was coming to see you." He tried to sound assured, sincere. But all he heard in his trembling voice was desperation and fear. "IIve got what you want. All of it. The shipment arrived today. About the other business, the chemistry was wrong, but its straight now." "You liar. You double-crossing son of a bitch. Your next drink is with the Devil!" The whip hissed through the air. Joe flinched, raised a hand, anticipating the cut of the lash across his palm. Instead, he heardbut didnt feelthe smack of lash on flesh. The horse brayed and reared. For a moment, Joe saw mount and rider looming over him, an enormous shadow against night-dark clouds. The whip fell again. The horse pawed the air, then leaped forward with a grunt. Joe recoiled in terror. He heard, then felt a bone-crunching snap. And screamed. His leg. Intolerable pain engulfed him like a black avalanche. He tried to grab something, roll away. His fingers closed on ooze and shattered ice. The horse reared again, fighting rein and whip. Hooves plunged down, flashing past Joes face, crushing his ribs with a sound like dry wood splintering. Joes last scream was muffled by mud and honky-tonk music. And the piano played on.