company office. âWhatâd you have in mind?â
âMaybe the Argosy will offer a reward for anybody who can find those outlaws and recover the gold they lost,â Bo suggested.
âYou mean weâre gonna be bounty hunters?â Scratch shook his head. âWeâve tried that before, Bo. It never works out too good.â
âAlways a first time for everything.â
âYeah . . . like gettinâ our fool selves killed. I swear, Bo, sometimes it seems like youâre gettinâ even more reckless than I am in your old age. Folks look at you and think youâre the sober, responsible one, but they just donât know.â
Bo just smiled.
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The offices of the Argosy Mining Company were housed in a two-story building even more substantial-looking than the bank. For one thing, it was constructed of brick, one of several brick buildings that now stood along Deadwoodâs Main Street and Sherman Street, the two principal thoroughfares. When the Texans had first visited the place, back in its mining camp days, Deadwood had consisted of tents, tarpaper shacks, and a few hastily thrown-together buildings of raw, splintery boards. The presence of brick buildings showed just how much it had changed, how respectable it had gotten.
But with the arrival of the Deadwood Devils, the same sort of wild lawlessness that had plagued the area back then had cropped up again. No wonder folks were upset. Nobody wanted to go back to the way things had been.
When Bo and Scratch went in, they found themselves in an outer office with a desk in front of a railing and two more desks behind it, along with a couple of doors. A man in a suit and a stiff collar sat at the desk with a number of papers in front of him. He looked up with an impatient glance at the Texans and said, âYes? What can I do for you?â
âIs your boss around?â Bo asked.
The superior curl of the manâs lip came as no surprise. âIf youâre looking for a job at the mine, youâll have to ride out there and speak to the superintendent,â he said. âWe donât hire any laborers here.â
âWeâre not looking to swing a pickax, sonny,â Bo said, keeping a tight rein on his temper. More and more, he and Scratch ran into these prissy, soft-handed types who would have been more at home back East somewhere, rather than out here on the frontier. But, as he had mentioned to Scratch as they were riding into Deadwood earlier, everybody had to be somewhere.
âThen what is your business with Mr. Nicholson?â the man wanted to know.
âHeâs the owner of the Argosy Mining Company?â
âHeâs the president,â the clerk replied with barely suppressed annoyance. âAnd heâs not accustomed to dealing with the likes of you.â
Scratch grinned, but it wasnât a very pleasant expression as he leaned over the desk and placed his hands flat down. âYouâre kind of a snippy little cuss, ainât you?â he asked.
The clerk drew back and paled, although he already had such a pallor it was hard to be sure he lost even more color. He looked like he realized his arrogance might have gone too far.
But before he could say anything, the door to one of the inner offices behind him opened, and a man stepped out. He stopped short at the sight of Bo and Scratch and said in a loud, rumbling voice, âYou two again!â
Bo and Scratch found themselves staring in surprise at the massive Reese Bardwell, who they had tangled with in the Red Top Café. Scratch straightened from his pose leaning over the frightened clerkâs desk and said softly, âWell, this is an interestinâ turn of events, ainât it, Bo?â
âTake it easy,â Bo advised his old friend. âOne ruckus a day with a fella ought to be enough.â
Bardwell stalked forward. âWhat are you doinâ here?â he demanded. âDid you follow
Jerry B. Jenkins, Chris Fabry