shotguns and rifles holding back the curious and the angry. Hat peaks showed along most of the adobe and shingle rooftops: those were Mr. Pickettâs men too, their rifles stirring constantly so that everybody in the buzzing crowd knew there was a gun on him. Citizens were hurrying to and from the waterfront with ideas and plans and the news. The crowd got bigger and bigger and its noise became higher-pitched, hotter.
â Heave. â
The wagon lurched onto the deck. Boag dropped the tongue and they all reached for ingots. Boag said, âDonât nobody drop one of these, likely itâd go right down through the deck.â
But there wasnât time for making neat stacks. They just set the bricks down by the wagon in a heap and then they were dragging the wagon off the ship and shoving it off the side of the pier to make room for the new buckboard that was already half loaded with ingots back by the company office. The empty wagon floated a few yards downstream and got wedged on a sand bar. Boag and Wilstach were on their toes, running. Inside the office they shouldered into the trio of loaders and lent a hand finishing the wagonload. The light was very bad by now and Stryker had refused to light a lantern in the gold roomââYou want to be an easy target?â They had to load the last bricks by feel.
They started to wheel the buckboard down the pier and a flurry of gunshots erupted. Boag threw himself flat on the planks. A bullet screamed off one of the gold bricks. Mr. Pickett had a surprisingly big voice for a man his size: it was calling across the wharves. âGet that damn fool.â There was a fusillade of shots, mostly from Mr. Pickettâs outposts on the rooftops, and Boag saw a man fall out of the second-story window of the assay-office building, and somewhere in the crowd a man started to scream; there was another volley of shots from overhead and the scream was cut off abruptly in its middle.
A ragged aftervolley, and things calmed down; the citizens were scrabbling for cover and the waterfront streets were emptying.
Somewhere back there in the town the local defenses were organizing themselves and it wouldnât be long before an army of locals came charging down the alleys filled with determination and brimstone. There wasnât a whole lot of time. Stryker was bellowing: â Heave. Damn you lazy bastards!â
Boag was heaving; he caught the flash of Wilstachâs grin. Mr. Pickett went forging past them up the gangplank at the head of a wedge of his men; they were heading straight up for the pilothouse on the Texas deck, where a couple of the men already had guns on the captain and the helmsman. There was another Pickett man in the engine room and now when Boagâs boots reached the gangplank he felt the heavy throb of the mechanisms under his soles.
Mr. Pickettâs sharpshooters were making their way down from the rooftops. Now another firecracker series of gunshots began: That was Mr. Pickettâs men, retiring, firing the occasional shot to keep the townspeopleâs heads down. In the darkness the rifles shot out orange lances of flame. Boag had his fingernails clawed into the splintery wood of the buckboard tongue; he backed up the gangplank, his back arched over, hauling. The sharpshooters began to swarm up along the pier and a few of them lent their shoulders and finally the wagon was bumping onto the deck.
Stryker was talking: âNever mind unloading the damn thing. Somebody lash it down where it stands. Use a couple of them shore linesâthereâs cleats all along the rail there.â¦â
Half Strykerâs words got eaten up in the explosions of gunshots. The town had rallied and a crowd pressed onto the wharf blazing away at the boat: there was a lot of hysterical calling back and forth, a lot of confusion and rage; they were shooting into the Uncle Sam because they were too stupid to realize if they sank the riverboat it would