The Highwayman: A Longmire Story Read Online Free Page B

The Highwayman: A Longmire Story
Book: The Highwayman: A Longmire Story Read Online Free
Author: Craig Johnson
Tags: Mystery, Western
Pages:
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funny. . . .”
    “That’s not the funny part. About eleven that night a Jeep Cherokee hauling three kids from on the rez blew a tire and swerved, rolling the thing against the inboard rock wall at the exact spot that the coin had been.”
    Henry’s voice rose from the darkness on the other side of the cab. “Did any of them survive?”
    She nodded. “The two passengers did, but the driver was dead on scene when I got there.”
    The Bear held up the other silver dollar. “And this one?”
    “About a month ago I found it at mile marker 115 at the same time of day, right when the light gets really perpendicular, you know? That last little bit of light that hits everything and makes it stand out? I was drivingalong, and I saw something flash in the middle of the road so I stop, and sure as anything that coin is laying out there shining like a beacon.”
    I traded Morgans with the Cheyenne Nation and studied the second for any signs of wear, but there were none, and the silver dollar looked as if it had just been double-minted down in New Orleans. “Then what?”
    “Nothing.”
    “Nothing?”
    “I check back there less than an hour later—nothing. I sit there for another hour, and it starts raining, so I call myself every stupid name in the book and head north. I catch this idiot on a Harley about twenty miles over, up near the fly shop, and pull a quick U-ey, run him down, both of us standing there in the pouring rain; some lawyer from Colorado and he’s all Do-You-Know-Who-I-Am, so I give him the citation. I turn around and head north, you know, finishing my loop, but I get this funny feeling.”
    “Yep.”
    “So, I flip around and head back down, but there’s nothing there, so I pull up and park. It was a slow night and nobody was out, so I just sat there for a few hourswaiting to see if anything was going to happen.” She glanced out the side window. “Nothing.”
    “Well, that proves that it was just—”
    “The next day at around noon there’s a message on my cell phone from Captain Thomas saying some kayakers found this guy and his Harley over the cliff, smashed up by the water.” She continued gazing out the window into the darkness. “The medical examiner said he probably survived the fall but was broken all to pieces, laying down there on the rocks all night while I was sitting right above him, you know, watching the road and looking for ghosts.” She finally turned her head, and I could see the small reflection in her eyes. “Mile marker 115, right where I found the second coin.”
    There was a blip on the radio as another patrolman reported in from Shoshoni.
    Static. “Unit three, 10-7.”
    “That’s Parker, out of Riverton. He’s got a bladder the size of a grape.”
    I considered the coin. “You know the story about Womack and the Central Bank & Trust theft?”
    She studied me. “You think I haven’t looked up everything there is to know about him?”
    “Then you tell me.”
    She unzipped her jacket and took off her hat and tossed it on the seat beside her. “I haven’t read the official transcript, but I checked out all the newspaper articles in Thermop and Riverton. It was a righteous shooting. He pulled these renegade WYDOT guys over just north of the tunnels and one of them had a shotgun, blew out the windshield of Womack’s cruiser. He planted in a one-two position and shot the guy in the chest before he could reload the 12-gauge. The passenger was out by then and fired over the top of the car with a snub-nose; now, you know as well as I do that unless you’re locked in a phone booth with a perp those things are pretty useless, but the guy hits Bobby in the side, busting a rib. Womack returns fire—one shot, right in the head. Two assailants, two men dead on scene.”
    “And no bag of Hot Lips Morgan silver dollars?”
    “Nowhere to be found.”
    “They go through the car?”
    “Took it completely apart in a garage in Worland. Nothing.”
    “Did they search the
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