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    Strong Darkness


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      The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you without Digital Rights Management software (DRM) applied so that you can enjoy reading it on your personal devices. This e-book is for your personal use only. You may not print or post this e-book, or make this e-book publicly available in any way. You may not copy, reproduce, or upload this e-book, other than to read it on one of your personal devices.

      Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the author’s copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.

      For the Gregorys

      Life’s a beach

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      Must be that time of year again, and I promise you another great ride this time. Before we start, though, I need to give some much-deserved shout-outs.

      Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but let’s start at the top with my publisher, Tom Doherty, and Forge’s associate publisher, Linda Quinton, dear friends who publish books “the way they should be published,” to quote my late agent, the legendary Toni Mendez. Paul Stevens, Karen Lovell, Patty Garcia, and especially Natalia Aponte are there for me at every turn. Natalia’s a brilliant editor and friend who never ceases to amaze me with her sensitivity and genius. Editing may be a lost art, but not here, and I think you’ll enjoy all of my books, including this one, much more as a result.

      Big thanks also to Mireya Starkenberg, a loyal reader who now suffers through my butchering the Spanish language in order to correct it. My friend Mike Blakely, a terrific writer and musician, taught me Texas firsthand and helped me think like a native of that great state. And Larry Thompson, a terrific writer in his own right, has joined the team as well to make sure I do justice to his home state. I’m also indebted to my cousin George Mencoff for introducing me to the principles of the Deep Web and to Time magazine for publishing a perfectly timed cover story.* You’ll also find more info on how Strong Darkness came to be in my author’s note that follows the epilogue here.

      Check back at www.jonlandbooks.com for updates or to drop me a line. I’d be remiss if I didn’t thank all of you who’ve already written or e-mailed me about how much you enjoyed the first five tales in the Caitlin Strong series. And if this happens to be your first to visit to the world of Caitlin, welcome and get ready for a wild ride. Right now it’s time for me to stop talking so you can start reading.

      P.S. For those interested in more information about the history of the Texas Rangers, I recommend The Texas Rangers and Time of the Rangers, a pair of superb books by Mike Cox, also published by Forge.

      *“The Secret Web: Where Drugs, Porn and Murder Live Online,” Lev Grossman and Jay Newton-Small, Time magazine, November 11, 2013

      CONTENTS

      Title Page

      Copyright Notice

      Dedication

      Acknowledgments

      Epigraph

      Prologue

      Part One

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Part Two

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      Chapter 21

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Part Three

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Part Four

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Chapter 43

      Chapter 44

      Chapter 45

      Chapter 46

      Part Five

      Chapter 47

      Chapter 48

      Chapter 49

      Chapter 50

      Chapter 51

      Chapter 52

      Chapter 53

      Chapter 54

      Chapter 55

      Chapter 56

      Part Six

      Chapter 57

      Chapter 58

      Chapter 59

      Chapter 60

      Chapter 61

      Chapter 62

      Chapter 63

      Chapter 64

      Chapter 65

      Chapter 66

      Chapter 67

      Chapter 68

      Part Seven

      Chapter 69

      Chapter 70

      Chapter 71

      Chapter 72

      Chapter 73

      Chapter 74

      Chapter 75

      Chapter 76

      Chapter 77

      Chapter 78

      Chapter 79

      Chapter 80

      Chapter 81

      Part Eight

      Chapter 82

      Chapter 83

      Chapter 84

      Chapter 85

      Chapter 86

      Chapter 87

      Chapter 88

      Chapter 89

      Chapter 90

      Chapter 91

      Chapter 92

      Part Nine

      Chapter 93

      Chapter 94

      Chapter 95

      Chapter 96

      Chapter 97

      Chapter 98

      Chapter 99

      Chapter 100

      Chapter 101

      Chapter 102

      Part Ten

      Chapter 103

      Chapter 104

      Chapter 105

      Chapter 106

      Chapter 107

      Chapter 108

      Chapter 109

      Chapter 110

      Epilogue

      Author’s Note

      Other Books by Jon Land

      About the Author

      Copyright

      In order for the light to shine so brightly, the darkness must be present.

      —FRANCIS BACON

      PROLOGUE

      “They knew their duty and they did it.”

      —Ranger John S. “Rip” Ford (1815–1897)

      LANGTRY, TEXAS; 1883

      “Well,” said Judge Roy Bean from behind the greasy bar in his cramped saloon that doubled as a courtroom, “I’ve researched this matter from the best resources available and have concluded that there ain’t no law in Texas against killing a Chink. So with that in mind, this court finds the defendant not guilty.”

      The overflow crowd, hoping to a man for a quick resolution so they could get back to the business of drinking, was already applauding the verdict when Bean banged his gavel. The judge stripped off the black robe covering his bulbous frame and laid his palms atop the bar on either side of the single law book upon which he relied.

      “Now,” he said, slapping the wood hard enough to kick a blanket of dust into the air, “who wants a drink?”

      * * *

      In the bar’s rear, Texas Ranger William Ray Strong was the lone man not celebrating. He stood shaking his head, eyeing the famed frontier judge who liked to proclaim himself the only law west of the Pecos. Just a few days earlier, William Ray had been summoned to an area on the outskirts of El Paso where the Chinese victim had been found hanging from a cottonwood tree. Arresting the culprit had been as easy as walking into an El Paso bar with the intention of posing some questions, only to over
    hear a cowboy with rotting teeth and the worst breath he’d ever smelled boast of doing the deed.

      “Can I take that as a confession?” William Ray asked, approaching the table.

      “You can take it as the drunken word of Cole Varney,” the cowboy said, toasting him with his beer, “the only word I know.”

      Varney watched William Ray hitch his barn coat back to reveal his Colt Peacemaker.

      “What are you, some kind of lawman?” Varney asked, drawing a collective chuckle from those crowded at the table with him.

      William Ray pulled the barn coat further to reveal his Texas Ranger badge, forged out of a Mexican Cinco Pesos coin. “I suppose you could say that.”

      The chuckling seemed to freeze midbreath, the whole bar going silent. William Ray noticed men who’d eased their hands a bit closer to their holstered pistols draw them back, leaving those hands in evidence for him to see.

      “And you, Cole Varney,” he resumed, drawing close enough to stand over his suspect, “are under arrest for the murder of Han Chu.”

      “Was that the Chink’s name?”

      William Ray kicked the chair out from under Varney and he hit the floor hard, blowing out some breath that stained the air with the stench of stale onions and eggs gone bad. Light spilling from dusty tin lanterns strung overhead flickered at the impact that coughed a dust cloud into the bar’s already grimy air.

      “Doesn’t matter if he was a Chinaman or the goddamn man from the moon,” William Ray said, jerking Varney to his feet by the scruff of the neck. “You confessed to murdering him, sir, and the awful stench you give off should be enough to arrest you on its own.”

      “I didn’t confess to nothing. Anybody hear me confess to something?” Varney asked anyone in the bar who was listening.

      To a man, including those at his table who’d kept to their chairs with their hands remaining where William Ray Strong could see them, nobody answered Varney’s question one way or another.

      “You’re under arrest, sir,” William Ray said, snapping his handcuffs into place on the suspect’s wrists.

      “Who the hell are you?” Varney spat, clinging to his bravado.

      “A Texas Ranger, and if that ain’t enough for you, we can each try our guns and see who’s still standing after the smoke clears.”

      * * *

      While William Ray had been riding with the famed Texas Ranger captain George W. Arrington of the Frontier Battalion, fighting renegade Indians and Mexican bandits, a steady stream of Chinese workers had moved into West Texas to continue laying track for the Central and Southern Pacific Railroads’ expanding routes through Texas and into Utah, Nevada, and California. There weren’t enough workers to handle all the area that needed to be covered, and it had reached the point where the railroad companies were actually negotiating with prisons to turn their incarcerated into virtual slave labor.

      When the Frontier Battalion was disbanded the year before, William Ray had found himself busting up those illegal chain gangs. But the charges never stuck and those truly responsible were too powerful and far away to arrest anyway. While that frustrated him to no end, it in no way softened his commitment to make sure the laws of the land were applied to this new wave of immigrants on both sides. As far as he was concerned, American or not, they had to be answerable to justice whether they were the perpetrator or the victim.

      Chinese crews relocated their campsites regularly to keep up with track laying progress. The particular camp they occupied here in the Trans-Pecos region of Texas had served as home longer than usual, thanks to the need to build an earthen dam to help stabilize the rail bed before ties and tracks could be spiked. It had been an unusually wet year for West Texas, stopping the railroad in its tracks until the Chinese crews completed the nearly quarter-mile-long, fifty-foot-high dam.

      Work on the tracks, though, still had yet to resume, the land deemed too wet to drive the ties into place to properly secure the rails. By then, William Ray imagined the Chinese had worn out their welcome as far as the locals, never known in these parts to be friendly toward strangers, were concerned. A local sheriff had called in the Rangers as soon as Han Chu’s body was found, and William Ray had ridden through the night to pick up the trail that had brought him to this bar and Cole Varney.

      It turned out the tree from which Varney had hung the Chinese victim actually lay in Langtry, home of the infamous Judge Roy Bean. Bean was known for hanging more than his share of men himself, just not any who were patrons of the saloon that doubled as his courthouse, which the accused clearly was. William Ray didn’t expect much from Bean and, true to form, the judge didn’t disappoint.

      “Yo there, Ranger,” he heard Bean’s voice call, when he was halfway out the door in the wake of the verdict being announced.

      William Ray turned slowly, watching the judge comb his long gray beard with the fingers of his right hand. “What can I do for you, Judge?”

      “You’re real good at holding your tongue, ain’t ya, son?”

      “I did my job, sir. Not for me to tell others how best to do theirs.”

      “No matter, Ranger. You heard me say there’s no law in Texas against killing a Chink, I imagine.”

      “I did indeed. Imagine you got it out of that single law book of yours.”

      “Well, that same book’s got nothing to say about killing a whole bunch of Chinks neither,” Bean said, his expression tightening to the point where the spiderweb of red veins across both his cheeks smoothed a bit. “Chink ladies more to the point.”

      “Sounds like you’re about to tell me something I oughtta know, Judge.”

      “I am indeed, son. Regular customer of mine who supplies beef to the railroad spilled it in the saloon just the other night ’fore he puked all over his shoes.” Roy Bean stopped long enough to stuff a thick wad of tobacco into his mouth, his left cheek puckering and then filling out with what looked like a round rock wedged in place there. “Four Chink women he said, all killed deader than dead in the past few weeks since the rains come, their bodies left like you wouldn’t believe. Chinks figure the rains brought something else with them.”

      “And what’s that?”

      “Southern Pacific man heard them blame a ‘black guy,’ meaning we could be looking to put a nigger in our sights, if that makes any sense.”

      “It doesn’t. Bahk guai is what the man meant by those words.”

      “Huh?”

      “Chinese for ‘white devil.’”

      Bean stiffened. “That ain’t right at all.”

      “’Course the phrase could mean something else entirely, more literal.”

      “Like what?”

      “An actual devil, a demon.”

      “Well, son, I never put one of them on trial.”

      “First time for everything, Judge. In any event, I’ll head out to the Chinese camp and have myself a look straightaway.”

      Roy Bean looked as if he were running the prospects of that through his mind. “I’m of a mind to ride along with you on this one, Ranger.”

      William Ray hocked up some spittle. “Rangers are used to working alone.”

      “Land west of the Pecos got its own law, son, and that law’s me. Trouble here is you ain’t gonna be facing Injuns or Mexicans, no sirree. You ever get yourself snared in barbed wire?”

      “Can’t say I have, Judge.”

      “’Cause that’s what this investigation is gonna be like. You’re gonna be dealing with a whole bunch of interlopers and invaders, from the Chinese to the Southern Pacific goons, to their bosses in starched suits coming to our land like they can do whatever they want with it. Pays to have a man of my esteem standing by your side with a pair of wire cutters should the need arise.”

      William Ray considered Bean’s proposal, working his tongue around his mouth from the left to right and sweeping it across the inside of both cheeks, pushing one out and then the other. “On one condition, Judge: any man I arrest stands a fair trial.”

      “Aw, hell, I only sentenced two men in my whole career to han
    g.”

      “Were they guilty?”

      “Close enough.”

      “Close enough don’t cut it in my book,” William Ray groused. “I can’t stop you from holding your court in a saloon. But if booze dictates your justice, I’ll burn the place down with you in it.”

      “I’m offering you a helping hand here, Ranger,” the judge said, frustrated by the lack of embrace to his proposal.

      “Which has got a mite too much blood on it for my tastes.”

      Roy Bean made a show of wiping both his hands on a vest missing half its buttons. “That oughtta do the trick. So let’s ride out to that camp and catch us a killer, a demon, or a black guy.”

      “That’s bahk guai.”

      “Isn’t that what I said?”

      CHINA, 1998

      “You understand there is a stern price you must pay for such grand ambitions.”

      “Wo yuan yi,” Li Zhen said in his native Mandarin, forcing himself to bow slightly. “I do.”

      Zhen stood reverently in the center of the deceptively simple room formed of a bamboo floor and walls covered in rattan and tightly woven straw. The harsh light shining in his eyes nearly blinded him while the three men seated at the table before him remained lost to darkness. Mere shadows wearing expensive dark suits, formless and lacking any texture at all, visible only in the slight motions and mannerisms they allowed themselves. A fourth chair had been placed behind the table but it remained empty.

      “I am willing to offer you anything in my possession,” Zhen said to them, bowing again so they wouldn’t notice him visibly cringe at this necessary show of deference.

      “In your case,” another voice said to him, “anything may not be enough. You are not of the proper social class to pursue such ambitions. You should consider yourself fortunate to even be permitted in this room.”

      “I understand.”

      “No,” snapped the third man hoarsely. “If you understood, you would not have bothered wasting the Triad’s time, er bal wu.”

      “Perhaps it is my own time I am wasting,” Zhen said, hardly bothered by being called a fool.

      He had been directed to this room inside a decrepit building rising from the refuse of what the Chinese government referred to as “inner-city villages.” Slums like this had been settled in crumbling neighborhoods by rural migrants in search of any work the factories and plants nearby had to offer, the truly poor and destitute. Many of the homes and structures had been built illegally, the government turning a blind eye to the challenges posed by evicting and then resettling huge masses of residents. Sometimes it was easier to leave well enough alone.

     


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