robber.â
The boy answered while chewing on the gumdrop. âSure did. The only trouble is, nobody believes me.â
âI do,â Bell assured him. âTell me what you saw.â
Jackie was about to reach in the sack for another gumdrop, but Bell stopped him. âYou can have them after youâve told me what you know.â
The boy looked peeved but shrugged. âI was playing baseball in the street with my friends when this old guyââ
âHow old?â
Jackie studied Bell. âAbout your age.â
Bell never considered thirty as old, but to a young boy of ten he must have appeared ancient. âGo on.â
âHe was dressed like most of the miners who live here, but he wore a big hat like the Mexicans.â
âA sombrero.â
âI think thatâs what itâs called.â
âAnd he was toting a heavy sack over his shoulder. It looked like it was plumb full of something.â
âWhat else did you notice?â
âOne of his hands was missing the little finger.â
Bell stiffened. This was the first clue to identifying the killer. âAre you sure he was missing a little finger?â
âAs sure as Iâm standing here,â answered Jackie.
âWhich hand?â Bell asked, containing his mounting excitement.
âThe left.â
âYouâve no doubt it was the left hand?â
Jackie merely nodded while staring longingly at the gumdrop sack. âHe looked at me like he was really mad when he saw I was looking back.â
âThen what happened?â
âI had to catch a fly ball. When I turned around, he was gone.â
Bell patted Jackie on the head, almost losing his hand in a sea of unruly red hair. He smiled. âGo ahead and eat your gumdrops, but, if I were you, Iâd chew slowly so they last longer.â
Â
A FTER HE checked out of the Rhyolite Hotel and before he boarded the train, Bell paid the telegraph operator at the depot to send a wire to Van Dorn describing the Butcher Bandit as missing the little finger on his left hand. He knew that Van Dorn would quickly send out the news to his army of agents to watch out for and report any man with that disfigurement.
Instead of traveling back to Denver, he decided on the spur of the moment to go to Bisbee. Maybeâjust maybeâhe might get lucky again and find another clue to the banditâs identity. He leaned back in his seat, as the torrid heat of the desert grilled the interior of the Pullman car. Bell hardly noticed it.
The first solid clue, provided by a scrawny young boy, wasnât exactly a breakthrough, but it was a start, thought Bell. He felt pleased with himself for the discovery and began to daydream of the day he confronted the bandit and identified him by the missing finger.
THE CHASE QUICKENS
11
MARCH 4, 1906 SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA
T HE MAN WHOSE LAST ALIAS HAD BEEN R USKIN stood in front of an ornate brass sink and stared into a large oval mirror as he shaved with a straight razor. When finished, he rinsed off his face and patted on an expensive French cologne. He then reached out and clutched the sink as his railroad boxcar came to an abrupt stop.
He stepped up to a latched window, disguised from the outside as if it were a section of the wooden wall of the car, cautiously cracked it, and peered outside. A steam switch engine had pushed ten freight cars uncoupled from the train, including the OâBrian Furniture car, through the Southern Pacific Railroadâs huge terminal building, called the Oakland Mole. It consisted of a massive pier built on pilings, masonry, and rock laid in the San Francisco Bay itself, on the west side of the city of Oakland. The slip where the ferryboats entered and tied up was at the west end of the main building, between twin towers. The towers were manned by teams of men who directed the loading and unloading of the huge fleet of ferries that moved to and from San Francisco
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