RATING: PG-13 for language
CATEGORY: Challenge - OW
MAJOR CHARACTERS: Chris and Ezra
DISCLAIMERS: This is fanfiction. No profit involved. This story is based on the
television series "The Magnificent Seven". No infringement upon the
copyrights held by CBS, MGM, Trilogy Entertainment Group, The Mirisch Corp, TNN,
the Hallmark Channel or
any others involved with that production is intended.
NOTE:
The April 2004 Challenge: offered by
Lily Of The West "Write a story in which
at least one guy poses as / or is mistaken for at least one of the others. You
can include as few or as many guys as you want. For a big fat bonus points, include an animal in the story (other than a horse!)"
SUMMARY: Okay, here we go again, another turn at an Ezra and Chris story - the
boys visit another one of those 'distant towns' and encounter a bit of mayhem
FEEDBACK: Yes please! comments and suggestions are greatly appreciated.
SPOILERS: Small spoilers for Serpents and Obsession
DATE: April 15, 2004, housekeeping done Sept 25, 2004
In Black
Winner of the 2004 Gold Ezzie Award for
Old West Fic - General - Medium
By NotTasha...who's heard that black is slimming. It
ain't.
I've seen the photographs |
 |
Part 1:
"An ordeal…” Ezra muttered as he stepped down from
the coach and squinted in the afternoon light. He took a moment to dust
his hat. “Deplorable travelin’ conditions, not fit for good and
upstanding citizens.”
“When have you ever been one of those?” Chris asked
from his position inside the vehicle as he helped Mary Travis to the door.
“Nevah!” Ezra grinned, showing his gold tooth.
Settling his hat on his head, he laughed and stated, “It’s much more
invigoratin’ to play at the other side of that coin.” He offered a
hand to Mary to assister her in stepping down. “Traveling by coach is,
by far, the most uncomfortable means of transport known to man.”
“It fulfils its purpose,” Mary responded pensively, as
she stretched. She looked toward the driver and brakeman who were
scurrying about, getting baggage untied from the roof. The horses would be
swapped out next. She hoped they hadn’t heard Ezra’s comments, but
apparently they were too busy to take any note of them.
Chris Larabee narrowed his eyes, regarding how long Ezra
had held Mary’s hand as he assisted her. Billy pressed against Chris’
leg, eager to get out of the conveyance as well. The gunslinger shook off
his irritation and smiled down at the boy, placing a fatherly hand on his
shoulder. Once Mary was clear, Larabee gave the boy a pat as a
warning and then grabbed hold him. He lifted the child through the door
and down to Ezra.
The gambler pretended to loose his grip on the child as he
grasped him, but turned the drop into a twirl and he spun the boy around.
Billy first yelped as he felt himself falling, laughed as he feet flew out from
under him, and then giggled as he was settled beside his mother.
Larabee frowned, not appreciating the antics, then stepped
down from the coach as well. They were the only customers leaving the
coach at this stop, but the rest of the passengers disembarked after them, to
stretch their legs before continuing on.
A drummer was the last to get off, struggling with his
case. Larabee threw him a disgusted look. A small man with a pinched
face, he’d been hawking his wares during the trip, passing around cheap silver
trays and forks in the confined place, trying to make a sale or two. The
Larabee glare had finally convinced him to hurriedly close up shop and leave
them alone. As the salesman faded into the crowd, Larabee looked about,
getting a feel for the town of Tierra Negra.
It was a little town, with businesses lining both sides of
the street. Townsfolk were moving excitedly around the stagecoach, trying to
draw the tired passengers into their stores during the stop. Larabee
grimaced, not liking the closeness of all the people – they pressed too near,
touching him on the shoulder, looking to sell him something. God, he had
to get out of this place – quick!
The trip to Tierra Negra had been a last minute decision
for Larabee. Mary had arranged the ride, to visit an old family friend,
Martin Goss. Chris went along when he discovered that Goss would be unable
to meet Mary in town – someone needed to escort the mother and child on the
hour ride to the Goss property. It was only after he’d purchased his
ticket that Larabee discovered Standish would be on the coach as well – going
to Tierra Negra to pick up money from their bank – a payoff on someone’s
gambling debt. Apparently Standish couldn’t wait for the funds to be
transferred – or didn’t trust anyone to transport his money. Typical,
Larabee thought. Leave it to a gambler to act like that.
Larabee watched as Standish brushed at his black suit.
“One would hope,” Standish complained, “That one could stay relatively
clean in that contraption.” He sighed unhappily. “I’m utterly
filthy!”
Chris glanced at his own blue-striped shirt, seeing none of
the ‘filth’ that so annoyed Standish. “Ezra,” Larabee
muttered. “I’ve never known a man who complained as much as you.”
“Hmph,” Ezra returned. “You haven’t known
that many people, have you, Mr. Larabee?”
With a shake of his head, Larabee turned toward Mary.
“I’ll check on the livery, see what’s available for rent. You and
Billy should wait for me at that restaurant.” He nodded to a charming
looking storefront. The apple-faced proprietress stood in the doorway, and
tried to shoo the coach passengers within. Larabee gave Ezra a nod.
“Standish,” he addressed.
Ezra smiled winningly. “I suppose I’ll be seein’
you back on Four Corners,” he stated. “I’ll be takin’ the return
stage today. Luckily the time tables work in my favor for a change.”
Chris nodded. “I’ll be comin’ back tomorrow,”
he told the gambler. His gaze followed Mary who was fussing with Billy.
“Goss will be able to get Mary back to town next week.” On Tuesdays
and Wednesdays the lines went back and forth through Tierra Negra, and the rest
of the week, the town was on their own.
“You’re returning so soon?” Ezra asked, sounding
surprised. “I thought you might like the chance to spend some time
with…” and then he trailed off, smiling mischievously. Larabee glared.
“No?” Ezra tried to look perplexed, but that fell into a crafty grin
as he rubbed his hands together and he added, “At least I’ll have a chance
to try the local tables before the other stage comes through. Of course,
there’s the matter of $100 to attend to first. I don’t know how I
allowed Mr. Prosser to carry that debt. It’s a miracle he paid up.” He
cupped one hand to his ear. “Ah, I hear it callin’ already. I
shall go to the bank and claim what is mine.”
“That why you’re wearin’ that suit today?”
Larabee indicated Ezra’s plain black attire.
“Bankers…” Ezra told him, “… they tend to be more
trusting of people who dress as they do.”
“So, you can’t trust another man to transport your
money?” Chris continued.
“Well,” Ezra drawled. “I know I couldn’t
trust myself with that task, so how could I trust another?” He shrugged
and looked astonished that anyone might have asked that question. “Mrs.
Travis,” Ezra stated, “Master Travis, Mr. Larabee, I wish you all a pleasant
journey and I shall see you again in Four Corners.”
Mary smiled pleasantly and took Ezra’s hand.
“I’m glad that you came with us, Ezra. You certainly helped pass the
time.”
“It was nothing, my dear,” Ezra responded, kissing her
hand gallantly. “I was only trying to entertain myself.” He
smiled and formally shook Billy’s hand before turning to Larabee and saying,
“I leave them in your capable hands,” as if Standish had any say in the
matter. “I hope they can keep you safe from harm. I know how Chris
Larabee can draw the worst attention.” And Ezra laughed. With a
wave, he turned and walked toward Tierra Negra’s only bank.
Chris frowned, watching him go. Standish was one of
the most irritating people Chris had ever known, but -- as Ezra had pointed out
– Chris Larabee really hadn’t gotten to know that many people in his life.
Certainly, there were plenty of others in this world that were far more
exasperating than Standish.
Can’t think of any offhand, Chris thought,
recalling how Ezra had been egging on the drummer during the ride, getting him
to dig out all manner of things from his sample case, having him to discuss the
differences in his products. He recalled how the salesman had gone
on-and-on about a new line of silver, edged in black for ‘a sophisticated
look… we call it Eleganté’’ God! Chris had
learned more about that crap than he ever cared to know.
Ezra had examined each piece that came into his hands with
a speculative eye and kept that man talking for far too long about silver.
As if anyone gave a damn about those pointless showpieces! What good was
it anyway? That nonsense would just sit on a shelf, awaiting company,
gathering tarnish. When did it do anyone any real good?
Of course, Chris recalled, the conman had also kept Billy
busy throughout most of the ride, showing him card tricks and telling stories.
Heck, Ezra’s showing-off had kept the whole coach occupied during the rough
and long ride. Made the experience pass rather quickly.
Maybe ‘irritating’ isn’t right.
‘Enigmatic’ might be a better word for him, Chris decided. Confusing
maybe? Can’t figure there’d be many folks more confounding than
he is. Never can tell what he’s going to do next. Like, why the hell did
he come all this way? Can’t he trust anyone? The man lives too
much in the shadows. Life should be easier than that – black or white
– good and bad. He’s too much in the gray.
Chris located his small bag and then grasped Mary and
Billy’s larger case. As he handled the luggage, he pondered his reason
for this journey. Hell, did I really need to come along either?
Am I just fooling himself into thinking that Mary needs me?
It was difficult to admit for the hardened gunslinger, but
he liked being with Mary Travis. He liked her smile and her intelligence.
He liked her determination and her generosity – liked the idea of traveling
alongside that woman and her son. There was something… familiar… about
taking on that task. It reminded him of another time – another
place – when he was truly happy.
Sarah and Adam -- he brooded over them a moment, their
faces blurred in his memory, their voices indistinct. He’d been so
content with them, as a husband and father. It had felt ‘right’.
But that time had ended, and he’d wrapped himself up in a black mantle.
The emptiness of his life had become familiar to him – easy. As he gazed
after Mary and Billy, as he watched them disappear into the restaurant for a
refreshment, he wondered if it was time to cast away that dark aura, to find a
new way to live, to find a new life that wasn’t steeped in black.
Shaking off that thought, he picked up the bags, and went
in search of horses for the ride to Goss’s place.
Part 2:
Chuckling as he folded the newly acquired cash, Ezra shoved
the wad into his inner vest pocket. The banker had miscounted and he’d
ended up with an extra $5. Ezra pursed his lips, trying to hide the smile.
Dame Fortune was smiling upon him! It was time to try the tables and see
if she remained on his side.
For a moment, his hand touched the silver plates he’d
filched from the drummer. He withdrew the little piece, a small tray that
might hold a gravy boat or display some tiny pastries. Cheap crap, Ezra
decided as he ran a finger along the black paint that edged the piece of Eleganté.
He winced at the pronunciation the drummer had used. The edge hadn’t
been properly finished, leaving it a bit jagged. Poor craftsmanship.
Ezra tapped a finger on the plate, hearing a dull thunk. Garbage!
He’d planned to return it, having secreted the piece to
annoy Larabee. He’d expected the drummer to put up a fuss when the piece
was found missing. Standish smiled, imagining Larabee’s apoplexy if the
salesman had become quarrelsome about finding the missing plate. Ezra, at
that point, meant to slip it back into the drummer’s trunk.
Unfortunately, under Larabee’s glare, the salesman had snapped his case shut
so quickly there’d been no time to perform an inventory and he didn’t notice
its loss. With a shrug, Ezra replaced the piece within his waistcoat and
continued on his way.
If he found the salesman, he’d return the plate somehow
– maybe slip it into a pocket or something to confuse him. If he missed
the man, well, then he’d own a new piece of cheap silver. Standish
chuckled at the thought and stepped onto the boardwalk. Maybe the plate,
edged in black, could be used to hold his cufflinks and watch on his dresser.
He stopped his promenade and watched as Larabee and Billy
rode past on a big roan horse, alongside Mary on a dun. He raised a hand
to wave, but they didn’t see him as they continued on their way. Ezra
smiled as he watched them go.
Chris looked happy, Ezra thought, happy and proud to escort
the mother and child to their destination. It was good to see
the black-hearted gunslinger smile, to see him gently but firmly holding onto
that boy, to see him look proud and content. He’s earned that,
Standish thought. He deserves a good life, after all that sorrow.
He looks good in something other than mourning clothes.
Billy seemed pleased as punch, sitting in front of the tall
blond gunslinger, and Mary was smiling contentedly, turning often to look at
Chris as they rode off. Yes, they look almost like a family, Ezra thought.
It was good for all of them really – broken families on the mend.
They all deserved this better life. All three of them
needed to be free of their blackness.
He watched until they disappeared from sight and then
sought the salesman. Ezra had started toward the coach when he heard a
voice growl, “I heard Chris Larabee just come into town on that stage.
That man should be dead.”
Ezra came to a halt and looked in disbelief at the two men
who leaned against a storefront, talking as if they had no cares in the world,
as if it didn’t matter that everyone could hear them. “Yeah, fella with a
bunch of spoons told me. I hear Larabee nearly bit the poor bastard’s
head off.” The speaker was tall with a bushy mustache.
“Wish I could find that Larabee. Thinks he’s so damn fast. I’d
show him.”
“We can find ‘im,” the other stated. He was as
tall as the other one, blond with a scar across his lips. “You and me,
Carter. We’ll track him down and get him.”
“Yeah,” Carter replied. “Hunt him like a dog and shoot him cold. We’d be
heroes! Everybody would know us – the men who shot Chris Larabee!”
They chuckled as Ezra listened. Around him, people
moved along the street, some pausing to listen as well. Ezra glanced about
himself, amazed. These fools were discussing murder in conversational
tones – not caring that others were hearing every word.
“Think we could really do it?” the blond sounded
dubious. “He didn’t get famous for nothing. I mean, everyone’s heard
about ‘the man in black’ and how he’s never lost a gunfight.”
Carter chuckled. “Problem with him is, he fights
fair. Listen, you’ll distract him and I’d shoot him in the back.
He won’t have a chance. It’d be easy.”
“Distract him?”
“Come up to him and say, ‘how-de-do’ and ask him for
the time, or somethin’. I’ll get him from behind.”
“And we’ll both be famous, right? Both of us?”
“Sure, Buster. You and me both,” Carter decided.
“Think we’ll get away with it?” Buster asked,
excitement tingeing his voice.
The folks around Ezra continued to listen, acting as if
they were only pausing to read a placard or stare into a window. The men
kept talking, either unaware that they had an audience, or content in the idea
that people were hearing their high-flung plans.
“Sheriff wouldn’t stop us. Man’s a drunk,” Carter
continued. “Everyone would know us. They’d treat us with
respect.”
“Respect!” Buster echoed.
Ezra let out a breath, watching where Chris had disappeared
with Mary and Billy. These two men were just braggarts, he decided.
But the conman knew that braggarts sometimes tried their schemes, and good
people suffered.
Some of the people wandered off. Others stayed.
One man, with long black hair, raised his boot onto a nearby barrel, trying to
look nonchalant as he buffed the leather, but not succeeding in hiding his
interest in the conversation.
“I hear Chris Larabee is stayin’ at Goss’ place,”
Buster declared.
Good God...Ezra thought.
“Goss!” Carter returned. “Hell, I say we ride
out there right now. Goss won’t give us no grief. Heck, he’ll
probably just welcome us if we came there with guns blazing.”
“Let’s get goin’,” Buster sounded excited.
“He’ll let us in. Goss is a fool.”
“Hell, he’ll let anyone in.”
“We shoot Larabee there.”
“It’ll be perfect,” Buster affirmed.
“But then nobody will know what we did,” Carter said
thoughtfully. Then he snapped his fingers. “I know! We bring
Larabee’s body to town and drag it down the main street so everyone knows what
we did.”
“Yeah,” Buster breathed out, sounding as if he was a
little too keyed up about that prospect. “We drag Larabee through
street. Won’t nobody dare stop us.”
The images came to Ezra… of these two malefactors showing
up at that homestead, appearing as friends – of them gunning down Chris, Ezra
swallowed at that thought. He could see them shooting him in the back -- dragging Chris’ body through this very
street. Ezra’s eyes tracked along, as if he could see this imagined
occurrence -- as if it was happening before his eyes. He felt cold and
sick at that thought.
But Chris could take care of himself, couldn’t he? But
what if they got Chris from behind – didn’t give him a chance?
Ezra thought of Mary and Billy. What would become of
them if these fools showed up, gunning for Larabee? What would happen if
that woman and child got in the way? Even if Chris were to survive these
gunmen, what if Mary and Billy didn’t?
Drawing a deep breath, Ezra stepped forward to face the
men.
Ezra lifted his chin, taking in their unconcerned
expressions. Then, lowering his voice and flattening out his accent to
something that might imitate a Hoosier, he stated, “You’re looking for Chris
Larabee?” He narrowed his eyes and pulled back his jacket to access his
Remington. With a voice that dripped with menace, he declared, “I’m
Chris Larabee.”
All arrogance left them as Carter and Buster threw up their
hands, terrified. “Hey,” Carter exclaimed. “Me and Buster
don’t mean you no harm.”
“Yeah,” Buster, added. “We were just funnin’,
that’s all.” They both laughed dryly.
Ezra scowled, keeping his accent modified, he stated, “Wasn’t
funny.” The crowd hovered around them.
“Yeah, well…” Carter tried, dropping his smile and
his clipped laugh. “No harm done, right?”
Ezra kept his expression hard and uncompromising.
“You’d best be movin’ on,” he growled.
Carter and Buster seemed enthusiastic about the chance to
flee. Ezra stepped back, giving them leave, and they scuttled along,
getting away from him as quickly as possible. Around Standish, people started
moving again, going on their way on the crowded boardwalks.
“Thought he’d be taller…” Ezra heard Buster
whisper.
“Yeah,” Carter returned as they moved off. “I
always pictured Chris Larabee as a big man.”
The gambler scowled as he muttered, “I’m not short!”
The frightened hooligans disappeared into a building.
Well, Ezra thought. That went well.
Now though, instead of spending a few leisurely hours in
town, Ezra knew he had to get moving. He’d travel to the next town and
pick up the coach on its way back to Four Corners. He sighed, hoping that
Larabee had left a decent mount available for let.
He was just turning to make his way to the livery. Something slammed into
him, driving the air from his lungs. Pain exploded through his chest,
spinning him. He registered a gunshot as he staggered, reaching out one
hand toward the cowering townspeople. The expressions that faced him were
shocked and frightened. One man, with longish-black hair, stood apart, a
smoking pistol aimed in his direction and an utterly satisfied look about him.
The ground tilted beneath Ezra as the pain and blackness consumed him.
Part 3:
Archie Malone re-holstered his weapon, grinning as he
watched the man-in-black go down like a load of bricks. The streets
emptied as people ducked and dashed. Archie grinned all the wider.
His
eyes stayed focused on the unmoving body – its head still on the boardwalk,
the rest in the dirt. He kicked the body, rolling it off the walkway and
totally into the street, its face toward the ground.
“Just like you deserve, Larabee,” Malone declared.
“Dead in the dirt. Ain’t so high and mighty now, are ya?” He
jerked up his head as Carter and Buster came toward him.
“Damn!” Carter uttered, giving Malone an
appraising look. “You just shot down Chris Larabee!”
“You did it!” Buster stated, awestruck.
Malone smiled wider, looking as if he’d bust buttons.
“Damn right!” he shouted. “Yeah, I got him! Me!
Archie Malone!” He pointed at the body. “Remember me, you
black-hearted son-of-a-bitch!” he snapped out. “I’m the man who
gunned you down! I’m the man who killed Chris Larabee!”
From their hiding places, the townspeople quivered.
Malone, nearly glowing with pride, turned to Carter and
Buster. “Couldn’t have done it without you two,” he told them.
“Ya have good ideas. Didn’t know he was in town. Wouldn’t have known who the bastard
was. You distracted him good.”
The two men beamed at each other, glad to have had a part
in the momentous occasion. Someone shouted from down the street –
and the sheriff came trotting toward them. With a yelp, Malone turned and
ran in the opposite direction. After a second of indecision, Carter and
Buster followed, ducking into the blackness of the covered alleyway.
Minutes later, Sheriff Cobb came to a huffing stop.
Resting his hands on his knees when he reached the sprawled body. He
grimaced, not appreciating dead men on his street. “Anyone see … what
happened?” he asked between gasps as the townspeople reappeared.
A man stepped forward and pointed to the black-clad body.
“That was Chris Larabee,” he uttered.
“Larabee? Really?” Cobb looked astonished.
“Who did this?”
The man supplied, “I didn’t know him, but he said his
name was Archie Malone. Those boys, Carter and Buster went with him.”
Cobb touched the whiskey bottle in his pocket as he
considered this. “Larabee you said?” He paused, wondering how
this should affect him, wishing he could just take another drink instead of
dealing with this. “The famous Chris Larabee?” he asked, to allow him
a few more moments to think.
“Yeah!” someone returned.
From further back in the gathered group, someone commented,
“I thought he would be taller.”
Someone else hissed, “Shut up! Who else would he
be?”
“Think he might be still alive?” Cobb asked cautiously.
There were murmurs throughout the crowd and someone voiced,
“Ain’t no way anyone could have survived that. Malone got in
real close. Larabee was dead before he hit the ground.”
“Malone and those fellas are gone?” Cobb asked.
“They went up that way,” the first man told him,
pointing down the alleyway. “You want to form a posse?”
Bystanders grumbled unhappily and crossed their arms over
their chests. Nobody wanted to mess up a Tuesday afternoon.
Cobb smiled, glad for that reaction. “Aw,” he
responded. “They’re probably too far by now. Won’t be able to
catch them.” He pulled up at his pants. “No sense in wasting our
time with that.” Let someone else take down Malone and his ‘gang’.
Glancing about the crowd, Cobb spotted the man he expected
to find amongst them. “Danver, he’s yours I guess.”
Mr. Danver, the town’s undertaker stepped forward,
recruiting another man as he approached the body. “Been a busy day,”
he said as he shoved the body onto its back with his foot. It went over
heavily. A bloodstain was visible against the white shirt – the black
garb hid the rest of it. The mouth was slack, but at least its eyes stayed
closed. “Second customer today,” Danver said thoughtfully before
stepping closer to grab hold of the victim’s feet. “Come on, Adams.
Let’s get this taken care of.”
Adams did as asked, grasping hold of the narrow wrists of
the dead man. Immediately, he let loose his hold. “Ugg!” he
exclaimed, leaping away. The arms flopped to the ground. “Still
warm!”
Danver looked unexcited. “They’re easier to deal
with when they haven’t gone all cold.” Adams still looked squeamish,
so Danvers added, “There’s a lunch in this for you if you help me.”
Adams contemplated. “Okay, but I’m ordering a
steak.”
“No dessert,” Danver negotiated.
“You take the arms. I don’t like touchin’ ‘em
when they’re still warm.”
Danver sighed and nodded his consent. They changed
positions and, fastidiously, Danvers pulled on his gloves. Adams smirked
at him. “I’m a professional,” the undertaker declared.
“Yeah, ain’t we all,” Adams responded, as he picked
up the dead man’s black hat and settled it on his own head, finding it a bit
too small. Then, they both stooped down and picked up the corpse to tote
it to the undertaker’s shop.
Part 4:
Ezra awoke with a start as he was dumped unceremoniously
into a dark corner of the undertaker’s shop. Any gasp that might have
escaped him was muffled by Adam’s loud groan. “God, Danver,” Adams
grumbled. “I’m too old for this. You should get yourself a kid
to help out.” With a disgusted move, he tossed the ill-fitting black hat
onto a nearby table.
Danver nodded, as he removed his gloves. “I’ve
tried. Nobody wants to take the job,” he said with a long-suffering
sigh. “Now I got two of bodies to deal with and nobody around who’ll
pay to bury them.” He wrinkled his nose distastefully as he pointed to
the other body that occupied the floor of his shop. “Someone brought
that one in this morning. Killed himself at the hotel. Just some
drifter. Doesn’t have a penny on him.”
“At least you could sell his horse,” Adams said
helpfully. “That his pinto up front?”
Danver nodded. “I’ll get something out of this.
I don’t do this for free.”
“I’ll help you go through Larabee’s pockets,” Adams
offered greedily. “He looks like he might have something on him, enough
to pay for both of them, maybe? Heck, we might get a little something for
ourselves if we’re lucky.”
Danver smiled and draped a companionable arm over Adams
shoulder. “I know I liked something about you, Adams. Come on,
let’s get that lunch. We’ll deal with them when we get back.”
Ezra blinked in the dim room, listening as the two men
left. His head swam. It hurt to breathe. His whole world
ached. He listened, hearing a roaring in his ears – and beyond that, the
sound of people on the street. He faded in and out for a few minutes, not
wanting to awaken, but unable to fall back into that pain-free blackness.
Snap out of it, Ezra, he told himself. Someone
tried to kill you! Now was not a time for a nap. Taking a deep
breath, Ezra tried to assess the extent of his injury. The pain grabbed
him as he inhaled and an ache radiated through his ribs and down his belly.
It felt as if he’d been kicked in the gut.
Slowly, he pushed himself upright, groaning as his chest
barked in pain. Dizziness grasped him as he moved, threatening to topple
him. Gasping, he shuffled, getting his back up against the wall for
support as he caught his breath. Damn, that hurt. Was he
shot? What else could have happened?
Still, he didn’t ‘feel’ as if he’d been
shot.
Probing about, he could find the stained fabric of his
shirt, but it didn’t seem enough blood for a fatal wound. Something seemed to be jabbing him.
Reaching inside his vest,
he was perplexed as his fingers touched something. Drawing it out,
he smiled as he recognized the object: the small silver plate he’d
stolen from the drummer. “Well, it just goes to show,” Ezra said as he
turned the bent plate around, “Not all of the Commandments should be followed
to the letter.”
He carefully removed his jacket and unbuttoned his
waistcoat to get a better look at his injury – there was a moon-shaped cut
across his chest where the plate had bit into his flesh and let it bleed – but
it was closing up. Below it was a horrible bruise that was painful to
touch. It spread around his abdomen, looking unnaturally dark.
Broke a rib, Ezra figured as he pressed against the area. He let out a
gasp as the room dimmed.
He clenched his hands into fists as he felt the pain all
the way through him. This was worse than just a broken rib, he realized.
Slowly, painfully, he staggered to his feet, pausing for as
the pain caught him. The room spun and his head pounded as he got his feet
under him. He pressed his lips together, telling himself that he
wouldn’t get sick – Lord, I don’t think my body could stand that right
now.
He had to get out of here. His gaze lit upon the
other body in the room. It was turned on its side -- a man with dirty
brown hair and blank, lifeless eyes.
“I hope you won’t mind,” Ezra stated as he noted the
jacket that’d been balled up near the dead man’s head.
“Unfortunately, I find myself in need of a change of clothing. I suggest
a trade.” With that, Ezra draped his black blazer over the dead man,
covering his lifeless face, and stooped to pick up the brown jacket.
“Christ!” he ground out at the motion. For a moment, his hearing faded
and a heat passed over him. He grasped a table for support as everything
spun. “Lord, oh Lord,” he muttered, managing to straighten himself
against the table. He closed his eyes, wishing away the spinning images,
promising himself he wouldn’t be sick.
Finally, as the world quieted, he allowed himself to open
his eyes. He gulped and looked to the jacket that had cost him so dearly. This
had better fit. He pulled it on slowly, carefully, finding it dirty
and a bit too long – it would have to do.
Irritated, he cuffed the sleeves as he spoke to the dead
man. “You’ll find we made a fair trade. The jacket you’re now
sporting is worth in excess of what I now have in my possession. Good luck
to you.” He pulled the money from his vest pocket and frowned to find it
soiled with blood. At least it had escaped destruction by bullet this time
– a damn shame that cold hard cash had to suffer when he’d been shot at the
governor’s rally. There were a lot of things about that day that had
been a damn shame.
Quickly, he folded his money and, settling his foot on a
nearby chair, he managed to slide the bills into his boot without much pain.
Time to go, before you’re found. Spotting
the bent plate where he left it on the floor, he painfully retrieved it, taking
his time when he straightened, wondering why his head was buzzing so
relentlessly. He told himself that he couldn’t leave the piece behind as
evidence, but honestly, he wanted it as a souvenir. It slid into his
pocket.
Ready? he asked himself. Then get moving.
Ezra stepped toward the door but stopped short when he heard a ruckus just
outside. Scrabbling backward, Ezra frantically looked for a hideaway, and
slid behind a curtain that separated the back room from the front. As soon
as the curtain fell back into place, Archie Malone banged the door open and
strode in, with his newly formed gang behind them. All walked with a
swagger, their expressions haughty and sure.
“There he is! Chris Larabee!” Buster shouted and
Ezra’s heart missed a beat. Good God, they’ve found Chris. No
wait, they think I’m Chris. They’ve found ME! He glanced
down to see if his boots were protruding from beneath the curtain, but Buster
headed toward the dead man.
Carter pointed to the black jacket that Ezra had left on
the drifter. “See! See!” he shouted. “The man in
black!”
Malone smiled darkly, hefting the coil of rope in one hand.
“Chris Larabee,” he purred to the dead man. “You’re comin’ with
me.” He dropped a lasso around the dead man’s feet and tightened the
loop. With a grin to Carter, he said, “You boys had a good idea.
It’s time the folks of Tierra Negra knew who’s running the town.” He
took on a questioning expression as he asked, “You sure that sheriff is
drunk?”
“Oh yeah,” Buster returned. “After what you
done? He’s gonna be out all day. ‘Long as he’s drunk, he won’t have
to do anything.”
“Good,” Malone responded. “We’re gonna have
some fun.”
Ezra kept silent behind that curtain, watching as Buster
hooted and Malone strode out of the shop, carrying the other end of the rope.
He mounted his horse. Buster and Carter stayed long enough to drag the
body to the doorway. Once they were clear of the opening, Malone hollered
and, with a thud, the body was jerked from the shop. The black jacket that
had covered the body’s face, was left on the boardwalk.
Wincing, Ezra listened as the man rode off, dragging the
body of the nameless drifter. Buster and Carter shouted and crowed, as
Malone tore down the street on his horse, shouting for all to hear that he’d
had killed Chris Larabee and that nobody would forget it.
There was no more time for lollygagging, Ezra knew.
Time to get out of town before Carter and Buster had a chance to see him.
Ezra had no intention of meeting the same fate as that drifter.
Stiffly, Ezra strode out of his hiding place, as the gang
members followed their leader into the street. He heard Danver, the
undertaker, shouting after the men.
As he made his way through the room, something caught
Ezra’s eye and he found his hat sitting on a table. He snagged it and
settled it on his head – at least he hadn’t lost that. The pressure of
the hat stopped him, and he closed his eyes against this new pain. Good
God Almighty, can’t I even wear my hat? he questioned as he repositioned
it.
At the doorway, Ezra peered out. The undertaker stood
outside a restaurant, raising his fist, and Buster and Carter skedaddled.
Danver took off after them.
While everyone’s attention was on the spectacle, Ezra
eased himself from the shop. A pretty paint horse waited at the hitching
post. It blinked at him, looking bored. With a sigh, Ezra approached
it. He murmured softly, untying it from the bar. It was time to
disappear. He sucked in his breath as he pulled himself into his saddle,
the pain in his chest almost enough to make him pass out. Breathing
harshly, he turned the horse toward Four Corners and started the pinto at an
easy gait, hoping no one would pay notice.
He could have left a message for Chris, but Larabee was
already expecting to meet him back in Four Corners, and it would be rather
suspicious for 'Chris Larabee' to leave a message for Chris Larabee while Malone was dragging the
‘Larabee corpse’ through the street. No, if Larabee was to follow his
usually form, he’d come back to town tomorrow, just in time to get on the
coach, and disappear without a word. Good for him.
It would be better, Ezra realized, if nothing delayed
Larabee’s departure. It would be better if Larabee came into town, got
onto that coach and went away before anyone knew he was here. To delay
him, might only bring his demise.
As Ezra brought the horse to a painful trot, he realized
stealing a man’s horse was a hanging offence, but if the horse belonged to a
dead man, Ezra figured, the penalty wouldn’t be too steep. I’ll
have it returned to the undertaker once I’ve made it home safely. Might
have to send back the $5, too. I’m keeping the plate.
Well, he decided, if worse comes to worst, since
I cheated death, it would be a fair sentence in the end.
Part 5:
Ezra traveled slowly, because every step was jarring.
He held one hand against his hurt belly and held his breath. His head
throbbed and he swallowed against the building nausea. He traveled with
one intent – to get back to Four Corners before anyone saw him.
Any plans to stop in the next town faded as this consuming
goal overtook him. There’d be no waiting for the stage, no lingering
about – he had to get home and away from Tierra Negra.
He felt so confused and tired. His belly hurt so
strangely. What’s the matter with me? he pondered. Why
can’t I think straight? Why do I feel so goddamn sick?
His fear only grew when he paused for ‘the call of
nature’ and saw blood. Oh Lord, not that. What do I do?
It took him several minutes before could come up with a clear thought. He
had no choice. There was no time to relax and rest. He was in the
middle of nowhere and had to get to help. He continued on, a new anxiety
buzzing in his muddled head.
He mindlessly kept to his trail and avoided contact with
anyone. Kept moving. Had to get to Four Corners.
He had the wherewithal to find water before he stopped for
the night, but could hardly stoop to drink it. He leaned himself against a
tree and thought about sleep, but couldn’t manage to get to the ground.
The night was black as pitch and he could go no further until morning.
Miserable, he dozed against the tree and waited… waited for daylight and for
the black to be dispelled.
And in the morning, as the sun leached the black from the
sky, he sighed … and continued on.
Part 6:
Larabee walked Goss’ property in the late morning, slowly
pacing off the distance from the barn to one of the outbuildings. He
watched Mary and Martin Goss, a man of about forty years with long dark hair and
a square shoulders. Goss’ wife had died the previous year, leaving
Martin alone in the world with his little girl. He was a lonely man, who
liked talking about ‘old times’ with Mary. Goss made her smile with
the memories. He made her laugh. Larabee did his best to stay away
from them. He’d just be a black cloud around them.
And all the time that Chris avoided them, he felt as if he
should be doing something about it… doing something to drive a wedge between
them, to separate them. But, it wasn’t his place. He had no
business messing with Mary’s affairs. The woman deserves a life.
Someone should be happy.
Near the barn, Goss’ daughter, Petunia, and Billy
played with the girl’s new puppy. The little hound yipped as the
children fussed with it. The kids giggled and screeched as Beau rolled and
nipped playfully. It was a scene that would bring a smile to anyone’s
face, even Chris could find happiness in watching their joyful play with the
young dog. It was a good thing for Billy, he figured. It’s
the sort of happiness that I could never give him.
The night had been uncomfortable for the gunslinger. Goss
hadn’t expected him, and had seemed rather put out to find a stranger arrive
with Mary. He’d been cordial, of course, but there’d been no room for
another guest in the house – Petunia was already giving up her bed for Mary,
and the children were to sleep in the main room. When Goss considered
having the children sleep in the barn, Larabee beat him to it, and carried a
blanket to the hayloft.
After all, the loft had been more comfortable than the
charged atmosphere of Goss’ house. Martin couldn’t stop fawning over
Mary, telling her how beautiful she was, saying that they should stick together
since they both knew the sorrow that came from losing one’s spouse. Mary
had come close to telling Martin that Chris had experienced the same grief, but
stopped short when she came under a sharp glance from Larabee.
It was all for the better that he slept in the barn.
Maybe they’d wanted some time alone. Chris spent hours awake in that
loft. He couldn’t decide why he was so keyed-up, and pondering over it
only made him more restless.
The night had passed slowly and, with dawn, he awoke and
waited for the rest of the house to come alive. They’d breakfasted and
then Goss had brought them out to show off his property. Chris wandered
away. It was time to get back to Tierra Negra. He’d be in town
hours before the coach pulled through, headed back toward Four Corners, but he
wasn’t going to spend any more time in their way. Maybe he’d find a
restaurant to haunt, or a chair on the boardwalk, check to see if any telegrams
came in for him. He didn’t like lingering in strange towns – it often
brought trouble – sometimes his name alone was enough to cause difficulty.
But, all things considered, it would be preferable to staying in this place.
He watched as the children merrily played with the dog.
Beau leaped suddenly and struggled free of their embraces. The children
scurried after it. Beau, his feet too big for his tiny size, tripped and
fell and leaped again – a joyful little bawl of energy. Billy tackled
him, and they rolled with Petunia squealing after them.
Chris tried not to look as Martin held Mary’s hand to
help her step over a fence-rail. Seems a bit too familiar, Larabee
thought. Mary laughed and Chris ground his teeth.
There was too much happiness here. Mary and Billy fit
in too well with Martin and Petunia and the hound dog. For Chris, there
was no room at all.
A new movement caught his eye and Larabee turned to see a
horseman coming toward them. Without taking his eyes off the newcomer,
Chris moved closer to Mary. “Goss!” he shouted. When Martin
turned, Chris pointed toward the stranger. “Someone’s coming,” he
stated as he pulled back his jacket to expose his weapon.
“Hey, Chris,” Martin chided. “No need for that.
This is a nice place. We don’t shoot people around here.” He
smiled congenially as he came alongside the gunslinger and patted his stiff
back. “We’re all friends. It isn’t like that unruly place you call
home.” His smile was all teeth.
“Hmmm,” was all Larabee could say on the matter, his
gaze focused on the horseman who jogged toward them.
Realizing that he was under a harsh scrutiny, the horseman
stopped and lifted a hand. “Hello, Martin!” he called.
Slapping Chris on the back, Martin said happily, “See,
it’s only Jude. Come on in, Jude!” and he waved his arms far
more than a man should.
Jude, a lean man with hair bleached to almost-white, closed
the distance, bringing his horse to a halt a short distance from his friend. He
looked cautious, restrained. “Martin,” he said seriously, flicking his
gaze from his friend to the people who were strangers to him. “I was
just stoppin’ by to tell you that you’d best keep from town for a while.”
“Why ever for?” Martin cried, arms akimbo.
Pausing, Jude regarded how to phrase his words.
“Been some trouble,” he finally stated.
“Really?” Martin explained. “Couldn’t
be too bad, could it?”
“It’s bad,” Jude returned. He glanced toward
Mary. “Probably shouldn’t talk about it in front of the lady.”
Mary smiled tightly. “I’m a reporter,” she
explained. “You can tell me anything.” She drew a notepad from a
pocket and found a pencil. Ready, she smiled up at Jude.
Jude looked undecided, holding the reins tight in his
hands. “I don’t know…” he said.
“What kind of trouble?” Larabee cut in, tired of
waiting.
Jude pursed his lips and then finally stated, “Man
was shot in the street yesterday.”
“Oh,” Martin exclaimed, stepping closer to Mary.
“That’s terrible.”
Neither Mary or Chris looked too impressed. Gauging
his audience, Jude went on, speaking to the people from Four Corners and turning
from his nervous friend. “They dragged the body through the street.”
“Oh my God!” Martin cried. “That’s horrid!”
He glanced to the children who were too engrossed with the puppy’s antics to
pay them any mind.
“The sheriff?” Chris asked as Mary scribbled. “What
the hell was he doin’?”
With a shrug, Jude returned, “He got drunk.” He
looked over his shoulder as if he expected to see someone following him, then
leaned forward on his horse and lowered his voice to a conspiratorial level,
“They dragged the body back and forth. Wanted everyone to see.”
A muscle in Chris’ jaw jumped. Mary wrote out the
words as quickly as she could. “Do you have their names?” she asked as
she worked.
“Archie Malone,” Jude said slowly, waiting for Mary to
write it out. “He seemed pretty damn proud of himself. He’s not
from around here. The other two were local boys, ah, Carter and
Buster. Don’t know their full names.”
“And the dead man?” Mary continued.
“Chris Larabee,” Jude told her, leaning close. He
jerked himself upright in an instant as the blond man lunged toward him.
His horse back-stepped, but couldn’t escape.
“Is this some sort of a joke?” Chris spat out,
snatching hold of the horse’s bridle. The sorrel’s eyes rolled back in
fear as Larabee held him. Mary and Martin looked on in open-mouthed
wonder.
Jude’s voice rose. “I told you what I know!”
“Chris Larabee?”
Jude nodded nervously. “Yeah, ‘the man in
black’… they kept saying that,” he declared. “It was Chris
Larabee.”
Not releasing his hold on the bridle, Chris growled,
“I’m Chris Larabee.” And he grasped Jude by the shirt and pulled him
down.
Part 7:
The children had been sent to play on the
other side of the barn, allowing them to be away from the discussion. Jude told the tale, informing them of everything he’d heard and seen.
That Archie Malone’s gang had found Larabee in town the previous day,
how Malone had gunned down Chris Larabee in the street, how the gang had stolen
the body from the undertaker, and how Jude had witnessed the body being dragged
to a bloody pulp in the street.
Mary kept one arm wrapped around Chris’.
Martin paced. Chris stood as still
as stone, listening to Jude’s words, his eyes set like flint.
“You see him?” Chris finally said when
Jude was through.
“Malone?” Jude asked. “He wasn’t such a scary guy.
Normal
looking, got hair kinda like Martin.” He
gestured to his friend, and Goss gave Jude a terrified look. The gaze Larabee directed at Goss could have frozen blood.
“Larabee,” Chris clarified darkly.
“ The man they were callin’ Larabee. Did you see him?”
“Ah,” Jude started. “I didn’t see
him when he was alive. He had brown
hair…” Jude trailed off, trying to figure out a good description of the
flailed body he’d seen. “I
heard that he’d gotten off the stage, and had just left the bank when they got
him. Talked all high and mighty. He was wearin’ black. Oh, someone said he was short.”
Chris looked away, unable to breathe. A cold blackness overtook him.
Gazing
toward town, he whispered, “Ezra…”
“Ezra?” Mary returned, sounding
perplexed as she continued to cling to Chris. “Ezra isn’t short…”
Larabee tore away from Mary, and strode
toward Jude’s horse. “I’m
taking your horse,” he declared without looking at the owner.
“Ah…Okay,” Jude responded, stepping
away. “I’m gonna want him
back…”
“It isn’t Ezra!” Mary insisted,
following Chris. “It couldn’t
be!”
Chris’ heart thudded, his thoughts spun.
No. No. No. God, no. Not because of me. Not again.
“Chris,” Mary repeated, traipsing after
him. “You don’t know enough.” She held her notepad, looking at the statement they both heard.
“There’s not enough. Why
would you think it’s Ezra?”
As Larabee climbed into the saddle, he shot
Mary an angry look. “Who else
would get mixed up in crap like this?” he declared. For a moment, Mary thought she saw a look of horror and sorrow cross
Larabee’s face, but he turned the horse before she could be sure and was gone.
Part 8:
Chris Larabee came into the town of Tierra
Negra like a thunderhead. The
street seem to darken and the air became heavier as he rode down the street, his
eyes searching, his jaw set.
He tried not to think. He tried not to rationalize.
His
chest felt tight. It hurt to
breathe. All the color seemed to
have been driven from his world, leaving everything in blacks. He prayed that he’d spy the gambler on the boardwalk so that he could
kick the crap out of him. Let me
be wrong. Let me be wrong. Let him be robbing good folks here in town or safe in Four Corners,
vexing Nathan and harassing Josiah.
The streets were quiet. Townsfolk hid.
Recent events had made them quail, and the arrival of the
furious gunslinger sent them scurrying. Chris
glanced about – searching – hoping – despairing.
At the sheriff’s office, he dismounted,
stomped onto the boardwalk and slammed his open palm into the door. It banged mercilessly and the sheriff shot up in his seat, clutching his
head.
“You the sheriff?” Larabee barked,
striding across the floor in a second, to snatch up the lawman by his lapels.
“Hey!” Cobb cried. “Leggo!”
Larabee didn’t release his hold, dragging
the lawman to his feet. He stunk of
booze. “You’re the sheriff?” Chris demanded to know.
“Yeah, yeah,” Cobb slurred. “So, get your hands off me!”
“What do you know about the killing
yesterday? Who did it? Where do I find them?”
“Let go!” Cobb demanded again, his eyes
beseeching. “I’ll tell you all
I know!”
With a grunt, Chris released his grip and
let Cobb fall back to his chair. The
bleary-eyed sheriff coughed and straightened his collar. The angry blond man eyed him.
“Chris Larabee was gunned down in the
street,” Cobb said flatly, starting his tale.
“It wasn’t Larabee,” Chris cut him
off.
“How’re you so sure?” Cobb shot back.
“I seen ‘im! I should
know!”
“I know because I …AM …Larabee!”
Chris shouted, slamming his fist on the desk. An empty whiskey bottle jumped.
“Who
the hell did they gun down?”
Cobb shook his head, amazed. “I don’t know?
He’d
come in on the stage. Larabee was
on that stage. Just left the bank. He was wearing black! Everyone
knows Larabee wears black.” Cobb
jabbed a finger at Chris as if that was evidence enough. The sheriff’s gaze drifted to Chris’ decidedly blue shirt.
“Black, I tells ya!”
“What else you know about him?” Chris
barked, viciously slapping away the jabbing digit.
Cobb furrowed his brow as he cradled the
offended hand to his chest. “He
was dead in the street when I got there.” He bit his lip. “Stone cold dead.
Banker told me he talked with a southern accent, but he knew
it was fake. Used a fake name.”
“What was it? What name?”
“Ezra Standish,” the sheriff said
confidently. “Priggish alias if
you ask me!”
Oh Ezra, Oh God. It took a moment for Chris to find his
voice. All around him, the
blackness seemed to close in tighter.
When he was able, Chris pressed the palms of
his hands against the desk and leaned closer to the sheriff. “I need the names of the men who did it.”
His voice left no room for argument.
“Archie Malone!” Cobb instantly told him.
“He
was the one that pulled the trigger. Then
there was Tracey Carter and James Hubbardston – Buster! Buster and Carter are local boys though.
They’re good fellas. They
deserve a fair shake.”
“If they had anything to do with this,
I’ll shake them to pieces,” Chris declared. “Where do I find them?”
“They went off…” Cobb told him,
pointing vaguely north. “All
three of them. North, past the
Gorman property. Probably
went to that old mining camp that’s up there. Carter and Buster know where it is.”
“You been up there yet?” Larabee asked.
Cobb shrugged, grinning sheepishly. “ I figured that as long as they were gone – good riddance, you
know?”
Son of a bitch, Chris thought. Bastards…all of them.
He
drew in another breath and asked a question that hurt him to the core. “Where is he?”
“I just told you!” Cobb whined.
Slowly, with more patience than he thought
possible, Chris asked, “What did they do with the body?”
“Oh!” Cobb exclaimed. “They burned it.”
Chris closed his eyes and straightened,
running one hand through his hair. Oh, Ezra, he thought mournfully.
Dammit, Ezra. I’m
sorry. I’m so damn sorry.
“Where?” Chris asked quietly.
Cobb, seeing the change come over the
gunslinger, grew bolder. He
declared, “They burned it at the garbage heap. They doused everything with kerosene and lit the whole thing on fire.
Caroused there for a while, then left. Burned all night,” he stated solemnly.
His face screwed up as he started, “Now those boys, Carter and Buster,
there’re a good couple of fellas. They
just caught up with the bad element and…”
At those words, Chris turned and shoved open
the door, leaving the sheriff alone in his office.
Part 9:
“What the…” JD started, his eyes wide as saucers as he
held the message outside of the telegram office. The color drained from his
face as read and then reread the note. “Buck… Buck…”
Wilmington, as he walked toward the young man, prepared to
make a sly remark, but JD’s devastated look stopped him. “What’s
wrong?” Buck asked.
“We gotta go to Tierra Negra,” JD
stated. “We gotta go now.” He turned, prepared to run full-speed
to his room to pack. Buck’s hand, falling on his arm, stilled him.
“Why? What’s going on?”
Buck asked, glancing to Vin who’d been sitting on a chair nearby. The tracker
stood, watching them carefully and then headed toward them. Tanner said
nothing as he came alongside Buck, his gaze intent on JD.
“We gotta go to Tierra Negra,” JD
demanded breathlessly, looking sick.
“I know, Kid, you said that already.”
Buck grasped hold of the paper, but couldn’t get it loose without ripping it.
“What’s it say, JD?” Vin asked calmly.
JD’s lip quivered as he explained,
“Chris says … Chris says that three men gunned down Ezra… gunned him down!
We gotta go to Tierra Negra and take care of things.”
Neither Buck nor Vin spoke immediately.
“Does it say if Ezra’s…all right?” Buck whispered hoarsely, as he tried
to see around JD and read the page. Standish was supposed to return
yesterday on the late stage. When he hadn’t stepped down, nobody had
been too concerned. After all, Chris would be returning the next day, so
maybe they’d be coming together. Buck shook his head, wanting to think
clearly. “JD?” he prodded, since the kid hadn’t answered.
“He’s dead,” JD whispered.
“Chris say’s Ezra’s dead. We gotta to Tierra Negra,” he uttered
one more time before he turned abruptly, tearing the message because neither he
nor Buck would let go.
“Damn, goddamn,” Buck swore as he moved to follow the kid.
“Someone should stay,” Vin stated
solemnly, stalling the ladies’ man. “Someone’s gotta watch the
town.”
Buck nodded. “Nathan maybe.”
“Josiah, too,” Vin continued.
“He’ll want to come,” Buck told him.
“Can’t,” Vin returned, his voice calm
and cold, but he wouldn’t meet Buck’s eyes. “You know how he’ll
be. Four of us can take on those three.”
“He’ll want to break every bone in their
bodies,” Buck said softly, envisioning the preacher enraged. It was an
image that nobody wanted to see come to fruition. It wasn’t as if Buck
didn’t want to do the same, but there was a line he figured he wouldn’t
cross.
And there was silence between them. Finally, Buck, still holding a scrap of the note, said, “We keep
this to ourselves, just the five of us. No sense in causing the town any
grief.”
At the word ‘grief’, the tracker ducked
his head and headed toward his wagon.
Buck
sighed sadly, looking at the bit of paper in his fingers. “Dammnit,
Ezra,” he whispered. “What did you do?” And, with a groan, he went
in search of Nathan and Josiah.
Part 10:
The pinto moved through the dusk at a tired
gait and his rider slumped in the saddle. Ezra drew in a short
breath. His gut hurt miserably, his head throbbed, and he felt so
sick…so tired. But he was home. He’d gotten away from Tierra
Negra. He’d succeeded. That brought a smile to his wan face.
The journey had been slow, and Ezra, unable
to concentrate, had let the horse wander more he should have. Several
times, he’d awakened from a daze, still in the saddle, not knowing where he
was. He knew better than to travel in that condition – with an unknown
horse no less. But he kept going.
Back within the streets of Four Corners, he
allowed himself to relax. It was quiet in town, none of the usual rabble.
He found Yosemite taking care of things outside of the livery, and gratefully
handed over the horse’s reins. Yosemite looked at Ezra curiously, but,
as was his norm, had nothing to say.
Home. He was home. Now what?
Where were the others? What should he do? All he wanted to do was to
go to his own room, curl up against his pain and never worry about rising again.
Instead, he climbed the stairs above the livery.
Slowly, painstakingly, Ezra made his way to
Nathan’s clinic. Help… I need help. God, why does Nathan
insist on keeping his place of business at the top of the stairs?
Doesn’t he realize that sick people need to get here? At the door,
he rested his head against the frame and knocked. There was no response.
“Nathan?” he called softly. “Nathan?” He knocked again,
harder, then pounded. At the assault, the door swung open and he was left
to face an empty room.
“Nathan?” he whispered, his hot
head resting on the doorframe. But the healer
did not return his call. The room, lit by a forgotten lamp, remained
unoccupied.
With a sigh, Ezra looked over his shoulder,
wondering if he could make it down those stairs to go in search of the healer
– or any of their group. It had taken everything he had to get this far.
There’d be no return journey to the stairs. The lit lamp told him that,
perhaps, Nathan was coming back.
Ezra pressed away from the doorframe and stumbled into the room. Along one wall was Nathan’s collection of
medicines. Maybe he could figure out what would be best to take care of
his pains. Leaning against Nathan’s workbench, he tried to focus on all
the little bottles and boxes. Perhaps it would be obvious. The
laudanum could ease his discomfort. But everything swam. He
blinked and swallowed thickly, feeling thirsty, tired and sick. His vision
was edged in black; it drew around him like the paint on the silver plate.
Gripping
the table for a moment longer, Ezra softly called, “Nathan,” and then
collapsed to the floor.
Part 11:
They came into the town of Tierra Negra as
night fell, the three of them, riding abreast. The town was still.
The townspeople, the few that were out, looked at the newcomers timidly, afraid
of them.
At the saloon that Chris had specified, they
dismounted. A wiry old-timer scowled at them as they tied their horses. A
watcher over the town, he didn’t like trouble. He didn’t like what had
been happening lately. He didn’t want any of this. “Ain’t a
safe time to be here, boys,” he told them. “Best go home.”
“Why d'ya say that?” Buck
asked.
“Two strangers are already dead,” the
old man returned. “Don’t want to see any more of that.”
“Two?” JD echoed, his voice high
with a sudden fear. “Who? Did you know who they were?”
The old timer rubbed his chin.
“First one – didn’t know his name. That other though…” and his
voice dropped as he whispered, “… was the gunslinger, Chris Larabee.”
“Oh God,” Buck muttered, feeling the
blood run from his face. Vin grasped his arm in a grip too tight to be
merely helpful. A glance to the tracker, and Buck saw Tanner’s
expression twist with rage. JD was gaping like a fish, his eyes wide as he
glanced about. “No,” Buck muttered. “No, it can’t be!
Not Chris, too.”
“Chris and Ezra?” JD squeaked.
“Both of them?”
Vin, his jaw set and his eyes narrowed to
hate-filled slits, shoved his way past his companions. “What the hell
happened to them?” he snarled as he reached for the old man.
The townsperson back-stepped, yelping,
“That’s all I know! I wasn’t here! I don’t know nothing
else!”
Buck closed his eyes, feeling cold and alone
– Chris… oh God, not Chris, too! What would they do without him?
JD was making odd little sounds, starting
to talk, but unable to say anything.
Vin stopped short of grabbing onto the
frail-looking, frightened man. “Who knows?” he bellowed. “Who
knows what happened?”
“Boys,” a quiet voice spoke from beside
them, and the three turned, utterly relieved to find Larabee standing in the
doorway of the saloon.
“Stud!” Buck cried joyfully.
Ignoring the hard expression of his friend, Wilmington grabbed hold of Larabee
in an ecstatic embrace.
JD was beside them, crying out, “Oh God,
it’s good to see you!” and patting Chris happily on the back.
Vin stood back, smiling as he watched Buck
and JD greet their friend, and letting the old man scamper away. His smile
dropped as he saw Chris’ expression.
Chris jerked away from Buck.
“Inside,” he ordered and turned, disappearing into the saloon.
Buck and JD, stunned by Chris’ reaction,
didn’t move immediately, so Vin was the first to go after Larabee. The
tracker followed Chris to a table at the back of the saloon, already graced with
a half-empty bottle of whisky, a shot glass and a bundle of black cloth.
“Hey, Big Dog,” Buck said as he grabbed
some glasses from the bar. “You sure gave us a scare. Goddamn, I think my heart stopped.”
JD came up, saying, “They said you were
dead!” as he pulled out a chair. “God, we thought you were dead!”
“Where are the others?” Chris asked
sharply.
“Figured we gotta leave someone to watch
the town,” Vin declared. “Figured maybe Josiah should stay out of
this. We got better numbers anyway.”
Chris looked as if he wanted to contradict
that idea, but he nodded once, realizing there was wisdom in that plan.
“What the hell’s going on here?” Buck
asked. “People are sayin’ you’re dead.”
“Wasn’t me,” Chris declared, pouring
himself a drink. “Ezra used my name. They killed him for it.”
JD and Buck were silent again, remembering
that first sorrow, feeling a little guilty about forgetting it. “He’s
really dead?” JD asked, wishing that this was just another misunderstanding.
Chris didn’t speak. His lips
twitched as he fingered his glass. “There was nothing I could do,” he
whispered. The four men were silent. The bottle was passed around.
They all sat, thinking about things, thinking about Ezra.
Finally, as Chris poured himself another
drink, he said, “I was out at Goss’s when it happened. He was in
town, talking to a couple men along the street. Another man shot him as he was
turning to go.” Chris’ eyes grew hard at that statement, knowing that
Ezra never had a chance. “They came back and took his body.”
Chris closed his eyes, hating what he had to say. “They dragged him
through the street. Burned him. Kicked the body to pieces,” Chris got out, belting down the shot
and slammed down the glass.
Buck gulped down his own glass, grimaced and
stated hopefully, “Maybe it wasn’t Ezra.”
Chris continued in that same cold tone.
“Bank manager remembered him.”
“Could have been someone else that got
killed though,” JD tried, holding his glass, but unable to drink it.
“Maybe some other fella that was walkin’ in the street.
Could’ve been someone else!”
Chris shook his head miserably.
“Folks described him good enough. Brown hair, green eyes. Said he
was short.”
“Ezra’s not short,” JD shot back,
looking toward Vin for back up, but the tracker didn’t look at him.
“Where’s Ezra now?” Buck asked.
Chris jerked his shoulders in a shrug.
“Tried to find him,” he bitterly remarked. “Wasn’t anything left.
Too many damn animal bones in that heap.” He gestured to the black cloth
at his elbow and stated, “Found this in the street. That’s all
that’s left of him.”
JD picked up the jacket, handling as if it
was a sacred relic, recognizing it as the black jacket that Ezra wore
occasionally. He didn't want to believe that this was all they had – that Ezra was gone.
“Where are they?” Vin finally spoke. “Those men who did it.”
“North of town,” Chris responded. “Most likely at an old mine.”
“When do we go?” Vin continued.
“First light,” Chris replied.
JD dropped the jacket to the table as he
looked between the two. “What are their names?” he asked.
“Shouldn’t we know who they are?”
Vin
stood abruptly. “Don’t need names. They’re dead men,” he
stated as he turned to go in search of a room for the night.
Part 12:
It was late when Nathan struggled with
Josiah, forcing him up the stairway to the clinic. It would have been
easier to get Josiah to the church, but Jackson figured that Sanchez’ mood
wouldn’t be fit for that sacred place. The preacher’s eyes had taken
on an unseeing cast and people ducked from him. Nathan had seen that look
before and knew that it was time to get Josiah away from the rest of humanity
– if only to save the preacher himself.
Josiah moved without thinking, his head hung
low, a hand wrapped around a bottle. He hadn’t really started in on it
yet – but wait until he was settled in for the night. Already he was
feeling sorry for what he might do to Nathan’s clinic once he got into his
cups. God, he just wanted to smash something, to destroy. He reached
out one hand, as if he was snatching someone by the neck.
They’d killed him… someone had shot
Ezra … killed him in the street. A hand clenched, wanting to beat
the brains out of the murderer, wanting to pulverize whoever had killed that
young man, who’d taken Ezra from them… from him.
God have mercy on their souls because I won’t. If I
get my hands on them – if I could just… Wearily, Josiah ran an arm
across his eyes.
Josiah stopped in his tracks. Behind
him, he heard Nathan let out an “ooof” as he ran into the preacher.
“Come on, Josiah,” Nathan said softly. “Let’s just get in for the
night, okay?”
“They’ll pay,” Josiah ground out.
“Tell me they’ll pay.”
Nathan, his hand at Josiah’s back, stated
solemnly, “They’ll pay, Josiah. Buck and the others, they’ll get
whoever did this.
“Not looking for justice. I want
vengeance,” Josiah growled. “I want them in my hands. I want
them at my mercy.”
And that’s why you’re here,
Nathan thought as he stood behind his friend. We can’t let you do
that. I don’t care what happens to those men, but I worry about
what’ll happen to you.
Not moving yet, Josiah whispered, “I
can’t believe he’s dead. Nathan… he can’t be.”
Stuck on the stairs, Nathan could do nothing
more than keep his hand at the big man’s back. “I know…” he
uttered softly. “It just doesn’t seem possible. It’s not
right.” The former slave sighed, feeling that same sadness. How
could that irritating southern bastard be gone? “Seems to me he’d
cheat death every time. Seems to me he’d win.”
“He was a good man,” Josiah said to
the balcony above him.
“He was,” Nathan agreed. “Come
on. Let’s get to my place so we can finish that bottle.”
With a nod, Josiah continued his journey up
the stairs, cradling the bottle to his chest. He didn’t notice that
Nathan’s door was ajar when he reached it – he only wanted to get behind it
and shut out the blackness of the night. With a careless hand, he shoved
the door further and strode in. Nathan was right behind him.
In the room, still illuminated by one lamp,
something was out of place – yet totally perfect.
Sanchez came to a stop, blinking. He
was hallucinating – he knew that. He gazed the form that lay on its back
beside Nathan’s desk. Josiah knew that he had to be wrong. That
familiar head was turned to one side; those narrow and expressive hands were
curled and quiet beside him.
Josiah waited for Nathan, unable to believe
his own eyes. He didn’t dare speak in fear of dispelling the specter.
Please, let Nathan see it, too. He felt
Nathan’s hand fall on his shoulder, and then heard Jackson’s voice cry out,
“Ezra!”
Thank you, Lord!
Both of them were on their knees in seconds,
beside the fallen man. “He’s hot,” Nathan murmured as he touched
their stricken friend. “Ezra,” he called softly. “Ezra, can
you hear me?”
“How… how?” Josiah whispered, allowing
himself to touch the man – dispelling his doubts as the Disciple Thomas might
have.
“He cheats,” Nathan said with a laugh,
“Thank God, he cheats!”
Ezra muttered and his eyelids fluttered as
Nathan felt about, trying to figure out what was wrong. Josiah pulled
Ezra’s head into his lap and spoke soothing words. Ezra let out a gasp at that movement.
“It’s okay, son,” Josiah crooned.
“We got you now. It’s all right, we found you. You’re home.”
The preacher’s gaze flitted up, watching the healer gently move his hands over
the gambler. When a frown caught Nathan’s face, Josiah asked,
“What’s wrong with him?”
Pushing back the unfamiliar brown jacket,
Nathan found the odd moon-shaped cut across Ezra’s chest and the mottled, ugly
bruise beneath it. Oh Lord, no. Nathan’s heart sped
up at the sight. The cut was red and puffy, but the bruise was the
real concern. The healer had seen damage like that during the war
– men died when they had bruises like that on their bellies. There were
too many things that could have gone wrong inside. Nathan admitted,
“This don’t look good.” And then repeated it as a whisper.
“This doesn’t look good.” Hoping he was wrong, Nathan probed the
spot to find out more.
Ezra came awake in a flash, swinging wide.
Nathan was able to duck in time, and Josiah quickly corralled Ezra’s flailing
arms. Nathan pressed down on the gambler’s legs before he could get away.
“It’s okay! It’s okay!” Josiah assured as Ezra breathed
harshly and tried to fling himself from their grips. “Ezra, Ezra…
it’s all right. Hush… shhh…” Josiah pulled Ezra’s arm close,
uttering, “It’s just me, Ezra. It’s Josiah and Nathan here.
We’re tryin’ to help you.”
Panting and sweating, Ezra blinked at the
two. “Sss…sorry,” he hissed out. “I… I don’t
know… don’t know… what… came over me.” He swallowed thickly and
started to drift off again.
Gently, Nathan tapped Ezra’s cheek.
“Come on, Ezra. Stay with me a minute.”
Ezra’s eyes opened as Josiah relieved his
tight grip on Ezra’s arms, but didn’t let him go. “Made it back,”
Standish muttered.
“Yeah, you did,” Nathan agreed.
“They didn’t find me… Safe…
Ever’one’s safe.”
Josiah and Nathan exchanged a look, not
understanding.
“Yes,” Jackson replied.
“Everyone is safe,” he said, hoping that he wasn’t lying about the others.
“Now, let’s get you into that bed so you’ll be more comfortable, okay?”
Ezra nodded and tried to stand, but
couldn’t outmaneuver Nathan and Josiah, who efficiently lifted him and eased
him onto the clinic’s bed. “Better?” Nathan asked.
“Bettah,” Ezra replied as he settled
into the pillows. “Could I… could I… trouble you for a… glass
of…water? I am…rather…
rather…parched.”
Before he could finish the request, Nathan
had crossed the room and poured a glass of water from a pitcher.
“When was the last time you had something to drink, Ezra?” Nathan
asked pointedly.
“Can’t quite recall…. I… I’ve been
rather… confused … I… I really don’t … feel well,” Ezra admitted
quietly.
Josiah held Ezra up as Nathan steadied the
glass and helped Ezra drink. The gambler’s arm shook and he grimaced as
Josiah moved him, but greedily drank from the mug. The preacher, cupping
one hand around Ezra’s head to hold it steady, frowned. “Nathan,”
Sanchez said softly. “I think he hit his head.”
Nathan felt the area where Josiah indicated.
“Damn,” Nathan sighed. “When’d you hit your head, Ezra?” Jackson
asked as Ezra finished his cup.
“I hit my head?” Ezra returned and
blinked slowly. “Don’t recall…”
No wonder he was so befuddled. Nathan
waved off the statement and said, “I want to get you out of this shirt, okay,
Ezra?” When he received a fractional nod from Ezra, Jackson stripped off
the gambler’s upper clothing, as Josiah held him upright. It took a few
minutes to undo the buckles and straps of Ezra’s armament – something that
always had to be contended with. Once Nathan dumped the jacket, vest and
stained shirt on the floor, Josiah settled Ezra onto the pillows. Jackson
frowned when he got a good look at the strange wound on Ezra’s chest and
abdomen. “What happened?” the healer asked.
“Got shot,” Ezra replied dreamily.
Nathan frowned. This didn’t look
like any gunshot wound he’d ever seen. The area was swollen and
discolored. He touched the spot carefully, aware of Ezra’s
discomfort. Standish raised a hand as if to push Jackson away, but dropped
the arm before Josiah needed to stop him. Instead, Sanchez grasped the
hand, offering what comfort he could as Jackson felt around, a studious and
disquieted look on his face.
“You pass any blood?” Jackson
asked seriously, noting the deep reds and blacks of the bruise.
“Yes…” Ezra admitted dully, his eyes
slowly closing.
“Did you have blood when you made water
or…”
“I was…” Ezra started, but drifted off
before he could say any more.
Josiah continued to hold Ezra’s hand in
both of his, compressing it. “You want me to wake him?” Josiah asked quietly.
Nathan shook his head. “No, let him
sleep. He needs… he needs to rest.” Quietly, he laid one hand on
Ezra’s forehead, finding him clammy and feverish. “Damn,” he
muttered.
Josiah asked, “Will he be okay?”
Nathan let out a breath.
“Maybe…” he stated, unsure.
“That bruise?” Josiah tried when
Nathan stopped talking.
“Besides the broken rib?” Jackson
let out a sigh. “Could be he’s just… you know… just a little hurt
inside and it’ll heal.”
“Or?” Josiah prompted.
“It could be bad,” Nathan told him. Not
looking up, he said, “Don’t know what I could do if he needed to be cut
open. He’ll need a real doctor.” He kept his hand on Ezra’s
forehead a moment more, before he stated, “Let’s get him a little more
comfortable. Can you get his boots
off? I’ll fetch some more water.”
“Should probably send word to Tierra Negra,”
Josiah commented. “I think the boys will be damn glad to hear that we
got him.”
“The line will be shut down at this
hour,” Nathan commented. “We’ll have Winston to send something off
first thing in the morning, once we see how he does through the night.”
With a sigh, he picked up Ezra’s dusty black hat that had rolled into a corner
of the clinic. Carefully, he set it on the bedpost so that it wouldn’t
be trodden upon.
Josiah didn’t release Ezra’s hand as
Nathan left the room. It seemed cruel that they had found Ezra, alive in
Four Corners, yet there may still be bad news to impart in the morning.
How could such good news be edged in blackness? “Let me tell them
something good, Ezra,” Josiah whispered. “What do you say about that?”
Releasing his hold on Ezra’s hand, Josiah
stood and started to work on getting Ezra settled for the night.
When Jackson returned, he found Ezra
carefully covered to his neck with a blanket, and Josiah sitting by the bedside with a wad
of cash in one hand and a bent silver tray in the other.
“Found this in his boot,” Josiah
commented as he nodded toward the money, unable to hide the pride in his voice.
He shoved the cash deeply into his pocket as he handed the tray to Nathan.
“This was in his coat.”
Nathan took the ruined, black-edged plate
from him and turned it over, running a finger along the sharp edge and examining
how the silver had been bent as if punched in the center. “Saved his
life, I reckon,” Nathan said quietly. “Like that diamond broach at
Ella Gaines’, or that wad of cash at the governor’s rally.” He
remembered those times – Ezra lying in the street, bleeding – then again at
Ella Gaines. Standish had lucked out both times – suffering from only a
small wound in one instance, and escaping with nothing more than a sore spot the
second time – musta just been a glancing blow that time. Lucky
bastard.
“He’s got the luck of the devil,”
Nathan commented. “Wonder how
many times he’ll cheat death.”
Solemnly
laying one hand against Ezra’s slowly rising chest, Josiah stated, “One more
time. One more time, at least.”
Part 13:
The night had passed in
relative peace. Ezra slept. A fever kept him warm and restless, but
he didn’t awake, didn’t make a sound. Josiah and Nathan kept watch
over him, ensuring that there was no further swelling, monitoring his fever,
keeping him comfortable. The bump
on his head reduced. The cut looked better. The swollen area on his
belly didn't change. His fever remained mild.
Josiah didn’t ask Nathan
if that was good news. He watched the healer, wishing to know that
everything was okay, but they didn’t speak on the matter. Josiah quieted
his questions, his nervous fears, hoping that sleep might repair whatever
internal hurt Ezra had suffered.
Nathan pulled books down
from his library and quietly read, feeling his trepidation rise as he read one
grim prognosis after another. Josiah
prayed. Ezra slept.
Finally, as morning dawned
and half-asleep himself, Josiah sat back in his chair, keeping one hand on Ezra,
as if he suspected the gambler would disappear again if he was let loose.
You can’t die, Ezra, Josiah thought, watching Ezra’s still face.
You won’t. I won’t have it. We’re not going to let you down. You
made it home. You’ll come out of this.
He felt Ezra stir. The
preacher blinked.
“Ezra,” Josiah called
softly, grasping Ezra’s hand again.
Nathan, still hunched over
his volumes, turned. “He wakin’?”
Josiah nodded.
“Ezra, can you hear me?” he called.
This would either be very
good, Nathan thought, or very bad. He’d hoped that if Ezra were to
suffer, that he’d just keep sleeping and never wake from it. Let him
be okay, Jackson thought as he claimed the other chair, across from Josiah.
Gently, he tapped Ezra’s cheek. “Come on, Ezra. Open your
eyes?”
Ezra furrowed his brow and
lifted one lazy hand in an attempt to bat Nathan away. “None of that,”
Nathan told him. “Wake up for
just a minute and then I’ll let ya sleep all you want.”
“Promise?” Ezra hoarsely
uttered.
Nathan smiled hopefully. “Yeah, I
do.”
With a flutter, Ezra opened
his eyes and stared up at the two men. He winced and closed his eyes once
more.
“Ezra?” Josiah called plaintively as he clung to Ezra, distressed by the
gambler’s lack of action. He was answered by a moan from Ezra.
“Are you in a lot of
pain?” Nathan asked.
“Oh…” Ezra let out.
He opened his eyes and gazed beseechingly at them. “Oh
God…pain…pain…”
Josiah held tightly.
“Just ride it out. We’re here with you.”
Ezra groaned as he tried to
curl into a ball. “God, oh God…Make it stop…”
“Ezra,” Nathan called.
“Tell me where you’re hurtin’.” Jackson’s hands hovered over the
gambler, wondering what he could touch, what he could do to solve this.
“I’ll getcha somethin’ for the pain. Just let me know.”
“Tell him, son,” Josiah
pleaded, watching Ezra’s pale face contort with pain. Tears came to the
big preacher’s eyes. He clutched Ezra’s hand all the tighter, wishing he could
take on that pain, wishing he could do something to stop it.
Nathan’s eyes were wide,
his heart pounding. All of his worst fears were realized. Lord
have mercy!
“Oh!” Ezra moaned,
squinting his eyes shut once more. “Christ!” he gasped.
“Agony…oh! It’s killing me!”
Nathan leapt to his feet,
toppling the chair. It slammed to the ground as he twisted away from it.
Turning toward his shelves, Nathan prayed that he’d know what to do to help
Ezra. So much depended on what was causing the pain. If he chose the
wrong cure, it might make things worse. Did he need to operate? Ether!
Where was the ether! Best that he put Ezra under as soon as possible.
Save him from that pain. Jackson’s heart hammered in his chest as he
thought about cutting into Ezra to fix damaged organs. Oh God, was he up
to it?
Ezra was whimpering
pathetically. Tears ran down Josiah’s face. Nathan knew he had to
do something, and do it now -- but he couldn’t operate without knowing more.
“What hurts, Ezra?” Jackson cried. “I gotta know so I can try to fix
it.”
“Just tell him, boy,”
Josiah pleaded, kneading Ezra’s hand between his. “We’ll do anything
we can to help you.”
Ezra’s eyes shot open as
he yelped, “My hand! Please, my hand,” he nearly sobbed. “For
the love of God, let go.” He
brought up his other arm and tried to free his poor hand from Josiah’s mighty
paws.
Josiah released Ezra
immediately, his eyes round with wonder. “Ezra… I’m sorry… I…”
“He would have crushed
it,” Ezra whined to Nathan as he settled back in his bed. “It’ll
never be the same again… never!”
Nathan released a sigh as he
observed Ezra flex his hand, pouting. Trying to settle his jangled nerves,
Jackson righted his chair and sat down. Ezra pulled his hand to his chest
and muttered unhappily.
“Ezra?” Nathan called,
drawing the gambler’s attention.
“Mr. Jackson?” Ezra
returned, sounding like a spoiled child. “How could you let him do
that?” He threw a dirty look at Josiah, but it made the big man smile.
“You know that my hands are my livelihood. He might've broken every
bone.”
“How you feelin’?”
the healer asked, risking a smile as well as Ezra scowled.
“Uncomfortable,” Ezra
returned, trying to sit up and letting out a grunt. “Ah hell,” he
grumbled. “That’s right. I
was shot.”
“Broke a rib,” Nathan
told him. “Got a nasty cut, and might have hurt something inside.”
Ezra considered this,
bringing a hand to the sore area. “Ah yes,” he uttered.
“I’ve been unwell.”
“Ya in any pain?” Nathan
asked.
Ezra held out his hand as if
any damage might be seen from Josiah’s mauling.
“Besides that,” Nathan
commented.
After a contemplative look,
Ezra decided, “Not so bad. Better than before.”
“Better?” Josiah
inquired.
With a nod, Ezra confirmed,
“Much better than when I got here. Lord, I was in a deplorable state.”
He paused before he asked, “It was last night that I arrived here, wasn’t
it?”
“Yeah, just last night,”
Nathan told him, amazed that only one night had passed since they found him.
“You gave us a scare,”
Josiah said solemnly. “Hell of a scare. They told us you were
dead.”
“Dead? Me?” Ezra
said and then frowned. “Well, nearly.”
“What happened in Tierra
Negra?” the healer asked.
Making a face, Ezra
explained, “A vile miscreant saw fit to mow me down in the street. I was saved
by a purloined piece of silver.” Ezra sighed. “I shall never be law
abiding again.” When the preacher dolefully shook his head at that comment,
Ezra grinned and continued, “I left town immediately, seeing no need for
further perforation. Traveled some distance to get here.” He
frowned and added, “I wasn’t thinkin’ soundly.”
Nathan nodded. “You
must have hit your head when you fell. Got your innards banged around a bit.
Looks like you just needed some rest.” Thank the Lord. “And you weren’t drinkin’ enough water.”
“Ah!” Ezra responded.
“That sounds likely. I can’t remember if I ever did replenish myself
on the journey home.” Ezra held out his hand, and Nathan wordlessly
handed him a cup.
Watching his patient drink,
Nathan asked, “How’s your belly feelin’?”
Ezra considered, then raised
an eyebrow. “Hungry!” Ezra decided as he passed the empty glass back
to the healer. “It’s been well over a day since I’ve last eaten.
It’s time to rectify that situation. When’s breakfast, my friends?
It’ll be on me. I’m feeling in the mood for sausage, eggs and
griddle cakes with jam and butter.” He cocked his head at the men,
surprised by their pleased expressions. “And plenty of coffee with
milk.”
“Toast and tea,” Nathan
decided. “We’ll start with that and see how it goes.”
Ezra sighed. He
crossed his arms over his chest and winced when he realized that was not a
comfortable position. He let his arms drop to his sides. “Very
well,” he muttered. “But I’d like some jam. Marmalade if
possible…”
“I want you to use the
chamber pot before you eat anything,” Nathan told him.
Ezra declared, “I will
make it to the privy, I believe.”
“Ezra, I need to check
your…. for…” Nathan tried to explain.
Ezra tugged the blankets
around himself, clutching them at his chest. “You’ll do no such thing.
I am quite capable of making it down to the privy and don’t need any
examinations of that sort going on!”
“Ezra…”
“No, I refuse!”
“I’ll get breakfast,” Josiah chuckled and stood,
giving Ezra a slap on the leg, and squeezed Nathan’s shoulder before he left
the room. He’d let Nathan and Ezra duke it out. It was good to
hear them arguing. Sanchez noted a touch of amusement in Nathan’s
responses to Ezra’s overly dramatic refusals.
Nathan’s behavior told
Josiah all he needed to know – it looked like Ezra was going to be okay.
The fact that Ezra was feeling well enough to want breakfast, and that he had
adequate rest to argue, was evidence enough for Sanchez. God, it
was good.
Once Josiah had descended
the stairs, he headed to the restaurant to place a breakfast order and then go
to the telegraph office, hoping that he would be able to get the good news to
the others before they did anything rash.
Part 14:
Chris gazed down into the
canyon and the black hole in the ground. From their vantage point, they
could see the three inhabitants moving around. It had taken some time to
find this place, but once they located the killers, Malone’s gang was as good
as dead.
They’d spent a sleepless
night in Tierra Negra. Vin had disappeared at some point. They’d
found him the next morning, waiting near the livery, his hair cropped short so
that just the ends appeared beneath his hat. Shocked, JD had asked him
why, but Vin offered no answered. Buck had taken the kid aside to explain
that it was a sign of mourning for the tracker who’d spent so much time amongst
the Indians. Even now, JD could not help flashing curious glances at the
shorn tracker.
The lawmen of Four Corners,
waited on the ridge, only long enough to get a feel for their prey. We’ll
take them down, Chris promised. Each one of them. They’ll
suffer for what they did to us – to Ezra – to me.
The pain hadn’t left him
– that horrible ache. These men had killed Ezra – killed him because
they thought Ezra was Chris Larabee. Why? Larabee thought. Why
did it have to be Ezra? Why couldn’t the bastards have gone after me?
I’m the one they wanted. I’m the one that idiots go gunning for.
Why’d they shoot down that conniving southerner instead?
For a moment, Chris imagined it – seeing himself
walking down the street of Tierra Negra and coming across those men. He
imagined two of them distracting him and the third gunning him down without
warning.
But Chris wasn’t in town when it happened. They
wouldn’t have found him there. Then Larabee thought again, and imagined
them coming to Goss’s place, and he ground his teeth as he came to a
realization.
Son of a bitch…
Quickly, he picked out Malone. Everyone was afraid
of Malone in Tierra Negra. Afraid of that toad?
By the end of the day there’d be someone new to fear. Larabee
made a motion to the others and whispered, “He’s mine.”
Vin kept his aim on the man.
Buck nodded tightly. JD swallowed. Buck regarded the kid – JD
looked paler than usual, sick with the news of what had happened to Ezra, but
seemed to be afraid of something else. Wilmington pulled the kid down, hidden from
sight and promised, “We’ll take care of them. They ain’t gonna take
us out.”
JD nodded. “I
know,” he whispered. “I got no doubts.”
Buck went on, “We have the
advantage this time. We’ll surprise those bastards just like they did to
Ezra. They’ll die like pigs.”
JD glanced from Vin to
Chris. Both men seemed to have a darkness about them and JD wondered what
would happen if Vin got to Malone before Chris. Would either man show any
mercy? Vin seemed to know of a lot of ways to hurt a man. Chris had
killed many.
With his hair cut to an
unfamiliar and brutal edge, Vin had a vicious and feral look about him. Chris, in
his blue shirt, seemed to be steeped in darkness. JD knew that neither of
these men would show mercy.
“We’ll do this thing,”
Buck continued. “Pay ‘em back in kind. They didn’t give Ezra a
chance.”
“It won’t bring Ezra
back,” JD said hollowly.
The statement brought Buck
up short. “No,” he agreed. “It won’t. But that’s why
we gotta do this. An eye for an eye,” and Buck paused, remembering the
last time he’d heard that phrase, uttered by Ma Nichols after her boys had
died on the streets of Four Corners.
“Are we gonna drag them
and burn them, like they did to… to Ezra?” JD asked slowly.
“Are we gonna kick their burned bodies to pieces?”
“No,” Buck quietly
exclaimed, stung by the questions. “We’re not like that.” He
glanced to his companions. “We’ll bring them back alive if we can,”
he raised his voice enough for the other two to hear him.
Chris and Vin both shot him
reproachful glances, and then hunkered down with the other two. “Easier
to bring in a dead man than one that’s still kickin’,” Vin proclaimed.
“There’s them that deserve a fair shake and them that don’t.”
“Yeah, but…” JD tried.
“They killed Ezra,” Vin
growled, looking like a different man than JD was used to. “Ezra!
Shot him down like a dog in the street.”
“Just Malone,” JD
reminded.
“The others were in his
gang,” Chris put in. “They’re all in this. They’ll all
pay.”
“We don’t know for sure
what happened,” JD continued, wondering if he was going too far. He
trusted these men with his life, but now he was treading on dangerous ground.
Chris’ face was taut with rage. Vin seemed to be barely keeping himself
in check. Even Buck had a sharpness that JD hadn’t seen before.
“We know enough,” Vin
responded. “We know Ezra’s dead because of them.”
“We should bring them in
and get them to trial,” JD said quickly. “Judge Travis won’t let them get
away with it.”
Vin snorted and said, “Too
many guilty men have escaped the noose.”
“And some innocent ones
have been claimed!” JD returned, making Vin blink.
Chris’ eyes narrowed as he
stared down at the kid, leaning in close and intimidating. “They killed
Ezra because they thought they were gunning down Chris Larabee! They admit
it. There ain’t no doubt.”
“So you’ll gun them down
in return?” JD asked. “You want to be just like them? Cold
hearted killers?”
Chris’ scowl deepened, not liking where this conversation
was leading. That black hatred towards those men seemed less oppressive as
JD argued with them. Damn that kid!
“Rider,” Vin cut in,
nodding to the horseman that trotted in their direction. They turned,
watching as the big roan horse meandered a bit, as if his pale-haired rider was looking
for something – someone. Chris recognized the man, recognized him
because he’d seen the man doing the same thing the previous day.
“Jude,” Chris muttered,
scrambling down the hillside to meet the man. Jude noted the descent and
came to meet him as Buck and JD followed. Vin stayed behind to keep an eye
on the men beyond the ridge.
Jude nodded to Larabee.
“Sheriff told me you were here. Came to get my horse,” he said as he
dismounted from the animal that Larabee had rented earlier. “You can
have this one back.”
“I got yours,” Larabee
declared, nodding toward the hill that hid their mounts.
There’d been no time to rent another horse that morning, and Jude’s sorrel
had proven to be a fine ride. No wonder the man was anxious to get it
back. Chris felt barely civil as he said, “You can have it.”
Jude pulled something from
his pocket and handed it to Chris. “This come for you. Man at the
telegraph office heard I was comin’. Said you’d want it.”
Chris nodded and accepted
the note, watching as Jude patted the nose of the rented horse and waited
patiently for his own to be returned to him.
Glancing upward toward Vin,
Chris unfolded the note. He let out a breath as he read the words, and
then stood as if struck.
“He okay?” Jude asked,
turning toward Buck.
“Chris?” Buck
asked, grabbing the note in Chris’ hands and succeeding in pulling it way.
Chris had the strangest expression and Buck couldn’t fathom what that look
conveyed.
“Buck!” JD cried.
“What’s it say?”
Pursing his lips, Wilmington
silently read through the message, and then let out a quiet laugh.
“JD…” he started, clamping one hand over the kid’s shoulder.
“Looks like we got ourselves a beautiful day started.” He waved the
note toward Vin, who only gave him a passing glance before returning his gaze to
his task. “And we got ourselves a crazy southern con man still.”
When JD gave him a puzzled
look, Buck told him. “Ezra’s alive. He showed up in Four Corners last
night.” Shaking his head, Buck regarded the note again. “Nate
and ‘Siah’s been in a dither about him overnight, but seems he’s okay.”
He glanced up at Vin and cocked his head as he regarded the tracker’s
strangely short hair. “Ezra’s gonna have some explaining to do.”
Extending a hand to Jude,
Buck said, “Can’t thank you enough for bringing this to us.”
“Gosh!” JD
exclaimed, as Buck gave Jude a hearty handshake. The kid stepped in to
offer the man one as well. “Ezra’s okay? What about that
body then?"
Jude shrugged. "Could 'ave been that drifter that the undertaker's
missing."
He glanced up
to Vin, wanting to shout out the words to the quiet tracker, but he remembered
where they were. He smiled. Vin’s hair didn’t look quite so
savage anymore. In this light, it looked a bit… silly. The ends of
his freshly cut hair stuck out at weird angles under his hat.
Chris still hadn’t moved.
Suddenly, he could breathe again. It was as if a heavy weight had been
lifted from him. The blackness that
had surrounded him pulled back.
“What do we do about the
Malone gang?” JD asked. “You know, now that Ezra’s not dead?”
“We bring them in,”
Chris responded, finally finding a voice. “Attempted murder. Desecration
of a body.”
Turning to JD, Chris added, “We bring them to trial. It’s the right
thing to do.”
Part 15:
Mary Travis stood on the
boardwalk on the edge of Tierra Negra, twisting a handkerchief. She
waited, hoping, waited for Chris and the others to return. They’d been
gone all day, hunting down the men who’d killed Ezra Standish.
The news was still a pain to
her – only two days ago, she’d shared a coach with the southerner.
He’d been a godsend on that journey, keeping Billy occupied with all manner of
card tricks. The other passengers had been mesmerized by his display.
She smiled, remembering how Billy had laughed. The smile became melancholy
as she remembered how Ezra had egged on the poor drummer – and how Chris had
fumed.
And then a man killed Ezra.
Chris and the others went in search of the killer and his gang. She was
left at Goss’ ranch until she couldn’t bear it any longer. If she had
to wait for Chris – she’d wait for him in town, and make certain that he
returned in one piece – body and soul.
She had seen a blackness come over Chris when the news
reached them. It was if someone had rid the man of any joy, of any hope
for comfort, any light. Chris Larabee would be consumed if he didn’t
carry out punishment against those men.
Where are you Chris? she thought as she waited.
She’d gone around the
town, asking questions, building on her story, finding out what was known.
When she questioned the undertaker, he’d seemed a bit evasive in his answers,
as if he was hiding something – maybe he was just concerned about the theft of
the body. Not good for business, she decided glumly.
Nowhere did she hear any
good news. Every witness told her the same sorrowful story – the
‘man-in-black’ was gunned down. ‘Larabee’ was dead. They’d had no doubts.
Archie Malone had done the deed in cold blood, made certain 'Chris' was dead
with the terrible dragging through the street. Oh, Ezra!
She waited, wringing the
cloth. When she finally saw the approach of horsemen, she counted
excitedly. Eight horses made their way toward them. She counted
heads – and let out a breath as she counted eight again: her four
lawmen, the three outlaws… and one more. For a moment she held the
fantasy that the eighth man might be Ezra. She smiled, thinking how
perfect that would be. That Ezra wasn’t truly dead – that he’d just
left town – that he’d been found -- they’d been mistaken.
It would be too perfect, she
told herself. Nothing is ever that perfect. That sort of ending only
happens in hackneyed stories.
Secretly, she wished for a
hack.
Her dream was dashed as the
riders came closer, and she recognized one of the ‘others’ as Jude –
Martin’s friend. But the four lawmen of Four Corners alive and well,
even if Vin looked different than before.
Chris led the way, ponying a horse at his side. The captured man looked
cowed, bowing his head as he made his way to town. A vivid black eye
marred his face and he kept his gaze downward. JD and Buck led the other
strangers, with Vin and Jude following. Her gaze lingered on Vin a moment,
taking in his changed appearance. Vin, feeling her scrutiny, flicked
self-consciously at his neck-hairs.
As he passed, Chris spotted
Mary, nodded in recognition, but continued on his path toward the jail. JD
and Buck greeted her warmly, smiling and chattering about the job they’d just
done, bringing in the gang. Vin said nothing, keeping his mares’ leg
ready – carefully watching the town for signs of trouble – ready to protect
his brothers. But he did sink his head into his collar as he passed
her. Jude seemed lost and wanting to get away.
The eight men continued on
toward the jail, and she followed on foot, her heart thudding with the
realization that it was done – they’d brought in the men – alive.
Thank the Lord!
The men dismounted at the
jail. The outlaws were dragged inside. Jude stayed long enough to
ensure that his part was done, and then led his horse off – glad to be free.
Mary waited as long as she could and was about to shove the
jailhouse door open to find out what had happened when JD and Buck burst out.
“Mary!” Buck exclaimed, his smile broadening. “Your pretty
face is a sight for sore eyes. I’m filled up with the sorry folk I’ve
been around all day. What d’you say we get ourselves somethin’ to
eat?”
“You got them?”
Mary asked. “You got them all?”
“Sure did,” JD
responded. “Heck, they hardly put up any fight at all. Don’t
think they knew what they were doin’.” He nodded and declared,
“Greenhorns!”
Buck laughed loudly, giving
JD a hearty slap. “That they were, kid.
“No one got hurt?” Mary
asked hopefully.
“Well, can’t say that
exactly,” Buck said, rubbing his chin. “That Malone fella took a thump
or two.”
“We’re fine,” JD
included. “None of us got hurt.”
Mary smiled, grateful.
They would all be okay… all except for one. That thought drew her
face into a grimace again.
“Ya’ll right, Mary?”
Buck asked, concerned.
“Oh,” she started, and
then continued, “I guess I haven’t gotten over it yet. It’s so
sad.”
“Sad?” JD asked,
perplexed. “Heck, I’m pretty darn happy right now. We done a
good thing today.”
Buck nodded.
“You’re darn tootin’, JD. Now, I’m gonna get myself some dinner.
Let’s go, kid.”
“But, what about…”
Mary paused, perplexed at their attitude. How could they seem so
happy? “What about Ezra?”
“Figure he’s taken care
of by the others,” Buck commented. “Now, if you’ll excuse me.
Ma’am?” Buck touched the brim of his hat, and seeing that Mary
wasn’t considering moving, took JD with him as they headed down the boardwalk
in search of dinner.
Mary gaped. She
thought that the men would be more… affected… by Ezra’s death. The
fact that they seemed so unmoved angered her. Suddenly, she changed her
opinion on the state of the captured outlaws. Why weren’t they dead?
Did Ezra’s murder mean so little to the lawmen that they sought no justice
against the killers?
By the time Chris and a
bobbed Vin walked from the jailhouse, grinning as if nothing had happened, she
was fighting mad. “Chris Larabee!” she spit out. The men stopped
in their tracks. “It’s not as if I expect you to cry about it…”
Mary started, and found that she was fighting he own tears, “…but one would
think… one would think…” She stopped speaking and patted the corners of
her eyes with her handkerchief.
“Mary…” Chris prompted
when the woman went no further.
“What with the horrible
way that they killed Ezra, one would think that you might show some feeling
about it. Instead you just…” and she trailed off again.
“…you act as if it’s nothing!”
Compassion lit Chris’ eyes
as he reached out and grasped Mary’s shoulders. She gasped in surprised at his
firm touch. “He’s alive,” Chris uttered. “He’s in Four
Corners. He’s hurt, but alive.”
“He showed up in Four
Corners last night,” Vin went on. “Made his own way home. A
perfect ending, I’d think.” With an irritated look, he yanked off his
hat and ran his hand through his murdered hair, “If it weren’t for this.”
Mary listened, contemplated
a moment then giggled. “Thank God for hacks.”
Vin scowled and Chris didn't know how to take that reaction.
Part 16:
“Where is he?” Chris
asked sharply as he dismounted from the rented horse.
“Up there,” Nathan said
with a toss of his head, indicating the clinic above the livery.
“Resting comfortably,”
Josiah added, “if you ignore his protests.” Giving the cropped Vin a
curious glance, he asked, “What happened to you?”
Chagrinned, Vin shrugged.
“Don’t want to talk about it,” he grumbled.
Still staring at Vin, Nathan
asked, “Where’s Mary?” Vin ducked his head and looked away.
“She’s still
visiting,” Buck answered. “Figured it’d be better to take the coach
back since she had Billy with her.” He paused and asked, “How’s Ez doin’?”
“Got hit pretty hard.
Ain’t feelin’ his best, but he’ll be okay,” Nathan explained. “I
thought he might have had some damage inside, but it seems to have righted
itself.” The healer spoke those words quickly, remember the fear that
had gripped him, and the relief as Ezra improved. Standish was still
passing some blood, but it was clearing up as time passed.
Josiah continued, “Got a
rap on the head, too. He won’t be feeling himself for a while.”
“What the heck happened?
D’ya know?” JD asked as he handed the reins of his horse over to Yosemite.
“We ain’t been able to get a straight story from anyone. Everyone was
sure he was dead. What did he tell you?”
Nathan shrugged.
“Someone gunned him down in the street.” Nathan touched the side of
his head. “Musta hit his head when he fell. They took him to the
undertaker, left him, and he got away. Said he came back here because he
didn’t want any further trouble.”
Chris snorted, thinking
about how easier things might have been if Ezra had left some sort of clue to
what had happened. Heck, might have saved Vin his locks. Well, it
wasn’t as if Ezra had a chance, Chris decided. With men wanting him
dead, Ezra had made the wise decision and left.
“How could a man survive
getting shot?” JD asked. “Folks we talked to said Chris’d got shot
at real close range.”
“Chris?” Nathan
exclaimed, moving toward the gunslinger in concern. Josiah’s eyes went
wide at this new knowledge.
Larabee stilled them with a
raised hand. “Ezra got shot because they thought he was Chris
Larabee,” the leader explained. “He was hurt ‘cause of me.”
Josiah raised an eyebrow. “Funny, he never mentioned that.”
With a roll of his eyes,
Nathan asked, “Does that surprise you?”
Vin added, “The fellas we
brought in were sure they’d killed Chris Larabee.” He nodded to Chris at the
mention of the name. “Couldn’t quite believe they’d only nicked a
fella named Standish.”
“Thought we were lyin’
to them,” Buck included, then jabbed a thumb at the blond gunslinger,
“‘Til Mr. Personality was able to convince them who was the real Chris
Larabee.”
Chris sneered at his friend,
daring him to say another word. Buck shut up.
“Why?” Josiah shot
out. “Why would anyone think that Ezra was you?”
“Not tall enough to be
Larabee,” Nathan said, contemplatively.
JD, miffed, defended, “He
ain’t short!” Only Vin nodded in agreement. After a disgusted
sound, JD went on, “How did he
survive it, Nate? Everyone was sure he was dead.”
Josiah pulled the silver
plate from his pocket and showed it to the others. Vin took it, examining
the bent, cheap thing. Chris snatched it from the tracker,
recognizing it from the drummer’s cache – the silver Eleganté, edged
in black. “Son of a bitch,” Larabee muttered. He noted how deformed the piece was.
Buck let out a low whistle.
“Damn! Looks like the bullet nearly went through it. That had to
hurt!”
Still clutching the piece,
Chris asked, “He give you any explanation as to why he was using my name?”
Josiah and Nathan shook
their heads. “This was the first we heard about it,” Jackson said.
“He wasn’t shot for
his money,” Josiah went on, remembering how Ezra had insisted on getting his
hands on the cash and had secreted it somewhere on the bed. “He
wasn’t robbed.”
“We just figured someone
didn’t want him in their town,” Nathan decided. “They thought he was
a bad element.”
Chris winched at those
words, then pulled a bundle from his saddlebag. “Stay put,” he told
the others. “I’m gonna have a talk with the little bastard.”
“Don’t mess him up too
much,” Vin commented. “I’m gonna want a chance at him.” He
made an annoyed sweep at his damaged hair.
Chris wanted to give Vin a
glare, but was met with a happy smile from the tracker. Buck and JD echoed
that expression – all three of them looked as if they wanted to get up those
stairs as soon as possible, too, and give their brother a good drubbing.
God, they were too damn
happy to know that the trickster was still alive.
Chris shoved the bent plate
into his pocket, and clutched the bundle as he made his way up the stairs.
He paused when he reached the door. Taking one deep breath, he pushed the
door open.
The gambler was sitting up
in bed, playing a game of solitaire on the bedspread. Ezra looked up at
him, reaching for a weapon, before he released the Remington and returned to his
cards. Chris strode in, his spurs jangling harshly with each step.
“Mr. Larabee,” Ezra
drawled, laying a red seven on a black eight. “I see you and the others
have returned. If I am to believe
your telegram, the miscreants who put me in this state have been captured?”
Larabee regarded the gambler
as he approached the bed. He looked pale and a little shaky, but alive.
Chris remembered sifting through the ashes at the trash heap, finding bones from
deer and cattle, and others that might have been human. A pain and a
blackness that filled his chest – that horrible wrenching hurt that came with
knowing someone else had died because of him. It wasn’t until this moment that
he truly believed otherwise, that the horrible blackness was totally gone.
Son-of-a-Bitch, making me go through that!
“What the hell
happened?” Chris growled.
Ezra looked at the partial
deck in his hand. “Seven of Hearts went onto the Eight of Clubs.”
And he grinned his goddamn self-satisfied smile.
Suppressing his desire to
slap the look of the gamester’s face, Chris continued, “Archie Malone shot
you down in the street. Why?”
“Archie?” Ezra
made a face. “I didn’t know his name.”
“Why’d he do it?”
“I did nothing to him,” Ezra responded, looking unconcerned in spite of
Larabee’s reddening face. “I didn’t know the man.”
“He thought you were
me.”
“You draw out the worst in
people, Mr. Larabee. You should try to deal better with people in the
future. It makes life so much simpler. Take me, for instance.
I do my best to get along with everyone. It’s a talent that I’ve honed
to great affect and…”
Cutting Ezra off, Chris
shouted, “Why the hell did this happen?”
“And how is Mrs.
Travis?” Ezra asked, ignoring the man’s rage. “Did she remain in
Tierra Negra, or did she return with you?”
“She's still in Tierra Negra! Goddamn it, Ezra!
I’m asking you a question!”
“And Billy? I hope
that they’re both enjoyin’ a restful and chaos-free sojourn at their
friend’s home.”
Annoyed as hell, Chris
barked, “Why did they think that you were Chris Larabee?”
Ezra met Chris’ eyes – pale green staring back at blue-green. “I couldn’t say,” Ezra
responded.
Chris glared, knowing that
if he stared at the gambler long enough, someone would have to blink.
Neither flinched. A minute passed. Realizing
that he wouldn’t win this way, Chris lowered his gaze as he asked, “Did you
tell them you were Chris Larabee?”
“Now, why would I do
that?” Ezra casually replied. “Lord, I am not a mad man, contrary to popular
belief, and I believe I carry enough trouble on my own. I don’t need to
take on yours as well.” He shuffled the cards as he spoke.
“Honestly, I believe those men were off their heads – suffering from heat
prostration.”
Chris regarded the gambler,
looking for weakness in his statements, but the southerner spoke the words as
easily as he might speak the Gospel truth.
Ezra shrugged and then
grimaced, remembering his busted rib and his bruises. “I was wearin’
black. Apparently they knew
you were about. Maybe that was enough. A man dressed in black is
probably always something to be concerned about.”
Chris tugged at his blue
shirt. “I don’t always wear black,” he muttered.
“You do often enough to
make it legendary,” Ezra drawled. “Far too often for a normal man.”
“What if I like the
color?” Chris asked.
"It’s not suitable for
you,” Ezra commented. “It’s an absence of light, it invokes an
atmosphere of grief, of doom, of despair, of evil. That’s not really
right for you, is it?” He cocked his head and added, “Blue is more
fitting, or perhaps green.” When Chris started to respond, Ezra
cut him off with a terse, “And don’t say I’m too short to be confused with you!”
Flabbergasted at the quick
change, Chris said nothing immediately.
“I am not short or
slight,” Ezra sounded particularly perturbed. “I am not 'little’.”
“Well,” Chris started,
drawing up a chair and sitting. “You’re a bit undersized, but not
short exactly.” He laughed as Ezra’s ire was raised. “Puny?”
Green eyes took on a furious
cast. “Puny!?” Ezra sputtered. “Now see here!” He tried to
sit tall, but failed with a gasp.
“Careful,” Chris
uttered, grasping Ezra’s arm to keep him from collapsing. “Didn’t
get away unscathed, did’ja?” he questioned as Ezra went a bit paler and
tried to catch his breath.
Ezra groaned and gasped,
clinging to Chris as he evened out his breathing, wrapping the other arm around
his chest.
Once he recovered, Chris
helped settle Ezra onto the pillows. “All right?” Chris asked.
Ezra nodded. “I’m
just not as…lucky… as I’d hoped,” he muttered.
Chris pulled the ruined
silver plate from his pocket. It was a small thing – probably meant to
display someone’s fragile gewgaws. Chris couldn’t see how
someone could have shot the thing dead-center when it was hidden under a man’s
jacket. “Lucky,” Chris said as he turned the bent metal. “Damn
lucky.” He fixed Ezra with his gaze. “We came this close to
losing you,” he uttered, holding up the plate and then tossing it to the
bedside table. It clattered. “What happened is my fault.”
“Nonsense!” Ezra
scoffed. “You weren’t even there, so how could you possibly take the
blame for the acts of those fools.”
“I wasn’t there when
Sarah and Adam died either,” Chris said softly, his face falling, fixed with
an old sorrow. “And I know why they died.” He dropped his gaze,
as he stated, “I’ve carried that blame for years. When I heard that
you’d been killed because of my name, it was like a part of me got killed
along with you.” He watched the gambler, who sat still as stone,
listening.
Both were silent.
Then, Ezra resumed his shuffling – a familiar and soothing action for the
gambler. Chris watched Ezra’s fretful movements, wondering why it
troubled the gambler to hear those words.
Hell, Larabee realized. It scares me too.
It’s not easy to have people care about you after you’ve become so used to
being alone. It’s not easy to care.
“Mary and Billy,” Chris
quietly stated, waiting for Ezra to look at him, but the gambler’s attention
was focused on his cards. “If those men had come to Goss’s place,
looking for me, Mary and Billy might have gotten in the way.”
The statement hung for a
moment before Ezra glibly replied, “That would have been a terrible shame.
It’s our good fortune that your scenario didn’t occur. I couldn’t
explain why things happened as they did.”
Chris stood, laying a hand
on Ezra’s shoulder. “Don’t do it again,” he stated. The
threat was quiet, almost friendly, but Ezra heard the implications behind it.
Ezra didn’t speak.
Instead, he nodded almost imperceptibly.
Chris returned the gesture
with one quick nod of his own. The bundle, nearly forgotten in
Chris’ hand, was dropped to the bedspread. Ezra recognized it as his
discarded jacket. Neither man moved to touch it. Chris stood and
made his way to the door. He paused before leaving. Ezra looked
contemplative, studying his cards, ignoring the black blazer.
Josiah had retrieved
Ezra’s favorite red jacket from the gambler’s room. It waited for him
on the bedpost. His familiar black hat, newly brushed, rested above it.
As Ezra flipped over cards, red, black and white flashed into sight.
Life, Larabee knew, was rarely black and white. And as he watched Ezra, he
realized that maybe Standish really wasn’t in the ‘gray’. Red seemed
like a more probable color for him.
Black, Larabee knew, was his
color. He’d chosen it and clung to it all these years. Maybe it
was time to leave it behind.
I’m gonna have to thank JD, Larabee decided.
Thank him for thinkin’ rationally when none of the rest of us could.
He’s got a good head on his shoulders. He’s a good kid – a good man.
A brave son-of-a-bitch to take on me and the others.
“Oh,” Chris started, remembering. “Vin’s
gonna want to talk to you.” He gestured vaguely at his head, and started
to say something, but let it drop. Let Ezra see the damage for himself.
“I thought you were
leaving?” Ezra grumbled as he continued the game and Larabee lingered by the
door. “Certainly you have something better to do than disrupt my game.
I swear, I haven’t had a free moment since my return. Josiah and
Nathan… hovering over me every minute of the day.” He laid a red ten
over a black Jack. “I can’t even relieve myself without them paying a
vested interest into every movement.” Ezra shuddered theatrically.
“Lord, I cannot wait to get out of here.”
The gunslinger smiled.
“Glad to have you here,” Chris told him.
“Where else would I be?”
Ezra returned.
Chris shook his head, never
quite able to understand that southerner, but liking it that way.
Standish lifted his gaze to
meet Chris’ “And where are you headed? I plan to live
vicariously through others until I’m allowed up on my own.”
“Potter’s store,”
Chris admitted. “Thought maybe I’d buy myself a new shirt.”
“A nice green maybe,”
Ezra uttered. “Nothing too bright. That blue one definitely needs washing.” Before
Larabee could leave, he added, “You should consider returning to Tierra Negra
next week to provide Mrs. Travis with an escort home.”
Stunned by this suggestion,
Larabee responded, “She can take care of herself.”
“Of that I’m certain,
but a gentleman wouldn’t let such a fine lady travel unaccompanied.
Besides, you can return the pinto for me. Surely the
undertaker would like it back, in spite of the fact that he did nothing to
deserve it.” The $5, Ezra had decided, was his for his pains.
Chris pondered, but
made no commitment. With a shove, he opened the door and made his way out.
Potter’s store should
carry green shirts, he figured, and he’d seen a notice there about a man who
was selling some Labrador puppies. Might be nice for Billy to have a
dog, he thought, remembering how much joy Billy had found in the Goss’ dog.
Every boy should have one. Might be a nice thing for Billy to come home to.
And maybe, he continued,
Standish had the right idea about taking that ride with Mary. Chris
figured he could bring back the pinto and his rented horse to Tierra Negra.
If nothing else, returning the horses would be a good excuse to make that trek.
He smiled, wondering if
Ezra’s devious side was rubbing off on him. Maybe that wasn’t such a
bad thing, maybe, he thought, it was time he started living in something other
than black.
THE END
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