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RATING:
PG-17 for some harsh language -- someone is steamed The Amazon Series - Winner of 2003 Mistresses of Malarkey Best Gen Sequential Fic By NotTasha...who rarely plays fair |
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PART 1:
“Looks like the fireworks
are about to start,” Josiah said as he gazed over his mug of beer and out
into the street.
“Yup,” Chris replied,
setting down his whiskey glass. He readjusted his duster, getting ready for
whatever was about to happen. He figured it wouldn’t come to gunplay,
but when tempers flared, one had to be prepared for anything.
“Darn fools,” Nathan
groused as he bit into his sandwich and settled in for the show. “Hope I
don’t gotta do any patchin’ up when all this is over,” he said as he
chewed.
Josiah chuckled. They’d
seen the cardsharp's return to town -- had been watching for it. Sanchez had
felt a wave of relief when Standish finally rode in, on a strange horse,
trailing a familiar one behind him. He’d been gone too long, drawing only
consternation from Chris and a darker mood from Vin.
Ezra had ridden in with an
undeniable slope to his shoulders. Fool must have run himself near ragged,
Sanchez thought, and was glad that the tracker hadn’t immediately noted the
return. Ezra needed a moment to get the horses properly seen to, to get on his
feet, to wake up a bit after the lulling ride. He wasn’t so lucky as he left
the livery.
They’d all noticed the
abrupt movement of Tanner’s head, had seen him glare toward the window, had
watched him jump to his feet and shove his way through the door, sending the
bat-wing doors flapping. His tread was fast and his face set.
Ezra walked along the
boardwalk, a saddlebag in one hand and his bedroll tucked under the other. He
was wearing his tan jacket, usually reserved as his ‘back-up’ when on the
trail, and a different hat. He yawned, trying to draw one hand up to cover his
mouth and failed because of his burdens. He hardly noticed the tracker’s
approach.
“Ezra!” Tanner’s
sharp voice called out.
Ezra paused, and turned to
face the sharp-shooter. “Ah, Mr. Tanner. I was going to commence a search
for you after dropping off my possessions. Thank you for making this an easier
task for me.” He nodded and tried to adjust his bags. “I doubt I
would’ve lasted long if you’d made yourself scarce.” He smiled slyly.
“Might not have made it out of my room again.”
Vin shifted back and forth,
obviously agitated. “Yeah, I bet. Figured you’d sneak past me, huh?” His
voice rose in his irritation. “Thought you'd just get away?”
“Not at all. You’d be
able to find me eventually, I suspect. You know where I lay my head.” He
raised an eyebrow and said, “You’re looking more like yourself. I’m glad
to see that you reached the town in one piece. Did you run into any unforeseen
difficulties after our parting?”
Vin’s eyes narrowed as he
came toe to toe with the gambler. “Where you come off askin’ a question
like that? Who the hell do you think you are anyway? Goddamn it, Ezra! I asked
you for the honest truth back there in Greeley and you told me a fucking
lie!”
“Fucking lie?” Ezra
echoed, looking bewildered at the statement. “I don’t believe that what I
said had anything to do with…”
“Shut the hell up!” Vin
bit back, his face growing red with rage. “Damn it, Ezra! Don’t you care
who gets hurt when you start playin’ around with stuff? Anythin’ could
have happened! I trusted you! You don’t treat your friends that way,
Ezra!”
Ezra smiled tiredly. “But
everything worked out for the best, as is evidenced by the fact that you are
there talkin' to me and we’re both back in town.”
“Ya ain’t even listenin’
t’me!”
“I find it difficult to
ignore you, as you’re speaking directly into my face.” Ezra stepped back,
and Vin stepped forward, closing the distance again and nearly shoving Ezra
off the boardwalk.
Vin’s face screwed up in
a look of further aggravation. “You don’t give a damn about what happens
when you pull crap like that, do ya? You don’t give a shit what I felt. Damn
it! You got no idea what I went through!”
“I didn’t think that
your feelings were the most important factor to weigh at the moment,” Ezra
admitted.
“Ya didn’t think any of
it through.”
“On the contrary, I spent
what I felt was ample time on the matter,” Ezra said and then shrugged
philosophically. “I analyzed the possible outcomes and found my plan to be
acceptable. The trade was justifiable and little would be affected in the long
run if something went awry.”
Ezra made a move to step
off the boardwalk just as Vin’s anger got the better of him. He swung at the
gambler. Ezra -- exhausted, burdened with his belongings and looking the wrong
way -- saw the movement only at the last moment. He tried to dodge the flying
fist, succeeding only in unbalancing himself. His foot missed the step as Vin
connected with his jaw and he went down like a sack of potatoes, his head
striking the wooden step with a loud 'thunk' as he landed in the
street.
It happened so fast.
Vin stood in shock, his hands at his sides and his eyes wide as he stared at
Ezra’s prone form. “Damn!” he exhaled and moved forward to help, just as
a pair of strong arms grabbed hold of him and jerked him back.
“That’s enough, Vin,”
Chris growled in his ear.
Nathan and Josiah were
beside Ezra as Chris yanked Vin further away. The gambler raised a hand to his
head and mumbled something.
“You okay, son?” Josiah
asked, concern filling his deep baritone.
“Take it easy, Ezra,”
Nathan spoke softly as the gambler blinked and shook his head. Ezra looked up
quizzically at the healer and preacher. “Think you can sit up?” Nathan
asked.
Ezra stared up at the sky
and asked, “When’d it stop rainin’?”
“Ezra, you okay?”
Josiah asked, his concern only growing.
“Seems it was stormin’
a second ago.” Ezra’s gaze met Josiah’s and his eyes grew wide.
“Mayor, sir, if you’d put down that mallet, we could talk. I swear, I’ll
make this right.” And he squeezed his eyes shut. “Tarnation,” he
uttered, his voice changing entirely. “I ain’t never played much at cards
b’fore. You fellas better go easy.”
“Come on, Ezra,” Nathan
said softly, “Let’s get you up.”
“Just played fer pennies
and setch with my sisters,” Standish continued with a heavy twang.
“Upsy-daisy,” Josiah
rumbled as they tugged the toppled gambler upright.
“Don’t look too bad,”
Nathan muttered, making a quick examination of Ezra’s head for blood,
finding none.
“Why’re ya’ll spinnin’
like that?” Standish continued his squint as he sat on the boardwalk.
“This isn’t an occasion for waltzing.” Finally he settled his gaze on
Nathan. “Sir,” he said in a soft voice, “I have no idea where that extra
Ace came from.” He blinked and added, “Must ‘ave fallen from someone’s
boot. Perhaps it was the miscreant who won the last hand.”
“How many fingers do I
got here?” Nathan asked, waving his digits in front of the sharp’s face.
“Three,” Ezra responded
without looking. The southerner smiled then and chucked, muttering, “A desk
of fiddles.” He lowered his head and rested it in his hands.
Josiah glanced to Vin as he
helped Nathan get the dizzy gambler to his feet. “You gonna be able to
walk?”
“Certainly, certainly,”
Ezra responded. “‘Long as the tightrope isn’t too high, my dear. I
haven’t your skill in tumbling.”
“‘Tumbling’ is the
right word for it.” Josiah shook his head in amazement as he snagged the
dropped belongings. “Ezra, you’ve led an interesting life.”
“Indeed,” was Ezra’s
response. “I always try to keep from becoming boring.”
Vin tried to follow, but
Chris held him back with a firm grip. “I’m sorry,” Vin called after
them. “I didn’t mean to…” He paused as Ezra stopped and turned toward
him, smiling in spite of the bruise that was already forming on his jaw. He
doesn’t even know what’s hit him, Vin thought. Probably hasn’t
figured that I would ‘ave done that.
Josiah and Nathan turned
Ezra and got him walking toward the clinic. The gambler stumbled and nearly
fell to his knees, but the preacher and the healer kept him upright, Josiah
talking to him in a soft soothing voice. Ezra continued to chatter, changing
topics and accents constantly, drawing bemused and startled expressions from
Jackson and Sanchez.
Chris shoved Vin away from
the scene and propelled him into the Redbird saloon. “Sit!” he ordered
when they reached a table, and Vin sat. “You done now?” Larabee queried.
Vin nodded.
“Good,” Chris returned.
“I get to have a round with him next. Damn fool southerner!” He poured
them both a glass of whiskey.
Vin downed the offered
drink as he flexed his hand. It wasn’t supposed to have happened like that.
He was just going to talk to Ezra, but the long wait had gotten the better of
him. The anger had only grown as the gambler grew tardier.
“Goddamn, lying,
son-of-a-bitch,” Vin muttered. “Someone could ‘ave gotten killed.”
“Yup,” Chris responded.
“If he’d tol’ me the
truth to begin with, none of this would ‘ave happened.”
“Hard to say for sure
what would ‘ave happened.”
“Never can trust him.”
“Nope.”
“Doesn’t play fair.”
“Not his style.”
“Just goes and does what he pleases, and damn everyone
else.”
Chris nodded.
“Thought after all we
been through, he’d ‘ave done things different,” Vin complained.
“Thought things had changed.”
Letting out a breath, Chris
said, “Hard to change a man.”
Vin ran his fingers around
the glass. “I could ‘ave killed him just then. Damn.”
Chris shrugged. “I think
ya just woke him up. His skull’s too thick for any permanent damage.”
Vin tried to smile, but
couldn't quite. Instead, he thought about what had happened over the past
three days.
PART 2:
THREE DAYS EARLIER
“Mr. Tanner,” the
sharp-dressed gambler said as entered the room they shared. The hotel in
Greeley had been fairly comfortable, but Ezra had spent most of his time in
the saloon. Vin preferred the quiet of the room -- away from the crowd, and
had enjoyed relaxing in the well-appointed space.
“‘ey, Ez,” Vin
responded, leaning back in the chair that gave him a good view of the street,
not much had caught his interest in the busy streets.
“I have an…important
issue to discuss with you.” Ezra frittered about nervously, tugging at his
maroon jacket.
“What’s about, Ez?”
Vin asked.
Ezra sighed and looked
away. “I’ve run into a situation.”
“Trouble, huh?” Vin
responded.
“Yes.” A chagrined
smile formed. “Somethin’ happened while at the gamblin’ table.”
“Why’s that not
surprise me, Ez?” Vin said with a laugh. "Don’t tell me you were
cheatin’?”
Ezra scowled in response.
“Please, sir. There’s no need to expend such energies here. I’m quite
capable of winnin’ fair and square, especially against the players available
in this town.”
Vin expected as much.
“You win more than was smart?” There was no malice in his question, just a
simple gathering of information.
Ezra licked his lips.
“There was a rather green player. I believe he was lookin’ for some
gamblin’ lessons and paid for them rather handsomely.”
“Yeah?” Vin stood and
faced the gamester. “You figure he’ll come fer ya?”
“Not precisely,” Ezra
drawled. “He just isn’t the type. I’m not kidding about the lessons. He
seemed determined to draw from me some of my expertise. He quizzed me
incessantly and watched my every move, talked a blue streak about his own
adventures and wanted the same from me.” He rolled his eyes and said, “In
short, he bored me to tears. I believe he’ll follow this jacket all the way
to Four Corners.”
“So you want to us to
start off in some other direction when we go?” Vin shrugged. “Not a
problem. We can head on ‘round to Four Corners after we get out of sight of
town. Might have to spend a night out if we leave after lunch like we planned,
but it won’t hurt nothin’.”
“Actually, I believe an
immediate departure might be in order.” Ezra leaned against the small
dresser, grinning. “And my plan is more involved. It will require a little
more subterfuge.”
“Subterfuge, huh? You
mean lyin’? Long as it gets us where we need to go.”
The dimples showed as the
gambler continued, “That’s exactly what I wanted to hear! Hand me your
hat, Mr. Tanner, and your jacket as well.”
Tanner’s brow furrowed.
“What you got in mind, Ez.”
“You and I, my friend,
are changing places.”
Vin smiled, waiting for the
punch line. “Yer kiddin’.”
“Not at all. It will be a
distraction that should thoroughly befuddle the young man,” Ezra replied as
he removed his jacket and carefully laid it across the bed. “You should
leave town an hour or so before me. Head toward Clarkston, then turnabout and
come toward Four Corners once you’ve lost the lad. I’ll take a different
path, for I am nothing if not different.” Vin snorted as Ezra continued,
“And I’ll meet you back in town.”
“Shouldn’t be too
hard.”
“Good,” Ezra responded
and gave Vin a punch in the arm. “We should hurry.”
Tanner regarded the conman
carefully before he asked, “This greenhorn of yours ain’t gunnin’ for ya,
is he?”
“Oh, not at all,” Ezra
said as the vest came off next. His nimble hands removed one cufflink and then
the other. “He was a perfect gentleman. A little too talkative for my
tastes, but harmless.”
“You ain’t got the law
after you then? I hear tell you got some sort of trouble in Fort Laramie.”
Ezra laughed. “Oh, not to
worry about that.” He spread his arms wide as he stated, “I’ve been
pardoned by the Honorable Judge Travis. And besides, it was nothing more than
a misunderstandin’ regarding a bet. What followed was a remarkable set of
circumstances that the people of that area are still talkin' about today.”
Wondering if he should ask
for more details, Vin raised an eyebrow, then decided to keep the questioning
on track. Ezra did have a tendency to reroute a conversation if one wasn’t
careful. “So you just want t’get clear of this fella? That’s all?”
Ezra responded,
“There’s only so much babble a man can take. I think you know what I mean.
You’re a man who can understand the need for quiet.”
“‘Spect I am.” Vin
ran his tongue over his teeth as he thought about the situation, and then
pulled off his hat and set it on a post. “Figure I could do somethin’ like
this for a friend.”
Ezra smiled at these words,
and then made a face as Vin handed him the fabled buckskin jacket. Standish
held it with the tips of his fingers before laying it over the headboard,
treating it as if it was infested. Vin removed his red shirt and handed it
over. The cardsharp wore his best pokerfaced as if to keep from becoming ill
as he tentatively put it on, followed by the jacket.
“You’re lookin’
good,” Vin commented as he picked up Ezra’s white frilled shirt. “Better
than Marley did when you shoved him into my coat.”
“Please,” Ezra said
with a gasp. “Don’t remind me. Lord, to think you haven't had it cleaned
since then.” He pulled discontentedly at the coat.
“Got the elbow fixed at
least,” Vin commented, watching as Ezra sniffed at the buckskin and
grimaced.
“Lord,” the gambler
muttered. “The things I go through…”
Vin put on Ezra’s shirt
and buttoned the front. “Man alive, Ez.” The tracker frowned as he
examined the sleeves. “How d’ya work with these things? They’re floppin’
all over.” He demonstrated by flapping his arms and letting the loose cuffs
flutter.
Ezra shook his head and
handed over the cufflinks. “You’ll need these.”
Vin squinted at the gold
jewelry for a moment before attempting to tag the cuffs into place. Tanner
tried without success to spear both ends of the cuff with the link. “Don’t
know how you kin do this with just one hand,” he muttered. “Don’t seem
possible.”
With a shake of the head,
the gambler stepped forward to help him. “It takes a little practice.”
Vin held out his arms so
that Ezra could work on them. “Sure is a pain to get this stuff on.”
“I don’t mind taking a
moment to dress properly.” Standish exhaled and added, “Otherwise one
might end up looking like this.” And he gestured to the clothing he wore
before finishing the second cuff.
Vin tugged at Ezra’s
shirt. It fit him well enough, though it was a little too short in the
sleeves. The material was definitely softer than what he was used to. He put
on the maroon jacket and found that it had a nice feel to it too. Rubbing his
hand against the sleeve, he understood why Ezra liked the feel of fine fabrics
so much.
Ezra sat down and pulled
off his boots. “Trousers are next, Mr. Tanner. I’m afraid our look won’t
be complete without them as well.”
With a frown, Vin
commented, “I ain’t givin’ up my drawers. I got ‘em worked in just
right.”
The gambler turned a little
green as he mumbled, “Heaven forbid!” He shook his head abruptly to chase
away the horrible thought and added, “No, my friend. I believe the trousers
will be enough, because we are miserably mismatched without the exchange. My
jacket and those pants?” He looked aghast as he gazed at Vin’s outfit.
“That will never do. But, I suggest we keep our own boots.”
“Yup,” Vin agreed,
knowing that having the proper footwear in the desert was often a matter of
life or death. If they had to walk out of some god-forsaken place, it would be
smart to wear what fit them best. He watched as Ezra plucked a wad of money
from his boot and set it on the bed beside him.
Vin grinned devilishly.
“How much is this worth to you,
Ez?”
“Come again, Mr.
Tanner?” Ezra asked.
Vin nodded toward the
money. “You’re wantin’ this distraction and all, how much is it worth to
ya?” The money wasn’t an issue to Tanner, but it was a good barometer in
judging just how far Ezra was willing to go to get something. Parting with
cold cash was never easy for the gambler. “Figure I should be getting
somethin’ out of this.”
A somewhat disturbed
expression hid behind Ezra's eyes. He regarded the tracker, and Vin
silently returned the stare. Both seemed to be calculating. Ezra turned his
head one way, as if he’d come to a decision, then turned it the other way.
He looked miserable when he finally declared, “Perhaps $20 will be
sufficient.”
“Aw, Ez, you got a lot
more than that in your wad there.”
“$20 is more than you
need.”
"Well, Ez. I can use a
lot if I got a mind to.”
“$50?”
Vin snorted.
Scowling, the southerner
decided, “I’ll give you half of what I have -- $150. That’s far more
than the situation deserves.”
“Figure it’d do. Must
be some awful annoyance for you to go that far,” Vin responded, wondering
now if something more was afoot.
Ezra seemed to cheer up as
he said, “Oh, Mr. Tanner, I’ll have it all won back from you in a matter
of hours after our return to town. It’s of little significance.” Ezra
peeled half of the bills off the wad, trying to seem nonchalant about the
exchange, but his fingers hesitated over the bills before he held them out to
Tanner.
Vin almost waved them away,
but figured that if Ezra truly wanted this badly enough, he’d go for it
whole hog. He picked the bills from Ezra’s extended hand. “Thank ya
kindly,” he said. “Pleasure doin’ business.”
“Highway robbery,” Ezra
muttered in response.
In a matter of a few
minutes, Tanner and Standish had exchanged clothing. Gambler and tracker stood
shoulder to shoulder to gaze into the room’s small mirror, looking like a
tracker and gambler. “Perfect!” Ezra stated. “As long as no one comes
too close, this should work.” He frowned and added, “Your boots could use
a polish and you…a shave…and a bath…and a haircut.”
“Hell,” Vin replied,
raising his hands to halt the conversation. “That’d cost ya the rest of
yer packet, and I ain’t gonna cut my hair! I got it tied up and I think
that’s far enough.”
Ezra scowled. “Well, keep
your hat low,” he uttered.
Vin complied by tugging
down on Ezra’s black low-crown hat. “What’s this fella that’s houndin’
you look like anyway?”
“He looks as if he’s
just stepped off his father’s farm, wearin’ his Sunday best -- brown hair
and eyes, and a forever-earnest expression on his face. He’s about as tall
as Buck, but skinny as a rail. He wears blue and rides a roan with
one white sock and a blaze. His name is Trevor Woollock.”
Vin nodded, putting the
description to memory. “Why don’t ya just say ‘so long’ to this fella
and be gone?”
“He doesn’t seem to
take the hints I’ve thrown him.”
“Well, you were never
known to go about things the easy way. Always got to do it crooked.” Tanner
reached for his saddlebags and asked, “I’ll be ridin’ your horse?”
Ezra nodded. “I believe
you know most of my verbal commands, so you’ll have no trouble with him.
Besides, Chaucer likes you.”
“Don’t go spoilin’
Peso. He won’t be no use to me if you do.”
“There’s peppermints in
your pocket if Chaucer becomes contrary. Usually, that’s all it takes to put
him into an agreeable mood.”
Vin smiled, remembering
Christmas Eve, when he and Ezra had rode double on Peso, leading a limping
Chaucer through the snow, enticing him all the way with candy -- damn
spoiled nag!
He picked up his bags,
figuring that they’d might as well keep their own kits. He smirked when he
looked at Standish again, finding it terribly funny to see him dressed so
disreputably. Strangely enough, Standish now looked totally comfortable in the
outfit.
“You ain’t lyin’ to
me are you, Ez?” Vin asked. “Seems like you’re goin’ through an awful
lot of trouble for almost nothing.”
“But that's what I do,
Mr. Tanner.” Ezra raised his hands. “I find new and interesting ways to
perform mundane tasks. It’s the only thing that keeps me sane.” He smiled
and his clear green eyes met Vin’s blue. “I give you my word that Mr.
Woollock will not harm you in any way, that you will suffer nothing from this
endeavor. On my honor, you will return home safely -- barring unforeseen
mishap.”
Vin nodded, accepting that.
“Now, please. You should
get going. Head immediately toward Clarkston, but make your way toward Four
Corners as soon as viable. If you feel Mr. Woollock is following, please do
your best to lose him.”
Vin smiled. “I’ll do
better than that. I’ll lead him on a goose chase.”
“As long as you don’t
waste too much time on it.”
“Figure it won’t hurt
to lead him ‘round a bit. You headed straight home?”
“Straight as possible for
a man like me,” Ezra returned, smiling from beneath the slouch hat.
PART 3
Vin immediately left town,
riding his companion’s chestnut gelding. Chaucer had looked a little
confused about the change in riders, but gave Tanner no trouble -- for as Ezra
had said, Chaucer liked him…and the peppermints came in handy.
The departing tracker
watched the saloon, and noted the man that Ezra had described was sitting near
the front window. The tall gambler sat up sharply and got to his feet, then
ran toward the livery as Vin brought his heels to Chaucer’s sides. The horse
shot away, into the open country.
He kept the horse at a
gallop until he was well along the trail to Clarkston, and then turned off at
a place where Woollock would be sure to see him. Yeah, he thought,
the kid would have an interesting ride ahead of him.
For the morning and
afternoon he kept ahead of Woollock, catching sight of the young man from time
to time as the kid struggled to catch up. When they reached rocky terrain, he
missed having Peso beneath him. Although Chaucer was fast, Peso was the
superior animal over difficult surfaces, and they had to slow to accommodate.
Luckily, Woollock’s horse faired no better and he kept a steady distance
between them.
Vin amused himself by
losing the young man from time to time, only to let himself be found again. He
figured that he’d draw Woollock away to allow Ezra’s departure, and the
longer he pulled Trevor along, the better. He kept to a route that brought him
closer to Four Corners without ever heading exactly in that direction. No
sense in ending up far from home, he reasoned.
As he rode, he thought
about the strange situation. It did seem odd that this young pup, Woollock,
was more than the cagey gambler could handle. The money resting in his pocket
struck Tanner rather strangely, too. Ezra was up to something, but Vin
couldn’t quite figure out what. Certainly, the gambler wasn’t trying to
endanger his life. No, Vin figured he knew Ezra better than that -- Standish
wouldn’t purposefully do anything to hurt any of the Seven. Besides,
Standish had given Vin his word -- and that meant something.
So what then?
Was this situation only
because that Standish wanted to be rid of Woollock and would rather unload him
on a friend than do it himself? Yes, that was quite possible. Vin knew that
the southerner prized his comfort and had been known to offload
‘annoyances’ onto others -- but he also prized his money, prized his
clothing. Was this situation dire enough for the gambler to don the outfit of
a no-account tracker?
Encouraging Chaucer along,
Vin decided that it wasn’t too outlandish an idea. Ezra had worn costumes
more than once in order to get what he wanted. Funny, the fussy gambler would
put on a dress, or a Union uniform, or a beat-up, smelly, old buckskin jacket
if he felt the reward was big enough -- but heaven forbid if his own clothing
became soiled in some daily activity.
He’s a peculiar sort, Vin
decided. Ain’t quite right in the head, but that ain’t so bad.
Vin enjoyed the friendship
he shared with Standish. It was a strange relationship, really. Never would he
have thought that he’d have a con artist as a friend -- a quick-talking,
over-educated, conniving, persnickety gambler. People like Ezra rarely gave
people like Vin a second glance -- and if they did, it would only be a look of
distrust, revulsion, fear or pity: shifty Indian-lover; unwashed savage;
unpredictable bounty hunter; poor illiterate boy.
They were thrown together
by a set of circumstances -- a village in need of help, a chunk of gold, a
battle with ghosts -- one man walking away and yet turning about.
Vin knew that the sharp had
a difficult, lonely childhood, and an often-indifferent mother. Probably
rarely got anything without having to pay for it. Remembering the money in his
pocket, Vin felt a flush of shame. – never should have made him pay me to
help him, he thought.
PART 4:
Dusk was falling and
Chaucer was tired. Hell, Vin was tired too. It had been a long day on the
trail, switching back and forth, losing and finding Woollock. They’d stopped
a few times, letting Chaucer rest, giving Vin a chance to stretch his legs,
and letting Woollock catch up -- but soon enough they took to the trail.
Night was nearly upon them
-- and night was not a time to be taken unaware. Vin decided to get rid of his
tail. He’d grown tired of the greenhorn, too. Ezra must be well on his way
home and there was no need to worry about the gambler meeting up with the
troublesome amateur anymore.
Tanner figured that there
was two ways to go about it. One was to lose Trevor once and for all -- but
they were in the middle of nowhere and if the young man were left wandering
out here, there’d be no hope for him. Woollock probably had no idea where he
was and Vin didn’t want to see the fool get killed because of this prank.
His other choice was to let Trevor catch up to him -- to take the young
gambler on his terms. A better option, Vin decided.
Vin stopped when he found a
good place, and set up camp for the night. If the man was as harmless as Ezra
said -- then there’d be no trouble. Tanner would explain the circumstance,
tell him to stop pesterin’ people. He’d put the kid to bed, tuck him in
and hope Trevor didn’t snore. In the morning he’d point him back toward
Greeley and hope for the best. If Woollock proved to be less a gentleman than
Ezra supposed, well then -- Trevor wouldn’t live long.
Vin had just lit a fire and
started rooting through his saddlebags for dinner when he heard the horse’s
approach. He stood stiffly, wary as a man should be when approached by a
stranger, and waited. He brushed at Ezra’s jacket, hoping that he still
looked the part and then chuckled because he’d forgotten that the jig was up
and he was setting aside the charade. He stepped out of the fire’s light to
let himself be caught up in shadow.
“Hello, camp!” a voice
came out of the dark, and the man road in on a white-stocking roan. Up close,
he looked as young and earnest as Ezra described, and as lean as a rake. He
looked around, surprised to find the camp abandoned. “Hello?” he called
again, raising his hand over his eyes as if to shield them from the sun that
had set.
“Hey,” Vin responded
from the shadows, pulling his mare’s leg free -- at least Ezra had agreed
that they’d both keep their own armament.
The newcomer grinned at the
partially obscured man. “Hey, there! I’ve had the devil’s own time
keepin’ up with you!” He dismounted with a tired grunt.
“I had a devil of a time
keepin’ you behind me,” Vin replied. “Thought I’d lost you out by Dead
Horse Hill.”
The man laughed, gazing
into the dimness. “He told me you’d say somethin’-o-that. You sure do
know some tricky stuff. We must’a crossed by Dry Fall a dozen times. Smart.
That should’a done the trick.” He stretched out a hand. “Trevor Woollock,”
he introduced. “And you must be Vin Tanner?”
Tanner felt a cold flush
reach him. He stepped clear of the shadows. “What did ya say?”
Trevor eyed him carefully.
“You are Vin Tanner, ain’t cha?”
“Who told you that?”
Vin asked quickly.
Gesturing in the general
direction of Greeley, Trevor said, “Well, Ezra did, of course.”
“Ezra?” Confused, Vin
paced back toward the fire. “What the hell’s goin’ on here?”
Trevor grinned, looking as
pleased as punch. “Ezra asked me to follow you out of town, to be sure that
nobody come after you. He told me you’d be tryin’ to lose those fellas and
I might have a heck of a time keepin’ up. Said that you’d be watchin’
for me and make sure that I stayed close. Sure enough he was right. Dinnent
lose me and sure made it hard for those fellas to follow.”
Vin felt his heart
constrict as Trevor spoke. “Fellas? What fellas?”
“I was beginnin’ to
worry that I wouldn’t reach ya b’fore night. Ain’t like I never slept
out in this area, but it ain’t exactly safe alone. I was born near here.
Know the land pretty well. Anyway, b’fore it got real dark, you let me catch
ya. I kept a good watch out, Mr. Tanner. Not a soul followed.”
“Who would ‘ave
followed?” Vin yelled, catching Trevor by his blue lapel, and yanking him
down an inch or two.
His eyes growing wide,
Trevor replied, “Them bounty hunters that were looking for you.”
“Oh God,” Vin gasped
and let go of the young man as he realized what had happened. He paced past
the fire, toward Chaucer. “Son of a bitch!’ He spun back toward Woollock
and demanded, “What do you know about those bounty hunters?”
Hooking his thumbs into his
belt, Trevor took a deep breath and said, “Well, Ezra and I were having a
friendly game in the saloon when these two fellas started to talkin’. They
were askin’ folks if anyone had seen this fella name of Vin Tanner. That’d
be you.” He pointed a finger at the tracker. “They had a poster with your
face on it, I guess. One of the folks in the place said he’d seen you with a
fancy gambler from the south. We was sitting on the other side of this
partition thing, so nobody could have seen us there ‘les they come around. I
seen Standish look real queer when he heard what they were saying, and he just
sat there for a bit. I figured he might have had some sort of fit or something
‘cause it didn’t look like he was breathin’ for a while. But then he
drank down what was left of his whiskey and grabbed me by the arm, sayin’ he
had a proposition for me. We slunk out real quiet.”
Vin pressed the palms of
his hands against his eyes as he listened.
“So he and I go out in
the alley and he tells me that he figures I was a straight shooter.” Trevor
nodded. “And I am. He told me how he was gonna have you hid by getting you
to put on his clothes so you could get out of town safe. He told me he wanted
me to follow.”
“Son of a bitch,” Vin
murmured again. “He put you after me so I’d keep a’goin’ and believe
his damn story. Son of a bitch!” He swung about, wanting something to punch.
“Hey, now,” Trevor
said, holding up placating hands. “No need to get angry at me, Tanner. I was
just doing as a friend asked me. Figured Ezra was an okay guy and I could do
this for him. He taught me some moves and I figured I owed him. Plus he gave
me fifty dollars to do the job.”
“He’s dressed like
me,” Vin muttered. “And there’s a couple of bounty hunters looking for
Vin Tanner!” All his previous thoughts came back to haunt him. Here he
thought he was doing something for Ezra’s sake only to find out that Ezra
had turned it around again.
Trevor frowned as he
realized what Vin was saying. “He didn’t tell me that he was gonna dress
like you. I might've advised against it.” He shrugged and added, “I guess
he didn’t think I needed to hear the whole thing..”
“Tell me something I
don't know,” Vin returned and moved toward Chaucer again. The tired horse
regarded him with skeptical eyes.
“You ain’t thinking on
heading back now?” Trevor asked.
“I ain’t leaving him
there to be shot in my name!” Vin growled.
“It’s hard country at
night. And, he won’t be in Greeley,” Trevor informed him. “Said he’d
be heading out after you left town.”
“Out? What the hell does
that mean?”
“Said for me to tell you
to go on home lickety-split.”
“Like hell I’d do that!
I’m headed back.” Vin’s stomach twisted at the thought of what might
have happened. Don’t let him be dead, he thought as he grabbed the
saddle.
“Said that he’d ride
out for a day or so, and come on ‘round when it looked like a fine idea.
Told me to say, ‘Don’t be throwing good money after bad’.”
Vin closed his eyes. Good
money after bad? Hell! Where does he get off sayin’ that? Who’s to say
what’s good and what’s bad?
“I took his money,”
Tanner whispered. “I made him pay me $150, and he took my place.” He
glanced out into the darkness, realizing that a whole day had passed since
he’d switched places with Ezra -- a whole day with bounty hunters at
Ezra’s back. “Forced him to pay me for the pleasure of getting killed in
my name. Gonna do what I can to stop it.”
Trevor scuffed at the dirt.
“Look, Tanner, the horses are plum tired after that ride, and I know we’re
nearly to Four Corners now.”
Vin wasn’t listening, his
mind was working too quickly, trying to figure out how in the hell he had let
this happen.
Trevor continued, “It’d
make more sense to spend the night, and start off tomorrow. He said he was
gonna be fine.”
“Did you catch their
names?”
“Whose names?”
“The bounty hunters,
dammit!”
“Oh, Bailey and Cox.”
Trevor looked triumphant. “Heard that earlier from them. I ain’t stupid,
Tanner. I hear stuff and remember it.”
Vin nodded. He remembered
the names, too, but it didn’t make him feel any less stupid.
Bailey and Cox were the
type of men who’d usually do the right thing. They were in the “bring
‘em back alive” category of bounty hunters. If they were to catch up to a
man and found out that they were trailing the wrong person -- they would
probably be okay with it, release the wrong man, and go on about their
business. Ezra most likely knew that and counted on the gentlemen to behave
that way and let him go unscathed.
But things didn't always go
as planned. Tanner had heard that Bailey had a temper -- that Cox sometimes
got a little crazy. Their bounties usually came back alive, but not always in
one piece. Sometimes, Bailey and Cox couldn’t help but kill the men they
followed.
Good guys really… when it
came to dragging in the bad guys. Any hurt their bounties got was earned,
wasn’t it? They were fine guys, as long as Bailey didn’t get upset and Cox
didn’t get crazy when they found out that a weasely, lying, quick-talking,
son-of-a-bitch conman had tricked them out of a bounty.
Bailey and Cox -- they were
dead men if anything happened to that gambler.
PART 5
Vin spent the night haunted
by terrible dreams. He slept in snatches waking often to the stars and
Trevor’s rattling snores. “Damn,” he’d whisper and try again to find
sleep.
He kept playing out
scenarios in his dreams…. Ezra racing away, trying to outrun Bailey and Cox,
but somehow, Standish just couldn’t get away. Vin couldn’t move in the
dreams -- he was frozen in his tracks and could only watch and shout at Ezra
to stop -- but the gambler paid him no mind.
In one dream, the bounty
hunters cornered Standish, captured him, roughed him up, thinking he was Vin
Tanner. Yeah, they roughed him up a lot -- then tied him to a saddle and
carried him away. The damn fool, too hurt to talk, let them take him all the
way to Tascosa. They towed him to court and the quick-witted conman, dazed
from his beating, was be unable to save himself. Vin could only shout from the
shadows as they brought him to the gallows. Tanner awoke with a frightened
gasp as the floor dropped away from under his friend’s feet. Ezra was hung
until the life was choked out of him because he dared to be a friend to Vin
Tanner.
He dreamed again, but this
time Cox and Bailey caught up to Ezra and discovered the ruse. They were angry
-- seeing their $500 disappear with the taunting smile of a green-eyed,
southern bastard. They hurt him for that, hurt him for tricking them, for
deceiving them, for leading them on -- for losing their money. In his dream,
Vin could only stand by the side as they killed the devious lawman -- all
because he helped Vin Tanner.
And again he dreamed, and
they’d shoot Ezra as he tried to keep ahead of them, hit him between the
shoulder blades and send him sprawling. He’d somersault over the shoulders
of the borrowed horse, to be trodden beneath the hooves -- because he did his
friend, Vin Tanner, a favor.
Again and again, he woke
with his heart racing, sweat clinging to his face, to stare at the heartless
stars, to hear Trevor sawing mercilessly, hear the ceaseless sounds of the
desert insects…and then drift off again.
When morning finally came,
he welcomed the light. It was time to go. There’d be no more waiting around.
He put away Ezra’s things and pulled his extra clothing from his bags.
He’d have no jacket, but the day was mild. “Damn fool!” he kept
muttering, as he dressed. “Son of a bitch.”
Trevor listened without
commenting, not wanting to get in the way of the tracker. He fiddled with his
own belongings, waiting.
“Why’d you go along
with this fool idea of his?” Tanner demanded finally. “Couldn’t you
figure he’d just end up getting hurt?”
Trevor snorted. “I
ain’t the one that put my clothes on him. I ain’t got a bounty on my
head,” he responded indignantly. “And he paid you more than he did me.”
He crossed his arms over his navy jacket.
Vin turned away, blinking
his eyes. Damn, he thought. I didn’t need the money. I didn’t
want it. Just done it to see what he’d do. Now he’s got Cox and Bailey on
his ass, chasing him down. He gave me half of what he had. He's only got $150
left -- well a bit more if the little bastard cheated me. Would that be enough
to bargain with? Not when those two have just lost $500.
He sat down beside the
nearly-dead fire and started bringing it back to life. He’d throw something
together for breakfast, just enough to get him started. Soon as he could,
he’d be on his way back to Greeley.
“Son of a bitch,” Vin
murmured again. “Never asked for that. Never!” He rubbed at his eyes,
thinking, I’m gonna kill him when I get my hands on him. Gonna wring his
neck. Looked me right in the eye and lied. Why couldn’t he just tell me that
he'd seen a couple of bounty hunters in town and felt we’d better be
cautious? “Son of a bitch!”
“You don’t have a very
big vocabulary, do ya?” Trevor asked as he sat down beside Vin and set a
coffeepot on the fire. His long thin legs looked like sticks as he bent his
knees and drew them close.
“Who’s askin’ you?”
Vin shot back.
Trevor shrugged. “I
figure he did you a favor. Figure he done you a good turn. We both made out
okay in it.” The young man grinned at him. “I know I’m gonna end up with
more than I started with.”
And I’ll have less,
Vin thought in return. “Gamblers,” he complained aloud. “Goddamn
gamblers!” He stood, abandoning the fire, and walked toward the horses.
“I’m headin’ back to find him.” Bring his body back if nothing
else. Make sure he gets buried decent. They ain’t takin’ him to Tascosa.
“Look,” Trevor said.
“I ain’t one to go talking, but I figure we should just wait this out. We
should go on to Four Corners and he’ll show up in a bit. Figure we’d get
there in an hour or so. He’ll get there by night.”
“Why the hell d'ya want
to go there?” Vin barked. “You done what you’re supposed to do. Now,
scat! ‘Parently, you know your way.”
“Well, I’ll get another
twenty dollars if I get you all the way back.” Trevor smiled broadly.
“Goddamn gamblers!” Vin
spat out.
Trevor let out a long
breath and muttered, “Least he’s learned a few more words.” His gaze
followed Tanner as the tracker paced. “I figure if we go on to Four Corners,
we can find out if he’s sent a wire,” Woollock stated. “He said he
would. Find out where he’s gone. If there ain’t no wire, you can get those
friends of yours and go off after ‘im. It’d make more sense if there was a
bunch of you instead of just one.”
Vin stared at the young
gambler who worked at the fire, bringing the embers to flame. The man seemed
to know a thing or two about camp life. You never can be sure what you’ll
get when you run into a gambler --- they tended to surprise him.
The tracker mulled over
what had been said. “Figure it makes sense to head home,” Vin stated at
last, wanting to see that wire. If there was no message, he’d need the
others to help him hunt down Bailey and Cox. Might not want the others around
once he caught up with the bounty hunters. It just wasn’t good to have
friends around at times like that – wouldn’t want them to suffer the
consequences of his actions -- as Ezra probably had.
"We're goin'," Vin suddenly stated.
“Good!” Trevor
rejoined. “We just got to get to town and make sure that both of us get seen
together. That way I can be sure to get my money.”
Vin shook his head. Damn
fool, he thought. Sends a shadow after me to get me all the way home.
He glared out across the open land and prayed that Cox and Bailey had been
forgiving, that Ezra had been wily enough to outthink them, that his worst
dreams would not come true.
PART 6:
The wire was waiting for
Vin when they reached Four Corners. It had been received earlier that morning
and read only, ‘VT. STAY PUT. WILL RETURN BY NIGHTFALL. EPS.’ The wire
came from Westover. An inquiry was sent to the Westover telegraph operator for
more information about the sender, trying to find out if the gambler was all
right, but the response told them that a farm boy had brought it in that
morning.
It was decided that they
would wait. No one could be sure about where Ezra was at that moment, not even
if he was still near Westover. He’d be back before dark. Chris and the
others had reasoned that it made more sense to wait. So, that’s what Vin
did.
But night came without the
ill-dressed gambler returning. Vin slept, mostly because he was so tired after
the restless night before and the stressful day. He slept and awoke and
climbed down from his wagon to wait again.
Morning dragged and still
there was no sight of Standish. Ezra wasn’t a morning person, but out on the
range, the gambler tended to wake as early as any of them -- the hard ground
wasn’t exactly as enticing as his feather bed. With any luck, he’d show up
before lunch.
But, lunchtime passed. As
the day rolled on, Vin haunted the saloon, watching the livery for sign of
Ezra's return. Tanner packed a bag and prepared to go after the gambler.
Larabee forcibly stopped him, making him understand that waiting was the best
option at this point, especially with bounty hunters in an active search. A
message was sent to Greeley, demanding any information they had on the parties
in question, and a message was returned to let them know that a man fitting Vin
Tanner’s description had left town about an hour after the man who fit Ezra
Standish’s description. Bailey and Cox had quit their residency shortly
afterward, but no one knew where any of them had headed after they left town.
“We’re gonna wait and
see,” Larabee had insisted. “He’s a big boy. He got himself into this
mess. He’ll take care of himself. There’s no telling where he’s gone
after Westover and we’re not going off half-cocked, not knowin’ where to
look."
And so Vin waited, and got
angrier with each passing minute: angry because he couldn’t do anything;
angry because he’d put his friend in danger; angry because Ezra had lied and
maybe sacrificed himself; angry because they hadn’t worked out something
else; angry because Ezra might be dead at that very moment -- dead because of
Vin Tanner.
Finally, he ended up simply
angry. That’s when Ezra returned, a day late and just in time to catch Vin
in a rage.
PART 7:
“You calm down yet?”
Larabee asked from his seat beside the tracker.
Vin grunted in response.
“Not like you to take a
swing at a man who ain’t ready to defend himself.”
Vin muttered, “Didn’t
mean to hurt him.”
“Damn fool probably needs
someone to take a pop at him every so often just to get his head adjusted
right.”
“I just wanted to
talk.”
“Didn’t seem like much
of a discussion.”
“Wanted to find out why
he done it like he did.” Vin shook his head sharply. “If he hadn’t said
that crap, ‘bout how it would ‘ave been a fair trade if somethin’ went
wrong, I wouldn’t ‘ave had to...” Tanner slammed a fist on the table.
“Damn it!”
“Frustratin’ little
son-of-a-gun, ain’t he?”
“Don’t know where he
gets off saying stuff like that.”
Chris looked long and hard
at the tracker. “He’s tired,” Larabee said finally. “Probably didn’t
mean to say it.”
Vin slung down the drink.
“I know. Usually he’s got enough wits about him to keep that shit
quiet…but he thinks it.” He glanced up at his friend. “The fact that he
thinks that way ain’t right. Hell, Chris, I figured we was friends, him and
me. Thought I got him set straight on that. Don’t he know what it’d do to
me if something happened? I’d have to live the rest of my life knowin’ I
got him killed.”
Chris smiled and replied,
“I don’t know, Vin. Seems that he hasn’t had too many chances at
friendship.”
“Yeah,” Vin admitted.
“Ain’t right.”
The gunslinger nodded.
“Just keep working on him like you have. Some folks take longer than others
to come around.” He refilled their glasses saying, “Done good so far.”
The saloon doors swung open
and Josiah strode in, walking easily to their table. “Boys,” he said as he
sat.
“Is Ezra okay, J’siah?”
Vin asked immediately.
Josiah picked up the bottle
and took a draw from it, as there were no more glasses on the table. Not
wanting him to drink alone, Chris downed his glass. Vin watched the preacher,
waiting for a reply.
Sanchez wiped his lips on
the back of his hand and finally answered the question; “He’ll be fine.
Sleepin’ now. More exhausted than anything. Nate will bring him around every
so often, make sure he can wake him.”
“So, he ain’t hurt?”
Chuckling, Josiah
responded, “Oh, I wouldn’t say that. He got his head rapped pretty good
and probably won’t be seeing straight for a while.”
Vin let out a held breath
and worriedly rubbed his forehead.
“He tell you anything
about what went on?” Chris asked.
Josiah shook his head.
“Once he got his head clear and stopped talkin’ nonsense, he asked if his
clothing was all right and said he wanted everything back, properly laundered
and pressed. Said that he’d raise a fuss if anything smelled like the items
he had to wear.” Sanchez smiled. “I figure that’s a sign that he’s
going to be fine.”
“That all?” Vin asked.
“Yeah, that would be
about it,” Josiah responded. “Fought pretty hard just to say that before
he finally fell asleep.”
“He didn’t give you no
reason for doin’ what he did?” Vin kept at it, his voice becoming sharper.
The preacher shook his
head.
Vin stood abruptly, only to
be caught by Chris. “Where ya goin’?” the gunslinger demanded, noting
the fierce look had returned.
“Gonna check on him.”
“Josiah just told you
he’s fine,” Chris said as he let go of Vin’s arm and pulled the bottle
from Josiah’s grasp. He refilled his glass and snagged another from a nearby
table, filling it for Sanchez.
“Just the same…” Vin
muttered.
“Sit,” Larabee ordered.
“Sit your ass back down until you get yourself calmed.”
Vin slumped back into his
chair and glared at the glass in front of him. “I’m not fixin’ to hit
him again, Chris,” Vin pouted angrily.
“Yeah, but you ain’t
gonna do him any good right now.” Larabee polished off his glass. “Stay
here, Vin. I’ll go check on him.” He glanced to Sanchez. “See that he
does.”
Josiah nodded his
acceptance of duty. Chris gave Vin one last glance before he pushed himself to
his feet and left the Redbird. Sanchez regarded his drink, not knowing if the
glass Larabee had found was dirty or not -- and decided that the alcohol would
have killed anything still living in it, and drank it down. Once he’d
finished, he gave Vin a serious look. The tracker was slowly turning his glass
with an irate expression.
“You blindside him again
like that, Vin,” the preacher stated, “and you’ll have me to answer
to.”
Vin glanced to the
preacher. Josiah’s face was mild, but his eyes held a severity that was
difficult to ignore. All the members of the team had learned to respect that
smoldering anger -- knew that the soft-spoken and gentle man could become a
raging grizzly if prodded in that direction. One or two of them had met that
anger head-on and had felt the results.
Vin listened.
“You could have killed
him,” Sanchez continued. “If he’d hit his head any harder…”
“I know,” the tracker
cut him off. “I know.” And slumped further into his chair.
PART 8:
“Hey, bruiser,” Buck
called as Vin walked along the boardwalk the following morning. The ladies’
man leaned against the wall to the assayer’s office and grinned. “I hear
tell that you knocked out our gamblin’ friend.”
“Dang, Vin,” JD added,
slouching beside him. “You really hit Ezra like that? You knock him to the
ground? He’s usually pretty fast with his fists. Never seen anyone take him
out so easy.”
“‘Les of course someone
whacks him ‘cross the back with a chair or something,” Buck completed,
remembering a brawl in a saloon. “He got took by surprise that time, too.”
Wilmington gave Vin a meaningful look. “Seems a friend of ours didn’t give
him much of a chance. Actually, it seems more like the sort of thing that
sneaky little bastard would do -- not you.”
“Must ‘ave hit him
really hard,” JD added unhappily.
“Taught him a lesson,
didn’t ya?” Buck smiled.
“Seemed like the thing to
do,” Vin muttered as he glared at Wilmington.
Buck chuckled and stepped
back. “Well, if you hadn’t done it, Chris might have. Heard him spoutin’
off at Ezra most of last night at Nathan’s. Any time that poor
son-of-a-bitch opened his eyes, Chris had a thing or two to say. Figure ol’
Ez ended up by playing possum, hopin’ that Chris would give up and wander
off.” Buck laughed. “Chris can be just as stubborn and didn’t let him
be.” Wilmington rubbed his chin. “Listening to what he said, I couldn’t
quite figure if Chris was mad as hell about the whole thing or kinda proud of
that son.”
“Proud of him?” Vin
interjected. “For nearly gettin’ himself killed?”
“Heck, that didn’t
happen, Vin. Ezra got you both home without gettin’ anyone hurt,” JD
reminded.
“Yeah,” Buck included.
“‘Cept for when he got a welcome from you.”
“I dunno. It seemed like
he had a good idea, Vin. Don’t know why you got so upset about it.” JD
shrugged. “His plan worked fine.”
“Yeah,” Vin said with a
sigh. “Seems that way.”
Buck clamped an arm around
Vin’s shoulder and nearly tugged him off his feet. “Time you let bygones
be bygones, pard. Ain’t worth feuding over him saving your fool life.”
Congenially, he shoved Vin’s head under his arm and rubbed his knuckles
across Tanner’s scalp.
JD laughed as Vin struggled
his way out of the headlock.
Nathan approached, pausing
for a moment as he saw the scene. He chuckled and greeted them with a,
“Mornin’.”
“Hey, Doc,” JD
returned.
“Nathan,” Buck
responded, releasing the tracker.
Vin tried to shake his hair
back into position. “Nate, how’s he doing?” Tanner asked when he was
able. “Ezra’s okay, ain’t he? I didn’t hurt him real bad, did I?”
The healer shrugged.
“He’s fine. Got a swollen jaw and a pretty good goose egg on his head, but
he seems to be seeing straight and talking sense now. Don’t look like
you’ve done any permanent damage to him. Finally got Chris to give him some
peace ‘round midnight,” Nathan said with a smile. “I’ll let him go
later today, once he catches up on his sleep. Probably didn’t get a wink
since you last saw him in Greeley.”
“I’ll go up and check
on him,” Vin decided.
“Let him sleep, Vin,”
Jackson declared, laying a restraining hand on the tracker’s arm. “He’s
plumb tired out. Woke for a bit
this mornin’, long enough to order breakfast but not to eat it. You can talk
to him later.”
JD shoved his hands deep
into his pockets and said, “Seems like a pretty poor way to treat a man who
done you a favor.”
Vin, exasperated, spat out,
“You’all just don’t understand. That bounty’s on my head. It’s
something that I got to deal with. Never asked no one to step into my place
and take it up. He should have talked to me about it, ‘stead of running off
with his own ideas that might have gotten him killed.”
“The man does seem to
have a problem with tellin’ the truth,” Nathan admitted.
Buck grinned. “Well,
that’s just the way Ezra is.”
“I dunno, Buck,” JD put
in. “Can’t remember him ever lyin’ to me.”
“Well, he doesn’t
always lie outright,” Buck commented. “But he sure has a way of twisting
things around so you end up thinkin’ he’s said something that’s the
plumb opposite of what was truth.”
“Man shouldn’t live
like that,” Nathan said, crossing his arms.
Vin stepped back and
hunched his shoulders, letting them talk. They just didn’t get it. How could
Ezra have pulled this stunt on him? He lied. He cheated. He did what he
pleased. And, he didn’t understand that Vin wanted no part in that trade? It
didn’t make sense that the well-mannered, educated, expensively-dressed
southerner could rate himself as something less than a tracker in a beat-up
jacket.
Just don’t understand it,
Vin thought. Makes no sense a't all.
Yeah, he’d let the fool
sleep, but sooner or later the gambler would emerge. Then he’d have a talk
with him -- get this all straightened out. He gazed toward the Redbird as if
he expected to see the brightly-dressed confidence man amble toward them.
As if on cue, another
gambler appeared. Trevor Woollock stepped out of the saloon. He glanced about,
and then recognized Vin. With a smile, he strode up the boardwalk until he’d
joined the group.
“Hey, fellas,” Trevor greeted. “You seen Standish anywhere?” He looked
between them, rubbing his hands together. “He’s got that money he owes me
and I aim to get it t’day. I’ve waited long enough, I figure, and done all
I had to do. You see him anywhere with my money?”
Vin sighed, “Gamblers,”
and continued on his way as Nathan related Ezra’s current circumstances to
Trevor.
PART 9
“Ezra,” Vin started as
he approached the gambler’s table. It was late in the afternoon. He’d
heard that Nathan had released the gambler shortly after lunch, but hadn’t
been able to find him until now. Standish did have a tendency to disappear if
the mood suited him. Of course, when he wanted to be found -- it was difficult
to miss him. The Redbird was an obvious place to look.
Standish, who’d been
quietly drinking a mug of beer and idly flipping over cards with one hand,
stood abruptly. “Mr. Tanner.”
The tracker winced seeing
the swollen and bruised jaw, the tilted head and narrowed eyes -- a sure sign
that the cardsharp was suffering a headache. He watched Ezra’s tense movements and saw that Standish kept
his hands ready to defend himself.
Damn, Vin thought. After all we’ve done over the
past two years, it’s come to this? Used to be friends, now it looks like
we’re ‘bout to pummel each other just for breathin’ funny. “I
ain’t gonna hit cha,” he sighed with a note of defeat.
“And I, for one, am glad
to hear that,” Ezra replied, not changing his position.
“Just want to talk,”
Vin explained.
“Very well,” Ezra
responded. “If the discussion is the same as yesterday’s, then I would
prefer to do it out of doors. I’d rather not have to pay the costs of
refurbishing this saloon. I spent far too much the first time.” He shifted
his stance like a boxer in a ring. “Shall we adjourn? I’m certain to fare
better at this meeting. You will not take me unaware again.”
“Sit down, Ezra,” Vin
said as he pulled out a chair. What anger he’d harbored had leached out when
he’d seen Ezra’s reaction to him. It was hard to believe that this was the
same man who’d sat with him at Dolby’s Crest, taking care of him when his
leg was busted up and he couldn’t move. Difficult to conceive that this was
the same man that sang carols with him in a ramshackle house on that snowy
Christmas, that had patiently helped him with his reading, that had talked
with him on the balcony of the Redbird on a starry night.
Vin recalled the recent experience of being unable to do anything when Ezra
was trapped beneath that stagecoach -- that horrible helpless feeling.
Sort of like now -- sort of
how he felt earlier -- helpless and unable to change the situation his friend
had ended up in.
“Sorry I hit cha, Ez,”
Vin muttered. “It wasn’t my meanin’.”
“Hmmm,” the cardsharp
returned. “I guess your fist just slipped.”
“Yeah, somethin’ like
that,” Vin said with a sigh.
Ezra kept a careful eye on
the tracker, watching as Tanner sat down. Once Vin was settled with his hands
on the table, Ezra returned to his seat. “I suppose you have something to
say about the incident that occurred in Greeley,” Standish began. His voice
had a slurred quality, due to the uncooperative jaw.
“Yeah.” Vin twitched
his lips. His voice remained soft as he said, “You should’ve told me. You
should’ve said it outright that there were bounty hunters in town. Weren’t
no cause for tricking me, for lyin’.”
“I did inform you that
subterfuge would be involved.”
Vin muttered, “I didn’t
think you meant that I was the one you were lyin’ to!”
Ezra shrugged. “I don’t
believe that I told you an outright prevarication, Mr. Tanner. I simply
omitted elements.”
“Omitted a damn lot.”
“Would you have gone
along with my plan if you knew all of the factors involved?”
“Hell no!” Vin shouted.
“We could have figured something out. Maybe you and me could have just taken
on those two guys.”
Ezra took a sip of his beer
and then set it carefully before him, his eyes always on Tanner. “There was
more than two,” he said offhand.
Vin paled a bit. “Trevor
said it was Bailey and Cox looking for me.”
“They were working in
concert with the Foley Brothers.”
“Max and Linus?” Vin's
hands tightened into fists as Ezra nodded in response. The Foley Brothers were
small-time bounty hunters. They were farm hands when it was the season to
harvest farm-goods, and they harvested bounties the rest of the time. They’d
never been much of a threat to Vin, and weren’t known for being terribly
clever -- but they had brought in a few bounties over the years -- some alive
and some dead.
“Damn it, Ezra. Four of
‘em?” The tracker stood, paced to the door and back to the table. When he
swung back, he noted Ezra’s stance-- he was still seated, but his hands were
flat on the table as if he were ready to push himself to his feet, to defend
himself. Vin growled, “Should ‘ave told me! One man can’t take on four!
That makes no sense!”
“Exactly, Mr. Tanner. One
man cannot take on four when one plays fairly. But, one slightly-crooked man
can cheat his way past four. You recall our first meeting?” The gambler
smiled unevenly, one side of his face swollen. “There was more than four in
that saloon and I managed to handle them quite handily on my own, using a few
simple tricks.”
That’s just another time
when I didn’t give him no help,
Vin thought, remembering his first contact with the wily conman. We let him
get out of that alone -- with one man tryin’ to gouge his eye out and other
gonna shoot him in the back. We would ‘ave jumped in if things took a turn,
but probably not without ‘im sufferin’ for us bein’ late.
“Damn it, Ezra. This
ain’t the same thing. Least you got yourself into that brawl yourself. This
wasn’t your fight. Weren’t none of your business.”
“The fact that they were
set to bring you to justice…” Ezra made a face as if he’d tasted
something bitter. “…made it my business.”
“Hell, we could have
snuck on out of town at night.”
“There were four men
actively searching and watching the town for you. We would’ve been located
if we waited about too long and wouldn’t have gotten far without some manner
of plan.”
“Well, we could have
figured out something sneaky -- together.” He gave Ezra a knowing look. “I
could have just put on your pretty tan jacket and a nice shirt, bought a new
hat..”
“They were looking for
you, Mr. Tanner. If you’d just disappeared, do you think they would’ve
given up? They knew you were in my company so anyone riding with me would be
suspect.”
“Hell,” Vin muttered.
“I could have put on some of your stuff and just rid off alone. Weren’t no
need for you to put on my jacket and hat. You could have put on something else
-- a dress even! -- just anythin’ but my stuff. We would have gotten off
clean.”
“But they were looking
for you, Mr. Tanner,” Ezra stated. “And, must I repeat, they knew you and
I were traveling together. Someone, at some point, would have followed ME
if they didn’t have YOU to follow instead.” He rubbed his swollen
jaw and closed his eyes for a moment before continuing. “I was able to lead
them off course for a few days. Meanwhile, your merry chase with Mr. Woollock
left a difficult trail for them to attempt if they decided to follow you upon
learning of the ruse.”
“I should have just rode
off by myself -- in my own stuff,” Vin grumbled, tired of thinking about
disguises and misdirection. “I could have just rode out and let them try to
catch me. Gone off alone so there was no need to put you in danger, too.”
“Ah, you see,” Ezra
responded. “That’s the problem right there. Your honesty and integrity
would have gotten in the way. Certain to save my life, you would’ve left
town on your own to try your luck in outrunning them.”
“Yeah,” Vin said with a
nod. “‘Spect that’s how it would have ended up.”
“And you do understand
that I couldn’t let that happen? I had to come up with a plan that would
keep you from yourself. If they caught up to you, then your life was forfeit.
If they caught up to me, then chances were that they’d let me go.”
“Damn it, Ezra, it was a
fool idea! You could’ve gotten killed or hurt or something.” He pounded
his fist into the table. “You think I wanted you to get yourself killed on
my account?”
Ezra watched the action
with raised eyebrows. “I’m not dead, Mr. Tanner. The plan went almost
exactly as conceived.”
“Idiot plan,” Vin
muttered. “What the hell was your idea? Get me out of the way and then throw
yourself at the wolves when I wouldn’t be ‘round to help?”
“I threw myself at no
wolves, Mr. Tanner. I had no designs on dyin'. From the moment we parted ways,
I did everything possible to remain with the living.”
“What the hell didja
do?”
“Well, I suppose I can
tell you the tale.” Ezra touched his chin again, manipulating his jaw as he
gathered his thoughts. “I engaged Mr. Woollock, as you know. Then, I
revealed part of the plan to you.”
“Lied your damn head off,
ya mean.”
Ezra waved a hand.
“Nothing was an outright lie, Mr. Tanner. I did promise you that you’d be
in no danger, which was entirely on the up-and-up. Also, Mr. Woollock was
honestly trying my nerves. I did want to be free of him.” He frowned and
added, “I suppose I still owe him $20. No doubt he’ll be looking for
me.”
At that comment, Vin pulled
a fold of money from his pocket and set it onto the table. He said nothing,
but his eyes filled with the discontent he’d felt ever since he’d taken
the money from the sharp. He pushed it across the table. Ezra eyed the wad for
a moment, ran his thumb over his bottom lip thoughtfully, and then picked up
the fold and returned it to its proper home. Not a word was spoken during the
exchange.
“What happened after you
sent me away?” Vin asked quietly. “What’d you do?”
“Well,” Ezra drawled,
“I had a bit of an adventure.” He sat back in his seat and smiled. “I
remained in the hotel room for a short time after your departure to ensure
that you and Mr. Woollock had covered some distance. Then I took a quick
stroll to the livery to saddle your faithful mount and leave the town, bein’
certain to keep your hat pulled down low. I was able to get somewhat ahead of
the gentlemen pursuers. They’d been delayed because some miscreant had
damaged their saddles to the extent that they no longer could be used.”
“Funny how things like
that happen,” Vin uttered.
Ezra looked baffled. “And
it seems that all their horses had overeaten and couldn’t be taken on a hard
run. Pity really. Well, once that problem had been overcome -- new horses
found and saddles obtained -- I had been able to get some distance away.” He
sipped again at his drink. “The rest was simple. Upon reaching the outskirts
of Westover late in the day, I found a young man, and I asked him to take a
message into town that would be wired onto Four Corners. The note was to
assure you and the others that I was well. From there, I continued on toward
Regal and set up camp. The Foleys and their friends caught up to me the next
morning as I was preparing my breakfast.”
Ezra yawned as Vin sat
forward. “What happened?”Tanner demanded.
Ezra continued in a
disinterested tone, “I was wearing your preferred uniform. They came at me
in an ambush. Cox got a gun up to my head while one of those Foley’s nearly
twisted my arm off.” Ezra rolled his shoulder at the memory. His accent
changed as he spoke, switching from the lyrical and erudite mix of southern
tones that Vin was used to, into a flat, mid-western accent. “They got me
down on my knees with my hands b’hind my back b’fore I could say anythin’.
When they called me Vin Tanner, I told them my name was Arnold Wickfield. I
told ‘em that I was on my way to Regal to get a job on a ranch out
that-a-way. They spent part of the mornin’ askin’ me all sorts of
questions. They liked askin’.”
“They hurt you any?”
Tanner asked, setting his jaw.
“Well, not so much,”
Ezra responded. “I figure they only meant to subdue me. The fact that they
nearly dislocated my shoulder was probably due to my own poor construction
than from their designs.” He smiled and added, “I was unharmed by the
encounter.” He winced slightly as he finished, his eyes narrowing further,
reminding Vin who had been the one that had driven the gambler’s head into
the ground.
Tanner said nothing,
lowering his head and listening to Ezra’s tale.
Ezra returned to the odd
accent, “I think they were tryin’ to trip me up, as they were askin’ all
manner of fool things, but I held my ground and soon they figured that
they’d made a mistake, followin’ the wrong fella all day. Made ‘em a bit
ornery, I think, but what could be done?” He shrugged.
Shifting his position, Ezra
continued, “I packed up my camp and headed out. Then, I met up again with my
new friends. Ya see, they hadn’t gone far. They’d waited down the way.
Apparently they weren’t as convinced as I thought, ‘cause they followed
me, at a distance, all the way to Regal. T’keep up the act, I had to find
some poor rancher that might ‘ave been lookin’ for help. They caught up
with me again oncest I finished my interview.”
“Yeah, what come of
that?” Vin asked since Ezra paused.
“If I tire of my work
here in Four Corners,” Ezra said in his usual accent. “I can always return
to Regal and begin my position as a cook’s helper.” He smiled as broadly
as his damaged mouth would allow, the tilt of his head becoming more
pronounced.
“What happened to Bailey,
Cox and the Foleys?” Vin asked sharply.
“Oh, they wired Greeley
once they reached Regal, undoubtedly, and were told that ‘another’ man
matching Vin Tanner’s description left town shortly after they ended their
residence. Apparently THAT Vin Tanner was headed toward San Francisco.”
“How’d you arrange
that?” Vin asked skeptically.
“Oh,” Ezra said.
“Every man has his price. Lucky for me, the telegraph operator in Greeley
has low standards.” He sighed. “And one would think that wire operators
would stand on higher principles than us mere mortals. The men that
disseminate information and form the communication backbone for our nation
should behave better than that.”
Vin frowned. “We wired
Greeley and nuthin’ was said about two Vin Tanners leavin’ town.”
“Please,” Ezra scoffed.
“I’d ensured that he wouldn’t make such a foolish claim to anyone in
Four Corners.”
Vin harrumphed, and then
asked, “So you come on home after that?”
“On a circuitous
route,” Ezra said twirling one finger in the air. “After deferring the
offered position at the ranch to a later date, I purchased one of their horses
and used that as my mount on the way home, resigning poor Peso to the position
of pack animal. He wasn’t pleased, but it was necessary to change to a new
horse to complete the charade -- as I had changed my clothing to something a
bit more presentable and presumed the role of a surveyor for the railroad. I
needed to make a few purchases to complete the act. I doubt if many know what
proper surveyor’s gear looks like, but one never knows – one should be as
accurate as possible in such circumstances. Now, I’ll need to find a buyer
for the equipment and the horse as well. Oh, you may want to give Peso a bath
as I had to mark out his blaze.”
“So that’s it? You come
on home without any trouble?”
“I was delayed more than
I cared to be. I figured they might be looking for Cooks-helper Arnold
Wickfield, so I did my best to behave like Surveyor Adrian Deverall. After
surveying a certain stretch of open territory, I spent another night on the
range. I had no desire to lead them back to you after all I’d done to avoid
it.” Ezra closed his eyes and unconsciously rubbed the back of his head.
“You sleep at all while
you were out there?” Vin asked pointedly.
“Well, Mr. Tanner. It was
necessary to keep on my toes and ensure that the bounty hunters weren’t
about to pounce upon me.” He yawned and added, “All in all the plan worked
famously. The fact that we both made it back to town in one piece speaks
leagues for it.” He carefully touched his bruised chin and winced again.
“Of course, my plan didn’t include what might happen upon our
rendezvous.”
“That’s just it, Ezra.
Ya didn’t stop to think how I’d feel about the whole thing.”
“But, it worked,” Ezra
said with a note of finality.
“Ya should ‘ave asked
me for my opinion on it. It was my problem.”
“My plan was the right
thing to do.”
“No, it wasn’t.”
Ezra folded his hands and
said, “We shall never see eye to eye on this matter, Mr. Tanner, so let’s
simply end the disagreement here. What’s done is done. We are both still
alive and well. Now, are we still friends?”
Vin paused. “I don’t
like it when you pull crap like that -- like the time you rode off with
Marley’s body, tryin’ to draw fire. Like when you got up on that armored
wagon with a bottle of whiskey -- where anyone could ‘ave shot you down. You
do stuff like that and then act like it ain’t no problem if you get yourself
killed.”
“I haven’t been
killed,” Ezra reminded. “As you can see, my plans -- although somewhat
alarming in nature -- succeed. We survive."
“But ya risk yerself when
there might be other things that’d work.”
“I always measure the
odds, Mr. Tanner. I only place my bets when the odds are in my favor.”
Vin said nothing
immediately, regarding the conman who seemed to be having trouble even opening
his mouth. His eyes were almost closed by this point. “It’s not just a bet
you’re riskin'. Yer worth more than ya think. Ya know that, Ezra?”
“And you are, too, Mr.
Tanner. Which is why the effort is justified.”
“Not more than you, Ez.
You ain’t worth less than me.” Vin leaned across the table.
“Why, Mr. Tanner,” he
said, hooking his thumb under his vest. “The very cost of my waistcoat
outweighs the amount you spent on your entire outfit.”
“That ain’t what I was
gettin’ at.” Vin scowled.
“I know,” Ezra said
with a tired smile. “And I understand. Neither of us holds a position of
greater value. I am fully aware of that fact. Worth is not an issue here.
It’s not as if one can set a dollar value on another’s life.”
Vin furrowed his brow and
said softly, “Damn sorry about takin’ that money, Ez.”
“It was a
justifiable…”
“No it wasn’t. It was
plain meanness on my part.” Vin swallowed. “Wasn’t the act of a friend.
I’m sorry I took it.”
“I know,” Ezra
responded.
“I fucked up with askin’
for that.”
“It’s not an issue, Mr.
Tanner.”
“It sure as hell is an
issue, Ezra.” Vin met Ezra’s tired eyes. “Fact that you don’t see it
drives me crazy. Hell, you should have slugged me back in Greeley for even
askin’.”
“Forget about it. I led
you to believe that such a fee was deserved.”
“No! No it wasn’t.”
Vin shook his head in frustration. “Damn it! It wasn’t right. I make ya
pay me when you come askin’ for help, and then I go and hit cha, too. Nothin’
I did was right, and I ain’t gonna justify any of it, but you shouldn’t
have lied to me, Ez.”
“But I didn’t,” Ezra
responded. “Not really. I chose my words very carefully, sir.”
“You led me astray.”
With a shrug, Ezra
commented. “Ah, but that’s the sort of man I am. All my training is in the
art of deception. It happens without effort. I have never hidden that
particular truth. I let everyone know exactly the sort of man I am.”
“You know what you are,
Ez? Ya really want to know what you are?”
The gambler looked unsure.
“Go ahead,” he suggested. “I’m open to your opinion.”
Vin drew in a breath, not
knowing exactly what do say. “I figure you’re a guy that’s been screwed
over a few times too many -- so you don’t got your head screwed on quite
right anymore. Figure you’re the kinda guy that’d do just about anythin’
for a friend, but you ain’t had many that deserved you.”
Ezra chuckled and shook his
head. “Well, I always have gotten what I deserved in the end, Mr. Tanner.”
Vin didn’t let the conman
sway him. “You’re a good friend -- a damn good one. One of the best I’ve
ever known. Ain’t just anyone that’d do what you done for me. It’s a
hell of a shame that no one’s seemed to have noticed that.” He wished for
once that Ezra would hear him and would understand. “Figure you haven’t
had too many people you could count on in your life.”
“There’ve been a
few,” Ezra admitted slowly. He looked away, rubbing his jaw again as if to
keep from saying anything else.
“Well, I’m one of
‘em, Ez. I got to get you to understand that.”
“Okay, then.” Ezra
turned to Tanner. “If we’re such good friends, let’s end this argument
between us.” Standish extended one hand. “Friends?”
“You understand what that
means, Ez? Friends? We don’t pull crap like this on each other.”
“Certainly. I’m in
complete understanding.”
Vin accepted the hand and
they shook. Tanner wanted to end this matter in any case, to go back to the
friendship they’d had before. “You agree that you ain’t gonna do this
sort of thing again?”
“Oh, I assure you, I
never try the same stunt twice. You’d be expecting it next time.”
“Well, at least I got
that much out of you. It’s done. We won’t argue ‘bout it no more, but
you’re gonna tell me next time you get a cravin’ to kill yourself.”
“Ah, but you know I
always value my safely above all things,” Ezra said with a sigh. “No more
shall be said about this matter.”
“And you’re gonna
understand that you and I are friends, right?”
“Of course, Vin.” Ezra
stood, and laid a companionly hand on Vin’s arm. “Now, if you forgive me,
I believe I shall go have a lie-down. My head is pounding incessantly.”
“Take care of yourself,
Ez.”
With a smile, Ezra
responded, “I always do.”
No, you don’t, Vin thought as he watched Standish make his way to
the back stairs, and then disappear from sight. With a frown, Vin leaned
backing his chair, wishing he could just get Ezra to truly believe what he’d
said.
PART 10
Days passed. Weeks passed.
A month trailed by. Trevor Woollock stayed in town long enough to get the rest
of his money, and then left. Ezra sold off the horse and gear he’d obtained
during the charade, gaining a profit -- enough to cover what he’d paid to
Woollock. The bruise on his face faded and he stopped squinting against the
headache. He suffered no lasting effects from his run in with Vin's fist and
the boardwalk.
Chris tried to take Ezra to
task for his actions, but ended up laughing about it, and shaking his head at
the conman’s audacity. Josiah was more successful in getting ‘Old
Testament’ on the card sharp, drawing promises from Ezra that he’d never
try that same thing again -- but Vin had already been able to get that
particular promise -- for as much good as it’d do. Ezra could always find a
new way to skirt his given word.
Buck, JD and Nathan seemed
to accept things as they were and pressed no issues.
Life in Four Corners
returned to normal.
It was a mild, quiet day
when Vin stood on the boardwalk, fingering the cufflink he’d found that
morning. It had fallen off of Ezra’s shirt when he’d hastily packed away
the disguise on that angry day on the trail. Ezra had asked about it shortly
after their return, and Vin had searched, but had come up empty. They decided
that it must have been lost along the way. Ezra was obviously disappointed.
He’d sent out inquiries to some of the nearby towns, hoping that if someone
came upon it, they’d try to sell it immediately. It was personalized, after
all, and of little use to anyone unless they had the initials EPS and the need
for only one cufflink.
“Perhaps a one-armed man named Ernest Pablo Salt has it now,” Ezra had
said with a dramatic sigh. And
then he talked about going to California to get a replacement.
Vin chanced across the
piece of gold jewelry as he cleaned out his saddlebag, wedged in a dark corner
of the pouch. He’d find the gambler and give it back to him. But, Ezra had
been scarce all day and his horse was in the livery. That meant one of two
things – either he was sleeping very late -- or he was up on the rooftops
again.
Vin noted the arrival of
the stagecoach and watched as a big, rough-looking man stepped down. The
stranger raked the town with his gaze, obviously intent on something, then
spotted Vin and headed toward him.
“Hey!” the man started.
“You wouldn’t be that tracker would you?”
Vin regarded the man -- his
close, beady eyes, his sweaty face, his tight mouth -- and shrugged. “I do a
bit of tracking,” he replied.
“Well I heard about
you.” The man snorted. “Don’t know your name, but mine’s Bennett --
Orville Bennett. I’m lookin’ for a fella that’s goin’ by the name of
Standish.” He bit off the name. “Last I heard it was Sutton, but now
it’s Standish.”
Tanner leaned back against
the railing. “Never heard of Sutton,” he responded.
Orville pursed his lips.
“What about Standish? You know him?”
“Heard the name,”
Tanner replied. “Why you want him?”
The man twitched his nose.
“Got a matter to discuss with him -- a family matter.”
“Why you think he’s
here?”
“Fella named Woollock
told me about Ezra Standish, told me all about a stunt that Standish pulled.
Sounds a lot like Ezra Sutton.”
Vin regarded the big sweaty
man. Bennett had an intensity to him that set off alarms in the tracker.
Everything about him seemed ready to pounce, to attack. Orville barked out his
words, his eyes darted around the town as if murderously searching out a
conman he knew as Ezra Sutton.
“What sort of trouble you
got with him?”
“None of your
business,” Orville said with a sneer. “It’s between me, Sutton and my
sister! Gotta talk to him ‘bout somethin’ in regard to her.”
So,
Vin thought, it’s that kind of trouble. If a girl was in trouble, Vin
figured, Standish should do the right thing for her -- but he wasn’t going
to let this big thug get to Ezra. No, let Ezra come to a decision on his own.
He didn’t need Bennett breaking a bone or two to force it.
“I haven’t seen him
around town lately,” Vin told him. “Might be anywhere.
Last I heard, he wanted to go to San Francisco.”
Orville’s face fell.
“You kiddin’ me?”
“Nope,” Tanner stated.
Then, since he already knew Woollock had provided information, he added, “He
had a run in with some bounty hunters.”
“Bounty hunters,”
Orville mumbled. “Figures.” He frowned. “You talk to this Ezra ever?”
“A time or two.”
“He ever mention Gertie?
Or Topeka?” Bennett asked leadingly.
“Cain’t say I heard him
talk of those,” Vin answered honestly.
“Yeah,” Orville
grumbled. “Probably wouldn’t. Not his style is it?”
“Figure not.”
“Damn, came a long way
for nothin’.” Orville jammed his hands into his pockets and scuffed his
feet. “Hell! Probably not even
a decent hotel in this town.”
“They got a good one in the next town on the line,” Vin told him.
Bennett sighed and turned on his heel toward the stagecoach to make
arrangements for an early departure.
Vin watched until the
horses were swapped out on the coach and the passengers finished milling about
and boarded again. The stage went along its way with Orville Bennett, scowling
out the window.
PART 11
After the coach had gone,
Vin sought out Standish, finally finding him atop the flat roof of the feed
store. “Hey,” Vin called as he scrambled onto the roof through the
trapdoor.
“Good day, Mr. Tanner,”
Ezra said, glancing over his book. “Did the stage have any interesting
passengers?”
“Yeah,” Vin responded.
“There was one in particular that was interestin’-- a fella named Orville
Bennett.”
Ezra set down the book and
met Vin’s eyes. “Orville Bennett? You’re certain?” He stood and
glanced off in the direction the coach had gone. “A big man with a glandular
problem, shifty eyes and less than simpatico disposition?”
“That’d be him.”
Ezra stood taller, as if it
would give him a better view over the tops of the buildings. “Orrie Bennett.
Imagine that. Here.” He turned to Vin, his eyes full of wonder and a strange
sadness. “Imagine that,” he repeated. “Out of the blue, he shows up
here.”
“Said he was lookin’
for you, or a man named Sutton,” Vin said as Ezra, with a stunned
expression, sat down again. “He talked to Trevor at some point and found out
about you livin’ here. Come lookin’. I talked a bit, made it sound like
you’d gone to San Francisco. That fool Woollock must be spoutin’ his mouth
off somewhere. 'Least he seemed smart enough to keep my name quiet. Weren’t
so smart about yours. Said
something about family business and his sister -- Gertie, and Topeka.
She in some sort of trouble, Ez?”
“Oh, Vin,” Ezra said,
his voice solemn and his mouth drawing out in a sad expression. “She’s
beyond trouble now.”
Vin watched Ezra’s
unconscious movements, how his hand continued to manipulate the simple gold
band on his ring finger. Tanner was familiar with the ring. Ezra had a cache
of jewelry that he swapped around regularly, some of the pieces were graced
with large stones. The flashy stuff, Vin figured, was to draw attention away
from what the hands were actually doing. But, the significance of the simple
band had long puzzled the tracker. He knew that it rarely left the card
sharp’s hand and figured it had to have some sort of a purpose. He
understood what it meant now, as he noted his friend’s solemn and lost
expression.
Vin said nothing as Ezra
kept his gaze on the path the stagecoach had taken.
“Orville isn’t such a
bad fellow, you know,” Ezra said softly. “He just comes off poorly,
especially when he’s tired, uncomfortable and disappointed.” Ezra shifted
his gaze to the ring and held out his hand for a moment to look at it before
making a fist and lowering it out of sight. “Like the first time he came to
visit us. You should have seen the look on his face.” Ezra smiled again, but
his eyes remained sad. “He was disappointed…so disappointed. She deserved
much better -- better than a run-down house in the bad part of Topeka, better
than the moth-eaten furniture and the borrowed dishes, better than me.”
He sighed and Vin stayed
silent, sitting down beside the gambler. He edged over until they were side by
side. “We saw him a few times, enough for him to remind me that I wasn’t
quite up to grade. But his sister loved him, so he was always welcome. I did
my best to live an honest existence, to make her proud, but….times were hard
and we never seemed to get ahead. I wasn’t made for honest labor. I’m just
not that sort, I suspect.” He pressed his lips tight for a moment.
“Orville expressed his opinions of me, but she didn’t listen.”
He stared at a spot on the
roof. “She’d just laugh at his words and try to bring him around. She
loved to tease him, loved to laugh.” He wiped the back of his hand across
his eyes and was quiet a moment. “The last time I saw him was after she was
gone.”
For a long minute there was
silence.
Finally, Ezra took a deep
breath. “There was a sickness in town.
At least it was quick for her. There
was little suffering. That was
one small mercy. Orrie was good,
you know -- very good to me then. Their father didn’t come. He’d given up
on her, though she never deserved it. But Orrie came, and stayed until
everything was done. He took care of things. He’s a good man.”
Vin rested one arm over the
gambler’s shoulder and drew him close. Neither said anything, gazing out
across the rooftops of the town. Ezra sat stiffly while Vin kept him near.
Finally, Ezra said in a low voice, “I haven’t seen Orville or their father
since then. I figured they preferred I kept my nose out of it, left her in
peace.”
“Sorry, Ez,” Vin
muttered. “I didn’t know. He looked like trouble. Shouldn’t have sent
him off like that. I should ‘ave asked you first.”
“It’s
understandable…” Ezra replied flatly.
“Look, we can go after
him. We can catch that coach at its next stop.
He’s going to be staying in Vail.”
“No,” he said softly.
“No, it’s better this way.” He nodded as if convincing himself.
“It’s better that I just disappeared from their lives. I made a concerted
effort to do that five years ago and I shouldn’t give that up now.”
“We could follow,” Vin
insisted. “He come all the way out here to find you.”
“And Fate moved him on.
It’s best that I let him go on his way. We all must move on with our lives.
I’ve done my best to follow that advice.”
Five years ago… Vin thought, realizing that this happened at about
the same time that Chris lost his family -- three years before they met up.
Funny, how different they both were about it. When he first got to know Chris,
Vin could tell that Larabee was a man eaten up with guilt and pain -- a
blackness had filled him which was only recently lightening.
If a man were to look at
Ezra, all he’d see would be a fast-talking conman, a glib gambler, a
cultured southerner, a fun-loving charmer. Conned us all, Ezra, Vin
thought.
Tanner tried to keep his
gaze from Ezra’s face to provide him some privacy, but from the corners of
his eyes he could see the miserable and lost expression. Ezra's face was
twisted up as if he was desperately trying not to cry. Vin didn’t know what
to say. He never was very good at words, but sometimes silence was the best
thing a man could give.
Vin remained silent, his
one arm holding Ezra. Ezra closed his eyes and bowed his head and for several
minutes, nothing was said. Man should cry, Vin thought -- but Ezra
didn’t make a sound.
Finally after the pause,
Ezra said, “I apologize, Mr. Tanner.”
“Hell, Ezra, ain’t
nothin’ to apologize for,” Vin said, squeezing his shoulder.
Ezra shook his head and
moved out from under Vin’s grip. “No my friend, I wish to apologize for my
actions of last month.”
Vin watched as Ezra stood
on the rooftop and fussed with his jacket. The tracker put two and two
together. Finally, in a low voice, Vin said, “I should ‘ave kept my nose
out of your business with Bennett. Sorry about that, Ez. I really am.”
Ezra responded, “No need
to feel that way. You were obvious looking out for my well-being and I
appreciate that more than you know. It’s good to know that someone’s
willin’ to watch my back. Thank you.”
Vin got to his feet. “I
never can understand what you’re gettin’ at, Ez.”
“What I’m sayin’ is
that there’s no reason for either of us to be upset at each other. We both
did what we thought was best for the other. And we’re both fine. What I am
apologizing for is that I didn’t understand your point of view before. Now I
do.” He nodded. “It won’t happen again.”
“Shake on it?” Vin
asked as he extended his hand and they shook on the matter. “So you ain’t
gonna go off on some half-assed plan without askin’ my opinion? Ain’t
gonna risk yer neck to save mine? Ain’t gonna cheat or lie to me again?”
Ezra shrugged as they
released their grip.
Vin ignored the gesture and
smiled smugly. “I’ll keep you to that promise.”
“I’ll follow through as
long as I feel it’s conscionable,” Ezra added.
Vin shook his head.
“Yeah, same here. Long as I feel it’s good for ya.”
As they headed for the
trapdoor, Vin said softly, “She must ‘ave been somethin’ special.”
Ezra halted, his eyes again
taking on that sad cast. “That, she was,” he whispered.
Vin crouched down by the
trap door, holding the handle as he looked at Ezra. “Bet she didn’t think
you were no good, that you were a disappointment. Bet she wouldn’t have gone
in for any sort of trade concernin’ you.”
Ezra looked away. “She
was one of those very rare people that actually made me feel as if I was worth
something.”
Dang it, Ezra, Vin thought. That ain’t right. “Bet she
would ‘ave knocked ya silly if ya did anythin’ as foolish as what you done
back in Greeley.”
“She could be fierce at
times,” he said. “But she had such a wonderful heart, my Trudy. It was so
good to be with her -- so good. Oh, she was rather plain looking and a little
plump, and she came from no money, but she was the most beautiful woman in the
world.” A wistful smile played across his lips. “She was funny and smart,
and never complained -- not once. We had nothing, but we were happy. She made
me happy.” He bit his lip and then added, “She loved me. Me, of all
people.”
Ezra looked to Vin, with a
thunderstruck expression. “I can’t quite comprehend it to this day. I had
nearly a year in her company. She was so beautiful.” Ezra’s gaze returned
to his ring, and he rubbed it gently with his right hand. “She was so
amazing… perfect. Wish I could see her just once more. Wish I could hear her
voice.”
“We can still catch up
with her brother if you want.”
Ezra gazed out longingly
after the stagecoach. “They laughed the same way, you know -- Orville and
Gertrude. If you’d heard Orrie laugh, you’d understand what a good man he
was. He has a great deal of kindness in him -- just like her. He wanted only
the best for her.” He wrung his hands, saying in a voice that was almost too
low to hear, “Everyone that I’ve ever cared about has left me somehow. I
just can’t go through that again.”
Vin froze for a moment,
hearing the words that were never meant to reach him. He threw back the trap
door. “Come on, we’ll catch him when they stop at Vail for the night.
I’ll come along,” he said casually. “I kin watch your back. Heck, I’ll
even wear your coat for you so Bennett will be mad at me first. I’ll draw
his fire, then, I can wander off a bit and letcha jaw a bit. I won’t get in
the way at all.”
“It wouldn’t work,”
Ezra whispered.
“Sure it would,” Vin
replied. “We’ll make it work.”
“No, Vin,” Ezra
responded quietly, his face screwed up as if he were in pain. “It’s over.
It’s done. She’s gone. Let it be.” With that, he darted down the ladder
and disappeared.
Vin remained for a minute
longer, as the sound of the gambler’s hurried footsteps grew further away.
“Damn,” he muttered.
PART 12
It was late in the day when
Vin stood outside telegraph office, one hand on the doorknob as he tried to
think things through, then he pushed the door open to find the operator at his
desk.
“Good Afternoon, Mr.
Tanner,” Winston Juje said in an official sounding tone, picking up a
pencil. “You looking to send a wire?”
“Yeah, yeah,” Tanner
said as he sidled up to the desk. “Need it to go to Vail for a Mr. Orville
Bennett.”
“Is there one T or two in
Bennett?” Winston asked as he licked the lead of the pencil and found the
next blank spot on his official notebook. When Vin shook his head to show he
didn’t know, Winston wrote what he thought was right. He continued,
“Where’s he stayin’ in Vail?”
“Dunno. He just went
through on the stage. It’s stoppin’ there for the night. Just gotta make
sure Bennett gets it before he heads on in the morning.”
Winston nodded and made the
proper notation. “Sender: that would be you?”
Vin nodded again.
“What do you want it to
say?”
Vin cleared his throat and
gripped the edges of the counter. Keeping his eyes on his hands, he spoke, “
‘Ezra Sutton found in Skunk Water, STOP. Leaving Tomorrow, STOP. If you’re
quick you’ll catch ‘im, STOP’.”
Juje raised an eyebrow as
he wrote the note, not asking any questions. A good wire operator said
nothing, but remembered everything. “Anything else?” he asked, wondering
where this would lead.
“Yeah," Vin
responded, keeping his gaze on his hands. “I need you to receive a wire,
too”
Juje smiled thinly and
said, “I do that all day long, Mr. Tanner. It’s my job.”
“I need you to get one
from Skunk Water and say it’s from the guy who runs the general store.
What’s his name?”
“Taylor,” Juje
responded, narrowing his gaze. “Gerald Taylor.” He quickly reconsidered
his pledge to keep his comments to himself. “You’re not askin’ me to
fake a message, are you, Mr. Tanner?”
Vin raised his eyes and met
Winston’s. “Yeah,” he replied. It wasn’t his practice to lie, let
alone bring others into the fabrication, but there were times when one needed
to bend the rules.
Juje crossed his arm over
his chest. “Mr. Tanner,” he said imperiously. “You’re asking a man
who’s sworn an oath to deliver accurate and…”
Tanner raised his hands.
“Winston, I’m askin’ a favor.” The wire operator frowned deeply. Vin
continued, “Remember a few months ago when you thought your wife had
somethin’ goin’ on with Buck?”
Winston grunted, tightening
his arms at his chest. It was his turn to look down.
“Remember how you was
plannin’ to cause some sort of trouble for him? Send Buck a faked-up wire
from a made-up girl in San Antonio?”
With a snort, Winston said,
“Never should have confided in you.”
“Naw, you did the right
thing when you told me, ‘cause I was the one who set you straight, wasn’t
I? Ain’t I the one that told you that Buck’s always talking to ladies that
way and that you shouldn’t think nothin’ of it. Nadine is too good a woman
to go after the likes of Buck."
“She looked…” he
murmured unhappily.
“Every girl looks at
Buck. The thing is, she done nothing.”
Winston grumbled and sucked
his teeth, but finally nodded and picked up his pencil again. “I guess since
you helped me then, I’ll help you now.” Instead of writing in his
notebook, he picked up the message pad. “This isn’t going in anythin’
official,” he said. “If anyone comes back to me, askin’ questions,
I’ll deny it all. I’ll say someone took a page or two from the pad, and I
had nothing to do with it.”
“I’ll own up when the
time comes. Say it was all me.”
“I’m not going to
deliver it and neither is anyone in my family.”
“I’ll do that part.”
“What is it then,” Juje
muttered.
“It’s to Ezra Standish,
from that Mr. Taylor in Skunk Water. It should say, ‘Found gold cufflink
initials EPS, STOP. Come to identify, STOP’.”
The operator sucked his
teeth again. “What do you got up your sleeve?”
“Best if you don’t know
too much,” Vin said as the operator wrote out the note.
Winston held the paper for
Tanner. “Heard you and Mr. Standish had a falling out a few weeks ago.
He’s one of you lawmen, and I don’t need him gunning for me. You aren’t
gonna cause him any trouble with this, are you?” he asked.
“A bit,” Vin admitted.
“But it’ll be good for him in the long run and I ‘spect he’ll get over
it in time. They got that mineral spring there in Skunk Water in any case. He
likes his baths so it won’t be a trip lost. ‘Sides, he probably wants to
get away for a bit right now.” He took the illegal paper from the telegraph
man and asked, “How much?” as he fiddled with the coins in his pocket.
Juje snorted. “I’m not
takin’ anythin’ for this bit of business.” He made an irritated gesture.
“I’m gonna get that message to Bennett and then we’d best just forget
about all of this.”
Vin nodded, tugging at the
brim of his hat. “Thank you,” he stated and left the small office. Juje
hastily cleaned the counter before he sent the wire, using a piece of wadded
linen against the hard wood, as if the dust might hold a clue to what just
went on.
As Tanner walked along the
boardwalk he sought the gambler. Fingered the lost cufflink in his pocket, he
thought that Ezra really should have a chance to talk to Bennett. Maybe
Orville would set him straight on a thing or two. Maybe not. Either way, Vin
figured, Ezra needed to see him.
He just hoped that Ezra
didn’t get too mad with him when he figured out the ruse. Might not like
it a’tall, Vin decided. But that’s what friend were for, wasn’t it?
Sometimes a man just had to do what was best for his friend and damn the
consequences. Sometimes one faced death for helping a friend, and other times
just the possibility of anger and distrust. It might take a while to repair
the hole. It was a fair trade if it helped the other.
It wasn’t Tanner’s usual way, but it was right, he figured. It’s what a friend would do. And besides, turnabout was fair play.
THE END -- by
NotTasha
CONTINUE on to An Introduction
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