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"How much money you
got, Heyes?" The two cowboys had just arrived in town, saddle
worn and chilled to the bone, after spending several days and nights
on the trail, settling for whatever meager shelter they could find.
"Why?"
"Cuz I'm
cold," Kid's words puffed out of his mouth in steamy little
clouds.
"Hmmm?" A
chill wind whispered past them where they stood on the boardwalk in
front of the hotel. It carried with it various and sundry bits of
debris that had been accumulating on the street in anticipation of
just such a breeze. Heyes squinted his eyes into the wind and pulled
his oversized gray coat tighter around his body.
"I said I'm
cold. I'm not sleeping outside again tonight. We need to get a room.
How much money you got?"
"Naw…this
ain't cold. Why, I remember one night back in eighteen,
seventy-"
"Heyes.
How much money you got?" Kid pronounced each word carefully to
make sure he had his friend's undivided attention.
Feigning offence at
being so rudely interrupted, Heyes glared pointedly at Kid for a
moment before reaching into his pants pocket and bringing out a few
silver pieces. Heyes studied the contents of his open palm intently
before meeting Kid's eyes again. "Ninety cents. You?"
"Even less than
that. How much you figure a room would run us?"
"About three
bucks a night, I reckon."
"Figure they'd
let us pay later?"
"Not
likely."
"Well, we gotta
try. I'm cold!" Kid bounced lightly from one booted foot to the
other in a vain attempt to ward off the icy chill seeping into his
joints.
"Kid, I'm
surprised at you. Making such a fuss over being a mite chilly."
"A mite
chilly?" He looked up at the gray and overcast sky.
"Heyes, it's starting to snow." The wind whistled past
them from the north, threatening to steal the hats from their heads.
"OK, Kid. You
win. If you're gonna let a little thing like snow bother you…"
his voice trailed off as they entered the lobby of the hotel. Heyes
plastered a confident smile across his ruggedly handsome face and
leaned his arms on the counter. "A room, please."
The clerk was a
rather weaselly-faced little man; the type who thought he was
infinitely better than his station in life implied. His pointy nose
crinkled up as he gave Heyes and Curry a contemptuous look through
his too-close-together eyes. Finally satisfied that the pair
was-marginally-acceptable, he handed Heyes a pen and gestured
towards the guest register. "That'll be three dollars."
Heyes accepted the
pen, still smiling, and said, "Yeah, right, can we pay that
later when we check out?"
Quick as a snake, the
clerk snatched the pen from the outlaw leader's hand and slammed the
register closed with a sharp snap. Heyes looked up at him, startled,
but still maintaining the smile he reserved for people he didn't
particularly like. Kid, who wasn't smiling at all, watched his
friend and waited to see what was going to happen next.
"Up front…cash!"
The smile slipped
from Heyes' face as he replied, "Well, see…we don't exactly
have that much right at the moment."
"But we'll have
it before long. All we have to do is-"
"Sorry. No
money, no room," the clerk said with finality, his beady eyes
never blinked even once.
The two stared at
Weaselly a moment longer. He was too dim to realize that he was
skating on thin ice, especially with Kid. Heyes sighed in
resignation and turned to his partner, "Now what,
Thaddeus?"
Kid glared at the
clerk. "Any other hotels in town?"
"This is the
only one," he answered with an arrogant sniff through his
pinched nostrils.
Heyes and Curry
started towards the door, pulling their coats closed against the
chill that would soon hit them.
"You could try
Mrs. Crabtree's, I suppose," Weaselly called after them.
In unison, they
wheeled around and headed back to the counter.
"Mrs.
Crabtree's?"
"Yes. She runs a
boarding house down at the end of Cedar Street. You might be able to
get a room there. And I hear she's looking for some help around the
place. That old house is falling down around her ears. An eyesore,
that's what it is. Ought to be torn down, I say."
"Cedar
Street, you say? Thanks. Let's go Kid."

The house at the end
of Cedar Street was pretty much as the desk clerk described it. At
some time in its past it had been a handsome home but now it was in
serious need of some repair. There were shingles missing from its
tall, pitched roof, the front porch sagged, and shutters were
hanging, or missing altogether, from some of the big windows facing
the street. Curry and Heyes stood looking at the house for a few
minutes before venturing across the street to its front steps.
"Whaddaya think,
Kid?"
"I think
anything is better than freezing our tails off. Let's go see about
getting a room."
A shiny brass knocker
hung precariously from the front door. Curry grasped its handle and
rapped it a couple of times. It smacked soundly into the heavy
wooden door, before coming loose from its hinges in Kid's hand. He
was still holding it, wondering what to do with it, as the door
swung open. Hastily, he stuffed the knocker into his coat pocket. In
an aside, he said to Heyes, "I'll fix this later." Heyes
stifled a grin.
"Yes? Can I help
you boys?" The woman who stood there staring at them curiously
from the other side of the doorway looked like she should have had
about a dozen grandkids swarming around her. She was a little woman,
all billowy and soft looking like a gramma should be. Her gunmetal
gray hair was tied in a tight braid and wound around her head from
bottom to top and back again.
"Uh, yes ma'am.
My name is Joshua Smith and this here is my friend, Thaddeus Jones.
We heard you might have a room to rent for a few days?" Heyes
asked. "Cheap?"
"Yes, I do
happen to have one room available…Why don't you come in? We're
letting all the cold air in."
"Much obliged,
ma'am." She stepped aside and let the pair into the house, cozy
warm from the heat of a fire blazing in the nearby fireplace. The
inside of the house was in much better condition that the outside.
It looked immaculate, not a speck of dust to be seen anywhere.
Still, there were things that apparently needed repair even here.
"How much is the
room?"
"Don't you want
to see it first?"
"Does it have a
bed?"
"Why, yes, of
course!"
"It's perfect.
How much is it?"
"Three dollars a
night. Up front."
"Up front?"
"Certainly. That
includes two meals a day."
"Well, that's
surely a fair price, ma'am. Only problem is, we don't exactly have
the money right now…"
"But we expect
to have it shortly, don't you worry."
"Oh, I believe
you, but you see, I really can't afford to take the chance."
She leaned towards them and whispered, "I've had boarders skip
out on me in the middle of the night without paying, can you
believe?" Speaking in a normal tone again, she continued,
"Now I don't imagine that you boys would do anything like that…you
look like nice young men, but I'm afraid it has to be paid up
front."
"Oh." Kid's
face sagged in disappointment. He tipped his hat to Mrs. Crabtree.
"Thanks anyway, ma'am." They turned to leave. As an
afterthought, Kid dug into his pocket and brought out the brass
doorknocker. "I think this belongs to you. Sorry about
that."
They were just
pulling the door open to head back into the cold evening air when
Mrs. Crabtree called to them, "Just a second, boys."
Once again, in
unison, they spun around on their heels and faced the matronly lady
of the house. "Ma'am?"
"First off, stop
calling me Ma'am. Just call me Mizz Emma. Everybody does. Now, I
think maybe we can work something out." She looked them up and
down, appraisingly. "You look like fine strappin' young men…you
don't mind a little hard work, do you?"
"No Ma'am…uh,
Mizz Emma. Hard work is what we do best…when we can't find
somethin' else to do, at least."
"How'd you like
to help me do some repairs around this old place? I'd give you free
room and board, three meals a day, for as long as you're willing to
help."
"Free room and
board? Sounds pretty good, eh, Joshua?" Kid was anxious to take
her up on her offer. He was not looking forward to another night out
in the cold.
However Heyes was not
ready to seal the deal quite yet. "How about free room and
board plus three dollars a day?" He paused and added with a
charming smile, "We gotta get a stake for when we're ready to
move on."
Mizz Emma frowned and
looked ready to put them out, unwilling to accept Heyes' terms.
Curry was just about to intervene when she said, "You drive a
hard bargain, young man, but I'll agree to pay you what you ask. It
will be so wonderful to have this old place looking nice for the
holiday."
"Your room is
upstairs, first room on the left. Get yourselves settled in there.
You can have this evening to relax and tomorrow you can start on the
repairs around here. Supper is at six. You'll get a chance to meet
my other boarder, Mr. Jameson, then. I know you'll all get along
famously."
As they walked away
to find their room, Kid asked Heyes, "What holiday is she
talking about?"
Heyes shrugged his
broad shoulders, "Must be Christmas. That's the only holiday I
can think of coming up."

Supper was served
promptly at six, as promised. As Heyes and Curry entered the dining
room, they were welcomed by enticing smells of Emma's home cooking
coming from the attached kitchen. The table was set, well-used china
marking four places. An elderly man was already seated at one of the
places.
"Ah. Our new
boarders, I assume. Smith and Jones, is it?"
"Yes, sir.
That's right. I'm Jones and this is my partner, Smith," Kid
extended his hand. "You must be Mr. Jameson."
"Bingo, boy. So
what are you waiting for? Sit. You're in for a real treat tonight.
Emma has made one of her specialties. Brisket with mashed potatoes
on the side. Purely melts in your mouth I tell ya. And I'm pretty
sure I smell some of her delightful buttermilk biscuits coming out
of the oven."
"Much obliged,
sir." The two had barely pulled out their chairs and planted
themselves before the door leading into the kitchen swung open. Mizz
Emma backed into the room, struggling slightly under the weight of a
large platter that she set down in the center of the table.
"I hope you're
hungry, boys. I always make more than just two of us can eat. I
still haven't adjusted to not having more family around for
meals," she chuckled. "You'd think by now…aw well, old
habits are hard to break, you know. And at my age, old habits are
the only kind I have."
"Well, don't
worry Mizz Emma. I'm hungry enough to eat the whole cow," Kid
answered. Heyes smiled fondly at his partner, knowing that he was
probably exaggerating just a little.
"That's what I
like, a young man with a good appetite."
"You don't know
the half of it, Mizz Emma," Heyes grinned, earning the expected
glare from his partner.
"Go ahead and
get started then. I'll be back in a minute with the rest," she
said, rushing back into the kitchen.
By the time she
returned with the rest of the meal, all three men had dug into the
brisket, helping themselves to hefty chunks of the savory meat. Once
the mashed potatoes and gravy and biscuits with freshly-churned
sweet butter were added to their plates, Kid Curry looked like he
thought he had died and gone on to heaven.
Around big mouthfuls
of the food, he said, "This is delicious. Just like my gramma
used to make."
"Emma is the
best cook in town. She's gonna make some lucky man very happy some
day," Mr. Jameson grinned with a wink.
"Oh, Hank! You
stop that now. Don't tease me so!" Emma's kindly face warmed
and she giggled like a schoolgirl.
"So how long
have you been living here, Mr. Jameson?" Heyes asked, focusing
his dark brown eyes on the older man.
"Let's see. I
think it's been almost two years now, isn't that right, Emma? It was
shortly after I retired from working. Forced to retire
actually."
"Forced,
Sir?"
"Yep. Never
really recovered from that bullet I took. Couldn't fulfill my duties
as sheriff anymore-"
Heyes' choking and
sputtering over the mouthful of coffee he had been trying to swallow
cut him off.
Kid was alarmed, both
by Heyes' outburst and by Jameson's statement, but managed to cover
nicely by talking loudly over the sounds of his friend, who
continued to gasp and wheeze even as Kid thumped him soundly on the
back.
"Sheriff, huh?
That's great. That's really something. Never met a real sheriff in
person before."
Heyes, whose face had
turned a rather unusual shade of purple, finally recovered enough to
squeak out a few words, "Wrong pipe," he croaked
miserably, holding his throat. "So you were saying…you've
lived here for two years?"
"Yes, he has and
it's been a real pleasure having him around too. A quieter boarder I
couldn't hope to find. And since my daughters married and moved out,
he's been a great comfort to me too."
"And how long
have you been running the boarding house, Mizz Emma?"
"Since right
after Mr. Crabtree, God rest 'im, passed on. Almost five years, it's
been. I had my daughters to support so I had to find a way to bring
in some money. Never regretted it even once either. I'm hoping that
you boys can stay on a while, leastways 'til you get some things
fixed around here."
"Ma'am, you keep
cooking like this and we're likely to start breaking things just so
we can stay on a little longer," Kid said, pushing away from
the table to give himself a little more breathing room now that his
plate was polished clean.
"Yes,
ma'am," Heyes laughed nervously. He was still thinking about
Jameson and wasn't one hundred percent sure they'd be staying on too
long at all!
"Good. That's
settled then. Now I'd like to see you get as much done by
Thanksgiving Day as-"
"Thanksgiving
Day?"
"Next Thursday,
of course. Oh, it'll be so nice to have you boys here to help
celebrate the holidays. I don't expect my daughters will make it
home this year," Emma said sadly.
"Oh,
sure---Thanksgiving Day. Uh-huh." Heyes and Curry exchanged an
uncomfortable glance. Without a word, both men pushed their chairs
back from the table and rose as one. "Will you excuse us, Mizz
Emma? Thank you for the fine dinner."
"Nice to meet
you, Mr. Jameson."
Emma looked surprised
but said, "Yes, of course. Breakfast is at 6:00 am," she
called after them as they rushed from the room and made for the
stairs and the privacy of their room.
She looked at Hank.
"What strange young men."
He shrugged his
shoulders, bewildered as her by their sudden departure.

Heyes and Curry took
refuge in the room at the top of the stairs. Whoever had decorated
this space had a passion for pastels and lace. A delicately stitched
quilt of many colors, pink, lavender, blue, and pale yellow, covered
the full-size bed. A girl's room, it probably looked much the same
as when it was lived in by one or both of Emma's daughters. The two
rough and ready cowboys seemed out of place and too bulky to occupy
such a room.
"Heyes, help me
out here. What's Thanksgiving Day all about?"
The ex-outlaw leader
looked surprised at the question, "Kid, don't you remem-"
Frowning, Heyes
stopped in mid-sentence and took a different tack. "Well, near
as I can figure, it's…uh…" Heyes shrugged and continued
lamely, "a day set aside for giving thanks."
"That's the best
you can do? A day set aside for giving thanks? I had that much
figured out myself."
"Awww, whaddaya
want from me, Kid?"
"I just expected
a little more from you, is all, what with all that book readin' you
do. I'll tell you this though. I don't plan on having no
Thanksgiving Day. What've we got to be thankful for anyhow? Look at
us, no home, no family, no steady jobs. Heck, we don't even have use
of our real names anymore. Smith and Jones-what kind of names are
those?"
"Kid, I'd like
to argue with you, but I gotta admit you're right for once. There
ain't much in this world that I can rightly say we got to be
thankful for. But it don't make no sense for us to up and leave
right now. Thanksgiving Day is still a ways off. Let's stick around
here where we got a roof over our heads and three squares for a
while, but we'll head out before the holiday gets here. How would
that be?"
"Yeah, that'll
do, I reckon."

Sleep did not come
easy to Jedediah "Kid" Curry that night. As he lay on his
half of the bed that he shared with his long-time friend and
partner, thoughts and remembrances thrashed through his head. He
found himself thinking about a happier time; a time that he had
almost forgotten ever existed, it was so far gone. He had a family
once, a mother, a father, brothers, but he had been on
his own for so long that sometimes he couldn't even remember their
faces. Sometimes when he tried to conjure up the people he loved all
he could muster was a vague silhouette.
Tonight was
different. Lying there in the cool stillness of the room; Heyes'
even breath giving some small comfort, slow and steady; Kid had a
picture in his mind of a woman he once knew and loved with all his
heart, loved beyond all reason. Her face floated there behind his
closed eyes. To him, she was the most beautiful woman in the world,
always had been, always will be, although her face bore the lines
and sorrow that a life on the rough and dangerous plains of Kansas
would inevitably bring to anyone.
Tonight, he
envisioned her how he remembered she was in the evenings, after all
the chores were done, after all the children were tucked into bed.
She would come to his room, the one he shared with his brothers, to
give him a good night kiss. Some nights, she would be dressed for
bed herself in a long flowing nightgown. Her corn silk colored hair
would be loose around her shoulders, not knotted at the nape of her
neck like it was during the day. Her hair was always shiny and soft,
her crowning glory. Not even the harsh Kansas weather could take
away from its beauty.
Jed liked to twist
small sections of this hair around one of his chubby fingers as she
leaned over him to give him his kiss. She would always smile at
this; after all he was her baby, her youngest. He remembered the
feel of her hair in his hand, so fine and soft, and he remembered
the smell of it too, like lilacs, heady and sweet.
If he lay real quiet
and didn't breathe, he could even imagine he heard her laugh, sweet
and melodious as a church choir, as she wrapped him in her loving
embrace that carried him down to sleep.
In his childish mind,
Jed thought he would stay with her forever, basking in the
reflection of her love. But of course, childish dreams have a way of
vanishing in an instant and this one was no exception. Those happy
memories were lost when people he didn't know and never got the
chance to repay snatched his family away from him.
Thanksgiving Day, a
day for families…not a day for people like him. Orphans, vagrants,
transients as Deputy Harker had put it…there is no thanksgiving
day for people of their ilk. As sleep finally claimed his troubled
soul, a single tear, silent and solitary, slid down his cheek until
it was swallowed up by the pillow cradling his head.

Heyes was lost in his
own thoughts. He knew Kid was awake. It was apparent in the
restlessness of his breathing and the little twitchy movements he
made as he tried, unsuccessfully, to shut his mind off. He didn't
disturb his partner with talk though, he had his own demons he was
wrestling with.
He lay staring up
towards the ceiling in the gloomy darkness. All the colors that had
brightened and cheered the room during the day had been sucked out
by night's black vacuum. And there was a blackness in Heyes' heart
to match.
He was good at
concealing his feelings from most of the people he met. Oh, he knew
that sometimes his more intense emotions shone out dangerously
through his eyes and the set of his smile or lack thereof, but most
of the time he had a pretty good poker face and he used it for more
than playing games.
About the only person
who could read him right most of the time was laying there next to
him. That's why, on nights like this, he was glad for the darkness.
He wouldn't want Kid to see him like this, jaw clenched so tight it
hurt, all worked up by his emotions and memories of a time that he
wanted more than anything to put behind him once and for all.
His breathing
wouldn't give him away. He had practiced the slow and rhythmic
inhale/exhale so many times that he was sure Kid had no idea that he
was even awake. All his turmoil was bound up inside of him as he lay
there, rigid, staring wide-eyed into his past.
The headmaster was a
devious man, with a black heart and no compassion for the lost and
pathetic children put in his charge. But in order for him to
continue receiving full funding from the state, he had to carry out
the charade of a Thanksgiving Day dinner. The President of the
United States, after all, had made the proclamation of a national
day of thanks.
Under threat of
beating, all the children were expected to be there in attendance as
some of the city's big shots were going to be there, to see what a
fine place this charitable home for unfortunate youth was.
Hannibal didn't care
about the beating though. Lord knew he had already had more than his
share, but not more than most everybody else had got too. There
wasn't any way he was going to be marched out there in front of all
the rich folk just to make Headmaster Glock look good.
But he didn't intend
to go hungry either. So while everyone else was going about their
business, he snuck into the kitchen and stole what he wanted. It
wasn't hard; he'd done it a lot of times before.
Then just as the
dignitaries were beginning to arrive, after all the boys had been
scrubbed up and given something decent, meaning anything better than
the rags they normally walked around in, to wear; Hannibal
disappeared into his secret hiding place to enjoy his 'thanksgiving'
dinner in peace. The food tasted good, but not as good as it could
have. It was somewhat tainted by the knowledge that his current
exploit was likely to earn him a whippin' to end all whippins' by
the end of the day.
Heyes remembered how
alone he felt that night, sitting there in the shadows of his secret
place. He was tough, but sometimes he didn't feel so tough.
Sometimes he felt like that little boy who still missed his family.
Remembering, Heyes
saw himself as that young boy, already so full of the knowledge of
how the world can be. He thought about the wall that he had felt
going up around his soul as a boy. Then he thought about the only
person who had been able to crawl over, break down, and ultimately
destroy that wall before it had destroyed him.
Heyes remembered how
the boy had shown up in Heyes' secret hiding spot the night of the
big Thanksgiving feast and how the two of them had shared the food
he had stolen from the kitchen. He remembered how glad he had been
to see him there, peeking around the corner in the semi-darkness of
his hidey-hole, risking his own beating by sneaking away to join his
best and only true friend.
Hannibal hadn't felt
so alone anymore that night. That night, they made a pact to always
be there for each other. They swore to it in blood drawn from their
fingers with Heyes' pocketknife. That was the second time they had
made such a pact, the first had been at a happier time, not long
past.
And in all these
years since, that boy, now a man, had been the only thing that was
constant in his life. Everything, everyone, else had come and gone,
by choice or by force, but Kid was always there for him, holding him
steady and strong against a world that sometimes seemed determined
to destroy him. For that he was thankful, little else.

Sunlight breaking
through baby blue lace curtains woke Kid. Heyes was still asleep,
lying on his stomach, mouth open, the side of his face smashed into
his pillow.
Kid considered his
sleeping friend for a moment before giving him a gentle nudge on the
shoulder, "Heyes. Get up. It must be nigh on six o'clock."
"Uhhngg,"
Heyes muttered in return. His eyelids didn't so much as flutter.
"Heyes."
Kid said again, more insistently this time. "Wake up. You're
droolin'. You're gonna drown if you don't close your mouth." He
nudged Heyes as second time, not quite as gently as the first.
"Mmmmm…I'm up,
Kid. Leave me alone." Slowly, Heyes opened his eyes, first one
and then both. They felt gravelly from lack of sleep. He hadn't
fallen asleep 'til very early in the morning, haunted by the
memories of his time spent in the orphanage. He didn't know why Kid
didn't remember that time, the one and only Thanksgiving they had
shared, but it was probably better that way anyway.
"And I'll have
you know, I don't drool," he muttered with all the indignation
he could work up at such an early hour.
"Uh, huh,"
Kid smiled, his blond curls tousled and wild from his restless
night.
Heyes met Kid's smile
with a frown. While Kid was busily getting dressed, Heyes sneaked a
look at his pillow through sleepy eyes. His frown deepened and he
flipped the pillow over before resting his head on it for another
quick minute.
"C'mon, Heyes.
You can't sleep all day. Besides, breakfast is waiting."
Heyes sighed,
"How come you always have to be so full of energy in the
morning? Would it kill ya to sleep in once in a while?"
"It's just my
nature I guess. I'm a morning person. You…well, I'm not sure what
you are, but I like mornings. 'Sides, we don't wanna miss breakfast.
So get up!"
Something landed on
Heyes' head with a soft plop. "Here's your shirt. Get
dressed!"
Heyes had a pretty
good idea what was really driving the Kid. The smells of bacon
frying and good strong coffee brewing drifted up the stairs and
through the gap at the base of the bedroom door. If there was
anything that motivated his friend, it was food.
Kid was in a pretty
good mood this morning, the sadness that accompanied his fitful
passage into sleep replaced by a feeling of serenity. After finally
drifting off, his dreams were visited by the same lovely face he had
remembered while awake, but in his dreams, her beauty re-assured him
that things were going to be alright, and he believed her.

They found Mizz Emma
in the kitchen, putting the finishing touches on breakfast. When she
saw them, she smiled cheerfully and shooed them back out to the
dining room. She didn't have to ask them twice to sit and eat. Heyes
inquired as to Mr. Jameson's whereabouts.
"Oh, he's out
for his morning constitutional. He never eats breakfast, just a cup
of coffee. But you boys go ahead. You have a lot of work ahead of
you today."
Not really liking the
sounds of that, but grateful for the food, they ate.
Mizz Emma kept them
company while they had breakfast. She kept up a steady stream of
chatter; commencing with the list of chores and repairs she wanted
them to do. The list was considerable. Before she had finished
counting them off, Heyes and Curry had exchanged more than one
glance, undoubtedly wondering if they had made such a good deal
after all. Mizz Emma was determined to get value out of them.
When she finally
paused, Mizz Emma reached into the deep pocket of her apron and
pulled out the brass doorknocker. She handed it to Kid, saying,
"You can start with this. You'll find nails and whatever
materials you need in the shed out back."
Kid grinned
sheepishly, "Thank you, ma'am."
Once breakfast was
over, they set to work. Kid had fixed the doorknocker good as new,
with Heyes' careful supervision and unwanted advice. Then they both
moved on to the once white picket fence surrounding Mizz Emma's
home. Several of the pickets had started to rot out and needed
replacing. They were busy tearing off the old boards when Mr.
Jameson approached them from behind. He studied them thoughtfully
for a few minutes before he made his presence known to them.
"Howdy boys.
Hard at work, I see. Good…you know what they say about idle
hands."
"Yes, Sir.
That's why I enjoy poker so much."
"Huh?"
"Oh, nothing
Sir. I was just saying that there isn't much danger of our hands
being idle as long as Mizz Emma is in charge. Did you enjoy your
walk?"
Jameson frowned and
cleared his throat noisily, "I guess so. Mostly I just do it to
keep this dang leg from stiffening up on me. Ain't been the same
since I took that bullet."
"Yes sir, you
were saying that. Mind if I ask how it happened?"
"To be truthful,
it was just a senseless accident, I suppose. Would you believe I was
shot by my own dang deputy? Blamed fool. Should never have been
carrying a gun, let alone wearing a badge, that one. Dumb as one of
those posts you're fixin' in that there fence."
"Were you
chasing outlaws when it happened?"
Jameson guffawed
bitterly, "I wish…no, we was in the office and that dimwit
was cleaning his gun. I'm just lucky he didn't kill me."
He paused, recalling
the event, and then added, "You know what makes it even worse?
The blamed fool is my own nephew! Can you believe that? My own
sister's son. You just can't trust anybody in this world."
"That's too bad,
Mr. Jameson. What happened to him? Is he still deputy?"
Jameson laughed
again, "No, he got booted out same as me. Now he works as the
desk clerk down at the hotel. Say, you mighta met him. Shifty
looking little character? Name's Wesley."
Heyes and Curry
nodded, remembering the weaselly clerk from the day before.
"Yep, we met him. You say his name is Wesley? Somehow, that
seems to fit, don't you think, Joshua?"
"Sure do,
Thaddeus."
Jameson turned to go.
As he walked away he repeated, "Yep, that's my nephew. Just
goes to show you can't trust anyone. Let that be a lesson for you
boys."
"So Weaselly…I
mean Wesley was a deputy. How's that for luck, Heyes? We've met
three people in this town and two of them are ex-lawmen. The way
things are going, I wouldn't be surprised to find a tin star pinned
to Mizz Emma's dress under that frilly apron she wears."

At supper, later that
evening, Mizz Emma was not her usual cheerful self. Although she
tried valiantly to conceal her discontent from the three men seated
at the table around her, frustration radiated off her like steam
from a hot stone on a cold day. Mr. Jameson asked, "What's
wrong, my dear? Has something happened?"
Emma looked up from
her food that she had been attacking as though it were still living
and she wanted it dead. Her face was set in an unhappy scowl, which
she attempted to smooth out when she realized that she was being
appraised by 3 pairs of curious eyes. "Oh, it's nothing. I'm
just being silly. Don't mind me."
The three men, being
men, did as she asked. They went back to eating their dinners, not
minding her. Emma stared at the three bent heads for a moment
longer, her frustration rising to a new level. Suddenly, with a loud
clank, she dropped her silverware onto her plate. Three heads
snapped up in unison as she started, "I stopped in at the
mercantile this afternoon to pick up a few things."
Heyes, Curry, and
Jameson waited expectantly for more. Emma sat looking at them for a
few seconds, then shrugged her shoulders and said, "Oh, never
mind. What's done is done." Then she picked her fork back up
and, taking a deep cleansing breath, started to eat again. The men,
seeing this as a signal that all was fine, did the same.
Clank! Down went the
fork again. Up came three male heads. This time it was up to Heyes
to speak. "C'mon, Mizz Emma. Something is obviously bothering
you. It's not good to keep it bottled up like that. Why don't you
tell us?"
"Well, alright…like
I was saying, I stopped in at the mercantile this afternoon."
"Uh, huh. Go
on."
"Well…I wanted
to pick up a few things for the Thanksgiving Day dinner and also, I
had asked Carolyn…you know Carolyn, Hank…"
"Of course, my
dear…go on," Mr. Jameson encouraged.
"I had asked
Carolyn-you men will probably think this is silly-but they had the
most beautiful bolt of fabric in the store a few days ago, a very
pretty yellow with little pink roses on it, and I had asked her to
save me enough material off that bolt to make a dress for the
holidays. It would have made the most beautiful dress and you know I
haven't had anything new for so long. Anyway, I went down there
today to buy that fabric and you won't believe it, but she had sold
every scrap! Said she forgot I had asked her to hold it for
me." Emma looked as though she might start to cry. This made
the men squirm in their seats.
"I'm sorry,
Emma. Maybe there is some other fabric you could buy that would work
just as well. The mercantile must---"
Mizz Emma dismissed
this line of thinking with an impatient shake of her head.
"There wasn't anything else in the store that even came close
to that material and now it's gone. Why, come Thanksgiving, I'm
going to have to watch Mrs. Jenkins parading around in a new dress
made out of MY fabric. And I thought Carolyn was my best friend! You
just really can't trust anybody now, can you?"
As she talked, high
points of color had appeared on Emma's cheeks. Heyes and Curry
looked at each other, trying not to reveal their amusement at Emma's
plight. Heyes knew she was truly upset about the loss of the fabric
and wouldn't take it lightly if one of them so much as smiled, but
it was hard to keep a straight face, nonetheless. He just looked at
her; lips set in a sympathetic line; and shook his head slightly to
demonstrate his empathy to her plight.
Getting it off her
chest seemed to help a little. The color receded and she picked up
her fork again, seemingly more calm, at least on the outside. In a
more normal voice, she continued, looking at Mr. Jameson. "Oh,
by the way Hank, when I was down town I ran into your nephew."
"Wesley?"
"Yes. He asked
if you could stop in and see him tomorrow morning while you are out.
Says he needs to talk to you about something."
"Oh? Did he say
what?"
"Well…"
Emma glanced over at Heyes and Curry before continuing. "He did
say a little more but he told me not to say anything to anyone but
you." After a short hesitation, she went on to say, "But I
don't think it would matter if you boys heard. Wesley is always up
to some great scheme. I'm sure this is no different."
"So what did he
say, Mizz Emma," Heyes asked, curiously.
She leaned forward
conspiratorially, "Well, seems he has some plan to get his job
back." She turned to Hank for confirmation, "You know how
he hates working at the hotel and thinks they should never have let
him go after…well, you know. Seems he heard something that he is
sure he can use to convince them that he should be a deputy
again."
"Saints preserve
us if that ever happens, Emma. If he expects me to help him get that
badge back, he's crazier than I gave him credit for. I'll stop by
and see him alright, but it won't be to help him, it'll be to talk
him out of whatever fool scheme he has cooked up for himself."
While Mizz Emma
recounted her encounter with the weaselly Wesley, Heyes became
increasingly uncomfortable. The little hairs on the back of his neck
started to rise in a feeling of dread. He looked over at Curry and
could tell by the hard set of his jaw and his unblinking gaze that
he was feeling it too.
As one, both men
pushed back from the table. With a tight smile glued to his face,
Heyes asked, "Will you excuse us?" Without waiting for an
answer, they made for the safety of the little room at the top of
the stairs once again.
Emma, startled but
not entirely surprised, looked after them as they hurried from the
room. After they were gone, she turned to Hank and said, "Sweet
boys and hard workers too…but rather strange, don't you
think?"

As
soon as they shut the door behind them, Heyes started to pace the
room thoughtfully, running his fingertips over his lips as he did
so, brown eyes focused on a spot on the floor always before him in
his circuitous pattern. Curry allowed his partner a few minutes of
this routine, never taking his eyes off his moving friend as he sat
slouched in the only available chair in the room. Soon his patience
wore thin. He wanted to talk about what this might mean and what
Heyes thought Weaselly's plan might have to do with them, if
anything.
"Heyes…"
Rising from his chair, Kid walked over to the spot where he would
intersect Heyes' path, positioning himself in such a way that Heyes
would have no choice but to give him his undivided attention. When
Heyes got close enough, Kid reached out both his arms and laid his
hands on Heyes' shoulders, stopping him in his tracks. "Heyes,
what are you thinking?"
Heyes raised his eyes
to meet Kid's. Brown eyes met blue ones and held for a heartbeat's
time before he spoke. "I'm trying to think back to when we were
in the hotel talking to Wesley. Did we say anything that might make
him suspicious of us?" His face wore a worried expression.
Curry knew that Heyes
wanted him to say something reassuring. After thinking about it for
a few seconds, he answered, "I don't see what, Heyes. We
weren't in there more'n a few minutes. What could we have possibly
said or done to arouse Wesley's suspicions?"
Heyes' expression
cleared a little. He looked relieved and with a decisive nod, he
said, "You're right, Kid. What am I worried about? No, whatever
Hank's nephew has cooked up…it has nothing to do with us."
Kid smiled at Heyes,
glad to be able to help set his mind at ease. He had no intention of
revealing his own niggling doubts that they had indeed done
something to raise Wesley's hackles. The best thing to do would be
to just wait until after Hank had seen his nephew and then try to
find out what plan had hatched in Wesley's mind. He'd worry about
that tomorrow.
Turning the
conversation to safer ground, Kid said, "You know, Heyes, I
been thinking."
"Great."
"Seriously, I
been giving this Thanksgiving thing some more thought and I was
wondering if we really needed to set out before it gets here. Mind
you, I ain't sayin' we got anything to be particularly thankful for,
but what harm is there in joining these folks for their
celebration?"
"Ain't no harm
in it, exactly. But what made you change your mind all of a
sudden?" Heyes teased. "It wouldn't have nuthin to do with
Mizz Emma's good cooking would it?"
"Heyes, you know
me better than that. Course not. I'm just thinking of how happy Mizz
Emma is gonna be if we stick around. You heard what she said about
how lonely she's been since her daughters up and married off."
"I'll tell you
what. If you can think of one thing that you are genuinely thankful
for between now and Thanksgiving morning, then we'll talk about
staying. Otherwise, I think we ought to get moving on."
"One
thing?"
"Yep, but it has
to be something you're genuinely thankful for."
"Hmm…I think I
can manage that. You're on."

Early the next
morning, the two cowboys were already hard at work repairing the
sagging front porch of Mizz Emma's home when Hank Jameson returned
from his morning jaunt. His limp, a result of the errant gunshot,
was a little more pronounced this morning. Kid saw his approach
before Heyes and gave his partner a gentle nudge with his elbow.
Trying to appear nonchalant, they waved hello at the older
gentleman. Hank returned the wave cautiously. As he got closer, he
tried to smile but his attempt fell short of genuine.
"Howdy, Mr.
Jameson. Uh…nice day, ain't it?" Heyes asked, wanting to
engage Hank in conversation long enough to find out what Wesley had
said to him. The old man looked weary already, and it wasn't even
nine o'clock yet.
"Yeah, I guess
it is, for this time of year." Jameson looked them over for a
long time, his eyes coming to rest on the holster tied to Kid's
thigh. "You always carry that gun, Thaddeus?"
"Yes, sir. I do.
It's sorta become a habit, kinda like putting on my pants in the
morning. Why do you ask?"
"Hmm? Oh. No
reason, just thinking about something, I reckon." After one
more curious glance Hank tipped his hat and said, "You boys
don't work too hard now. I'll talk to you later. I gotta go sit for
a spell now." He turned and walked towards the front door,
every step seeming to take more effort than the one before it.
Heyes watched him
leave, his brow furrowed with renewed worry about what Wesley might
have shared with his uncle. Frowning, he turned to Kid and said,
"What do you make of that, Thaddeus? You still think we ain't
got nuthin' to worry about?"
"I ain't sure,
Joshua, but I think we oughta find out."
"Yep, we oughta,
all right. Got any ideas how?"
"Actually, I
think I do. C'mere." Kid led the way around the side of the
porch. Sure enough, the window to the front room had been left open
a few inches, allowing the day's unseasonably warm weather a chance
to get inside.
Heyes stopped at the
edge of the window frame. Cautiously, he leaned forward and peaked
one eye around just far enough to see into the room. Satisfied, he
slowly pulled his head back and whispered to Kid, "They're in
there, all right. Both of 'em. Wouldn't hurt to listen for a while,
now would it?" he smiled.
Kid returned the
smile, then ducking low, moved to the opposite side of the window.
From where they stood they could hear everything that was said
inside the house.
Hank had apparently
gone directly inside and found the closest comfortable chair to rest
in. He looked physically and emotionally worn out, both from his
walk and from his meeting with his weaselly nephew Wesley. From
where he sat, the men outside could see his profile. Emma was
standing next to him, with a concerned look on her matronly face.
"Land sakes,
Hank. What is wrong with you? You don't look so good. Do you need me
to get the doctor over here?" With motherly instinct, she
reached out her hand and laid her palm flat against his forehead,
measuring his body temperature against hers.
He gently removed her
hand from his face, holding it for a second longer before releasing
it. In a falsely gruff voice, he said, "Stop fussing over me,
Emma. I'm not sick. Well, I take that back, I am sick. Sick about
what that no-account nephew wanted to tell me this morning."
"What,
Hank?"
Before answering her,
Hank stared off into space for a minute, confusion muddling his
thoughts. His eyes met hers and he said, "I'm not sure I should
even repeat what he said. It's plumb crazy!"
Outside the open
window, Heyes and Curry listened intently. Heyes willed Jameson to
continue. They had to find out what Wesley had told him. If it came
down to it, they better be ready to ride out of there a lot quicker
than they had planned.
Under his breath,
Heyes encouraged, "Come on, Hank. What did your over-anxious
nephew tell you…"
On cue, Hank started
to tell his story as Emma and the two wanted outlaws listened.
"This might just be Wesley's latest half-baked idea to get his
deputy job back, I guess. You know how bad he wants it." Emma
nodded silently in confirmation, she did indeed know how bad his
sister's son wanted to be a lawman again. Heck, she was pretty sure
everybody in town knew it.
"Seems as though
he's got the notion that your two young boarders might not be
exactly what they appear." Outside, Heyes and Curry made eye
contact across the space of the open window. "Apparently, as
they were leaving the hotel the other day, he swears he heard one of
'em call the other 'Kid'." Hank paused for dramatic effect.
Heyes was stunned. He didn't remember letting Kid's name slip out
that day, but if Weaselly heard him say it, then he must have! His
eyes locked on Kid, wide and worried.
Kid could tell by his
partner's expression that he was ready to high tail it out of town,
NOW! With a slight shake of his head, he let Heyes know that he
should simmer down for a minute, at least until they heard the rest
of what Hank had to say. To his way of thinking, a few more minutes
wasn't going to make any difference. Besides, if Hank believed what
Wesley had told him, then why hadn't he pulled his gun on them when
he first came home like any good ex-lawman would? Kid figured there
had to be more to this story and he aimed to hear what it was.
From where they
stood, cautiously peering around the edge of the windowsill, they
had a good view of Emma's face. She was still just looking at Hank,
waiting expectantly. Finally she said, "I'm sorry, but I don't
understand. So what if one of them called the other Kid? It's
probably just a nickname. You know, like Butchie or Doc, something
like that."
Hank smiled wryly.
"Of course, you're right, Emma dear, but my nephew doesn't see
it that way. He thinks that our friends Joshua and Thaddeus may be
hiding something…like a criminal past."
Emma gasped quietly
and laid her hand against her ample bosom. Her eyes widened as she
said, "Oh my! Is that possible, Hank? No, I don't believe it.
They are such nice young men. Wesley is just stirring the pot,
looking for trouble…don't you think?" she finished
doubtfully.
"To tell you the
truth, I don't know what to think. We don't know those two very
well. As much as I hate to admit it, Wesley might be right. On the
other hand, the thought of my nephew pinning that badge back on his
chest sends a shiver down my spine."
"OK, well. Let's
just say he's right, they are outlaws…what does he intend to do
about it. He can't really prove it, can he?"
"Don't know.
He's sure that if he looked through those old wanted posters over at
the sheriff's office, he'd turn up a couple with those fella's
descriptions on 'em. He'd be over there right now, 'cept he's gotta
work all day at the hotel."
"Well, I say let
him look. I don't believe it for a second. I think I'm a pretty good
judge of character and I say those two sweet boys are just that…sweet
boys!"
Hank laughed to
himself. Emma thought everyone was sweet. Heck, Billy the Kid
hisself could be sleeping in her upstairs bedroom and she'd think he
was a sweet boy. Good judge of character? Not likely.
As much as he hated
to admit it, there was a chance that Wesley was right. The only
problem Hank had was he wasn't sure that Wesley being right was such
a good idea, especially if it meant he might get his wish and become
a lawman again. Hank figured the townsfolk hereabouts weren't ready
for that. He certainly knew HE wasn't ready for that!
Emma tenderly patted
his shoulder, rousing him from his thoughts. "You're looking a
mite better, Hank. Why don't you just rest here a while longer? I
have some things I need to attend to in the kitchen."
He nodded and smiled
gratefully at her. He laid his head against the back of the chair
and closed his eyes after watching her make her exit.
Outside, Heyes and
Curry quietly tiptoed away from the open window and around the back
of the house where they could talk privately. "Whaddaya think,
Heyes? You think we oughta get our things and get out?"
"Probably."
"OK, you sneak
up to our room and get our stuff. I'll go get the horses." Kid
turned to leave, anxious to put some space between themselves and
Weaselly Wesley.
"No." Heyes
reached out and grabbed Kid by the forearm, stopping him dead in his
tracks.
"Huh? I thought
you said we were going?"
'I said we oughta be
going…probably."
Kid looked
crestfallen. "Awww, Heyes. You mean we're not going?"
"No."
"Why not?"
"Kid, think
about it. If we leave now, it's gonna look like Weaselly is
right."
"Weaselly IS
right, Heyes!"
"Course Weaselly
is right. I know that and you know that but if we leave now, he's
gonna make sure everybody in town knows. We'll end up running again
with a posse dead on our heels. I think there might be a better
way."
"What, Heyes?
Tell me."
"You heard Hank
say Weaselly is gonna go look through the wanted posters,
right?"
Kid nodded, waiting
to hear more.
"We're just
gonna have to get there first, is all. We'll get our posters before
he gets the chance to look for them. Then he won't have any proof of
who we are."
Kid looked skeptical.
"So lem'me get this straight. Your plan is to walk into the
sheriff's office and ask to look through the posters so we can just
take ours? Heyes, you really are slipping. That's one of the worst
ideas you've ever-"
"Now wait Kid.
Hear me out. First of all, we won't have to waste a lot of time
searching through posters. Remember, we're a couple of the most
wanted men in the whole of the west. Our posters won't be shoved
away in some drawer gathering dust. They'll be out in plain sight
where the sheriff can see them everyday."
"You're making
this sound so much better," Kid said sarcastically. "Now
the sheriff has the posters where he looks at them everyday! So how
are we going to get them past him? Ask him to cover his eyes?"
"Don't
be ridiculous, Kid. Why would the sheriff cover his eyes? I'm
starting not to like your attitude. I've a good mind not to tell you
the rest of my plan. Let's go."
"Just tell me
one thing, Heyes."
"What's
that?"
"Even IF we
manage to carry out your plan and stop Wesley from proving who we
are, how do we know we can trust Hank? His suspicions might be
enough for him to decide to do something himself."
"Good question,
Kid. I don't know, I just got a feeling about Hank."
"A feeling?
You're risking our freedom on a feeling?" Kid followed Heyes
down the street heading down town, shaking his head with misgivings.

Kid and Heyes stood
in the middle of Main Street, surveying their surroundings. Heyes
was looking for something, that much was clear to Kid. What or who,
he wasn't sure. Kid-well, he was just watching out for Heyes, keen
eyes on the lookout for anything that might spell trouble for them.
Sometimes his partner got so wrapped up in the details, it was hard
for him to see the whole picture. That's where Kid took over. And
the big picture was that this town might not be safe for them too
much longer. They already had two people suspicious of them, Hank
and Wesley. Who's to say Wesley hadn't been blabbing his mouth all
over town?
Suddenly Heyes' eyes
lit on a boy about twelve years old, give or take, walking slowly
towards them, chewing on an apple and kicking an old tin can down
the boardwalk. Heyes gave one sharp whistle from between his teeth.
When the boy looked up, Heyes gestured to him. "Hey, boy. Come
over here a second."
Warily, the boy
looked the men over. After debating with himself for a moment, he
walked over to where Heyes and Curry stood, leaned up against a
building. Heyes smiled his most winning smile.
"Yeah?" the
boy asked, taking a big juicy bite from the piece of fruit in his
hand.
"What's your
name, kid?"
"Well, it ain't
really none of your business, but my name's Trevor," he
answered, chewing on the apple.
Slightly put off by
the boy's manner, Heyes continued, "Ok…Trevor. How'd you like
to earn fifty cents?"
This piqued the boy's
interest. Fifty cents was a small fortune for a kid. "What do I
have to do?" he asked suspiciously.
"All you need to
do is go on over to the Sheriff's office and tell him you heard a
couple of men getting into it over at the saloon. Say you heard them
say they was gonna shoot it out."
"Why would I do
that?"
"Well, the
sheriff and us are good friends, ya see. We go way back. We just
want to play a little practical joke on him. Just in fun, nothing
serious-like."
"Friends, huh?
What's the sheriff's name?"
Heyes stared down at
the boy, his chocolate brown eyes narrowed with irritation.
"Seventy-five cents. And you don't ask any questions."
"Make it a
dollar and you got yourself a deal." Trevor stuck out one
grubby hand, palm-side up.
Heyes glared at him
while he considered his options. Kid was still leaning against the
building, arms crossed calmly across his chest, watching the
exchange between the two, amused that Heyes was getting his tail
whupped by this young pup.
Finally, with a deep
long-suffering sigh, Heyes extended his hand, palm-side up, in Kid's
direction. In no particular hurry, Kid reached deep into his pants
pocket and pulled out the coins he carried there and placed them in
Heyes' hand.
Heyes turned out his
own pocket and added some of his own change to the small sum Kid had
come up with. This, in turn, he placed into the lad's still upturned
palm, but not before one last admonition, "Now you do your best
to make sure the sheriff stays in the saloon for as long as
possible. Make like you can't remember who you heard talking or
something. It's real important that he doesn't come back too soon,
you hear?"
"You don't worry
about me, mister. I know how to handle myself," Trevor said
proudly, tossing the remnants of the apple into the dusty street.
"Yeah I guess
you do, kid." Heyes and Curry watched as Trevor walked into the
sheriff's office. After a few minutes, they watched the sheriff
hurry out and make his way down the street to the saloon. Trevor
followed right behind, grinning at his two benefactors behind the
sheriff's back, enjoying his great adventure.

Once the sheriff was
out of sight, Heyes lightly touched Kid's sleeve. With a sideways
nod of his head, he motioned towards the office and they casually
set off across the street. Luckily, there were few people out on the
street this morning. The two outlaws slipped unnoticed into the
empty sheriff's office. They had already asked around and knew that
the sheriff worked alone so they weren't afraid of having a deputy
walk in on them at an inconvenient moment. If they had only thought
to inquire as to the sheriff's name while they were asking around,
they would be fifty cents richer right now.
"OK, Heyes.
Let's get those posters and get the heck out of here. This place
gives me the willies." Kid unconsciously kept his hand close to
the butt of his gun. He was tense and wanted to get away as soon as
possible. Sheriff's offices were not places he liked to frequent any
more than absolutely necessary.
"Calm down, Kid.
We'll be out of here in a second. All I have to do is grab
our--" Heyes was busily scanning the wanted posters fixed to
the board near the door, sure that he would find the two they needed
in short order. It didn't take long for him to realize that their
posters were NOT part of the assortment mounted to the wall.
Puffed up with
indignation, he threw his hands in the air and huffed, "I don't
believe this. We have to be just about the two most successful
outlaws in the history of the west and this place doesn't even keep
our wanted posters on the wall."
Kid had already moved
to the big wooden desk that took up most of the space in the little
room. He was moving fast, searching through its drawers, looking for
a stack of posters. "Never mind that, Heyes. C'mere and help me
find 'em." He had the pile of posters clutched in his hand.
Dividing them up, he handed half of them to Heyes.
Heyes frantically
started thumbing through the sheets of paper Kid had given him. He
was still carrying on under his breath, "I don't know how this
sheriff, whatever his name is, ever expects to catch anybody
if--" when Kid put one calming hand on his forearm. When he had
Heyes' attention, Kid motioned for him to be silent and then pointed
towards the door.
Heyes had been so
busy being annoyed at the slipshod way the sheriff's office was
being run that he hadn't heard the voices coming from just outside
the front door. As they watched, the doorknob started to turn.
Wide-eyed, both men gathered up the piles of papers they had been
going through and looked around for a place to hide in the small
space of the office.
Desperate, and seeing
no other option, other than the cells at the rear of the building
(which they wanted to avoid for obvious reasons), they threw
themselves to the floor and crammed themselves, side by side, into
the small opening under the desk just as the door began to swing
inward.
They listened as a
pair of girlish voices entered the room. Kid's keen senses detected
the smell of hearty beef stew. They heard, "I hope Sheriff
Taylor likes his lunch today. I don't want him comin' back over to
the restaurant later complainin' about it like he did yesterday. Bad
for business…grumpy old coot," followed by agreeable
laughter.
Beneath the edge of
the desk, they could see two pairs of feet and the hems of two
dresses, stopped directly in front of where they were crouching,
trying not to breath, beneath the desk. Kid's holster was digging
into Heyes' side. He prayed for the women to finish up their
business quickly and get out before the sheriff got back and caught
them hiding under his desk. He was pretty sure the grumpy old coot
wouldn't take long to find their descriptions on a poster THEN.
"Set the basket
on the desk and let's get going. The lunch crowd is going to be
showing up real soon. Ma will need our help."
"OK, just a
second." From below the desk, Heyes and Kid could hear the
gentle scraping sound of a picnic basket being placed on the surface
of the desk. "Ready. Let's go." The feet retreated out of
their line of vision as the girls made their way back to the front
door.
Kid was ready to take
a sigh of relief when it caught in his chest. "Wait! Something
doesn't seem right." A feeling of foreboding came over him as
he waited for what seemed like a very long time. "Oh, I know.
Ma said to be sure to bring back yesterday's dishes. Can you grab
them?"
Finally, the two
girls left, closing the door behind them. Heyes and Curry scrambled
out of their hiding place. Heyes smiled. "That was too close,
Kid. Have you found anything yet?"
"As a matter of
fact, I have," he replied, holding up the familiar posters with
their descriptions emblazoned on them. Heyes whooped and clapped his
partner on the shoulder, smile widening to reveal pearly white teeth
and impossibly deep dimples.
Curry laughed, blue
eyes crinkling at the corners. "OK, let's get out of here
before Sheriff Taylor gets back. Only this time, let's go through
the back door."
Heyes took the two
posters from Kid and after folding them a couple of times, stuffed
them into his jacket pocket. Then they set off towards the back
door. Kid stopped, pausing for a moment before heading back to the
desk. Peeking under the red and white napkin covering the contents
of the picnic basket, he reached in and grabbed two biscuits from
within before heading back to where Heyes was waiting and watching
with amusement.
Kid tossed Heyes one
of the biscuits and said, "What are you waiting for? Let's get
out of here."

"Heyes? Remember
how you said I needed to come up with one thing I was thankful for
so's we could hang around here a while longer?"
"Uh,
huh." Heyes was lying on his side of the bed in the room at the
top of the stairs. He had his nose stuck in a book that he had found
in the highboy dresser. His boots were off, revealing a small hole
in one of his socks near the vicinity of his left big toe. As he
read, his lips parted slightly as he silently absorbed the words.
Kid, with his back to
Heyes, sitting on the opposite edge of the bed, was in the process
of removing his own boots, tugging at first one and then the other,
dropping them unceremoniously to the floor, where they would lie
until the next morning. "Well, I think I thought of
something."
"Um, huh."
Heyes answered, without moving his eyes off the page in front of
him. His eyebrows were knitted together in concentration as his mind
soaked up the information contained in the yellowed paper.
Kid swung his body
around to look at his friend, his boyish face set in a frown.
"Where'd you get that book?" he said in exasperation.
"I'm trying to talk to you…" After a few more seconds of
watching Heyes' eyes move back and forth across the page, Curry's
thoughts turned inward. He wanted to remind Heyes of the time back
when they were still boys, that last fishing trip they took the
morning of the day before their folks died.
That was one of the
last happy times he had had as a kid, lying there fishing; eating
and drinking the biscuits and honey and sweet coffee Heyes brought
with him from his mama's kitchen.
Kid remembered the
two of them sitting there on the bank of the little creek in the
woods behind his house. Seemed like Heyes…Hannibal and he were
always together back then. Kid smiled, thinking that not much had
changed in that department even now.
Summers were the best
times, filled with lazy days fishing, the occasional game of tag
with his older brothers, riding horses, and all the other activities
young boys enjoyed; always after the day's chores were complete, of
course.
That day, relaxing
there in the sun, Heyes lit on the idea that they should be blood
brothers. He took out that old fishing knife he always carried and
washed it off in the creek. Then they used it to slice into their
palms just enough to get some blood…
Ouch, that stung! Kid
grimaced at the memory and looked down at the palm of his right
hand. If he looked real close he could still see a thin scar. He had
been scared to let Heyes cut him, but he told him it was the only
way they could be blood brothers so he finally went along with it.
He absently ran the
thumb of his left hand over the scar, back and forth, as he thought
about that bright sunny morning that had happened a lifetime ago. He
could see them in his mind's eye, two young boys lying there on the
creek bank, not a care in the world, it seemed. They had had no idea
that their simple existences would be coming crashing down upon them
in short order. And when everything else was taken from them, it was
only natural that they would find a way to hang onto each other.
So now after
listening to Emma and Hank's stories about not being able to trust
the people in their lives, he knew that he was lucky to have a
friend like Heyes. Trust between them was never a question…it just
WAS!
Kid was so absorbed
in staring at his palm, examining that old scar, that he didn't
notice when Heyes took his eyes off his book and turned his head
slightly to watch him. Holding the book with one hand, Heyes looked
into his own palm for a while, squinting in his search for the
matching scar. "Lucky we didn't get tetanus from that rusty old
knife," he said, chuckling softly, rousing Kid from his revere.
"Were you saying
something, Kid?" Heyes smiled widely at Kid, dark eyes
twinkling with a mischievous gleam. He knew how much his partner
hated it when he started in on a new book. Kid wasn't much for
talking most times, but he couldn't stand to be ignored either. Just
about drove him plumb crazy. That's probably why Heyes took so much
pleasure in it.
Curry gently took the
book from him and quietly and deliberately closed its cover. He set
the book on the table next to him and then turned his attention back
to Heyes. "I was trying to tell you that I think I finally came
up with something I'm thankful for…but if you're too busy to
listen, well then I guess I just won't tell you."
"OK…Can I have
my book back then?" Still grinning, Heyes reached across the
bed towards the table where the book way lying.
Curry snatched the
book away just before Heyes' fingers closed around it.
"Alright. Here's what I was thinking. I'm thankful for…"
Heyes' dark eyes were trained expectantly on Kid, waiting to hear
what he was thankful for. Suddenly, the realization of what he was
about to reveal hit Curry! He stammered, "I-I'm…I'm thankful
that…that Wesley never found those wanted posters!" The last
words came out in a rush. Kid was relieved that he had come to his
senses before he said something unseemly.
Heyes smiled
benignly, pretty sure that Kid had been about to say something
different and equally relieved that he hadn't. They both knew how
important their friendship was to the other. No sense in talking it
to death. "Good, Kid. I feel exactly the same." He glanced
once more at the vague scar in his palm, running his thumb over it
for a moment, unaware that he was copying Kid's gesture from moments
before.
Finally able to relax
again, Kid said, "Now that we got that out of the way, do you
think it's safe if we stay for the Thanksgiving dinner?"
Heyes cleared his
throat and blinked a time or two before answering. "Well, let's
think about this for a minute. Wesley no doubt is down at the
sheriff's office right now, rummaging through those wanted posters.
Since he's not gonna find what he's looking for, he won't be able to
confirm his suspicions that way. And since all he has is a
suspicion, brought on by my calling you Kid, he's not gonna be any
closer to knowing who we really are now than he was a few days ago.
Since tomorrow's the big day, I think it might be alright if we
stay, but just to be safe, we probably better plan on leaving right
after, don't you think?"
"Sure, no
problem. Just so's we stay long enough to get some of Mizz Emma's
pumpkin pies she was baking today."
"Ok, it's
settled then. Let's get some shut eye." Heyes rolled over onto
his side and turned out the kerosene lamp next to the bed. Before
long, the room was filled with a chorus of masculine snores.

The next day dawned
crisp and bright, with not a cloud in the sky. From where he laid,
staring up at the ceiling, waiting for Kid to start stirring, Heyes
could hear Emma downstairs in her kitchen, banging around more than
usual. He suspected she was down there preparing for the day's
festivities. He wondered what the day had in store for them.
When they opened
their door a little while later, they could hear Emma and Hank deep
in serious conversation in the front room below. "So Wesley
didn't turn anything up last night, Hank?"
"Nope, not a
thing. But that doesn't mean he's given up. He's still convinced
these two are trouble."
"Oh pshh! I
still don't believe it."
"Well, he could
be right, but until there's proof, I don't intend to do anything
about it. We'll talk about it later, right now I have to go change
and get back over to Mabel's. She's expecting me to walk with her
and Wesley this morning." Hank started up the stairs, walking
slowly, favoring his right leg.
"Hank?"
Emma said, stopping him. "We're doing the right thing, aren't
we? I mean, trusting those boys?"
Hank smiled fondly at
her, "We're doing the right thing, Emma. Those two haven't done
a single thing to cause us to be suspicious of them. Maybe I've
mellowed in my old age, but until I know otherwise, those fellas are
just Joshua and Thaddeus, nothing more."
Emma smiled back,
relieved, as Hank continued his trek up the stairs.
Heyes and Curry
ducked back into their room, closing the door softly behind them,
until Hank had passed. When the way was clear, they stumbled down
the stairs dressed for work around the house, safe in the knowledge
that Wesley had nothing on them yet and that Hank and Emma could
still be trusted.
Mizz Emma took one
look at the two of them in their stained workpants and torn flannel
shirts. Her brow knitted with lines, she said, "Oh, dear. This
is not going to work at all. You boys march right back up those
stairs and put on something nice."
"Huh?"
"You don't
expect to go to church looking like that, do you?"
"No, ma'am. I
don't expect to go to church at all, thank you," Heyes replied,
cocking an eyebrow at Kid whose expression was frozen in one similar
to his own.
Emma was resolute.
With one hand firmly planted on an ample hip, she asked, "When
was the last time you two set foot in a church?"
The pair of outlaws
shrugged. She pursed her lips and said, "Well then, I don't
imagine it would hurt you none to go with me this morning. It is
Thanksgiving and the reverend will be expecting us."
"Us,
ma'am?" Curry asked.
"Of course,
everyone in town knows I have some new boarders. How would it look
if you didn't come to church? Now, march back up there and get
dressed."
Seeing that it was
useless to argue, Heyes and Kid turned and marched back up the
stairs. A few minutes later, they marched back down and waited to
see if they passed Mizz Emma's inspection. After she looked them up
and down, and front and back, she declared them fit to be seen in
church with her and they set off for the chapel.
It was a short walk
from her house to the church and they strolled down the avenue, Mizz
Emma's arms linked daintily within the crooks of the men's elbows.
Emma stopped and greeted everyone she met, being sure to introduce
the two handsome cowboys escorting her.
Back at the house,
Hank was ready to leave himself. Walking down the short hallway that
connected the upstairs bedrooms, he passed the room shared by Joshua
and Thaddeus.
A few paces past the
door; almost at the head of the staircase, he suddenly stopped. He
stood still for a moment, having been struck by an idea. Already
feeling a little guilty for what he was considering, but being even
more curious than guilty, he turned around. He contemplated some
more before he went to the door. Before long, the lawman inside him
won out and, hesitantly, he turned the knob and swung the door open.
The room was neatly
picked up, just the way Emma would have liked it. Hank looked
around. Two satchels stood near the dresser, empty. He opened the
drawers of the dresser, one by one. Men's clothes and toiletry items
were placed neatly in each of them. With mixed feelings, Hank
searched through each drawer, not really sure what he was looking
for and feeling more and more guilty with each pass.
Finally satisfied
that there was nothing unusual in the dresser, he closed the bottom
drawer and turned and surveyed the room once more. As he was about
to leave, he picked up the book on the nightstand next to the bed.
"Walden" was printed on the spine. Henry David Thoreau.
Impressed at Joshua or Thaddeus' taste in reading material, he
opened the book and scanned some of the pages.
Wedged between two
pages, Hank came across some crumpled sheets. His eyes locked on
these papers, not sure if he really wanted to know what was printed
on them. Dropping the book on the bed, he slowly unfolded the sheets
of paper. Lips moving slightly, he read the words printed there.
Stunned, he read them again a second time and then a third. After he
was satisfied that he understood their meaning, he carefully folded
the sheets again and placed them in his pocket.
Closing the door
gently behind him, he moved slowly down the stairs, feeling every
one of his sixty-nine years.

In the church, once
the initial discomfort of being in an unfamiliar place passed and
the congregation was well into the opening hymn, Heyes and Curry
began to find the experience "tolerable".
The church was a
simple rough-hewn building, unadorned by stained glass, gold, or
silver. Behind the utilitarian altar was a polished and gleaming
wooden cross. The pastor's prayer book was open and lying on the
altar, dead center. The congregation sat on unpadded and
uncomfortable-looking wooden benches that took the place of pews.
Kid silently prayed that the service wouldn't last too long…sitting
on them was likely to get mighty tiresome before too much time
passed.
The voices raised in
song were not all good, but it appeared that they were all
passionate in their desire to lift their voices up in praise. They
listened as the first off-key, monotonous strains filled the small
chapel unaccompanied by any instrument. Mizz Emma passed each of
them a hymnal and showed them where to turn. Gamely, they joined
their voices with the rest of the congregation, while Mizz Emma
gazed on them with motherly affection before joining in herself.
They were still
suffering the curious stares of the parishioners but they were
mostly friendly stares, some more friendly than others, of course.
The young women and girls of the congregation could be caught
sneaking quick glances at the two rugged, well-built cowboys. These
glances were met by small, easy smiles from one or the other, or
both, if they happened to be looking in the right direction at the
right time. That brought sweet blushes to the cheeks of the girls.
If their mothers happened to be the ones who caught them staring,
their glances were answered by sharp tugs on the sleeves of their
Sunday best.
Sitting on the bench
opposite Emma, Heyes, and Curry were Hank and his family; his sister
Mabel and her son, Wesley. The looks coming from Wesley were not
nearly as friendly. He hardly took his eyes off his two suspects the
entire service. A couple of times, Heyes and Curry returned his
glare with smiles, Heyes sharing the smile that he reserved for
people he didn't particularly like and Kid treating him to a
steel-eyed sneer which sent a little shiver down Weaselly's spine.
Still, his eyes were drawn to the two, even though he was more than
a little afraid of the blond one.
Hank's stares were
more unsettling to Heyes. There was something in his eyes that he
couldn't read and it made him more than a little uncomfortable.
Hank's looks weren't hostile like the ones coming from Wesley but
they weren't quite friendly either like Heyes would expect from
someone who didn't suspect him of anything. If he had to guess, he
would say Hank looked unsure of his own feelings and maybe a little
worried. Heyes hoped he would get a chance to talk to Hank soon and
draw some information out of the old man.
After church was
through, Heyes and Curry escorted Mizz Emma back to her house. Emma
chatted cheerily while they walked. "Wasn't the Reverend
especially eloquent today? Thanksgiving sermons are so moving, don't
you think?"
"Ummm…very
nice. Will Hank be joining us for dinner, Mizz Emma?"
"Hmmm? Oh, no,
he'll be spending most of today with his own family. That's why I'm
so glad I have the two of you to share the day with. Otherwise, it
would be a very lonely time for me."
Heyes frowned,
"Too bad. I was hoping to get to talk to him some today."
Unaware of his
partner's newfound concerns, Kid asked Emma. "So you never
heard from your daughters then?"
"No, I don't
expect they'll be making it home this year. It's quite a long way by
wagon and the children are small. Ah, well. Maybe for
Christmas," she said wistfully.
Kid and Emma
continued talking casually until they reached her house. Kid didn't
notice that his friend had gone silent and not uttered another word
after inquiring about Hank. He was already thinking about the dinner
Emma would be setting before them later.

At Mabel's house
across town, Wesley was hounding his uncle. Hank was slumped in a
fatly cushioned chair in his sister's front room, watching his
nephew pace back and forth in front of him. Wesley was in a froth.
"Listen Uncle. You need to help me get the goods on those
two."
Hank attempted to
wave Wesley off, but Wesley would have no part of that. He continued
to badger his uncle, intent on finding a way to regain his former
job and stature in the community. Hank watched his lips move,
fascinated with the way his nose twitched as his mouth formed the
words.
Staring, unhearing,
at Wesley as he droned on and on, Hank found himself thinking about
the two men staying in the house across town. He had allowed the
notion that Wesley might be right about them, that they might be men
with a price on their heads. This would not be out of the realm of
possibility.
He had considered
that the two might be wanted, maybe a couple of small time thieves
or rustlers. But when he had opened out those two wanted posters,
Hank was stunned to find out that Joshua and Thaddeus were actually
Hannibal Heyes and Kid Curry, notorious outlaws wanted for numerous
train and bank robberies.
Now he needed a
little time to think, to try to figure out what he should do about
them. If only Wesley would just get out of his face so he could
concentrate a little…He was seriously considering repaying Wesley
in kind for shooting him in the leg when, presently, Mabel called
from the kitchen for her son to "stop pestering your Uncle Hank
and come out here and help me with dinner".
Wesley stomped
towards the kitchen, muttering something about "women's
work". Watching him walk away, Hank drew a deep breath and
expelled it slowly, blowing through his lips, silently thanking his
sister for rescuing him.
Exhausted from the
morning's developments, he closed his eyes and tried to wrap his
mind around the problems facing him. They unfolded this way, near as
he could figure…First, he was an ex-lawman. He had a duty to
uphold the law and that meant turning Heyes and Curry in. On the
other hand, if he did this, he'd be helping Wesley get what he
wanted, his deputy job back. Hank would sooner shoot himself in the
other leg than see that happen.
On the third hand, if
he let them just ride off into the sunset, so to speak, there's no
telling what crimes they might pull in the future. Running out of
hands, he remembered that he had, a while back, heard a rumor that
Heyes and Curry were trying to go straight. When he first heard it,
it had seemed pretty unbelievable and he hadn't given it much
thought since. But that had been several months already and to be
honest, he hadn't heard of the pair being involved in any robberies
since, so maybe the rumor was true after all. Then again, maybe it
wasn't.
By the time Mabel
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