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"Evening Joshua,
Thaddeus" Sheriff Rogers smiled and tipped his hat at the two
men as he passed them on his way out of the saloon.
Ordering two beers at
the bar, Heyes turned to Curry.
"Did you see the
way he looked at us Kid? I swear he knows who we are."
"Yeah Heyes, I
saw him. He smiled. If he knew who we were, we wouldn't be standing
here, now would we?"
Hannibal Heyes and
Kid Curry had spent the last several days in the small but
flourishing town of Silver Junction without any signs of trouble -
and it was making them downright nervous, more especially it was
making Heyes nervous.
"Heyes, I think
you're looking for trouble where there isn't any. Forget it. He
doesn't know who we are. Come on, you'll feel better after you've
won some at poker."
Heyes nodded. Maybe
Kid was right. Nothing untoward had happened at all since they'd
arrived in town, but the three weeks previous to that had been a
different story. They'd been recognised several times and had spent
most nights sleeping out on the trail, only feeling safe enough to
spend a night in town on a couple of occasions. Maybe he really had
got so used to trouble that he was now seeing it everywhere. If Kid
thought all was well then he'd trust his instincts - for now at
least.
The evening passed
without even a hint of trouble. Heyes won more than his share at
poker and enjoyed the thoroughly pleasant company of his fellow
players. His mood had lifted substantially during the evening and he
said as much to Kid as they prepared for bed back in their room.
Curry was relieved.
He'd been a little worried about Heyes recently. He'd seemed more
nervous and jumpy than usual. But then, they'd spent so long now
running, always looking over their shoulder, always alert for
trouble, always afraid of being recognised. He hoped that Heyes was
just tired. Maybe a few days in a nice town like this, a few
challenging but profitable games of poker and he'd be back to his
normal self. Until then, Curry would just do what he could to
counter Heyes' over-sensitivity to possible trouble.
Three hours later,
Heyes was still wide awake, lying in bed staring up at the ceiling.
The gentle snores emanating from the other bed told Heyes that his
friend had been sound asleep for hours. Something was nagging at the
back of his brain though, preventing him from sleeping.. Had been
for days. He hadn't been able to pin it down and it was bothering
him. He'd always had such good instincts - and he'd always trusted
them. Countless times his instincts had kept them out of jail. Right
now they were telling him to run, but he couldn't put any logic to
it. But then, there'd been times before when he'd followed his
instinct when it didn't seem logical to do so - and it had turned
out to be the right thing to do. On the other hand, he admitted to
himself, there were also times when it hadn't been the right thing
to do.
He looked over at the
other bed. The Kid's instincts were good too and he trusted them. At
the moment, Kid seemed to think that Heyes was over-reacting and
that there was no danger. Maybe Kid was right. Or maybe he wasn't.
Leaving town would be the safer option, and even if there was no
need to, what would they have lost? A few nights in a comfortable
town. They couldn't stay forever anyway, they'd have to leave sooner
or later. Why not just make it sooner?
Knowing sleep was a
long way off, he climbed out of bed and padded over to the window.
Pushing back the drapes a little, he gazed down into the main
street. Everything was still and quiet. But, he decided, there
really wasn't anything worth risking staying for. It would be safer
to leave. He'd talk to the Kid about it in the morning.
He was just about to
get back into bed, when he saw Deputy Bradshaw come running down the
street. Young Robert Bradshaw was not the brightest of men, but he
was a likeable type and was popular in the town. A few seconds later
he returned with the sheriff and three other men. They were running
and they were carrying guns and Heyes knew exactly what that meant.
They were after someone, probably about to form a posse.
Heyes cursed himself
for not listening to himself, for not trusting himself earlier.
Approaching Curry's
bed, he shook him and called urgently "Get up Kid. Now. Posse's
forming outside."
As Kid roused
suddenly, Heyes caught the hand that moved automatically towards his
gun and repeated quietly "Posse's forming."
Curry
was wide awake in an instant and within a few moments they had
grabbed everything important, dressed and pulled on their boots and
gunbelts. Thank goodness they had at least found out where the back
door to the hotel was when they'd first arrived. They made it safely
out and into the livery where they managed to get their horses
saddled. They checked again for any sign of danger before riding out
onto the street and just as they thought they were going to make it
safely, Sheriff Morgan Rogers stepped out of the shadows in front of
them.
"Well now boys,
this is interesting. It's the middle of the night. I'm roused by my
Deputy who has seen four men breaking into the bank. It seems
they've got away with ten thousand dollars and a diamond necklace.
I'm in the middle of forming a posse to go after them, when I bump
into you two boys sneaking out the back of the livery. In the middle
of the night too. Now what on earth do you suppose that is all
about? Makes a sheriff mighty suspicious I can tell you."
Heyes closed his eyes
and sighed. The Kid was right. He was getting too nervous lately.

Barely half an hour
later they found themselves sitting in a jail cell, guarded by the
youngest and most junior of the deputies, while the sheriff led the
posse after the bank robbers.

The posse didn't
return until the next morning, but when they did there was a great
commotion in the streets. People were running and shouting
everywhere, though it wasn't easy to make out what they were saying.
Heyes and Curry pressed up against the tiny barred window, trying to
see what was happening.
It was clear that
three of the men who had ridden into town were tied up, obviously
the captured bank robbers who would presumably shortly find
themselves alongside Heyes and Curry in a jail cell.
Some of the townsfolk
were holding guns on those tied up, but the group had stopped not
outside the sheriff's office, but outside the doctor's office. Heyes
and Curry watched as Deputy Bradshaw was gently lifted from his
horse and carried into the doctors' office, accompanied by much
shouting and waving of arms from the townsfolk who were clearly most
unhappy. The mob followed the group of riders to the sheriff's
office and had now become extremely angry as the three prisoners
were hauled from their horses and thrown roughly into the jail cell.
Slamming the door on
their cell, Sheriff Rogers turned towards Heyes and Curry in the
cell opposite.
"Well, it's been
a long night. We've captured three of the four, but the one who got
away is the dangerous one - and the one I, and they" he said,
pointing outside at the mob "really want. He's the one who shot
Deputy Bradshaw."
"He gonna be OK
Sheriff?" asked Curry, genuinely concerned. He'd had dealings
with many lawmen over the years of course and generally speaking, he
wasn't especially fond of them. He'd only been in town a few days,
but he had to admit that what he knew of the young deputy, he'd
actually liked. He certainly didn't deserve to lose his life.
"Touch and go.
We won't know for a day or two. But I'll tell you this much, I'll
find a way to bring that man to justice whatever happens. Right now
though, I'm going to go and get a few hours' sleep and then boys,
I'm going to come back over here and try and figure out just what to
do about you two. I've got a feeling you're both Wanted and I think
I might just find your descriptions in my pile of Wanted
posters."
With that he turned
and walked out of the door, stopping only to open a drawer in his
desk, take out a pile of Wanted posters and place them on top of his
desk ready for his return later.

By late afternoon,
Morgan Rogers had returned and was sitting in the cell with Heyes
and Curry.
"See, two hours
ago I thought I had two problems. Then I finally figured out that
what I actually have is one problem and one solution. I need to
catch a bank robber. The town is in uproar and they're going to
blame me for Deputy Bradshaw getting shot, after all I was the one
who formed that posse. Unless I can bring the man who did it to
justice, I'm going to be a pretty unpopular man round here. That man
is dangerous though. To be honest I don't fancy my chances alone. I
would need a couple of capable and willing men to help. Now, finding
capable men is one thing, but finding willing men is another problem
entirely, especially since we're talking about someone who shot
Deputy Bradshaw. Everyone in this town is more than a little wary of
the man."
"So, that's when
I got around to thinking about my second problem. Why you two were
running last night and who you might be? I must admit I haven't come
up with any answers yet."
"Then I got
around to wondering how capable you two might be. More to the point
perhaps, how willing you might be?"
He paused before
continuing.
"I could walk
out of here right now and start going through those Wanted posters.
Or we could all three of us walk out of here right now and prepare
to go after a bank robber. If you'd be willing to take the job, then
I'd pay you of course. Let's say 300 dollars apiece. What do you
say?"
The two ex-outlaws'
eyes met, an entire conversation passing between them. They knew
they really had no choice.
"What's to stop
us running out on you as soon as we're out of town?" asked
Curry
"Well, 300
dollars apiece for one thing. I figure you could use that. If you
run out on me though, then I'll have no choice but to search through
those posters - and as you've already seen, this town is very good
at putting a posse together. They usually come back with prisoners,
and if they don't, well boys, you can also see that I am a very
determined man and when I want to bring a man to justice, I'll find
him. I have a very good record of getting what I want." he said
pointedly.
Heyes nodded. He
didn't doubt it for a second. Morgan Rogers was a shrewd man. In
fact, Heyes was pretty sure he already knew who they were.
"And just in
case you were thinking of killing me, there'd be a sealed letter
left with my banker, to be opened if I didn't return."
He watched them
intently.
"But I don't
think you two would do that. You haven't killed so far and I don't
think you'd want murder on your record now would you?"
Heyes smiled, at
least his mouth smiled, and without breaking eye contact, said
"Five hundred
apiece."
The sheriff smiled
back, nodded and put out his right hand to seal the deal.

They had been riding
for over an hour the next morning and still Morgan hadn't told them
any more details. A couple of times Heyes had tried, unsuccessfully,
to get him to explain more, which had left Curry silently amused. He
knew the curiosity would be tearing Heyes apart by now. They'd been
riding in silence for several minutes and, glancing at his partner,
Curry could detect a slight edginess. Oh nobody else in the world
would have seen it, but Curry had not spent so many hours with Heyes
without understanding what made him tick.
So it was then that
Curry was not at all surprised to hear Heyes try one more time, just
a few moments later. This time though, he met with more success.
"Joshua, you are
a very persistent man, but OK, I guess there's no harm in telling
you a little more. First of all, the main problem we have is
identifying the man we want."
"Identifying
him?" asked Heyes puzzled
"Yes, I don't
know what he looks like."
Heyes pulled his
horse around to look straight at the sheriff in astonishment.
"You don't know
this man?"
"Well of course
I have a description of him but I don't actually know what he looks
like, no."
"Description?"
"Dark hair, blue
eyes. Tall."
Heyes shook his head.
"So, how are we
going to identify him?"
"Don't worry
about that, I have a plan. First we have to concentrate on following
his tracks."
The sheriff,
unconcerned, moved on a way ahead leaving the two partners slightly
behind.
"Don't
worry" grumbled Kid, more to himself than anyone else.
"Funny how those words always seem to precede trouble."
"I suppose you
do actually have a name for him?" called out Heyes.
"Yes of
course" the sheriff called back "John Wesley Riggs"
Heyes and Curry
stopped their horses and, turning to face each other, mouthed in
unison "John Wesley Riggs?" Heyes' eyes widened and he
shook his head.
"Kid I don't
believe it. Riggs is... well, he's .." he paused, for once
completely lost for words.
"Crazy is what
he is" supplied Curry. "By reputation anyway."
"You know what
they say about him Kid?"
"That he's fast
and that he likes nothing more than to show off how fast he is in a
gunfight. Yes I heard that."
"They say he'll
pick a fight with anyone else he thinks is fast just to prove that
he's faster."
"Yes I heard
that too."
"Kid, I think
I'm beginning to see where this might be heading. He does know who
we are and he thinks Kid Curry might just be fast enough to provoke
Riggs into challenging him."
"Yep, I think
you're right Heyes."
"What I still
don't understand though is how he's going to identify him for
certain? OK, say he plans to set you up as a fast gun and wait for
Riggs to challenge you, how's he going to know for certain it's
him?"
"Easy. By his
gun."
"His gun?"
"They say he has
J Wesley engraved on the barrel."
"That so? In
that case, assuming Sheriff Rogers knows that, then it looks like
that's his plan?"
Kid simply nodded in
agreement.

Hannibal Heyes was
angry, very angry. Slowly he stood, looked directly at the sheriff
as if daring him to even contemplate challenging him on this. When
he spoke, it was calmly, although his voice was cold as ice.
"No. That's not
how it will go. We'll find another way. Now if you'll excuse me
sheriff." And with that, he was gone.
Curry watched him
leave with, he admitted to himself, slight amusement. He'd give him
a few moments to calm down a little and then he'd follow him.
In the meantime, he
watched the sheriff's reaction to his partner's sudden departure.
The sheriff was a little surprised but was trying not to show it,
Curry decided. In fact, he was trying to pretend that this was the
reaction he'd expected.
They'd been having
dinner, a pleasant affair until Morgan had told them of his plan to
find and capture Riggs. It was the part about Joshua and Thaddeus
taking part in a mock gunfight that had got Heyes so riled. Curry
was intrigued about the sheriff's reaction to that - presumably he
thought that "Joshua" did not want to face
"Thaddeus". Curry of course knew that had nothing to do
with it. It was an interesting scenario for sure and probably not
one they'd choose, but there was no danger in it. No, Curry knew
that what had got Heyes so angry was that he'd seen where the set-up
was leading and what the sheriff wanted to happen next.
Curry decided it was
time to go and talk to Heyes.
"Well Sheriff,
thank you for dinner. I guess I really should go and talk to my
partner though."
"Yes you
probably should" the sheriff nodded. "You might do well to
remind him how the two of you got yourselves into this to start
with. I hold the upper hand here and your partner would do well to
remember that."
"Yes sir, I'll
remind him" Curry gave him a reassuring smile before standing
to leave.
"See you in the
morning Sheriff. Goodnight."

Heyes
didn't seem to have calmed down much by the time Curry got to their
room. He was pacing as Curry sat calmly on the bed.
"No, no, no.
We're not playing it his way on this. Kid, you know what he's
looking for on this don't you?"
Curry nodded. He
understood the sheriff's plan fully but he let Heyes continue to
rant, hoping he'd get it off his chest.
"He's hoping to
goad Riggs into challenging you. What he really wants is a shootout
between you and Riggs. He wants to use you to get Riggs to identify
himself."
Curry nodded again.
"Kid he has a
reputation. It's a crazy idea and it's not going to happen. If a
setup gunfight between you and me is going to lead to that, then
we're not going to do it."
Heyes fell silent but
continued to pace, and for several minutes Curry let him.
"You sure it's
not that you're afraid I might beat you?" asked Curry
eventually, with a small smile.
"Of course it's
..." Heyes began to shout back, but as Curry's words sunk in,
he allowed his anger to subside and smiled back at him. His partner
certainly had a way of diffusing his anger.
"No of course
not" he gave Curry his most confident smile "Now why would
I even think that?"
"What then, you
afraid I might not beat Riggs?"
Heyes' face instantly
turned serious.
"No Kid, I'm not
afraid of that. You know that."
Curry nodded. He did
know of course. Heyes' total confidence in him had always meant a
lot to him and at times had been the very thing that had swung the
advantage his way. Curry hadn't failed to notice where his partner
stood whenever someone challenged him.
"It's just that
..." Heyes continued and then paused, looking at his partner
and friend earnestly.
"It's not going
to happen that's all."
Curry nodded. It was
something he didn't think about often, but he did understand the
risk Heyes faced every time Curry was involved in a gunfight - the
risk that one slight error could take his partner from him.
Curry patted Heyes
reassuringly on the shoulder and looking right at him, added more
gently "I know Heyes, I know."
Heyes gave him a
small smile, glad that he didn't have to explain further.
"Don't worry
Kid. There's another way of doing it. There has to be. All we need
is to find a way of getting Riggs to use his gun to show off how
fast he is and then find a way of taking a close look at his gun to
identify him properly, right?"
Kid nodded.
"There's another
way of doing it" repeated Heyes "and I'll find it."
"Yep, I know you
will Heyes."

Curry had been right
of course. Heyes had come up with an alternative plan and as they
neared the town of Black Ridge, Sheriff Rogers was giving them their
final instructions.
"We travel into
town separately." He turned to Curry before continuing
"Thaddeus, we don't want anyone to know that you know us, so
you go into town this afternoon and take a room at the hotel. Joshua
and I will sleep out here tonight and come into town tomorrow
morning."
Curry gave his
partner a wide smile. He liked this plan. A nice comfortable hotel
bed for him and the cold, hard ground for Heyes - and they hadn't
even had to toss a coin for it.
"We also don't
want anyone to know that I'm a sheriff and so from now on, my name
is Morgan."
The three men were
standing on a ridge overlooking the small, dusty town. It didn't
appear to have much going for it. The last that Morgan had heard, it
didn't even have a sheriff. It hadn't taken them long to track Riggs
here and tomorrow they'd put their plans into action.

The crowd was getting
more and more excited. They'd been gathered around the Shooting
Contest booth most of the afternoon. Almost everyone in town had
taken their turn and with no-one as yet having turned in an
outstanding performance, the three hundred dollar prize money was
still up for grabs.
Heyes and Morgan had
been working hard, encouraging people to have a go. The contest had
been successful in as far as the town had had great fun. It had not
yet, however, been successful in producing any great shooting
displays. They felt sure that John Wesley Riggs had not taken a
turn.
Curry
stood on the opposite side of the street, watching the proceedings.
Morgan had agreed to give the contest a go, but he'd insisted that
Curry come into town separately in case it didn't work.
Curry surveyed the
crowd of people around him. A bunch of young cowboys stood to his
left, probably from a local ranch. They'd all had a go at the
contest and not done too badly. Standing next to them, cheering
everyone else was an old man who'd already taken his turn and hardly
hit a thing. To Curry's right was a tall man in a suit who looked
like a city slicker, more like a lawyer than a gunman. Curry noticed
he did wear a gun but he didn't look too keen to use it and
certainly showed no signs of entering the contest. Beyond him a lone
cowboy caught Curry's attention, a shifty looking character, older
than himself he judged with greasy dark hair and a moustache. The
description they had didn't mention a moustache but he'd had time to
grow one Curry figured and so he couldn't be discounted. Taking his
turn at the moment was an aging cowboy, dark hair greying slightly
and with a limp. He shot nine of the twelve cans, better than anyone
else, though he appeared somewhat disappointed and annoyed with
himself.
There was a lull
after that, with no-one else coming forward. Morgan was shouting
out, trying to encourage people to have a go, but to no avail. His
eyes met Curry's, telling him it was time. The sheriff had agreed to
let the contest run its natural course in the hope that it would be
enough to entice Riggs to have a go. He had, however, insisted that
if that didn't work, Curry should have a go himself, setting a high
standard in the hope that Riggs would respond to the stiffer
competition.
Heyes and Curry had
discussed this between themselves. They weren't keen on the idea -
believing that it could be enough to push Riggs into drawing on
Curry anyway. Heyes was also still concerned about just how much
Morgan really knew about them. He was worried that this could also
be a ploy to prove their own identities to him. In addition there
was always the danger that fancy shooting in public could make
others suspicious. On the other side of the coin was the fact that
they really had little choice but to go along with the sheriff who,
they were fairly sure, did know their identities - why else after
all had he so definitely chosen Thaddeus to do the shooting rather
than Joshua? In the end they'd agreed they would go along with it,
but that Curry would do no more than was necessary.
Curry made his way
across the street. He made brief eye contact with Heyes and he knew
he was telling him "We have no choice. Do it. But no more than
ten."
Curry took out his
gun and fired six shots - each one sending a can flying. He reloaded
another six bullets and hit a can squarely with his first four
shots. Ten down. He took aim at the eleventh can, hesitated slightly
and then sent it flying into the air The crowd cheered loudly,
egging him on for the twelfth. He glanced quickly at Heyes, who was
cheering and clapping along with the rest of the crowd. His eyes
though told a different story.
Curry took aim at the
last can. He knew he could hit it and he had to admit, he was mighty
tempted, but he had to keep a cool head and remember why they were
here. He took aim and paused as Heyes' face appeared in his mind's
eye. He smiled to himself and pulled the trigger. The bullet flew
through the air as the crowd held it's breath. But instead of
hitting the can squarely as the others had, it grazed the edge of
the can finely, rattling it slightly but leaving it standing. The
crowd let out a disappointed "ooh" but Curry smiled to
himself. Yes, that had been quite a shot. He looked up at his
partner, knowing that only the two of them would ever know just what
a shot that was. Curry smiled. Heyes did not. He was seething.
As Curry turned to
walk away, the crowd cheered him and his eyes met the long, hard
stare of the lone cowboy, who removed his gun from his holster, spun
it and then paused with it in his hand before returning it to his
holster, breaking eye contact, turning and leaving. Curry stared
after him.
What he didn't see,
just to his left, was the city slicker run his hand slowly and
deliberately across his gun.

"We
agreed." yelled Heyes "You agreed. Just enough, no more
than was necessary. And in my book ten beats nine, not eleven. Not
to mention that fancy shooting on the twelfth. I still can't believe
you did that. What? You want to go around with a great big sign over
your head - I am Kid Curry?"
"Yes Heyes, I
agreed." Kid yelled back. "But you know what? I couldn't
resist. You know why? Because I'm just a no good gunslinger. When it
comes right down to it, I'm no better than Riggs."
Heyes calmed
instantly.
"No Kid, that's
not true. You're not just a gunslinger - and you know it."
Kid tutted but didn't
reply. He wasn't totally convinced,. He hadn't acted any better than
a gunslinger this afternoon and he didn't need Heyes to remind him
of the dangers of being recognised.
They'd managed to
snatch just a few moments alone in the room shared by Heyes and the
sheriff. In order to cover that Heyes and Curry didn't know each
other, Curry had his own separate room but since they'd arrived in
town, Morgan had kept a very close eye on them, keeping one of them
in his sight at all times.
Heyes was just about
to open his mouth to try again to convince his partner, when the
door handle turned and the sheriff entered.
"Well boys, we
gave it a go but it didn't work. Looks like it's time to try
something else."
"The trouble is,
we don't like the something else you've got in mind" objected
Heyes.
"Well now, I
don't remember exactly asking you whether you liked it. I don't
recall ever actually giving you any choice in this matter. Remember
I said I'd find a way to bring him to justice? I meant that. I'll
use whatever means I can. If you refuse to do this, I could just
start a rumour, something like maybe, Kid Curry himself is in town.
Now don't you think that would interest Riggs? And maybe a few
others as well?"
At the cold look on
Heyes' face, he decided to change tack. He really didn't want to
have to force his hand, but he would do if necessary. He wanted
Riggs. He sighed, and laid his cards on the table.
"Look, he shot a
man who is not only my deputy but also my friend. He has a wife and
two young children. For all I know, his wife may be a widow by now.
What am I to do boys? What would you do if you were me? As I see it,
we don't any of us have any choices here. I am in a position to
force you boys, but you know, I'd really rather not have to. I'd
rather you just chose to work with me on this. How about it?"
The two ex-outlaws
looked at each other. The sheriff's voice held a note of weariness
and neither of them were left untouched by his words.
Curry understood
completely. He knew exactly what he'd want to do if he were in the
sheriff's position. Heck, he had been there himself once before and
in the final analysis, he had killed.
Gunplay was never
Heyes' favoured way of resolving a problem, but nevertheless he did
understand. He also understood that it was the way some needed to
deal with things. Understanding though, did not mean he had to like
it.
"OK" he
heard Curry say to Morgan. "We'll do it."
Heyes rose without
uttering a word, reached for his hat and left the room.
"Joshua, I
..." the sheriff called after him but Kid stopped him.
"Let him
go." he said.
At the sheriff's
questioning expression, Curry continued.
"It's OK, he'll
do it. He's not afraid of what you think he is you know. He has no
fear of facing me if that's what you think?"
Morgan looked more
puzzled, clearly that was what he had thought.
"It's what
follows that bothers him."
"You facing
Riggs?"
"You know, every
time I face a man, he stands to lose more than I do."
"How do you
figure that?"
"I could lose my
life of course. He risks losing his partner."
Curry looked away and
out of the window and saw Heyes sitting on the front porch.
"Well, I guess
you'd have to know more about us to understand that."
"Maybe not"
mused the sheriff
Curry gave him a
tight-lipped half smile and then left the room in search of his
friend.

He sat in the chair
next to Heyes on the porch and they sat in comfortable silence for a
long time, just watching the world go by, each pre-occupied with his
own thoughts.
"I
want to do it" ventured Curry finally.
"I know."
"That bother
you?"
There was a long
silence before Heyes replied.
"What do you
want me to say to that? No, it doesn't bother me? Well, I'm sorry
Kid, I can't tell you that. Of course it bothers me."
"Yeah, I
know."
Another long silence
followed before Curry continued.
"But knowing
that doesn't make me not want to do it."
"Yeah I
know" Heyes turned and smiled fondly at his friend. "I
don't expect it to. It's part of what makes you who you are."
Curry gave him a
small smile.
"Because he shot
Robert Bradshaw" Heyes said quietly. It was a statement, not a
question, but Curry nodded in reply anyway.
"He has a wife
Heyes, two children. He was just doing his job."
Heyes turned to look
at his friend.
"And I thought
you said you were just a no good gunslinger? No better than
Riggs?"
Curry didn't answer,
but he had heard the words and he turned them around in his mind as
he stared down the street. Maybe, just maybe, Heyes was right.

Upstairs from his
hotel room, the sheriff watched the two of them on the porch and
acknowledged a new found respect and admiration for them. He
couldn't of course be absolutely certain of who they were, but he
was pretty convinced. If he was right, then he hoped that the
rumours he'd heard about them going straight were indeed true. When
he'd first heard those rumours a few months back, he couldn't, and
hadn't, believed them at all. But now? Well, now, he realised, maybe
he could.

Curry did what he
always did. He watched his adversary carefully, his ability to read
even the smallest sign and anticipate their movements never failed
to give him an advantage. He watched the eyes especially - there
weren't many he couldn't read.
Unfortunately
for Curry, Heyes also did what he always did. He plastered such a
cold, detached look in his eyes that they turned almost to stone and
became totally unreadable, even to Curry.
The expression jolted
right through the Kid. He'd seen that look before of course, had
watched it used to great effect. But it had never, ever in his life
been directed at him. He blinked but managed to keep his poker face
in return.
He wasn't sure he
could do it. He just wasn't sure he could. This was Heyes standing
in front of him, his friend and partner, his best friend, heck, his
only true friend. How could he do this?
Heyes saw the tiny
flicker of doubt on Kid's face, undetectable to everyone else but
crystal clear to Heyes. He knew it was his only chance.
He made his move.
Curry, however, was
not known as the best for nothing and his gun was in his hand in an
instant. Heyes' gun had cleared his holster, but only just.
For the first time in
his life, Hannibal Heyes started to appreciate what it was really
like to face Kid Curry. And yet, he realised, in truth he didn't
understand at all and never could. Because now that the gun was
drawn and pointing directly at him, he felt no threat, no danger. In
fact, he had to bite back a smile. Of course it had played out as he
knew it would, but he'd succeeded in unnerving Kid Curry for just a
split second using the only "weapon" he had against him -
Curry's feelings about their partnership. Inwardly he smiled, but
tried to remember that to make this look real, he really needed to
show at least a hint of fear at this point. It was harder to do than
he'd imagined though, and so he settled for his best poker face and
hoped it was convincing enough to those who didn't know him.
Curry, for his part,
was trying to look hostile. He was trying to remember the times when
he'd felt angry at Heyes, but it wasn't working too well. Anger at
Heyes was different to anger at anyone else; he just couldn't
associate any degree of threat with it.
So Curry tried to
unfocus his eyes and conjure up the picture of another face in front
of him, but that wasn't too successful either. Everything about
Heyes was so familiar to him that it was impossible not to recognise
who was standing there even if he didn't focus on him.
Curry realised the
room was waiting for him to make the next move. Heyes was standing
motionless, looking right at him, waiting.
Finally, Curry used
his annoyance at the situation to work up some aggression and
growled at Heyes.
"OK, you leave
the game."
Heyes leaned forward
and picked up his winnings so far but before he could even
straighten up, Curry growled again.
"Now place that
on the table in front of me."
Heyes froze. Curry
had gone too far now.
He looked at his
partner and realised that he really had no choice,. He could hardly
object, given the circumstances and the fact they were trying to
make this look real. This time, however, he let his eyes convey his
feelings to his partner as he placed his money in front of Kid.
It was Curry's turn
to stifle a grin. He was sure he'd regret this later. Heyes would
surely have plenty to say about it, but he hadn't been able to
resist.
Slowly, he
re-holstered his gun, picked up the cash and walked out of the
saloon, pushing roughly past the city slicker in the doorway. Heyes
just stared after him. As he left, the saloon breathed a collective
sigh of relief and went back to what they'd been doing. The show was
over, but it had made an impression on everyone and they were all
now busy discussing the fast draw, the likes of which they'd never
seen before.
At the table in the
corner, the lone cowboy rose, took his gun from his holster, ran his
fingers along the barrel and replaced it. He gazed after Curry and
then followed him out onto the street,
Heyes glanced at
Morgan, a chill running down his spine. This soon? He stood
perfectly still next to the poker table from where he'd watched
Curry leave. He could still see his partner walking up the street
towards the hotel. Outside the saloon, the lone cowboy watched him
too but didn't move. When Curry entered the hotel, he turned and
walked in the opposite direction.
Heyes let out a sigh
of relief.
So, the
"bait" was set. All they could do now was wait and see
what happened. The ball was in Riggs' court. From now on though,
Curry must remain on his guard and alert at all times.
Heyes walked over to
the bar to join Morgan. The bartender, a friendly, talkative man in
his fifties, poured a glass of whisky and handed it to Heyes.
"Here young
fella, you look like you could use this."
"Thanks"
murmured Heyes and downed the shot in one go.
"I'm sorry that
had to happen here"
Wasn't your fault
Mister"
"Joe. Call me
Joe" he smiled, refilling Heyes' glass. "I prefer to keep
the gunfights out of my saloon but there's not much you can do in a
two-bit town like this."
"Happen often
then?" asked Heyes
"Sure it
does" nodded Joe "There's always some young cowpoke wants
to show off his skills. It aint gonna get no better any time soon
either" he shrugged resignedly, before adding "I aint
never seen anything quite like that though. That was really
something."
"Sure was"
agreed Heyes with that not quite real smile. This kind of talk
around town was exactly what they didn't need.
"Come on Joshua,
drink up" urged the sheriff. "I think I'd better get you
out of here before you get yourself in any more trouble."
Heyes followed him
out of the saloon, frowning - wasn't that usually the Kid's line?

Setting:
Heyes and Curry are in Curry's room, looking down onto the street.
"Are you still
certain you want to go through with this?" Heyes asked his
partner.
"Yep."
"We could always
just leave town, take our chances against the sheriff?"
"No Heyes, I'm
certain. I want to do this."
Heyes nodded.
As he looked out of
the window, Curry saw the lone cowboy from the contest cross the
street towards the livery. He nudged Heyes to draw his attention to
him.
"You know
anything about him?" he asked Heyes.
"He was at the
shooting contest, but he didn't enter. I've seen him around town
since. Why?" Heyes was immediately alert and already scanning
the street for possible accomplices while Curry steadfastly kept his
eyes on the cowboy.
"I just got a
feeling about him is all. He was certainly interested in the outcome
of the shooting contest" explained Curry.

An hour later Heyes
was back in the saloon playing poker when he spotted the lone cowboy
walk in. Curry was still up in his hotel room so he wasn't concerned
about that but thought he'd take the chance to find out what the
bartender knew. Excusing himself from the table, he headed for the
bar and ordered a whisky. As the bartender filled his glass he
answered his question.
"Not much I can
tell you really."
"He a stranger
round here then?"
"Yes, he arrived
a day or so before you and your friend" Heyes' interest was
piqued.
"You know his
name?"
"He goes by
Martin Mackay"
"He say where
he's from?"
"Now you know
men like him don't go round giving out that kind of
information."
"Men like
him?"
"If you ask me,
this town'll be a happier and safer place when he's gone."
"I see what you
mean" replied Heyes, smiling.
"Of course, it
got the town talking, all these strangers suddenly arriving in
town" volunteered the bartender.
"There were
others?"
"Well you
already met one of 'em - that fella by the name of Jones. He's the
one that gave you a spot of bother earlier."
Heyes nodded, trying
to look serious.
"You know any
more about him?" Heyes thought it best to show a similar
interest in all of the "strangers".
"Not really.
Seemed like a nice fella - until earlier that is. You saw the way he
won that shooting contest and the way he drew that gun this
afternoon - well the whole town is talking about it. That sure was
some draw."
Heyes nodded in
agreement. He didn't like the sounds of the whole town talking about
Curry's fast draw. For one thing it would certainly draw Riggs'
attention and, he admitted to himself, he'd been harbouring the hope
that the plan wouldn't work. For another thing though, it always
made him nervous when too many people were aware of Curry's
abilities with a gun - it was all too easy for someone to put two
and two together.
"Then there's
Henry Wallace."
"Henry
Wallace?" asked Heyes, puzzled.
"Well he says
he's a banker over at Cartersville and is in town for a few days.
No-one seems to know the man though. Sneaky sort if you ask
me."
"Tall, dark
hair?" asked Heyes
"Yeah, that's
him. Now tell me, how many bankers you know who carry a gun?"
Alarm bells started
to ring in Heyes' mind.
"You seen him
use the gun then?"
"Oh no, just
carries it is all. He probably has no idea how to use it"
laughed the bartender.
"Probably
not" Heyes laughed with him and dropped a handful of coins on
the bar. He downed his whisky and then made his way out onto the
street.
The bright sunlight
was a stark contrast to the dimness of the saloon and Heyes paused
to let his eyes adjust. Gazing down the street, he watched as Henry
Wallace crossed from the hotel and walked up the steps to the bank.
Heyes let his mind mull over the things he'd learned. Martin Mackay
sounded so obvious and Kid was probably right about him, but Heyes
couldn't push Henry Wallace, the city slicker, from his mind.
Something was nagging at the back of his brain about him, but he
couldn't quite place it.
As Heyes watched him,
Wallace paused at the top of the steps, looked around him and then
deliberately placed his fingers on his gun. A memory trickled into
Heyes' mind, the vision of Wallace at the shooting contest, watching
Curry walk away after winning. Slowly it came to Heyes what it was
that had been nagging him. As Curry had walked away from the
contest, he'd walked past Wallace who had watched him all the way
and placed his hand purposefully on his own gun.

It only took Heyes a
few moments to pick the lock. As he quietly opened the door, he was
glad to see the gun pointed straight at him.
"Glad to see
you're alert Kid" he grinned in the dim light creeping around
the edges of the window blind.
"Heyes, ya gotta
stop doing that." Kid sighed and re-holstered the gun as he lay
back down in bed.
"Why?"
asked Heyes "I didn't want to knock - it might have woken
you.."
"Well, whatever
it is you wanted to tell me, I'm not interested."
There was a pause
before Curry continued, his eyes still closed.
"And you can
remove that expression from your face - it won't work. I'm sleeping
Heyes."
"What
expression?" asked Heyes feigning hurt.
"I can't see it
but I know it's there" insisted Curry
"Aw come on Kid,
get up. We've got work to do."
"Work?"
Curry half sat up and squinted one eye open, trying to see Heyes in
the darkness. He couldn't, so he gave up trying and flopped back
down into the bed and closed his eyes again.
"Work is for the
morning Heyes, go back to bed."
"OK Kid."
Heyes agreed amicably and started to leave the room.
That got Curry's
attention and he opened one eye again.
"What?"
"I said OK. If
you don't want to help me, then I'll just have to break into the
bank on my own."
"Break into the
bank?" demanded Curry, sitting up abruptly.
"Yeah. Shame you
don't want to help really, because you're the best darn lookout I
know. Still, don't you worry, You go back to sleep."
"OK, OK, Heyes.
I'm awake. Now come back here and tell me what's going on."
Heyes perched on the
foot of Curry's bed and began to explain.
"The loot Kid.
I've been thinking about the loot from the robbery. Where is
it?"
"Probably hidden
safely somewhere out there if Riggs has got any sense."
"If your cowboy
friend Martin Mackay is really John Wesley Riggs then I'd agree. But
what if it's Henry Wallace who is really Riggs?"
"Your banker
friend?"
"Well, he's not
exactly my friend" Heyes pretended to be offended "but
yes, that's who I mean." confirmed Heyes. He'd managed to sneak
a quick five minutes earlier to tell his partner about his
conversation with the bartender.
"You're thinking
he just might have placed the loot back into a bank in another
town?" Curry looked doubtful but then nodded as he started to
see Heyes' logic.
"Exactly"
nodded Heyes.
"Very
clever" mused Curry "who would think to look for a bank
loot in a bank?"
Heyes raised an
eyebrow at him.
"And you want to
break into the bank to see if it's there?"
Heyes nodded.
Curry sighed. Unlike
Heyes, he did not do his best work in the middle of the night, but
he had to admit his partner had a point and if they could find a way
of resolving this without a shootout, then so much the better - well
that of course was assuming that they could get into the bank and
out again without getting caught.
Curry climbed out of
bed and started to get dressed.

Heyes had been
working at the safe for about an hour now. He leaned his head back
and ran his fingers through his hair. It was a stubborn one but he
was making progress. Curry glanced up at him and then returned his
full attention to keeping lookout as Heyes returned his head to the
side of the safe.
Half an hour later
Heyes looked up at his partner and smiled as he swung open the safe
door. Curry stayed where he was while Heyes went through the
contents of the safe.
Ten minutes later,
Heyes shook his head and looked up at Curry again.
"Nothing, Kid.
At least nothing that gives us any clues."
"You sure?"
Kid sounded surprised. Heyes' logic had made sense and he'd expected
him to find something.
"You take a
look, in case I missed something" invited Heyes. They swapped
places with Heyes keeping lookout while Curry looked through the
contents of the safe, like his partner, being careful to replace
everything exactly as it was. He came up blank too.
"Nope, nothing
that helps us." he confirmed
Heyes returned to the
safe and peered in one more time.
"A lot of money
though" he almost drooled
"Sure is."
agreed Curry.
Both of them gazed at
it for a moment, before Curry's voice broke the silence.
"Come on, you've
done this bit before Heyes. Close the door."
Heyes pushed the safe
door closed and shook his head.
"I can't believe
it though. I really thought we'd find something."
"Me too
Heyes"
"We've missed
something"
Heyes stood up from
the safe and looked around him. What had he missed? He knew the bank
loot was here somewhere, but where would it be?
"Come on, let's
get out of here" encouraged Curry
"Yeah, OK"
agreed Heyes, disappointed.
He was about to turn
and follow his partner, when what should have been obvious from the
start suddenly hit him.
"Kid, the lock
boxes" he whispered. "If you were going to put bank loot
in a bank, you'd put it in a lock box right?"
Kid's face lit up
with a smile - of course!
It only took them a
few minutes to locate the row of lock boxes - eight of them!
"Better get to
work Heyes" grinned Curry and settled himself once again to
keeping watch.
After the first two,
Heyes was able to open the boxes fairly quickly. The first three
however revealed plenty of jewels and money but not the bank loot.
In the fourth one was
nothing but a small red book. Heyes picked it up and looked quickly
through it, not quite sure what to make of it. On each page there
were handwritten lists of numbers and letters. Some of them were
circled and some had squares or triangles drawn around them. Heyes
was intrigued. The book was obviously a list of codes, but it wasn't
clear what the codes were used for.
He would have liked
to have been able to look at it properly but he knew he didn't have
time. He replaced the book, closed the box and locked it again.
The next two boxes
were empty, but the seventh one yielded a small tan bag. Heyes
peered into the bag and smiled. Inside were several wads of cash and
another smaller bag.
"Hey Kid"
he whispered, beckoning his partner over. Kid peered into the bag as
well and smiled.
"Looks like you
were right Heyes"
A quick count of the
cash revealed that there was indeed ten thousand dollars there.
Opening the smaller bag, Heyes pulled out a gleaming diamond
necklace.
"So someone did
place the loot in the bank" grinned Heyes.
"Wallace?"
"Seems likely
Kid."
"But we don't
know that for sure do we?"
"No we don't.
The only thing we know for sure is that the bank loot is here."
"Well then if
you don't mind, I'll just go on keeping a close eye on Martin
Mackay. I've had a bad feeling about him all along."
Heyes nodded,
prepared to accept Kid's intuition.
"So how do we
tell Morgan that we found the bank loot?" asked Kid.
"Short of
telling him we broke into the bank and looked, I don't think we
can."
"That might make
him just a little suspicious huh? One of us can shoot and the other
can open safes." laughed Curry. "If he didn't know who we
were before, he'd soon work it out from that."
"You're
right" grinned Heyes. ""No, we have to find another
way to prove who Riggs is or prove that the bank loot is here. So
we'll just keep this information to ourselves for the time being and
see what happens."
Kid nodded his
agreement.
Carefully they
replaced the bag, locked the box and made their way out of the bank,
checking meticulously that they left no evidence that they'd been
there.
Back at the hotel,
Curry returned to his own room and Heyes silently let himself back
into the room he was sharing with the sheriff, undressed and climbed
back into bed.

The next day was a
long one. It was stifling hot and the air inside the saloon was
thick with smoke and the stench of unwashed cowboys. Curry had been
waiting all day, trying to stay alert, trying to have eyes in the
back of his head. Heyes and Morgan had never been far away, both of
them watching and waiting too.
Curry had entertained
the thought that it wasn't going to happen - but only for the
briefest of moments. He could feel in it his bones. Somehow he knew
that whoever Riggs was, he would call him out.
Martin Mackay, the
lone cowboy, had been around the saloon for most of the day. He'd
eyed Curry a few times but nothing more.
Henry Wallace, on the
other hand, had not been seen all day. From what he'd seen last
night in the bank, logic told Curry that Wallace was the man he had
to watch, but nevertheless, he still had a bad feeling about Mackay.
Curry threw his cards
in. He'd been involved in a game of poker for the last hour but his
mind wasn't really on it. Despite that, he'd done pretty well and
now had considerably more in front of him than he'd begun with.
One of the other
cowboys in the game also tossed in his hand and then collecting up
his winnings, made his excuses and left.
The hairs on the back
of Curry's neck stood up. He could feel a pair of eyes on his back,
became aware that he was being watched. He knew it was Mackay
immediately, knew the man was behind him.
He
looked up towards the bar where Heyes and Morgan were standing. From
where he sat, Curry could see Heyes watch Mackay walk across the
saloon. He also saw Heyes scan the area behind Curry. When Heyes
looked directly at him, Curry knew that it was indeed Mackay
approaching but that there was no other obvious danger behind him.
As he came into his
eyeline, Curry returned the man's hard gaze.
"May I?"
asked Mackay, indicating the empty seat. Curry nodded and Mackay sat
opposite him, the pair never breaking eye contact. The tension
between them was tangible and sent a shiver down the spine of the
young man sitting between them. Clearly there was going to be
trouble.
Standing at the bar
next to Heyes, Morgan watched the proceedings with the eye of a
lawman who had seen it all before. Deciding it was high time he
joined the poker table, he made his way across the room.
Joe, the bartender,
shook his head.
"Your friend's a
dang idiot if you ask me."
"Huh?"
Heyes asked confused and not in the mood for small talk.
"Playing cards
with that fella Jones" Joe replied, pointing across the room.
"Oh. Yeah."
Heyes acknowledged distractedly, his mind on the scene in front of
him.
"If ya ask me,
he'd better get the man to give him a receipt if he wins" Joe
was laughing out loud at his own comment which he obviously thought
was most amusing. "He'll be taking it all back off him in a
gunfight if he don't"
Heyes turned sharply
to look at him.
"What did you
say?" he demanded urgently.
"I said, he'd
better get the man to give him ...." he started to explain,
looking over at the table and then turning back to Heyes, he
stopped. Heyes had already gone.

"Good evening Mr
Smith. Your key?" asked the hotel desk clerk.
"Yes
please"
Heyes took the key
and started towards the stairs, but then turned back.
"Actually, I
know it's late, but I was wondering, would it be possible to get a
bath brought up?"
"At this
time?" asked the desk clerk, somewhat flustered. "Well, I
really don't know, it's very late." He stammered.
"Well, could you
check please? I would surely appreciate it." Heyes gave him a
polite and encouraging smile.
"Well, yes, I
suppose so." he replied and hurried off.
Heyes quickly reached
across the desk and locating the hotel journal, he quickly scanned
the pages for the names of Wallace and Mackay. Finding them, he
noted the room numbers and returned the journal, just as the desk
clerk returned, even more flustered.
"I'm terribly
sorry Mr Smith, it seems that we can't do that."
"Oh dear. Well
that is a shame" sighed Heyes in mock disappointment. "I
suppose it can't be helped though. Thank you for enquiring for
me."
He nodded politely
whilst scanning the room keys hanging behind the desk clerk.
Spotting that the keys for both rooms were there, he smiled and
turned.
The desk clerk sighed
in relief as he watched Mr Smith make his way up the stairs. He'd
expected the man to be far more angry.
Heyes made short work
of the door lock once again - they really should improve the locks
at this hotel he thought. Within moments he was inside the first
room. On the far side of the room was a large dresser with several
drawers but a quick search revealed nothing of significance. Next
Heyes moved on to the wardrobe, but again found nothing. The
carpetbag on the chair also revealed nothing.
Heyes looked around
the room. He couldn't see anywhere else to search. Maybe there was
nothing here to be found. He didn't believe that though. He was
convinced there was. Scanning the room once more, he sat down on the
bed to think. If he wanted to hide something important in this room,
where would he put it?
Smiling, he stood up
again and then turning back to the bed, he lifted the edge of the
mattress. He reached his hand underneath to search around. Finding
nothing, he moved to the other side of the bed and tried again. This
time his fingers touched a folded piece of paper.
He pulled it out and
unfolded it quickly. It was exactly what he had been looking for.
But was he in time to stop the gunfight?

Heyes ran across the
street at full speed, dashed through the saloon doors and stopped
dead in his tracks. He was too late. In front of him he saw the very
scene he had been hoping to prevent.
Curry was standing
with his back to the saloon door, facing Henry Wallace across the
saloon. Heyes took a few steps forward and a couple to his right
until he was standing a few paces behind Curry and fractionally to
his side. If Wallace fired and missed Curry, he would hit Heyes. But
Heyes had no fear. That wasn't how this was going to play out.
Curry's mind was
totally concentrated on the man in front of him and he didn't
consciously register Heyes' presence. And yet, somewhere inside, he
instinctively knew he was there, just behind him and to his right.
Everything about
Curry was calm. He was totally in command of the situation as he
always was. It was just one of the things that made him the best. He
looked right into Wallace's eyes, reading the man, reading his
reactions, with absolute clarity. As Wallace went to make his move,
Curry read him and with a smoothness and a speed which defied the
eye, Curry simply drew his gun and fired.
The saloon fell into
stunned silence and Wallace's eyes grew large in shock. He'd never
seen anything like it. It had been unbelievable. He looked down at
his hand. It was stretched out in front of him and it was strangely
empty. He looked around him in confusion and seeing his gun on the
floor, realised that his gun must have been shot clear out of his
hand. Shock made it impossible to move and he stood rooted to the
spot, still unable to comprehend what had just happened.
Morgan walked across
the saloon and picked up the gun from the floor. Turning it over, he
studied the barrel. Heyes came up behind him and peered over his
shoulder. There on the barrel, in tiny lettering, was engraved
"J Wesley".
Heyes looked up at
Kid and nodded.

"Well it looks
like it's all sorted out now." reported Sheriff Rogers as he
came out of the telegraph office to join Heyes and Curry who had
been waiting outside for him. "I sent a message back to Silver
Junction and they are sending some men over to help me escort Riggs
back. They should be here within a day or two and Riggs will be safe
in that jail cell till then. I'll be keeping a close eye on him
believe me."
"I guess the
town was happy to hear the news?" asked Heyes pointedly.
"They sure
were." smiled the sheriff, deliberately ignoring the point he
knew Heyes was trying to make. He didn't intend to make this easy
for them.
"What about
Deputy Bradshaw?" asked Curry.
"His injuries
are serious, but he'll live."
"That's good
news."
"He won't be
riding in a posse again any time soon, but he should make a full
recovery in time."
The two former
outlaws looked at each other. They were nervous - unsure now that
Riggs was safely locked up, exactly what would happen to them. The
fact that they were in the street with the sheriff rather than in
the jail cell with Riggs gave them some hope, but still, they'd feel
better once they knew for sure. Curry gave Heyes a look which
clearly said "ask him."
"So sheriff, now
that you have Riggs" ventured Heyes sounding more confident
than he felt, "what are your plans for us?"
"Do you know
boys, I haven't given that much thought really."
"Still thinking
about the fact that you've got Riggs?" asked Curry
"No, not
exactly."
"No?" Curry
was surprised
"No. I was
thinking about where the loot from the robbery might be - and
whether you two would help me search for it - seeing as how we made
such a successful team? It's just that, knowing you as I do" he
paused, looked deliberately from one to the other and then smiled
"I thought you might?"
Heyes
glanced at his partner. This could be trouble. He really didn't want
to admit that he knew where the loot was, but on the other hand, how
likely was it that Morgan would let them go until they'd found it?
If he let them go at all, that was. Heyes admitted to himself that
he was beginning to feel less and less sure about that. And if they
went out looking for it, they wouldn't find it of course because it
was in the bank. If the sheriff ever discovered that they knew where
the loot was, then he might assume they'd been involved in it all
along. On the other hand, if he admitted right out that they knew,
might that not make the sheriff think they were involved anyway? And
in any case, how could he explain away the fact that he'd opened the
safe without the sheriff realising for certain who he was? What to
do?
"Sheriff, what
do you plan on doing with us once this is over?"
"I told you, I
haven't given that any thought. All I'm trying to figure out right
now is how to find the loot. If I return to Silver Junction with
Riggs and the loot, I think that would safely put the issue to bed,
so to speak."
He stared off down
the street, before adding "Like I said before though, I'm
willing to do whatever it takes. As you know, I'm not averse to
starting the odd rumour, maybe that .."
"Yeah, yeah, we
know, that Kid Curry is in town" interrupted Curry.
The sheriff raised
his eyebrows in mock surprise.
"Actually no.
That Hannibal Heyes is with him."
Heyes and Curry
looked at each other and once again agreed that they had no choice
but to trust this man.
"It's in the
bank, in a lock box." said Heyes, somewhat deflated.
"The bank?"
the sheriff didn't appear quite as surprised as Heyes had expected
him to be and suddenly he was glad he'd told the truth, anything
less would have been dangerous.
"Hmm.. So how
exactly do you know that?"
Heyes took a piece of
paper out of his pocket and handed it to the Sheriff.
"It's a receipt
from the bank for the things he placed in the lock box - ten
thousand dollars and a diamond necklace. It was in his room. It has
his name and everything on it too. I found it just before the
shootout. I was hoping that this could all get sorted out some other
way, without the gunplay."
"I see."
Morgan looked at Heyes disbelievingly "And that's how you know
the loot is in the bank? Because you found a receipt?"
Heyes hesitated only
a second. He knew he had to continue with the truth.
"No. I know the
loot is in the bank because I've seen it there. I found the receipt
because I went looking for it to prove that Wallace was Riggs before
he drew on my friend here."
The sheriff nodded.
"I see. You know, I must admit that I thought the worst of you
two at one stage. But clearly I was wrong. You can't be who I
thought you were, you're too honest."
Heyes and Curry
glanced at each other.
"Now why don't
you two go over to the hotel and start packing? I'll go over to the
bank and sort this out and then I'll meet you in the hotel dining
room for dinner. I trust you'll be staying long enough for
dinner?"
The pair smiled at
him, relieved, and made their way down the street towards the hotel.
Morgan watched them
go, just as relieved as they were, because they'd told him the
truth.
So, Hannibal Heyes
and Kid Curry are in town he thought to himself and that rumour I
heard is true.
He smiled to himself
and continued on to the bank.

The three men were
sitting at a table in the hotel dining room, having just finished
dinner.
"Well boys, I've
got a lot of details to see to, so I'll have to take my leave I'm
afraid."
Unsure where this
left them, Heyes and Curry both looked at him questioningly. Seeing
their discomfort, the sheriff continued.
"Oh, well, being
as we had so successfully sorted out my first problem boys, I came
to a decision about my second problem. I decided that the town of
Silver Junction would be happy enough with the return of Riggs and
the money and the necklace, that they would hardly notice if two
notorious outlaws slipped through their fingers. Here," he
handed each of them an envelope "I've been carrying these
around with me since we left Silver Junction, kind of an insurance
you might say. You can have them now though,." He smiled at
them and stood from the table.
"Joshua,
Thaddeus, thank you for all your help and for being so," he
paused "willing. I'll be wishing you luck in the future - I
don't suppose you'll get a chance to return to Silver Junction again
- well at least not in the immediate future" he stressed the
last words before tipping his hat and leaving.
Heyes and Curry
opened the envelopes. Each one contained five hundred dollars in
cash and a folded sheet of paper.
Guessing that it was
their Wanted posters, the pair quickly unfolded them. Then, staring
at them in disbelief, they looked at each other and burst out
laughing.
"Wanted: Reward
$500 - Tom Gates" read one and the other "Wanted: Reward
$500 - Bill Barnes"
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