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"Ossawatomie,
Kansas, one mile," Kid said, reading aloud the road
sign that tilted drunkenly by the side of the muddy road.
The faded letters were hard to read through the drizzling
autumn rain. "Ossawatomie. Who thinks up these names
anyway?"
"Indians,"
said Heyes, shrugging and turning up his coat collar against
the cold wind that blew raindrops down the back of his neck.
"It means something in Indian, you know that. Place of
the buffalo hunt, or something."
"Probably
means place of the stinking cold rain," Kid said
morosely. "I swear it always rains in Kansas. In
between hailstorms, that is."
"Oh,
give it a rest," said Heyes. "Come on, we're
almost there. We'll just stop for the night, to get out of
the rain, and then head out in the morning."
Kid looked
out under the dripping brim of his hat, at the wide gray
sweep of Kansas prairie that surrounded them. The horizon
was veiled in curtains of rain, but up ahead the lights of
the town glowed faintly orange. "Never should have come
this way," said Kid. "Would have been shorter to
go around by Witchita."
"The
river was flooded by Wichita, you feel like a swim?"
Heyes snapped. "Come on, I'm gonna melt if we stand
here much longer." He shook the reins, and his tired
horse plodded on.
Kid glanced
at the sign again, and shook his head. "Kansas,"
he said heavily, and spat on the ground. "We must have
been crazy to come back here."
"Feeling
better?" Heyes inquired, as they leaned side by side on the
bar, a well-filled whiskey glass in front of each of them. A piano
sounded gaily, and the golden glow of an oil-lamp chandelier made
the crowded saloon seem a warm and home-like place.
"A
little better," Kid admitted. "Drier, anyway. Figures the
rain would stop soon as we got here."
"Well, we'll be
leaving in the morning, and next week we’ll be out of Kansas
altogether," said Heyes. He turned and surveyed the ring of
straw-hatted players who were frowning over their cards at a near-by
poker table. "Bunch of Kansas farmers," he said in a low
voice. "Some things never change. Want to get in the
game?"
"Nah, not in the
mood," said Kid.
"Well, this is
too good to miss," said Heyes. "See you later."
He ambled over to the
table, and gave the players a pleasant smile. "Howdy, neighbors,
got room for one more?" he asked, pulling up a chair. They
looked him over with blank, suspicious faces, and Heyes smiled
winningly. "So how do you play this game, anyway?" he
inquired, and Kid looked down to hide his grin.
A flash of gold
caught his eye, and he saw something shiny on the floor, half hidden
in the wood shavings and peanut hulls. It was a gold watch. He bent
and picked it up, and saw it was a man's pocket watch, handsomely
engraved, its weight showing that it was solid gold. Kid glanced
around the saloon to see who might be the owner, but there was no
one in the crowd of farmers and shop-keepers who looked well-dressed
enough to own such an expensive trinket.
He opened the front
of the watch to see if there was a name engraved anywhere. Framed
inside the front lid was a small photograph of a woman's face. He
stared at the picture, frowning. It was a young woman, in a
high-necked dress, with hair that he could tell was pale and fine,
even though it was drawn back in a bun; hair like cornsilk, long and
straight, and pure gold. Her eyes were light, fringed with dark
lashes. A pretty girl, he thought, but there was something about her
expression, some sadness in the sweet eyes, that made sudden tears
prick his eyelids.
"Nice
watch," said a gravelly voice in his ear, and he jumped and
looked up.
"Oh, it's not
mine," he said, blinking. "I found it on the floor here.
Any idea who it belongs to?"
"Yeah, looks
like old Daniel's watch. He's always mooning over that picture just
like you were," said the bartender, a small man with a bushy
handlebar mustache. He peered with curiosity over Kid's shoulder.
"Dan'd never let me have a look, though. Hell, women are a dime
a dozen, 'specially blondes, don't you know that yet, pal? What's so
special about her, anyway?"
"Nothing,"
said Kid, snapping the watch shut with an annoyed click. "Where
can I find this Daniel guy?"
"Over in the
corner there, having a drink as usual, don't think he's noticed he
lost it yet. Hang on to it for a couple of days," the bartender
advised, grinning. "Maybe he'll post a reward."
"You're all
heart, friend," said Kid.
"Ain't got no
heart, pal," the bartender said, pouring himself a drink.
"Last blonde I met stole it clean away."
Kid smiled and then
walked over to the corner where an old man was sitting at a solitary
table. The man looked up suspiciously with watery, red-rimmed eyes
under white brows, but as soon as he saw the watch in Kid's hand he
leaped to his feet, open-mouthed. He scrabbled at his empty vest
pocket, then snatched the watch from Kid. "My God, I had no
idea I'd dropped it," he said, his voice quavering. "Must
thank you, I am sincerely in your debt, sir. Many thanks." He
bowed in a courtly manner, and almost fell over.
Kid put out a hand to
steady him, noticing that his face was an unhealthy shade of gray.
"That's okay, friend. Looks like the chain broke, better get
that fixed."
"I surely
will," said the man. "Thanks again."
"By the way, who’s
the girl in the picture?" asked Kid casually. "I don't
recognize her, but she...reminds me of someone."
The old man looked
around, and leaned closer to Kid. "Francina," he
whispered. "Francina Talbot," as if that explained it all.
"And who's
that?" Kid inquired, with a smile. “She sure is pretty.”
“She is that,”
the man said. “You should see her smile...”
Before he could
finish, someone elbowed Kid roughly aside. He swung around to see
five young farmers, all carrying beer bottles and looking
belligerently red-faced. One of them gave the old man a shove, and
he staggered and almost fell.
"Get outta the
way, old-timer," said the young man. “You've been taking up a
whole table long enough."
"I didn't
mean..." the old man began courteously, but one of the farmers
shoved him again.
"Get out!"
Kid didn't waste time
in arguing, just grabbed the youngster by the scruff of the neck and
hauled him around. The farmer swung his beer bottle at Kid's head,
but he easily ducked it, and hooked his boot around the farmer's
ankle, tripping him neatly. The young man crashed to the floor,
swearing.
"Hey, Bill's in
trouble," said a burly man in overalls, waving to a crowd of
half a dozen other men lounging by the bar. Kid noticed Heyes
watching from the poker table, and saw his partner throw down his
cards and shove back his chair.
"No, this guy's
the one who's in trouble," said a man in a battered straw hat,
grinning at Kid.
"Come on, pal,
you think you can scare us? Who do you think you are,
anyway?"
Three men approached
him, fists raised, and others were getting to their feet. Kid got in
front of the old man, and drew back his fist with a grim smile and a
feeling of perverse pleasure. He’d been longing for someone to hit
ever since he crossed the Kansas border.

Five young farmers
sat meekly lined up on the bench in the sheriff's office, like a row
of schoolboys, with torn clothes, bruised faces and blackened eyes.
Behind them, on a second uncomfortable bench, sat Heyes, dabbing at
a bleeding lip, and Kid, nursing a bruise on his cheek. They were
all sitting quietly, listening to Sheriff Carter, and had been doing
so for the last quarter of an hour.
"...and there's
other ways to settle things, boys, peaceable ways," the sheriff
went on, his rising voice sounding as though he was at last coming
to a conclusion. "So remember, this is a peaceable town."
He was a large, beefy man, but Kid glanced at the rolls of fat that
overhung the sheriff's gunbelt and reflected that it was a good
thing the town was peaceable. "Now get outta here, all of you,
and don't let me see you in here again," the sheriff finished.
The farmers limped
out of the office, grumbling and shooting menacing looks at Heyes
and Kid. As the door slammed behind them, the sheriff sat down at
his desk and drummed his fingers on a pile of papers. "No good,
those boys," he said, shooting a glance at Kid. "They're
in my office twice a week, some of'em." He scratched his
stomach thoughtfully, and looked them both over with narrowed eyes.
"You guys are new around here, aren't you? Don't remember
seeing you around here before. 'Course I'm pretty new here
myself."
"Nice to meet
you, sheriff, we'll try not to trouble you again," said Heyes,
heading for the door.
"Try hard,
boys," said the sheriff pleasantly, eyeing Kid's low-cut
holster and the well-worn handgrip of his gun. "Try hard."
They clattered down
the wooden steps of the sheriff's office, and set off hastily down
the dark street. The office had been brightly lit with three
kerosene lamps, too brightly lit; Heyes felt more comfortable in the
shadows of the street. He glanced back over his shoulder, and saw
the sheriff standing on the steps looking after them, and he
deliberately slowed his steps to avoid the appearance of hurrying.
He blinked as his
eyes began to get used to the dark. It was close to midnight, and
the street was deserted. The night wind, blowing straight off the
prairie, was damp and chill; overhead the stars were blotted out by
sagging clouds that could be felt rather than seen. The side streets
were black as mine shafts, but on the main street an occasional lamp
on a windowsill sent a gold gleam across the muddy road. The warm
light from the houses only made the street seem colder.
They shivered and
buttoned their coats, and trudged along till Heyes broke the
silence.
"Well, we were
in town for, let me see, not quite twenty minutes before we got
hauled to the sheriff's office," he said pensively.
"That's got to be some kind of a record, even for us."
"You didn't have
to get into it, you could have just sat quietly and played
poker," said Kid grumpily.
"Well, actually,
that's what I was trying to do," Heyes said. "I think it
was when you and the fat guy in the overalls crashed into the poker
table and splintered it to matchwood that we decided to postpone the
game."
"Oh, come
on..." Kid began.
"Of course, the
chandelier crashing to the floor and setting the bar on fire was a
factor, too," Heyes went on. "I don't want you to think we
made a hasty decision or anything."
"It wasn't my
fault, I didn't start it," Kid said sullenly.
Heyes snorted.
"You've been looking for someone to pound on ever since we got
here," he said.
Kid gave him a
sideways glance. "I'm gonna find someone handy to pound on
right quick if you don't shut up," Kid growled, and pulled his
hat lower as rain began to spit down. "See, what'd I tell
you?" he said with gloomy triumph. "It always rains
in..."
"Oh, for God's
sake," Heyes moaned. "We're leaving in the morning, get a
new tune."
"Never should
have taken this job," Kid grumbled. "We're becoming damned
delivery boys."
"Well, the pay
beats cattle driving," Heyes said. "And delivering
documents is easier than fixing fences. Maybe they'll pay us extra
for bad weather..."
His voice trailed off
as he became aware of distant shouts, and curses, and the rising
sound of running feet. They were passing the mouth of a dark side
street, and before they could do more than look around, a figure
came at a clumsy, stumbling run out of the alley and crashed full
tilt into Kid, who staggered back against Heyes as the man grabbed
at him wildly.
"What the
hell?" Kid demanded, but the man made no reply.
Heyes grabbed the
figure by the shoulder, and hauled him off his partner, fist drawn
back. The light from a window gleamed on the man's face, and Heyes
relaxed his grip as he saw the wrinkled face under the shock of
white hair. The old man swayed, and Heyes propped him up.
"What's the
trouble, friend?" said Kid, recognizing his acquaintance from
the saloon who had lost the gold watch.
"They're coming,
they're after me," the man gasped, clutching at his chest with
both hands. They heard voices approaching, and gave each other a
glance over the old man's bent head. Five more figures emerged from
the alley, and a strong smell of alcohol and their weaving footsteps
showed that they were still good and drunk.
"What's the
trouble now, boys?" Kid called.
"That you,
deputy?" demanded a slurred voice.
"Yep," said
Heyes promptly. "You boys don't want to pay another visit to
the sheriff, you better back off."
"Where's that
crazy old coot?" said another voice. "I told him this time
I'd teach him..."
"Get out of
here," Kid said briefly. He put his hand on the handle of his
gun, but Heyes grabbed his arm.
"You ain't the
deputy, you're the guy who got us in dutch with the sheriff,"
said the first voice, as the shadowy figures swayed to and fro.
"We're gonna make you sorry you ever saw this town."
Kid shoved Heyes off
abruptly, and drew his gun. "Get out of here before I count to
three," he said in a hard voice that Heyes barely recognized,
"or you'll be the sorry ones."
The old man had been
leaning more and more heavily on Heyes, gasping and choking, and now
gave a violent shudder.
"Thaddeus,"
Heyes interrupted. "Something wrong with this guy." Heyes
lowered the old man's slight weight to the ground, where he lay
clutching his chest and drawing moaning breaths.
"He looks
bad," said Kid, straining his eyes to see the old man's face.
"One of you boys go get the doc," he ordered, but the
group shuffled their feet and muttered in low tones.
"Come on,"
said one. "Let's get outta here." There was a spattering
of running feet as they fled down the muddy road.
Heyes propped up the
old man's head, and Kid bent over him. The light from a window fell
on the man's wide eyes and bloodless cheeks, and they saw that his
lips were blue. He looked wildly from one to the other, then grasped
the front of Kid's jacket.
"You're the man
from the saloon," he said in a thread of a voice. "The one
who returned my watch. You've been... very kind."
"Take it easy,
pal," Kid said. "Stay here with my friend, and I'll go get
a doctor."
"No," said
the old man, clutching his jacket. "It's too late for me. But
you protected me, and I want to thank you for that." His face
twisted in pain, and he whispered, so low Kid could hardly hear him.
"I wish you could watch over her, too..."
"Who?"
asked Kid, a cold chill shooting through him. "Protect
who?"
"Francina,"
the old man gasped. "She'll be all alone now." He raised
himself on an elbow, and called in a desperate voice, as if
searching for a lost child. "Francina..."
"Protect
her?" Kid demanded. "Why? Is she in danger?"
The old man covered
his face with his hands, and tears rolled down his face. He murmured
so they had to bend over to hear him, but couldn't catch the
words.
"Okay,
friend," said Kid soothingly. He glanced at Heyes, who shook
his head, his eyes solemn. Kid took the old man's hand. "I'll
do what I can to help her. I promise. But you gotta tell me
where..." The old man interrupted him with a gasping cry, then
shuddered and went limp.
In the silence, Heyes
opened the threadbare jacket and put his ear to the thin chest, but
there was no heartbeat. He looked up at Kid. "Dead," he
said, shrugging, and laid the man down gently.
Kid released the limp
hand, and was surprised to find himself shaking. Death was nothing
new to him, and this was only a stranger, but he couldn't seem to
keep his hands from trembling, and he felt sick. He rose and stood
looking down at the small, twisted body in the road, and jumped when
Heyes put a hand on his shoulder.
"You okay?"
Heyes asked softly.
Kid nodded dismally,
and heaved a sigh. "Kansas," he said.

Kid paced the length
of the small room, then turned and paced back again, like a bear in
a cage. He fidgeted with the handle of his gun, feeling an intense
longing to shoot someone. Anyone. Heyes gave him a warning glance,
but Kid sighed, and rolled his eyes. He couldn't help it. It was
impossible not to be fidgety, when they were in a sheriff's office
for the second time in an hour.
He dragged his eyes
away from the wanted posters on the wall, and forced himself to
smile disarmingly at the sheriff, as he answered the same questions
for the fourth time. The complications of death in a civilized town
amazed him; out at Devil's Hole, you dug a grave and buried the guy,
said a few words, that was that. In a town, there were reports,
forms, officials, and questions, and more questions. He and Heyes
had answered questions for the sheriff, the doctor, the coroner, and
now the sheriff was painstakingly going over every detail of the old
man's death again.
"Well, all
right, boys," said the sheriff finally, stroking his mustache.
"Guess we've got it all. You can go." He shook his head,
looking mournfully at them as they hastily rose. "Hate to have
this kind of trouble here. This is a peaceable town."
"But let's get
back to this girl, Francina, that he was talking about," Kid
said. "He was terribly upset. She's in some kind of
danger." He was uncomfortably aware of the old man’s body,
stretched silent under a sheet in one of the back cells.
"Well, you got
me, young feller," said the sheriff, scratching his broad
stomach. "I don't know. I already told you three times, I never
heard of her."
"Yeah, but he
seemed so convinced she was in danger."
"He'd been
drinking," said the sheriff soothingly. "You know how
people get when they've had a few."
"No, he
hadn't," said Heyes. "No booze on his breath. He was sober
as a…a judge."
"Well, you got
me, boys," the sheriff said again, glancing at the clock on the
wall. "What do you want me to do? Never heard of no Francina.
But then I'm new in town, just started this job last month. I'm from
Texas, myself." He yawned widely. "Well, boys, it's past
my bedtime. Better get off to wherever it is you're staying. We'll
find this Francina in the morning."
“What about him?”
Kid asked, indicating the body. “Don’t you have an undertaker or
something?”
"It's late,
we'll deal with that tomorrow. Don’t worry, he’s not going
anywhere.” He got up and ambled over to the door, and held it open
invitingly. Kid hesitated, but Heyes gave him a surreptitious kick;
it wasn't often they had to be asked twice to leave a sheriff's
office. They once more walked down the steps into the pitch-black
road dotted with mud puddles. The sheriff locked up behind them and
went off whistling, and they stood alone in the darkness.
Heyes heard the
sheriff's heavy footsteps receding down the street, and heaved a
sigh of relief that was cut short when Kid grabbed his arm and
pulled him into a side-street.
“Come on,” Kid
said. “This way.”
“What?” Heyes
said. “No, I think the hotel’s actually over...”
Kid paid him no heed,
just strode through the alley, and Heyes followed, puzzled, as they
groped down the narrow way, tripping over uneven ruts and stumbling
into puddles. Kid turned left at the end of the alley, and left
again at the end of the next, and finally came to a halt at what was
plainly the back door of a low building.
“This is it, I bet,”
Kid said, and peered in the window. “Yeah, this is it, I thought I
noticed a back way. Come on, open it.”
Heyes inspected the
heavy padlock on the door. “You’re kidding,” he said.
“You think you can’t?”
Kid said, tapping his foot impatiently. "It's just a
padlock."
“It’s not the
lock,” said Heyes scornfully, running his fingers over it. “Child’s
play. But you mean you want me to break into a sheriff's
office? Twice in one night wasn’t enough?”
“Just for a minute,”
said Kid. “I just want to get something.” Heyes opened his
mouth, but Kid met his eyes. “Please,” he said.
Heyes sighed, pulled
a short piece of wire from his vest pocket, and bent over the lock.
Kid heard a rapid series of clicks and in thirty seconds the lock
was dangling and the door was ajar. "After you," said
Heyes, standing back.
They entered the
pitch-black room as Kid groped in his pocket, and struck a match.
The tiny gleam showed the deserted office and the shadowy stripes of
cell bars. Kid spotted a candle on the sheriff's desk and lit it,
and the warm light glowed strongly. He shielded it with his hat so
that no gleam would shine out the front windows, then turned and
headed for the rear cell and its silent occupant.
It felt odd to walk
voluntarily into a cell, without having a gun squarely pointed at
his back. Kid made sure the door wasn't going to swing shut behind
him, and then approached the silent, draped figure lying on the cot.
Years of practice had taught him how to keep a steady hand, but in
all his fast-draw encounters he’d never found it harder to keep
his hand from shaking. He reached out and pulled down the cloth.
The face was set in
the stiffness of death, with only a shadow of resemblance to the
living, moving face of a few hours ago. Kid reached in the vest
pocket and pulled out the watch, and immediately flipped the cover
open and stared down at the picture. The sweet eyes looked up at him
gravely, as if asking for help.
"That her?"
Heyes asked, looking over his shoulder.
Kid nodded, still
gazing at the face. "Francina," he said, as if that
explained it all.
He began to feel in
the man's other pockets.
"What are you
doing?" Heyes hissed, going over to peer out the window.
"A career as a pickpocket seems a bit of a comedown after the
Denver First National Bank. What on earth are you looking for?"
He crouched low and peered cautiously over the sill.
"I
don’t know," Kid muttered. "Something...something to
lead us to her." He dug around and fished out coins, a tobacco
pouch, a penknife, and other odds and ends. Then he put his hand in
the breast pocket, with a shudder at the feel of the dead man's
body, cold and hard. In the pocket, his fingers closed on something
round and metallic, like a coin, but with sharp points. He drew it
out, and the candle flame made the silver glint on his palm. It was
a sheriff's star.
Heyes reappeared
behind him. "Come on!" he urged, poking Kid in the back.
"Let's get out of here."
Kid put the star
gently back in the pocket, and then drew the sheet over the closed
eyes. They stole silently out of the room and Heyes relocked the
door, then they scuttled like cats down the back alleys till they
reached the main street.
It was long past
midnight; all the householders had gone off to bed, even the saloon
was closed, and every window was blank and empty. "Okay,"
said Kid, taking a deep breath, and loosening his gun in the
holster. "Let’s get busy."
"Busy? Doing
what, exactly?" Heyes asked. “I hate to say it, but I think
the sheriff's right. Not much more we can do tonight, might as well
go back to the hotel. If we can find it," he added, peering
down the unlighted street.
"But he said she
needed protecting," Kid said firmly. "We've got to do
something."
Heyes knew better
than to argue when Kid was in this mood. "Okay," he said
agreeably.
There was a pause.
"Not sure what, though," Kid admitted.
Heyes smiled in the
darkness, and gave Kid a gentle shove. "Come on, let's get some
sleep," he said. "Things'll look brighter in the
morning."

True to Heyes'
prediction, the morning dawned in a blaze of sunshine. From the
hotel window, Heyes could see the prairie beyond the town, wave on
wave of low hills golden with autumn sunflowers. A meadowlark sang
outside their window as Heyes pulled on his boots, and he was
tempted to comment on the lovely weather, but refrained. Kid was in
a mood as black as a thundercloud.
"Let's get
going," Kid snapped, buckling on his gunbelt. "I want to
avoid that sheriff, he won't be any help. The man's an idiot."
"Why, what a
coincidence, I’d kind of like to avoid the sheriff, too,” said
Heyes. “I don't know if he's as stupid as he looks. He had his eye
on you, all right, and noticed our holsters tied down, too."
Kid snorted.
"Well, if he comes after us, I'll let you take him," he
said. "Even you couldn't miss a target that big." Heyes
heaved a pillow at him, but Kid didn't retaliate, just stared out
the window at the cloudless blue sky.
"So where do we
start?" he asked the air. “How do we find her?”
"Well, everyone
who goes in or out of town has to leave their horse someplace,"
Heyes said. "Let's stop by the livery stable after
breakfast."
Kid headed for the
door. "Let's stop by there now," he said.

Heyes
kept a casual eye on Kid all through the long morning. The sunny
weather had brought the citizens of Ossawatomie out of doors, the
shops were open and the streets were thronged with people; it was a
cheerful morning, and the townspeople were willing to chat, but
every conversational path they started, ended up in the same dead
end.
"Francina
Talbot? Never heard of her."
No one seemed to know
anything about old Daniel, either. They asked the freckle-faced kid
at the livery stable, and the girl behind the counter of the store
that sold ladies' hats and bolts of calico.
They asked the young
clerk at the bank: "Francina
Talbot? No, sir."
And the boy who sold newspapers on the
corner. "Francina
Talbot? Nope. Never heard of her."
And with every shake of the
head, every blank face, every shrug, Kid's eyes became more grim.
"You know, I
could use a little breakfast about now," Heyes suggested
cautiously, as they left the last shop at the end of the main
street. "Maybe just a quick bite."
Kid rubbed a hand
over his eyes. "I guess you're right," he said. "What
time is it, anyway?"
"Three
o'clock," Heyes said.
Kid smiled
reluctantly. "I guess it wouldn't be too early for a plate of
ham and eggs," he agreed, and followed Heyes towards the cafe
on the corner.
"You know, maybe
we should think about moving on," Heyes said. "It's kinda
clouding up, we should travel while the good weather holds. We
really need to get those documents to Topeka pretty soon, the lawyer
said that..."
"Hey, let's try
those guys," Kid interrupted, pointing across the busy road to
two figures lounging against the wall of the feed store. "They
were in the bar last night, they must know the old guy,
anyway."
He crossed the
street, dodging under the noses of two horses pulling a wagon, and
ignoring the driver's shouted questions about his eyesight. Heyes
sighed and followed, splashing through the puddles to the drier
ground on the other side of the street.
By the time he caught
up with Kid, the conversation was well under way. Heyes could tell
from the shaking of heads and outstretched palms that these two
young farmhands knew no more of Francina than anyone else. Then one
of the men scratched his head thoughtfully, and spat a stream of
brown tobacco juice at Kid's feet.
"Hey, I know
what," he said, through the wad of tobacco. "Why don't you
ask Sam?"
"Yeah," the
other one agreed, slapping his friend on the back. "Sam'll
know."
"He knows
everybody," said the farmer, and spat again. "Well, he
gets to know everybody eventually. He's that kinda guy."
"Bet he'll
know," said the first, and they nodded at each other, their
straw hats bobbing up and down.
"Sam who?"
Kid asked politely.
"Sam, you
know," said the man, surprised at his ignorance. "Sam.
Everybody knows Sam."
"And he knows
everybody," said the other, elbowing him, and they both
chortled. "You new in town or something?"
"Just passing
through," said Heyes, glancing at Kid, who was drumming his
fingers on the handle of his gun.
"Sam who?"
Kid asked again, holding onto the rags of his patience.
"Don't know,
everyone just calls him Sam."
"Any idea where
we can find him?" Heyes said casually.
They looked at each
other and pondered this with sober faces. "Well, ya mostly see
him in the saloon, actually," said one. "Don't know where
he lives. You might keep an eye out at the saloon."
"Well,
thanks," said Kid. "It's a start, anyway."
They walked down the
street, leaving the two farmers still chuckling.
"Well, we're
making huge progress," said Heyes. "I feel like we're
narrowing it down rapidly. Maybe if we stand on a street corner and
yell 'Hey, Sam!' for a few hours."
"I'm about ready
to try that," said Kid. "What else can we do?"
Heyes stopped and
looked at him with a serious face. "Get going, that's
what," he said. "It's a dead end, Kid."
"I'm
not..."
"Come on, be
reasonable. This is a lot of money we're talking about, and a long
trip, it'll all be for nothing if we don't get those documents to
Topeka soon."
Kid kept on walking,
head down.
"Okay,
okay," Heyes sighed, reading the stubborn look on Kid's face.
"Let's go ask at the saloon. At least we'll get something to
eat there."
The bartender was
sweeping broken glass off the floor, but hastily retreated behind
the bar when he saw them, clutching the broom in front of him like a
weapon, his large mustache quivering.
"Relax,"
said Heyes. "We're not looking for trouble, just a little
information."
The bartender kept a
tight hold on his broom, but listened to what they had to say; he
denied any knowledge of Francina Talbot, but cautiously admitted
that he knew Sam.
"You aren't
going to beat him up, are you?" he asked anxiously.
Kid sighed.
"Like the sheriff keeps saying, I'm a peaceable sort," he
said. "Just tell us where we could find Sam, and we'll be on
our way."
"Well, I don't
know where he lives, but he goes by here most days on his way to
work," said the bartender. "I'll keep an eye out for
him."
"You serve
lunch?" Heyes inquired hopefully.
"Two bits,"
said the man. "You got two bits, I got stew." He
disappeared into a doorway behind the bar, and they heard him
rattling pots and dishes.
Kid turned and leaned
back against the slightly charred wood of the bar, and couldn't help
a rueful grin as he surveyed the room. "We did make a bit of a
mess last night," he admitted. "That chandelier may never
be the same again."
"That's why it's
so important we lay low for a while, not cause any fuss," Heyes
said severely.
"Yeah,
yeah," Kid said. "The chairs are kinda beat up, too, but
at least we didn't break any windows..." Kid glanced out the
big plate-glass window and broke off in mid-sentence.
"What's
up?" said Heyes, seeing his partner tense, and he spun around,
expecting to see an angry posse approaching.
"See that woman,
in the blue dress, across the street there? Look at how she's trying
to sneak along," Kid said.
"She's
afraid." Heyes peered through the streaked window and saw a
woman hurrying along the sidewalk, glancing fearfully over her
shoulder, and clutching a shawl about her head to hide her face.
"That's
her," said Kid, craning his neck. "Yellow hair, blue
eyes...it's her!"
"How do you know
what color her eyes are?" Heyes demanded.
"It's Francina,"
Kid said under his breath, and headed for the door at a run.
Through the window,
Heyes noticed the sheriff strolling along the wooden boardwalk that
ran in front of the saloon.
"Look out!"
Heyes called, but it was too late.
Kid burst out the
door, and slammed full tilt into the sheriff. Both men crashed to
the ground, and Heyes groaned out loud as Kid scrambled up, leaped
over the prostrate body of the sheriff who was lying on his back
like a beached whale, and fled down the street.
Kid elbowed and
shoved his way past the townsfolk, leaving a trail of irate citizens
in his wake. He had a glimpse of the woman's blue skirt as she
turned a corner, but when he charged around the bend the street
ahead of him was empty. The road ran past a few sheds and barns and
then ended, the packed dirt surface blending into the limitless sea
of grass that surrounded the town. The low sun emerged from behind a
cloud and he strained his eyes in the glare to glimpse a woman in a
blue skirt with corn-silk hair coming towards him across the
prairie, but the horizon was empty under a windswept sky.
"Where are
you?" he called, but the flat prairie had no echoes, and no
voice answered his.
"Francina!"
he called again in a desperate voice, as if searching for a lost
child. "Francina..."
He was turning to go
back, when suddenly he caught a flash of blue out of the corner of
his eye, and whirled to see another glimpse of the blue skirt as it
disappeared through the side door of a barn. He ran over to the
ramshackle building, shoved the door open, and went inside.
No one was in sight;
bars of sunlight slanted down through high windows onto stacks of
hay, and over his head pigeons clapped and fluttered in the rafters.
Then, blended with the sound of the birds he heard a feminine
giggle.
"Francina?"
he called.
The face of a young
woman in a blue dress looked down at him from the high hayloft, and
smiled.
"What do you
want, mister?" she inquired, raising her brows archly.
"You followin' me?"
Kid knew right away
she wasn't the girl in the picture, but he asked the question
anyway. "Francina?"
"No, I'm
Sophie," said the girl, and smiled more broadly, looking him
over.
"Who're
you?" A stern male voice said something from the hayloft behind
her, and she giggled again, and the blonde head vanished.
Kid left, closing the
barn door quietly behind him.

Heyes fingered the
coins in his pocket, and wondered if he had enough to buy the
sheriff yet another drink. Wining and dining the sheriff had seemed
a good way to smooth his ruffled feathers, but the man had a big
appetite, and Heyes' funds were running low. The sheriff pushed
aside his empty plate, and leaned on the bar, sadly regarding his
flattened, filthy hat, which Kid had trampled in his haste.
"So, that guy,
is he a friend of yours?" he asked, as he finished his fourth
large whiskey.
"Nah," said
Heyes. "Hooked up with him a little while ago, we were
traveling in the same direction. Say, you’re new here in town, you
say. Who was sheriff before you? It wasn’t that old guy who died,
by any chance, was it?”
“No, no, it was
Richard Jakes, he was sheriff here for years. Good man. Why?”
“Oh, no reason,”
said Heyes. “Have another drink?"
"No, thanks, not
on duty," the sheriff said. He brushed some of the remaining
mud from his trousers, and settled the dented hat carefully on his
head.
"Well, watch out
for that guy, neighbor. He’s nothing but trouble, I can tell. He's
a dangerous man." He nodded at Heyes. "Very
dangerous."
Heyes finished his
drink with relief as the sheriff left. The saloon was starting to
fill with the afternoon crowd, and many of the men who entered eyed
Heyes curiously, remembering last night's brawl. Heyes groped in his
almost empty pockets, and realized there wasn't enough in them to
even get started in a poker game. The piano player started up a
merry tune, and a poker table was forming, but he went out the
swinging doors and the music faded behind him as he trudged back to
the hotel.
He went up to the
dingy little room, and stretched out on the bed, yawning. The
afternoon was darkening as the sun sank behind clouds, and the
curtainless windows and bare walls made the room seem chilly. He
sighed, and pulled his mind resolutely away, as he always did, from
thoughts of a warm kitchen fireside and welcoming faces around the
supper-table. He fell asleep on the hard bed, waiting for Kid to get
back.
It was more than an
hour later when he woke up to hear Kid's slow footsteps trudging up
the hotel stairs. The door opened, and Kid entered wearily. As soon
as he saw Heyes' expression he put his hands in the air.
"Don't
shoot," he said. "I surrender."
"It's
unbelievable," Heyes said, looking up at the ceiling. "It
really is." He shook his head despairingly. "What have you
got planned next?" he inquired, sitting up. "Why don't you
challenge the sheriff to a little fast draw? Do some target practice
outside his office? Ask to see his wanted posters?"
Kid ignored this. He
sat down on the hard wooden chair, and drew his gun, checking it
over carefully. Heyes watched him for a few minutes.
"So it wasn't
her, huh?" he said, in a different tone. Kid shook his head
without looking up.
Heyes got off the
bed, and walked over to put a hand on Kid's shoulder. "Come on,
Kid. We can't do any more here, it's a wild goose chase."
Kid inspected the
gun's chambers with narrowed eyes. "I said I'd protect
her."
"Against
what?" Heyes demanded. "What the devil was the old guy
talking about? Kansas is pretty peaceful nowadays, you know. There's
no massacres any more."
"I don't
know," Kid muttered.
"That sheriff's
watching us, and he's no fool," said Heyes, shaking him by the
shoulder. Kid looked up, and their eyes met. "Come on,
Kid," Heyes said urgently. "For once, just once, let's
quit while we're ahead. Let's do the smart thing, and leave."
"I'm not
leaving," Kid insisted. "She's all alone, she needs
me." He stood up and shoved the gun back into his holster.
"I'm not going to let her down."
"She doesn't
know you from a hole in the ground," Heyes protested. "And
you don’t know her. I mean, I'd like to help, but we’ve done all
we can."
"No!" Kid
shouted, striding around the room. Heyes watched, amazed at the
violence in his tone. "She needs me!" Kid went on,
circling the room again. "She's all alone, no one to help her.
I was just a kid last time, but now I know how to use a gun. I'm not
going to let her down this time." He turned and flung out of
the room, slamming the door with a crash that threatened to bring
down the building.
Heyes hardly heard
the sound of Kid's boots thundering down the stairs.
"This
time?" he said out loud, staring at the door. "This
time?"

Heyes sat a table in
the saloon, an untouched plate of steak and fried potatoes in front
of him, gazing at the opposite wall. He was idly rubbing at a small
scar on his palm, and his thoughts were years away. For once he had
neglected the precaution of sitting with his back to the wall, and
he didn't hear stealthy footsteps come up behind him, pause, and
then approach closer.
Suddenly a hand,
holding a shot glass full of whiskey, appeared in front of his nose,
and he blinked in surprise. He looked up to see Kid standing over
him, swaying slightly, and holding a half-full bottle.
"Want a
drink?" Kid inquired. "You don't have to talk to me or
nothin', I'll leave you alone."
Heyes looked at him
for a moment, then accepted the drink without comment. He shoved a
chair out with his foot, and Kid nodded and sat down. They drank in
silence for a while.
"You know,
Kid," Heyes said in a low voice, refilling his glass. "I
agree we should try to help this girl, I'll go along, no argument.
But you gotta realize..." He paused. "Saving Francina
isn't going to change what happened. It won't bring her back."
Kid stared at Heyes.
"Her?" he said warily. "Who do you mean?"
"Your
mother," Heyes said gently.
Kid's eyes flew wide
in surprise.
"What are you, a
damn mindreader?" he demanded. "Think you know
everything."
"I do know
everything," Heyes said smugly. Kid snorted, and splashed more
whiskey into his glass, filling it to the brim. "That won't
bring her back either," Heyes added disapprovingly.
Kid ignored this and
tossed off the drink in one gulp. "You don't know
everything," he said bitterly, filling the glass again. He held
up the glass and looked at the amber whiskey gleaming in the light.
"This'll bring her back," he said. "Works every
time." He downed the drink, then slammed the empty glass back
on the table, and looked at Heyes defiantly.
"I know,"
said Heyes in a low voice. "I've tried it, too. And it does
bring my folks back, sometimes. I can see their faces and
everything." He looked away and shook his head. "It's just
that they're never gonna be back to stay."
The bartender waved
across the room to get their attention.
"Hey,
boys," he called. "Weren't you on the lookout for old
Sam?"
"Yeah," Kid
said, glad to end the conversation. He jumped to his feet and swayed
a little. "You know where he is?"
The bartender
squinted, peering out the window. "There he goes-- think he's
going to work, if you hurry you can catch him. Guy with the big hat,
red suspenders." Kid was out the door before the man had
finished speaking. Heyes got to his feet, and wearily followed him
out into the drizzle. Kid stood on the boardwalk, looking up and
down the street.
"Red suspenders,
there he is," he said, and pursued the man, shouting "Sam?
Hey, Sam!"
The man stopped and
turned around; he was a little, elderly gnome of a man, barely up to
Kid's shoulder.
"What do you
want?" he asked suspiciously, squinting up at them. "I got
to get to work, got a job to do."
"Well..."
Heyes began, but Kid interrupted him. "We're looking for a
Francina Talbot, do you know where she is?"
"Hm, Francina,
Francina Talbot...." the old man said, tilting his head to one
side like a thoughtful sparrow. "Name sounds familiar, now, why
is that?" He blinked into space a few times, while Kid fidgeted
impatiently. "Oh yeah, I remember that old guy, the one who
croaked yesterday--he used to bring her flowers all the time."
"Yeah, that
sounds right," said Kid eagerly. "So where is she, do you
know?"
"Let me think,
where did I see...was that...yeah, just on top of the hill there.
Over the stone wall, just across from the brook." He pointed to
a rutted road that ran past stores and houses up to the low hills
that encircled the town.
"Think she's
there now?" Kid asked eagerly.
The man stared at
him, and snorted. "Well, I should certainly think so," he
began, and that was enough for Kid. He strode off, up the hill under
the lowering clouds, as raindrops began to splash down. He walked
faster and faster, then broke into a run.
"What's your
hurry, young feller?" he heard the old man call behind him, but
he didn't look back.
He raced up the steep
road, past the houses, past the church, and suddenly in his mind he
was a child again, running frantically up another Kansas hillside,
smoke rising from beyond the crest, icy raindrops mixing with the
hot tears that stung his eyes. He ran, knowing with the sure
instinct of a child that something dreadful beyond words was waiting
just over the top of the hill.
He topped the rise
and slowed, panting, hoping to glimpse a figure in a blue skirt with
corn-colored hair, hoping desperately to see her turn and smile at
him, her blue eyes lit with welcome. But as he reached the crest of
the hill, the buildings ended, and the road faded into an endless
horizon of brown prairie grass. The hilltop was empty. He looked
around, and spotted the stone wall, and the little brook, but no one
was there.
"Francina!"
he called out in wild despair. "Where are you?"

Heyes had started to
run after Kid, but the small man caught his arm.
"Hold on, boy,
just hold your horses," he wheezed. "She ain't going
nowhere. Now what's so special about this Francina? Old Sheriff
Daniels, he used to bring her flowers all the time, I was always
having to tidy up, and now you two mooning around.”
"What do you
mean, tidy up?" said Heyes absently, watching Kid heading up
the muddy road towards the small white church that stood on top of
the hill.
"Sweep them
away, after they faded. Dang mess, it was. He sure was broke up
about it, felt he’d let her down, I reckon."
"Sweep them
after...what?" said Heyes, staring at the man. Suddenly things
fell into place, and he realized with a sickening jolt what Sam's
job was, and why it was that he eventually got to know every body in
town.
Heyes turned and
raced up the hill after Kid. He splashed through puddles, ignoring
the rain that was beating down harder than ever. Finally he came to
the top of the hill, where Kid was standing in the rain. He spun
around when Heyes came quietly up behind him.
"I'm not leaving
till I find her," Kid said, through clenched teeth.
"Where's that little guy? I'll beat it out of him."
"We found her,
Kid," said Heyes, pity in his dark eyes. "We found
her."
"What!
Where?" Kid grabbed his partner’s shoulder as though he would
shake the information out of him, then followed his glance, over the
stone wall, across the brook. He stared in disbelief for a long
minute, then read the words on the tilted, lichen-covered headstone
that was half covered by prairie grass.
A voice spoke behind
them, breaking the silence.
"I see you found
your friend," said the little man, blinking at them with
curiosity in his wrinkled face. He was holding a well-used shovel
over one shoulder. “Terrible thing, really. She was so pretty, you
know. Had the nicest smile, I used to...well.” He scratched his
chin. “Daniels, he was nuts about her, promised her she’d be
safe from the raiders. He never really got over it." He stuck
his shovel into the dirt. "Guess I'll put him up here, next to
her. I don’t think he ever got over...” Kid turned away hastily,
and strode off down the hill.
"Humph,"
Sam said to Heyes, struggling to push the shovel through the tough
grass roots. "Not very sociable, your friend, is he?"
"Oh, he just
wants to...to get out of the rain," said Heyes, watching his
partner walk back towards the town with hands shoved in his pockets
and head low. "He hates rain. Like a cat."
"Well, he came
to the wrong place, then," said Sam disapprovingly. "Heck,
it always rains in Kansas. In between twisters."
"Yeah, I
know," said Heyes, looking out over the darkening prairie. He
lifted his face to the cold rain, so that he would have an excuse to
wipe his eyes. "I know all about it," he said. "We
were born in Kansas."

Heyes looked across
the crowded saloon, warmly lit by the repaired chandelier. He
searched the faces of the cheerful card-players and drinkers, and
tipped his hat when he saw the sheriff leaning against the bar and
eyeing him suspiciously. He finally spotted a lone figure sitting at
a corner table, head down, a full whiskey bottle in front of him.
Heyes crossed the
room, and sat down at the table, pulling a deck of cards from his
pocket. "Deal you a hand, stranger?" he said, shuffling
the deck and fanning the cards expertly.
Kid looked up at him
and smiled.
"Want a
drink?" he asked. Heyes nodded, and Kid shoved his full glass
across the table to him. "Doesn't work anymore," Kid said.
"I can't bring her back even for a minute."
Heyes took a sip,
then idly dealt a couple of poker hands, watching Kid.
"Did you read
the date on the headstone?" Kid asked.
Heyes nodded.
"Same
year," Kid said. "Same exact year."
"Lot of killing
that year," said Heyes, his voice bitter. "They called it
Bleeding Kansas, remember?"
Kid picked up the
shot glass and emptied it, then crashed his hand back onto the table
so hard the glass shattered. "Damn it, it's not fair!" he
said, his voice rising. He cried out again, like a grief-stricken
child cheated of his heart's desire: "It's not fair!"
There was a lull in
the buzz of conversation, and the room fell silent as heads turned
towards them curiously. Heyes gave his partner a warning kick, and
Kid bowed his head.
The sheriff heaved
himself erect, and ambled over to their table. "Now, now,
boys," he said. "This is a peaceable town, you know. If
someone's not playing fair, why, you need to settle your differences
peaceably. This is a law-abiding town."
"Sorry,
sheriff," Heyes muttered. "Didn't mean to disturb
you."
The sheriff eyed
Kid's clenched fists and the shards of glass on the table.
"You take it
easy, there, son," he said reprovingly. "I don't blame you
for being mad, but don't go flying off the handle and shooting this
guy here. He might be a cheat, but we got peaceable ways of dealing
with his kind."
"What!"
Heyes protested. "I'm not cheating, we were just..."
"Sure, that's
what they all say," said the sheriff disapprovingly. "What
do you say, young fella?" he added, looking at Kid. "You
want to let him off, or bring charges?"
Kid raised his head,
and blinked up at the sheriff for a moment, then smiled.
"Well, I reckon
I'll let the dirty skunk go this time," he said magnanimously.
"To oblige you, sheriff."
"Well, that's
square of you, friend," said the sheriff, patting Kid on the
back. "I appreciate that. And you should too, young man,"
he said sternly to Heyes. "Deal 'em straight, now. It's not an
easy thing to take, when you've been cheated. It's not a pleasant
thing. Makes you mad."
"I know that,
sheriff," Kid said, his eyes somber again. "We both
do."

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