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The scene was a
familiar one. Two men were seated alone at a corner table in a dingy
barroom. It was early afternoon but the room had already taken on a
decidedly grayish cast, an offshoot of the muddy light coming in the
big front windows. Rain pattered against the tin roof and every once
in a while, the dull rumble of thunder could be heard in the
distance. If there was lightning accompanying that thunder, it never
quite managed to penetrate the murky shroud that seemed to have
covered the room.
The powerfully built
blond man studied the man sitting across the table from him.
Suddenly he smiled. "You know, Joshua, I'm real impressed with
how good you're taking being cooped up so much these last few
days."
Hannibal Heyes was
leaned back in his chair, one foot up on the square bar table in
front of him, the picture of relaxation. A half-empty bottle of
rotgut whiskey stood on the table next to his sole-worn boot. Both
men had been in the saloon for an hour or so and were getting
contentedly loose. The ex-highwayman nodded in the direction of his
boot before turning to focus, with just a little difficulty, on his
partner. "Why, thank you, Thaddeus. I'm mighty impressed with
myself too." He graced his partner with a well-oiled smile.
Curry smirked back at
him. "Yep, only thing is…maybe it's time we thought about
leaving this town. We've been here almost a week waiting to start
work on that ranch job and the rain ain't let up once. If we don't
get some money soon, we won't be able to keep paying for the room,
let alone food."
The saloon was not as
full as it would be later in the day but there was plenty of action
going on nonetheless. A couple of poker games were in full swing and
the men at the bar were tossing dice to see who would buy the next
round. Loud, raucous laughter assaulted the senses from all
directions but this was music to the ears for Heyes and Curry. So
far, nobody had gotten into any fights or thrown any punches but
there was still hope that this type of excitement would materialize
before the afternoon was over. Heyes and Curry enjoyed a good bar
fight as much as the next man as long as they weren't the ones
getting the worst of it.
"Thaddeus, you
worry too much. Try to be more like me. Relax and enjoy yourself for
a while. Have another drink." He shoved the bottle towards Kid
with the toe of his boot as his eyes wandered up; following the
retreating back of a saloon girl who swished past their table,
appreciating the graceful movement and enticing rustle of her satin
skirts as she walked away. She glanced over her shoulder at him as
she passed, casting her most flirtatious smile his way.
"Besides, we got enough money to last a few days yet. I don't
relish the thought of setting out on the trail with everything being
so muddy like it is." Heyes' eyes were still locked on the
saloon girl's form. "I'll be back in a minute, Thaddeus,"
he said as he rose from his chair, just a tad unsteadily, patting
Kid's arm.
Kid smiled.
"Take your time, Joshua." It didn't take a genius to
figure out where Heyes was going. He watched his friend weave his
way through the tables, wondering how much of his newfound calmness
came from the whiskey bottle. It didn't matter much. He was just
pleased that Heyes seemed so relaxed. He worried about Heyes
sometimes.
Heyes was almost
halfway across the barroom floor when Kid heard someone shout out,
"Hannibal Heyes?"
Heyes froze in
mid-step, instantly sober, afraid to even turn around in search of
the source of the voice. It felt like every eye in the room was
looking in his direction even while he tried to make himself
disappear.
Kid swiveled in his
chair, hand on his weapon, trying to see who it was that had
hollered Heyes' name. Whoever it was, he was concealed from sight by
the throng of men standing at the bar. Seconds passed and still no
one moved. Convinced that their only chance of escape rested with
him using his gun, Kid deliberately rose from his chair, trying to
attract as little attention as possible while unsnapping the gun
from his holster. Every nerve in his body was on alert, anticipating
trouble.
Just as he was about
to make his move, the men at the bar broke out into another round of
rowdy laughter. Nearly every man in the place, not to mention the
working girls, joined them. Only three people appeared to be left
out of the joke…Heyes and Kid and the man who had caused the
commotion in the first place.
The voice shouted
again, more adamant this time, "And there's Kid Curry,
too." This declaration was met with another round of laughter,
louder and more hilarious than the first. Still stunned, Heyes
forced himself to join in. His eyes wide, he forced a smile onto his
face. With a little more effort, he managed to force a half-hearted
laugh out after it. He looked over at Kid and, communicating only
with his eyes, let him know to follow along. It seemed as though no
one else was taking the voice too seriously so they needed to look
like they didn't either.
Neither Heyes nor Kid
had placed the voice yet but there was a certain familiarity about
it that Heyes knew he should recognize. As the laughter died down
again, a boisterous fellow pounded his palm onto the top of the bar
and hollered, "Winnie, you kill me, you know that? How many
times is that now, five-six?" Turning to stare at Heyes and
Kid, the enthusiastic gent motioned them over with a broad, sweeping
gesture, "Heyes, Curry --- c'mon over here. Let Bud Aimes buy
you a drink. Ain't every day we get a couple of famous outlaws in
our bar." He roared in laughter and continued, "Truth be
told, it's been a far sight more offen since old Winnie came to
town." Amused at his own wit, he slammed his palm into the bar
a couple more times.
Hesitantly, but with
his fake smile still firmly set in place, Heyes approached the bar,
signaling Kid to do the same. Kid, who still had his hand close to
his gun, warily went along, his blue eyes clouded with doubt. Bud
threw his arm around Heyes as if they were long lost buddies and
pulled him in next to him at the bar, shoving against the man on his
other side to make room. "Sam, set my friends here up with a
couple, would ya?"
From where he stood,
Heyes could see every man bellied up to the bar. His smile slipped
just a bit and his eyes widened in surprise when he finally realized
who had yelled his name a minute before. Standing, but just barely,
at the end of the L-shaped bar was someone who he and Kid had met on
two prior occasions.
If he had passed this
man on the street, Heyes was sure he wouldn't have recognized him as
he was now. The fellow leaning against the edge of the bar had
fallen far indeed. The clothes he wore had at one time been
expensive and elegant but now they were tattered and dirty. His
well-manicured fingernails had become ragged and caked with grime.
His hair, once meticulously cut and combed, now hung in stringy
sections around his face. But his eyes were still the same little
beady ferret eyes Heyes remembered and right now those eyes were
staring, a little unfocused at Kid and him.
His head drooped
forward into his chest, the weight of it apparently too much for his
neck to sustain. He stayed like this for a full minute. Then he
seemed to remember where he was and what he was doing. He lifted his
head to look across the bar at Heyes and Curry again. In a heavily
slurred voice, he said to the men gathered near him, "I'm
telling you…this time I'm right…these two really are Heyes and
Curry." The effort of speaking seemed to be too much for the
poor fellow and he leaned even more heavily against the bar.
Bud snickered again.
"Hey, Ralph - why don't you help old Winnie get home? Sounds like
he needs to sleep this one off."
"Yeah I guess I
could do that. I'm 'bout done here myself anyways." Ralph
grabbed Winnie, who made only a feeble protest as to how "this
time it really is them", and propelled him out the door.
Heyes was
dumbfounded. The last time he and Kid has seen Winford Fletcher was
back at Red Gap. He had a feeling they would run into him again some
time but never imagined they would find him like this. Still uneasy
but even more curious to find out how 'Winnie' ended up here, he was
eager to strike up a conversation with Bud.
By this time, two
beers had been placed on the bar in front of them courtesy of Bud's
giving nature. Heyes hefted his glass and took a greedy swallow to
calm his nerves. When he found his voice, he said, "Mighty nice
of you to buy us a beer, Bud. My name's Joshua Smith and this here
is my partner, Thaddeus Jones," making sure to emphasize their
'names' in hopes of avoiding any more confusion.
"Smith and
Jones, huh? Maybe Winnie IS right this time." Just as Kid's gun
hand started itching a little bit, Bud whooped with laughter again.
Heyes forced another
laugh from his own throat and slapped Bud on the back, glancing at
Kid to let him know everything was ok. "So who is that guy? And
why does he think we're those two vile outlaws, Hannibal Heyes and
That Kid Fellow?"
"Oh, there's
quite a story there all right…if you're inclined to believe it.
Word is that Winnie used to be quite an impressive figure. Claims to
have been a big real estate investor over at Silver Springs. Big
shot, you know. Lots of money, fancy clothes."
"Uh, what
happened to him?" Kid asked.
"Seems he had a
couple of run-ins with Heyes and Curry. Took him for a pile of money
on both occasions. I figure it just about drove him crazy. Anyways,
after the last time, he vowed he'd get even with those two crooks
even if it took everything he had…I reckon it's done just
that."
Heyes smiled again,
this time more genuinely. "Huh! Imagine that. Poor deluded
fellow."
"Yep. I heard
he's spent up all his money looking for them, private detectives and
all that. He's just been going from town to town searching for them
and finally ended up here, flat broke. Now he spends most days right
here in this saloon."
Bud took a huge
swallow of beer, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand before
continuing, "Hardly a week goes by he doesn't accuse some poor
saps of being Heyes and Curry. You'd be surprised how many fellows
resemble that pair. Sheriff took the first couple of times more
seriously but now everybody, including him, just ignores him."
"Poor
devil."
"Yep. He's plumb
crazy."
"Huh. Sad
story." Heyes drained his beer, signaling Kid to do likewise.
"Bud, it was nice meeting you and we thank you for the beer.
C'mon Thaddeus. Let's go."
Back at their own
table, Kid and Heyes went over what had just happened. "So what
do you think Heyes? You think maybe it might be a good time to leave
town now?" Kid asked, somewhat impatiently.
"Why would we
want to do that?"
"Why? I'll tell
you why. Because we just got identified to every man jack in this
here whole town, that's why!"
"You
heard Bud. He said nobody takes Fletcher seriously. And I can see
why. That man's fallen harder than an oak tree in a tornado. I ain't
never seen anything like it. I almost feel sorry for him."
Heyes tsked quietly and then seemed to let his mind wander somewhere
else.
Kid stared at his
partner for a few seconds, amazed at how unruffled he seemed to be.
Maybe a mite too relaxed, he thought wryly. Finally, frowning, he
asked, "But what if he manages to convince somebody…like the
sheriff…then what?"
"Hm?" Heyes
asked, his mind still elsewhere. "Oh. Oh yeah. Well, we'll just
worry about that when the time comes, Kid. In the meantime, I have
some unfinished business with that little filly over there."
His warm brown eyes were fastened on the saloon girl he had been
pursuing earlier, before Winford Fletcher distracted him from his
course. She was leaning against the bar staring back at him. If
anything, she appeared to be even more interested in him now that
there was the possibility, no matter how slight or farfetched, that
he might be the dangerous outlaw Hannibal Heyes.
Heyes got up from his
chair again, all unsteadiness gone, and set out across the barroom
one more time. This time he was not stopped. Kid watched as his
friend sidled up to the pretty girl in the satin dress. Heyes smiled
at her and she batted her lashes teasingly at him. Heyes motioned
for the barman to bring them some drinks and settled his arm around
the girl's narrow waist, pulling her in close.
Kid watched as the
couple at the bar drained their shots. Then he watched as Heyes
caught the young woman's chin with his fingertips, turning her face
towards his before kissing her deeply on her painted lips. At this
point, Kid turned his attention to the poker game going on a few
tables away. He guessed that Heyes was going to be busy for a while
and poker would be as good a way as any to pass the time for a
while.
Kid got up and walked
over to the other table. From the corner of his eye, he could see
Heyes and the girl walking hand in hand up the stairs.

Kid was still sitting
at the table an hour later when he felt his partner watching from a
few steps behind him. The dealer had just passed him the one card he
asked for. He picked up his hand and deliberately spread the cards…eight
of diamonds, five of clubs, nine of clubs, six of hearts…and the
card he drew, two of hearts. He could almost see Heyes' mocking
smile as he threw in his hand disgustedly. "Thaddeus, what did
I tell you about the odds of drawing to an inside straight?"
"Yeah, well…a
fella is bound to get lucky once in a while isn't he?" Kid
retorted as he pushed his chair away from the table. He picked up
his winnings and said to the man holding the cards, "Deal me
out, will ya?"
Kid gave Heyes a good
once-over. If anything, his partner looked even more relaxed than
before. "Did you have a good time, Joshua?" Kid smirked.
"Now Thaddeus,
you know I never kiss and tell," Heyes grinned.
"Hmm. So what do
you wanna do now?"
"I dunno…get
something to eat? I'm starved."
"Works for me.
Let's go." Both men turned up their coat collars before they
walked out of the barroom. The sky was a deep shade of blue-gray,
the same as it had been for several days in a row. Rain continued to
fall softly as they made their way down the boardwalk. It pattered
off their hats and splattered on the wooden walkway. They watched as
townspeople struggled to cross the muddy street. Getting to the
other side was an adventure as their feet slipped and slid in the
wet muck. Men held onto the arms of their womenfolk who had the
added inconvenience of trying to keep the hems of their dresses from
becoming too caked with the stuff that sucked against the soles of
their shoes with each step.
Thunder rolled across
the town just as they entered the café, safe from the rain once
more. The clouds burst forth with a new round of moisture, pouring
from the already rain-soaked sky with a fury. "Made it just in
time," the waitress smiled wearily at them as they sat down at
a table near the wall.
She set coffee cups
on the table before them and said, "I heard the river rose
another inch since yesterday. This keeps up and the whole town is
gonna be under water soon. The road out of town is already in danger
of being taken out."
They absorbed this
information but didn't say anything except, "What's good
today?"
"You've eaten
here before. You know what's good."
"Yes, ma'am.
We've eaten here before. So far, we ain't seen that much good,"
Kid answered.
"We'll just have
the stew," Heyes smiled prettily at the woman before she had a
chance to serve Kid a piece of her mind. She glared at them before
turning on her heel and stalking away.
"Not a good idea
to make the cook mad at you Thaddeus. You should know that by now.
What's the matter with you?"
"Nothing's the
matter with me, Joshua. I'm just a little tired of sitting around
this town. I never thought I would say it, but I'm getting bored
with sitting around the saloon and playing poker. I need to find
something else to do."
"Well, you could
always get a book and -"
"And what about
Fletcher?"
"What about
him?"
"It doesn't
bother you that he's here and he just told everybody who we
are?"
"I told you,
Kid, nobody believes him! If anything, it's a perfect cover for us.
Fletcher just made sure that no one thinks we're anything except
plain ol' Joshua Smith and Thaddeus Jones. Matter of fact, this
might just turn out to be the safest town we've ever been in."
Kid considered this,
doubt etched on his face. "Maybe you're right, but sooner or
later, these things have a way of turning around on themselves. I
just hope that when it does, we have a chance to get out of the
way."
The waitress set two
plates of steaming hot beef stew in front of them. Heyes smiled
sweetly at her, winning a fond look from her. Kid looked first at
his plate of food and then at Heyes' plate. "Hey, how come he
got more'n I did?"
She faced him, hands
on her hips. "He did? I didn't notice." Heyes hid a smile
as she walked away.
"I
told you not to make the cook mad at you," he said, digging
into his food hungrily, enjoying every mouthful to the utmost.
"Ummm…this is delicious. Eat up."
Kid scowled fiercely
and said poutily, "Don't matter much. She makes the worst stew
I've ever tasted." Heyes couldn't help it…he broke out
laughing at his friend's misfortune.
Around mouthfuls of
food, Kid continued, "You know what else I don't like about
this town? That boarding house we're staying at. That place makes me
jumpier than a frog in a frying pan."
Heyes had to admit
that he agreed with Kid on this one. The town's only hotel was full
when they had arrived in town so they had found a room with a woman
by the name of Thelma Campbell who owned a big, rambling home near
the edge of town. They had heard that at one time, she had been
married to a rich man who had come to an unfortunate end, the result
of a long night of hard drinking. Seems the poor fellow had ended up
down at the river with a couple of his drunk cronies and had somehow
drowned. Due to a series of bad investments, he left her a lot worse
off than she had expected, so since then, she had been taking people
into her home to help pay the bills.
That in itself
wouldn't be bad but the woman had recently opened her home to her
widowed brother, Ott Howard, the father of two daughters, Molly and
Miranda, who were twenty-one and nineteen years old; pretty little
things. His wife had died several years past and the man had raised
his daughters on his own, out in the country, before moving in with
his sister. Now his mission in life seemed to be getting his
offspring married off as soon as possible. Not an easy chore in a
one-horse town like this one.
He'd been giving
Heyes and Curry appraising looks since the first moment he laid eyes
on them the night they arrived at the house, pushing one daughter or
the other in their direction every chance he got. The two men had
taken to sneaking into their room quietly, glancing around corners
to make sure the coast was clear, but it never seemed to do much
good. Everywhere they turned, they bumped into one of the girls who
seemed eager to acquiesce to their father's wishes. Maybe a little
too eager.
The girls were cute
enough and would probably make good wives…for the right men.
Joshua Smith and Thaddeus Jones might be the right men, but Kid
Curry and Hannibal Heyes were definitely not the right men, and
there was no way around it - you couldn't get one without the other.
Kid was finished with
his lunch but he still had a dissatisfied and restless look about
him. He tapped his fingers impatiently on the table, glancing around
the room as though looking for inspiration on how to fill the rest
of the day. "So what do we do now, Heyes?"
"You want me to
lend you a book?"
Kid sighed deeply and
stood up from his chair, "Let's go play some poker."

Heyes threw his hand
in again, third time in as many deals. Lady Luck was not smiling on
him tonight. "Thaddeus, I think I'm gonna call it a night for a
while. I'm gonna head back to the boarding house. You comin'?"
Kid was concentrating
on the cards fanned out in his own hand. His stack of chips had
grown considerably this evening. If the Lady was not with Heyes, at
least she seemed to hold Kid in her favor. Winning did not seem to
do much to improve his mood though. His normally relaxed demeanor
had a slight edge to it, an edge that would go undetected to almost
anyone who didn't know him as well as Heyes did. "Hmmm? No, you
go ahead. I'm too keyed up to sleep anyway and, before you feel the
need to ask, I ain't interested in your books. I'll just stay here
for a while longer."
"Suit yourself.
Gentlemen." Heyes nodded at the other players at the table and
stood up to leave. "See you later, Thaddeus." Heyes made
his way through the crowded barroom headed for the door. The place
was packed, as expected for this time of the evening. They had
considered themselves lucky that Winnie had not reappeared tonight
to torment them. As it was, they had been greeted by shouts of
"Heyes" and "Curry" as they came back into the
barroom earlier. It had been a surreal experience to say the least,
making the pair want to run right back out into the rain and make
muddy tracks as quick and as far away as possible. But the shouts
were followed by peals of good-natured, drunken laughter and
assorted cowboys and farmhands smacking them on the back as though
they had just shared the greatest joke in the world. Even the
sheriff had enjoyed the punch line.
As he was leaving,
Heyes spotted his pretty saloon girl standing near the bar, talking
to another one of the working girls. She smiled at him and he
stopped to talk to the pair for a minute before venturing out into
the dark. After a few minutes of conversation, Heyes gave her a
tight hug and left the bar, promising to come back and see her
another time.
Outside, the rain had
nearly stopped for now and Heyes walked alone through the misty damp
night. The air smelled fresh and he was in no particular hurry to
get back to the boarding house so he took his time, enjoying the
crisp cool feeling of the night air. The cloud cover was lighter
than it had been for a few nights and the moon peeked out to guide
him on his way. He was lost in his thoughts as he rounded a corner
and ran right into a wobbly Winford Fletcher. The older, drunker man
would have lost his balance entirely if Heyes had not reached out
and grabbed him, setting him against the side of a building to
steady him.
Fletcher's bloodshot
eyes widened in surprise and fear to see Heyes again. He blurted
out, "Hannibal Heyes! I know it's you, you know. No sense
denying it." Heyes could tell Fletcher was afraid of him, even
in his beer soaked condition, as they stood nose to nose in the
shadows of the building with no one in sight except the two of them.
He smiled wickedly at the drunk, just to see him squirm.
Still holding
Fletcher upright against the wall, Heyes said, feigning ignorance,
"Winnie, isn't it? I'm real sorry, old boy, but you got the
wrong fellas. Me and my friend are just a couple of law-abiding
citizens, just like you. You really ought to lay off the
liquor."
"You…you might
fool the rest of the people in this town but you don't fool me, Mr.
Heyes. And by the time I'm finished, I'll make sure everyone knows
who you are!"
Heyes' eyes took on a
darker tinge. He was done fooling with this man. Fletcher saw the
subtle change in his appearance, even in the semi-darkness. When he
spoke, his voice held an edge, hard as granite. "Listen, Winnie,
if you know what's good for you, you'll keep your mouth shut.
Besides, who's gonna believe you? What happened to you anyway?"
"You and your
partner happened, that's what!"
"Well, take my
advice, Fletcher. Get your act together. And don't do anything to
make me or Thaddeus mad." The thinly veiled threat was not lost
on Winford Fletcher. He stood, immobile, as Heyes finally let go of
his shirt and strode off down the street. He didn't see the broad
smile that slowly spread across his rugged features or hear the low
cheerful whistle that issued from his lips.
Heyes chuckled softly
to himself. He couldn't help having a little sport at Fletcher's
expense. The man had been a thorn in their side too many times
already and he hadn't forgotten the long walk into Red Gap that he
and Kid had made because of him. Practically wore out a pair of
boots that night. Not to mention the whole episode with the banker
that nearly cost them their chance for amnesty. If it hadn't been
for Fletcher identifying them then, none of that would have
happened. No, he didn't feel bad for old Winnie at all.
Heyes' pace slowed a
little. The boarding house was within sight now and all he wanted to
do was get to his room without being seen. Walking softly, he
rounded the side of the house and headed for the rear entrance that
led upstairs. Bending over, he quietly removed his boots. With them
in hand, he peeked around the back of the house. Seeing the coast
was clear, he made for the door. Just as he grasped the knob in his
hand, the door swung open and he was face to face with Molly and
Miranda!
It took Heyes several
minutes to disentangle himself from the girls' attention. Finally,
he got loose and made a dash up the stairs, closing the door to his
room firmly behind him and turning the key in the lock, just for
good measure. He leaned his head against the door for a moment and
chuckled at his predicament. He and Thaddeus didn't make a practice
of running away from pretty girls but then again, pretty girls
didn't generally throw themselves at them so transparently with
marriage on their minds.
He undressed down to
his long johns and stretched out on the bed to read. Later, minutes
or hours, having lost track of time, he heard the doorknob rattle
softly as someone tried to enter. Heyes slid off the bed, grabbing
his gun from his holster and leveling it at the door. "Joshua,
let me in. Hurry up."
When he opened the
door, he saw Thaddeus standing there, muddy boots in hand, casting
quick glances around and behind him. He ducked into the room,
looking relieved.
"Did you run
into the girls too?" Heyes asked, smirking.
"Nope. I took my
boots off and snuck up here. Didn't see a soul," Kid replied,
smugly. "You?"
"No, just like
you…didn't see a soul."
"Uh, huh."
Kid knew Heyes was lying but didn't see much point in calling him on
it.
"So…anything
exciting happen at the saloon after I left?"
"As a matter of
fact it did."
Heyes smiled broadly.
"Really? What?"
"I won seventy
four dollars at the poker table, that's what."
Heyes' smile quickly
faded, "That's all?"
"What did you
expect," Kid asked suspiciously.
Heyes frowned and
said, sounding irritated, "I don't know. Somethin' more than
that, I reckon."
Kid stared hard at
his partner. "You know, Heyes, sometimes I worry about you.
You're a puzzlement. I'da thought you'd be happier than that about
seventy-four dollars. I know it's not a fortune, but--" He sat
down hard on the edge of the bed and pulled off his soggy socks.
"Turn out the light, will ya? I'm bone tired."

The next morning
dawned as gray as the one just past. The men ate breakfast at the
boarding house, under the increasingly watchful eyes of the other
residents. Finally, Ott said, "Heard there was some excitement
over at the saloon yesterday, fellas. Should we start counting the
silver after every meal?" He snorted loudly, amused by his own
joke.
His sister slapped
Ott soundly on the back of his head, "Ott! I'm surprised at
you. You shouldn't talk to our guests that way."
"No, no. It's
all right, Mrs. Campbell," Heyes smiled, silently wishing he
could give the man a slap of his own.
Kid said, "Yeah…good
one, Mr. Howard. You oughta go on the road with that comedy
act."
"But you know
that those notorious and incredibly brilliant outlaws would never
stoop to stealing silver. Trains and banks, those are their
preferences. Your cutlery is safe…even if we were them -"
"Which we ain't,"
Kid finished.
Ott was still rubbing
the spot on the back of his bald head where his sister had
reprimanded him. Grimacing, he said, "I know that. Cain't a
feller make a little joke around here without getting his brain
rattled around?"
Molly and Miranda
were silent through the adults' exchange. The only real
acknowledgement either one made of the conversation were the
exaggerated eye-rolls that followed their father's attempt at humor.
But Kid did notice that both girls seemed to be appraising them more
curiously than before. Their close scrutiny only made him more
uncomfortable with their current living arrangements.
After breakfast, they
went back to their room, mostly because they didn't know what else
to do. It was still raining. Heyes picked up his tattered, dog-eared
book and made like he was going to spend the next several hours
peacefully reading. Before he could open its cover, however, Kid
snatched it away.
"No sir, Heyes.
You ain't gonna sit here all day reading this danged book. I need to
have something to do too."
"You wanna read
the book?" Heyes asked, teasingly.
"No. I don't
wanna read the book!" A slightly pouty expression touched his
boyish face. "Let's talk."
"Talk?"
"Yep."
"Kid, you're the
one who's always telling me I talk too much. Now you wanna
talk?"
"Yep. There's a
time and place for talking and this here's the time and I reckon
this is as good a place as any."
Heyes sat down on the
edge of the bed and sighed, "Ok, then. Let's hear what's on
your mind."
Kid crossed his arms
across his chest confrontationally. "I want to leave
town." If he was expecting an argument from Heyes, he wasn't
disappointed.
"I told you
before, Kid, Fletcher has provided the perfect cover for us. We
can't leave now. It's just too easy. Besides, the rain -"
"The rain is
exactly what I'm thinkin' about. What if the road goes and we're
stuck here when you finally decide it's time to move on."
"That's not
gonna happen. Anyway, you just let me worry about it. Go on now.
Find somethin' to occupy yourself. Clean your gun, maybe. We'll walk
over to the saloon later and play some poker, how 'bout that?"
Kid fumed, "I
done cleaned my gun three times this week already. If it gets any
cleaner, I'm likely to wear right through the barrel." With a
fierce glare at his partner, who had already started settling in
against his pillow, book in hand, Kid Curry yanked his gun out of
its resting place on his thigh.

"Ya know, I
haven't even fired this once all week - but right now, the temptation
is getting pretty high."
Heyes chuckled deep
in his throat-but he never did look up, not even once.

Heyes could see the
front entrance from where he sat at the poker table. The Kid sat at
his left elbow, waiting to see the next deal. It'd been a couple of
days since their last encounter with Fletcher. They'd seen him pass
by the saloon numerous times, his round, beady eyes just visible
over the curved top edge of the swinging doors, searching them out.
But each time, after making eye contact with one or the other of
them, he dashed off down the boardwalk. A subtle change was coming
over the little man as the effects of too much cheap whiskey wore
off; he was starting to look more and more like his old self.
"Looks like he
took my advice," Heyes reflected softly as he watched Fletcher
retreat across the street for the third time that day.
"What's that you
say, Joshua?"
"Oh. I suggested
to Winnie that he clean up his act. Looks like he decided to take my
advice."
"Is that a good
thing?"
"Good for him,
maybe. Bad for us, I think."
Kid leaned in close
to Heyes' ear, keeping his voice low so that none of the other
players would hear his question. "Leave town?"
"Thaddeus, I
think it just might be time to start thinking about that. But first,
why don't we go see what our friend Fletcher is up to."
Excusing themselves from the game, amid unhappy grumbling from the
other players who would be going home with lighter pockets than they
had arrived with, Heyes and Curry picked up the money scattered on
the table in front of their seats.
Once through the
louvered doors, Kid stopped in wonderment. "Would ya look at
that!"
Heyes tensed,
suddenly cautious. "What?"
"It's not
raining! There's actually a patch of blue sky above us!" Kid
smiled happily.
Heyes relaxed and
smiled too, out of amusement at his friend's delight. "Maybe
it's a good sign, Kid." They started walking in the direction
they had seen Fletcher head. "Maybe -"
Kid put his hand out
and stopped. Heyes followed his cue and stopped as well, looking to
see what had captured his friend's attention. "I don't think
so, Heyes."
Across the street,
not more than one hundred yards away from them, Fletcher stood toe
to toe with another man. They were deep in conversation and Fletcher
was gesturing towards the saloon Heyes and Curry had just left. In
his hand, he clutched two large, tattered sheets of paper that he
kept shoving under the second man's nose. The other man happened to
glance in their direction and when he saw them standing there, his
expression changed from one of concentration to one of startled
fear.
Ott Howard grabbed
Winford Fletcher by the forearm and pulled him into the shadows, out
of sight.
Heyes and Curry stood
unmoving in the middle of the muddy street. "Now what do you
suppose that was all about?"
Heyes pursed his lips
thoughtfully. "I don't know, but I don't think it's a good sign.
Not a good sign at all."
"You don't
suppose -"
"Sorta looked
like it, Kid. In any case, I think it's finally time I listen to
your idea. We better get out of town."
"Now?"
"Tonight. We'll
wait until tonight and sneak out."
"Yoo-hoo! Mr.
Heyes! Mr. Curry! Would you come here a moment?" Molly and
Miranda Howard stood almost in the same place their father and
Winford Fletcher had occupied just seconds ago, shoulder to shoulder
on the wooden boardwalk, beckoning them to come over. Despite the
chill that ran down his spine from once again hearing their names
spoken so loudly and plainly, Hannibal Heyes, sensing they might
have information that he could use, put a smile on his face and,
bringing Kid Curry with him, met the girls under the awning of the
mercantile.
Kid touched his
fingers to the tip of his hat. "How do, ma'am."
"Hello, ladies.
What can we do for you?"
The girls looked at
each other, then looked at the men. Molly, the older one, spoke
first, stepping in close to Heyes. "We were wondering if you
both might want to take me and Miranda on a picnic tomorrow?"
As she talked, she traced a finger lightly down his shoulder, ending
near the collar of his shirt.
Heyes glanced at Kid,
whose arm, by this time, had become tightly entangled within the
grasp of the younger sister. He was trying to gently pull himself
free from her grasp, without seeming rude, but she would have none
of it.
Heyes smiled
charmingly at Molly, catching her hand in his, effectively halting
its wandering across his anatomy. "A picnic, Molly? Isn't it a
bit rainy for that?"
"Well, folks are
saying that the rain is about done. Ain't you noticed the blue
sky?"
"We noticed,
alright," Kid agreed. "And I actually thought it was a good sign. Ain't had nothing but trouble since."
In a mildly
conciliatory tone, Heyes said, "We'd love to take you girls on
a picnic, Molly." At this slight encouragement, she moved to
grab his arm in much the same fashion that Miranda was still
showing Kid. Sidestepping her, he continued, "But I just don't
think it would be right."
Disappointment washed
across the girls' faces. "But why not?" Miranda asked,
pouting prettily.
"For one thing,
we're just too old for you girls. You need to find some nice boys
from around here and settle down…start a family. Now we know your
daddy thinks we might make good husbands for you all but I can tell
you for a fact that -"
"Oh, our daddy
don't think that anymore at all. Not since he started talking to
that old drunk, Winnie. And besides, we don't wanna settle down with
some old dirt farmer or ranch hand green behind the ears. We want
excitement, adventure. We want you two." She grabbed for him
again and this time, Heyes was too preoccupied with what she had
just told him to outmaneuver her. She wrapped her arms around his
waist, reaching up on her tiptoes to plant a light kiss on his lips.
Startled, he pulled
himself free. "Molly! I'm surprised at you. Nice young ladies
don't act that way - especially not right out on the street like
this."
"Oh, psshh! It
was just a little kiss. Nothing to get so worked up about." She
looked like she might start to cry.
Ignoring her, Heyes
continued, "Waddaya mean - your daddy don't think we'd make good
husbands anymore?"
Sniffling softly,
Molly brightened and said, "That's right. He's been talking to
Winnie, that old fleabag, and he's decided that maybe the old coot
is right this time. He thinks you maybe are Hannibal Heyes and Kid
Curry." She stopped talking and just stared at Heyes, her eyes
gleaming with delight and excitement.
Kid looked at her and
then looked down at Miranda, who had been listening intently to her
sister talk. She had the same excited light in her eyes. It was
downright scary to see! "Joshua?" he said worriedly.
"Why would he
think that, Molly? What's changed? Fletcher is just a raving old
drunk."
"That's true…'cept
for the fact that last night he came over to the house with a couple
of wanted posters on Heyes and Curry. My, those are some wicked bad
men - very bad…" her voice trailed off.
"Molly!"
Heyes impatiently brought her attention back to the present.
"Hm? Oh yeah,
sorry. Anyway, he had those wanted posters. Me and Miranda read the
descriptions," she stared at his face for a long moment. When
she was done, she gave Kid the same scrutiny. "You sure do look
like them."
Kid forced a laugh
and argued, "Come on, now. Those descriptions on those posters
are so poor, they could be just about anybody."
"Maybe,"
she agreed doubtfully. "So how about that picnic then?"
"We'll
see," Heyes appeased. "But first tell us what else your
daddy and Fletcher said."
"Only if you
promise - the picnic?"
Lying smoothly, Heyes
promised. "What else did they say?"
Shrewd in her own
way, Molly replied, "I can't remember. The picnic?"
Drawing in a deep
breath, Heyes exhaled through his slightly clenched jaw. "I'm
gonna be honest with you Molly. We don't intend to be here tomorrow.
We're leaving town tonight."
"Oh? How you
gonna do that?"
"Same way we
always leave a town. On horseback."
"Hope your
horses can swim then. Ain't you heard? The road is gone - washed out
by the river."
Kid Curry looked at
his partner with reproach. "I told you we should have left
earlier."
Heyes refused to make
eye contact with Kid, preferring instead to continue his
conversation with Molly. "Where'd ya hear that? I ain't heard
that."
"My aunt Thelma
told me," she answered smugly, having gotten one up on him.
"Mrs.
Campbell?"
"Uh, huh. Aunt
Thelma was down at the river this morning. Every since Uncle
Clarence died, bless 'im, Auntie spends a lot of time down there
just thinking about him. She saw it with her own eyes. The road is
completely gone."
"Ok, ok."
Heyes nervously considered their situation. "There must be some
other way out of town though, right?"
"Well, there is
the trail to the old mining camp up yonder. But that hasn't been
used in so many years. I'm sure it's mostly overgrown with brush by
now. You sure wouldn't be able to use that after dark. Too
dangerous. In some places the trail's edge is a straight drop
several hundred feet. I can't imagine what condition it's in after
all this time. Especially with the rain we've had."
No longer interested
in conversation, Heyes tipped his hat, battered and worn, to the
girls and started to walk away. Before he got too far, Molly called
to him one more time. "Oh, there is one more thing you might
like to know. Something I overheard Daddy and that vile Mr. Fletcher
say…"
Eyes glittering
impatiently, he retraced his steps until he was standing before her
once again, "Alright, what is it?"
She smiled coyly at
him and, cheeks reddening, she boldly said, "I'll tell you for
a kiss."
"What?!"
"A kiss. Just
one kiss, that's all."
Miranda giggled.
Molly glared at her over Heyes' shoulder. Heyes swore he heard Kid
giggle from somewhere behind him as well. Sighing deeply, he planted
a chaste kiss on Molly's forehead.
"Uh, uh. A real
kiss."
"Molly,"
Heyes warned, his eyes darkening.
"What I have to
tell you is very important. I swear it'll be worth it to you."
"Go on, Joshua.
It's just a kiss," Kid teased. "You've kissed girls before…once
or twice."
Frustrated and
annoyed, Heyes rubbed his face roughly with his hand. With a lethal
glare at Kid, he made his move. Planting his feet squarely in front
of the young woman, he looked deep into her eyes. Flustered by the
intensity of his gaze, she tried to turn away, suddenly unsure of
the wisdom of her teasing request for a kiss. As she did, he reached
out and gently caught her chin between his fingers, turning her face
so her eyes were looking directly into his. She was unable to look
away, fascinated by the depth of his brown, almost-black eyes.
Slowly, Heyes lowered
his face towards hers until their lips nearly touched. She could
feel his breath on her lips for a few unending seconds before he
pressed his lips to hers, gently at first and then with more
urgency.
Heyes wrapped Molly
in his arms for a moment and then released her. Swaying, she took an
unsteady step backwards, her face flushed.
Wiping his lips with
the tips of his fingers, he pressed, "Ok, tell me."
"That was
amazing," she said.
"Not that! Tell
me what you heard your father and Fletcher say. And it better be
good, Molly."
"Hmm? Oh. Oh,
that! Um, yeah…"
"Oh for Heaven's
sake, Molly! Let me tell him," Miranda interrupted.
"Fletcher told Daddy that he had telegraphed the sheriff from
Silver Springs about you two. Said the sheriff was going to be
coming here to check out his story."
"Oh, no,"
Kid moaned. "This just keeps getting better and better."
"Ladies.
Later." Heyes grabbed his partner by the shoulder and the two
of them started down the boardwalk. If they had chanced a glance
back at the young women, they would have been met with doe-eyed
faces, sadly watching them leave.
Once out of hearing
range, Kid laid into his partner, angry that he hadn't listened to
his words of warning earlier. "This is bad, Heyes. This is
really bad. We're stuck in this town with a crazy man; no, two
crazy men; and the sheriff from Silver Springs, someone who probably
will believe we are who we are, is on his way here to check us
out."
Heyes was thinking,
his brow furrowed. "Kid, I admit it looks bad. But maybe it's
not as bad as you think. After all, if we can't get out of town,
then it stands to reason that the sheriff can't get into town
either. So we have some time."
"Maybe so,"
Kid agreed, some of the edge taken out of his voice. "But it's
still bad. Once the road is open, how are we gonna get out without
the sheriff catchin' us?"
"We're not gonna
wait for the road to open. I think we oughta leave now…take the
mining trail up into the hills that Molly was telling us about. But
we don't want to be caught out there in the dark so we have to go
now."
"That sounds
right to me. The quicker we get out of here, the better I'm going to
feel."
The two men made
their way to the livery stable where they paid the owner a few
dollars extra to get their horses and gear ready "as fast as
you can." While waiting, they discussed the wisdom of going
after their things at the boarding house. After some argument, with
Kid erring on the side of caution, they decided they would sneak
back to their room and retrieve their belongings. Heyes was partial
to some of the things he had left there and didn't want to give them
up so easily.
Horses and gear in
tow, they walked to the boarding house, keeping to side streets and
alleyways to avoid running into any of the town's citizens,
especially Fletcher or Ott Howard. They managed to reach their room,
collect all their worldly goods, leave payment for their
accommodations on the bed stand, and creep back down the stairs
without incident.
Kid's hand was
reaching for the door knob when the first sign of trouble was heard
rather than seen. The familiar, ominous click of a hammer being
pulled back and engaged reached their ears. Heyes squeezed his eyes
shut tightly and cursed under his breath. He knew Kid was looking at
him, ice-blue accusation coloring his eyes. Rightly so too, since he
was the one who had insisted on coming back for their things.
"Don't open that
door, boys, and don't turn around. Just take off your gun belts and
push 'em away from ya."
Heyes and Curry
dropped their bags and reluctantly complied with Ott's demands.
Reaching down to untie his holster from his thigh, Heyes risked a
glance over his shoulder. Ott and Fletcher stood in the doorway
leading into the parlor. In Fletcher's hand was the very handgun he
had used the last time they had crossed paths on the way to Red Gap,
a dainty little firearm more suited for ladies' handbags than
masculine hands.
With gun belts
removed and out of reach, the two reformed outlaws were allowed to
turn and face their tormentors. "Hands up, boys."
Grabbing air and
newly stripped of his own weapon, Kid Curry shot a verbal round at
Fletcher. "Winnie, don't you think it's time you get a real
gun? That little bitty thing is sorta girly, ain't it?"
"I assure you,
Mr. Curry, this gun is sufficient to do the job. If you don't
believe me, I could give you a demonstration. I believe the reward
on the two of you is offered 'dead or alive'. I don't have any
qualms about shooting you."
"Calm down,
Winnie," Ott said. "They aren't going to give us any
trouble." Reaching beneath his jacket, he pulled his own
weapon, a fifty-four caliber derringer, from where it had rested,
nestled inside his waistband. "I think you might be more
impressed with this gun, Mr. Curry? Big enough for you?"
"That'll
do," he agreed, dryly. Heyes glanced his partner's way and
rolled his eyes.
"Gentlemen,"
he began, in a placating voice. "What's this all about? I mean,
I know what Winnie thinks, Mr. Howard, but I would have given you
more credit than this! You don't actually believe his story, now do
you? Same story he's apparently told over and over again since
coming into town?"
"Well, now see,
Mr. Smith or…Mr. Heyes…I got my doubts about Winnie's story,
that's true. But seein' as how he has a couple of wanted posters
with your descriptions - well, I prefer to err on the side of caution.
After all, half of twenty thousand dollars is plenty of reason to go
along with him."
"Don't listen to
him, Ott. This man will say anything to get you to believe that
they're not Hannibal Heyes and Kid Curry, but I'm telling you I'm
right! These are the same men who swindled me out of fifty thousand
dollars and then cheated me out of more money a few months
later."
"Mr. Howard - if
we had fifty thousand dollars of this poor, crazy fool's money, do
you honestly think we'd be riding around, town to town, looking for
whatever employment might afford us a few meager coins? Of course
not! We'd be living in the lap of luxury somewhere…San Francisco
or Denver or Gila Bend, someplace nice like that. What Winnie is
saying just don't make sense. You can see that, can't you, a smart
fellow like yourself?"
Doubt flickered
fleetingly across the other man's face. For one exhilarating moment,
Heyes thought his silver tongue was going to convince Ott that
Winnie was wrong, again, in his assertions. But Ott's countenance
hardened again. "You could be telling the truth…and then
again, maybe you ain't. And you do seem to be leaving town in sort
of a rush all of a sudden - that's a mystery in itself since the road
is impassable right now.
"So I don't see
any harm in just holding you two fellas here until the sheriff from
Silver Springs gets here. If we're wrong, well, we'll owe you a big
apology for the inconvenience; but if we're right…"
"Oh, we're
right, all right. You'll see. I'm finally going to exact my revenge
on you two men -"
"Quiet, Winnie.
You're gonna make me regret my decision to believe you if you start
sounding crazy again. Get their guns and stick 'em in the closet
over there. As for you two - upstairs."
Heyes started to
lower his hands and raise his voice in protest, "Oh, now wait a
minute -"
"Hands up, Mr.
Heyes. You don't want to make me nervous. Haven't had much
experience with this gun. Hate to have it go off accidentally."
Heyes extended his
fingers towards the sky and tried again, "Mr. Howard…Ott…Can
I call you Ott? You don't seriously intend to hold us here, in your
sister's home! With your children living here?"
"Well, it's true
that Thelma probably won't like it much - but I figure you'll be safe
and, more importantly, harmless upstairs tied up in your room. It
won't be for very long. I reckon tomorrow or the next day, the water
will recede enough to make crossing the river possible. Then we'll
turn you over to the sheriff and collect the reward. No harm
done."
"No
harm done? Oh no, not at all! Unless you count the fact that
you're imprisoning a couple of innocent men. Why, the worst thing me
and Thaddeus ever were involved in was swiping a few licorice whips
from the general store back when we was hardly old enough to walk.
Got our hides tanned for that one good, didn't we Thaddeus? Since
then, it's been nothing but the straight and narrow for us."
"Don't listen to
him, Ott. He can talk the paint right offa the wall if you give him
half a chance." Fletcher gestured towards the stairs with his
miniature handgun. "Go on, get up there. I won't waste time
asking again."
"Nice job,
Joshua. You got them eating right out of your hand. Silver tongue…"
Kid muttered under his breath as the four men ascended the stairs,
two of them with their hands still pointed at the ceiling.
Their room looked
bleaker and drearier than the last time they saw it, even though the
rain had stopped and the sun had come out since. The gloom came more
from within the two men than from their surroundings.
"Please sit,
gentlemen..."
Heyes and Curry
looked around the room. "Where?" Kid asked, seeing there
were no chairs.
"The bed. Sit
down."
"What?"
"Listen, you're
going to be confined here for a couple of days. I just thought you'd
be more comfortable chained to the bed. At least you can lie down
and rest." Ott smiled.
"Mighty thoughty
of ya, Ott."
Heyes and Curry sat
down on opposite sides of the big bed. While Ott watched over them
with his derringer, Fletcher pulled a pair of handcuffs out from
within his suit coat.
"Where'd you get
those?" Heyes asked.
"Never mind
about that. Just give me your hand. No, not that one, the other
one."
Fletcher placed one
cuff around Heyes' left wrist, and then he slipped the chain around
one of the iron bars in the headboard of the bed. "Now you, Mr.
Curry, your right hand, please."
He fastened the other
cuff around Kid's right hand, effectively locking both men to the
heavy bed and to each other. They had enough mobility that they
could either sit or lie down in relative comfort. On first
consideration, the only way for them to get away would be to take
the whole headboard with them.
"That should
about do it. I don't think you'll be going any where. Now you boys
just relax. Once the sheriff gets here, we'll check out Winnie's
story and if he's wrong, we'll let you go on your way."
"Awful
neighborly of you."
Ott chuckled, fully
aware of the sarcasm dripping from Heyes' words. "You boys
behave yourself and I'll send some supper up here for you later.
Let's go Fletcher." Ott and Fletcher left. Heyes and Curry
heard the soft clatter of the lock being engaged from outside.
"I am getting SO
tired of people tying me up, Heyes!" Kid said, angrily. He
tugged at the chain vigorously.
"Ouch, Kid!
Don't do that, you're only bruising my knuckles! We aren't gonna
get out of these cuffs that way."
"You gotta
better idea?"

"I ain't sure
yet. But I might if things work out the way I hope. We just gotta
wait and see what supper brings."
"Supper? What
difference is supper gonna make?"
"Wait and see,
Kid. Supper could make ALL the difference."

The hours dragged by
for Kid Curry with little to break up the monotony. He spent long
minutes staring out the window watching the clouds, now white and
fluffy where previously they had been dark and heavy, drift by. When
he tired of that, he found himself peering over Heyes' shoulder,
reading along with him out of the book that he had found, still in
reach on the table next to the bed.
Normally, this would
have set Heyes' teeth on edge, to have Kid leaning in, breathing on
the side of his face, quietly moving his lips while he tried to
follow the words on the page; but today he patiently allowed his
friend to read with him, knowing that there was little else to
occupy his attention.
He did this out of
kindness and also because he was aware that if Kid became restless,
he himself would be the one to suffer most. So the two of them
passed the time in this fashion, reading from the same pages; Heyes
allowing Kid time to catch up before turning the yellowed leaves of
the book.
Once in a while,
Kid's mind would wander back to their problem at hand and he would
press Heyes for more information on how he planned to get them out
of their current mess but Heyes refused to tell Kid any more than he
already had. So Kid waited. Waited and trusted Heyes' instincts.
Presently, Heyes
closed the book and looked out the window. "Must be getting
nigh on supper time, wouldn't you say, Kid?"
"Yep, I'd say
so. You wanna tell me yet?"
"Just a little
longer Kid. Trust me. If this goes how I think it's gonna, we'll be
outa here before you know it."
Just then, they heard
the scrape of a key being shoved into the lock. Both men tensed
slightly, sitting up straighter in the bed, waiting. The door opened
slowly.
Molly and Miranda
entered cautiously, each one carrying a bed tray covered by a cloth
napkin. "We brought you your supper," Molly said, shyly.
Heyes' face lit up in
a brilliant smile. Kid could tell he was genuinely happy about
something. He wasn't sure yet what that was but he planned to watch
and wait to see, just like Heyes wanted him to. He found himself
smiling too, in anticipation.
"That's
terrific, Molly! We're starved, aren't we, Thaddeus? Bring it right
over here."
Suspicion narrowed
her eyes. Heyes rushed to assure her, "It's ok. We aren't gonna
try anything. Even if we wanted to, we couldn't get out of these
cuffs."
Her expression
softened but her voice became stronger, "Just so you know…we
ain't got the keys for those handcuffs. So it won't do you any good
to try anything with us. We can't help you…no matter how much we
might like to," adding, "which we don't," when she
realized what she had said.
"Exactly
right," he agreed. "Now just bring those trays on over
here, would you?" Heyes sat up even straighter, rubbing his
right hand against his pant leg, seemingly eager to get his dinner.
The girls set the
trays down where the men could reach them easily. With a final
wistful glance at Heyes, Molly turned to leave; digging the key to
the room out of her apron pocket as she went.
"Oh, Molly? One
more thing?"
Turning to look at
him, she waited to hear what he wanted. His eyes bored into her but
he didn't speak right away. Finally, several seconds later, not
being able to hold out against his stare any longer, she asked,
"What is it?"
"I was just
wondering…do you remember that kiss we shared earlier today?"
Miranda giggled,
unable to stop herself. The only thing that her sister had been able
to talk about all afternoon had been that kiss! Oh, yeah, she
remembered it all right!
Molly didn't seem to
notice her sister's laughter. All her attention was, again, focused
on the smoldering, rugged cowboy sitting on the bed, one leg bent at
the knee, the other one dangling over the side of the mattress, toes
brushing the floor.
Heyes didn't wait for
her to find her voice. Watching her carefully, he said, "I was
hoping that you might consider letting me have another? Seein' as
how I might be sent away for quite a while soon, I mean."
Color rose in her
face and breath caught in her chest. Flustered, she suddenly didn't
seem to know what to do with her hands. First they dangled nervously
at her sides, then crossed over her stomach and finally settled back
down near her sides. "No, I don't think so."
"Please Molly?
You wouldn't deny a condemned man a last request, would you?"
"You aren't
exactly condemned."
"Not yet, but if
the sheriff decides we are Heyes and Curry and we can't convince him
otherwise, then we'll be sent away for twenty years. That's a long
time to be alone, Molly."
"I'm sorry,
truly I am…but my daddy would kill me if -"
"How's he gonna
find out? Right, Miranda? And besides, it's just a kiss. Isn't that
what you said to me earlier?"
"Yes…I suppose
I did say that. But I'm not -"
"Please?"
Heyes gave her his most charming look, dimples blazing.
"Go on,
Molly," Miranda encouraged.
Molly could almost
feel her knees knocking against each other underneath her full
skirts. The idea of kissing Hannibal Heyes, if that's who he really
was, was even more exciting this time, now that it was his idea.
Finally, when she felt steady enough to walk, she moved to where he
sat on the edge of the bed. Bending down, she, deciding to play it
safe at the last instant, planted a chaste kiss on his forehead and
quickly straightened up. She would have spun away from him and left
it at that if he hadn't reached out and caught her arm with his
hand.
"A real
kiss," he insisted, bringing her round to face him. After a
brief hesitation, she bent forward again, bringing her face within
inches of his. He reached up and cupped the back of her neck with
his free hand, drawing her closer to himself.
Gently, he kissed her
as his hand moved up into her hair, holding her in the kiss. Then it
was over. "Thank you Molly. That was all I'd hoped it would
be."
Slowly, she
straightened and turned to leave. At the door, she stopped once
more. "Mr. Heyes? I'm sorry my father is doing this to you. I
wish there was some way we could help, but there just isn't."
"Don't worry,
Molly. We know you'd help if you could."
The young women left.
Heyes chuckled, immensely pleased with himself. "As a matter of
fact, you already did," he said to the closed door. Kid was
watching him speculatively.
"What just
happened, Heyes? How could a kiss help us? Have you gone loco?"
"No, Kid. I'm
completely sane. And incredibly brilliant. That worked just the way
I hoped it would."
"What did? I
don't see how we're any better off than -" Kid's words trailed
off as Heyes opened his free hand. The one that he had used to
retrieve a shiny gold hairpin from the upswept hair of Molly Howard.
With a subdued whoop
of glee, Kid admired his friend's finesse. "Heyes, you are a
genius."
"Without a
doubt, Kid, without a doubt. With this little hairpin, our troubles
are soon to be over. All I gotta do is pick the lock on these cuffs
and we-are-outta-here!"
"Well, what are
you waiting for? Let's do it."
"Patience, Kid.
I figure we should wait until dark when everyone is in bed. That
way, there's less of a chance of anyone coming to check on us until
morning. We'll have a bigger head start on them if we wait."
Kid laughed,
"Genius, Heyes, pure genius!"
"Yeah. So now,
let's just eat our dinner and then later, we'll make our
escape."
"Good idea.
Let's eat."

Three hours later,
the house was finally silent. No light crept in underneath the door
leading out into the hallway. With unspoken agreement, the pair
decided the time had finally come for them to move. Heyes extracted
the hairpin from within his waistband where he had earlier tucked it
away for safe keeping. With only the milky moonlight seeping in
through the curtained window to aid him, he set to work on the
handcuffs. Within seconds both he and Curry were free.
Heyes headed towards
the window and was just about to raise the glass so they could
shimmy down the side of the house and make their escape when he
noticed Kid was waiting by the door to the hallway. "Hey,
whaddaya waiting for? Let's go."
"Uh, uh,"
Kid answered stubbornly. "Come open this door. I wanna get my
gun. It'll only take a second."
"What!"
Heyes hissed loudly. "You can get another gun later. Let's just
get out of here," he insisted, gesturing towards the window.
"Nosir! Not this
time! I'm tired of having my gun taken from me. You know how hard it
is to find a good gun. I aim to keep this one. Besides…I just
cleaned it. Now git over here and unlock this door."
"Kid -"
"Uh, uh."
Heyes glared at his
friend for a split second. Then, in half-light, through silent
encouragement, he tried once more to convince him to use the window.
Kid refused to be swayed, however, and stood with his arms folded
across his chest, leaning against the door, unmoved and unmoving.
With a sigh that
originated deep in his chest, Heyes walked over to where Kid stood
near the door, muttering irritably under his breath. Kid couldn't
make out any of the words but the meaning was clear. Didn't matter
none to him though…he planned to get his gun.
With a magician's
touch, Heyes manipulated the simple lock. Within seconds, he heard
the tell-tale click that let him know he had worked his own brand of
magic. He smiled in spite of himself, enjoying the thrill he got in
opening a lock, any kind of lock.
With a flourish, he
stood back from the door so that Kid could do the honors of opening
it. Kid smiled and tipped his hat in recognition of Heyes' finesse
with the hairpin. Then, gently and carefully, he turned the round
knob listening for any sounds coming from the house. When he heard
none, he opened the door just wide enough for the two of them to
squeeze through. Once in the hallway, they listened again. The house
was silent.
As quiet as two men
in cowboy boots can be, they tiptoed down the stairs. With Heyes
watching his back, Kid, in the semi-darkness, found the closet where
Fletcher had stored their guns. Hurriedly, they buckled the belts
around their hips, tied the holsters across their thighs and
straightened up.
"Satisfied
now?"
"Yep," Kid
grinned, relishing the weighty feel of his gun resting against his
leg.
"Let's go
then."
"No argument
from me."
Only one door
remained between them and freedom and they didn't waste any more
time in using it. They left the boarding house for what they hoped
would be the final time, elated that they had managed to out-wit
Winford Fletcher again. As Heyes and Curry closed the door behind
them, two shadowy figures stepped into the foyer.

"Well, Molly was
right. The road is definitely out." Heyes and Curry sat,
leaning forward in their saddles, forearms crossed over saddle
horns, looking out across the dark water swirling muddily in their
path.
"Whaddaya think
we ought to do, Heyes? Go try the mining trail into the hills?"
"No, I don't
think so, Kid. Not at night. Wouldn't be safe."
"How 'bout we
follow the river downstream. The water might be shallower there. At
least shallow enough so we could cross."
"I think that's
a good idea. One thing's for sure, we can't wait around here much
longer. Just be careful, wouldn't want you ending up in the river
again."
"You just worry
about yourself. I plan to stay nice and dry."
Heyes and Curry urged
their horses on, cautiously avoiding the slippery and unstable banks
of the once placid, now agitated river. They picked their way
deliberately, using the light from the almost-full moon as their
guide. With the rain finished, the night was calm and fresh. The
only sounds that disturbed the air were the rhythms of their own
hoof beats thudding softly on the damp earth and the noises of night
creatures.
About a quarter mile
downstream, Kid drew his horse up and stopped suddenly.
Instinctively, his right hand found the butt of his gun and rested
there. Heyes caught the motion through the corner of his eye and
turned to look at his partner quizzically. "What is it,
Kid?"
"Did you hear
that?"
"What?"
Both men stood
perfectly still, heads cocked slightly Finally, Heyes shrugged and
said, "I don't hear anything."
Kid frowned.
"Yeah, I don't hear it now either but I would'a sworn I heard…"
his words trailed off without finishing his thought.
"Maybe we should
check it out? You think someone is following us?"
"I don't rightly
know. Could be I'm just jumpy. Maybe it was just -"
A scream cut through
Kid's words. Both men tensed visibly, their bodies frozen into place
for the moment. Before they could react further, they heard another
scream followed by a shout, "Miranda!"
Heyes groaned,
"Oh, no!" The two men wheeled their mounts around and took
off in the direction where the screams came from, no longer mindful
of the dangerous ground beneath them. A few hundred yards upstream,
they could see Molly, silhouetted in silvery moonlight lying prone
on the edge of the muddy banks. She was reaching into the swirling
waters. At first glance, she seemed to be reaching for a branch that
was stuck out just beyond her reach. As Heyes got closer, he
realized that she did in fact have the branch clutched in her hand.
The other end of the branch was in the tenuous grasp of her younger
sister who was desperately trying to hold on against the swift
currents.
He and Curry jumped
down from their horses and ran the few feet remaining between them
and the girls. "Hold on, Miran -" At that instant, Miranda
screamed again as she lost her grip on the slick branch. The
currents started carrying her downstream, slowly at first but then
picking up speed as she went.
Molly cried out, her
voice trailing off in a choked sob. She struggled to her knees, her
riding clothes heavy with muddy earth. "Help us!"
She needn't have said
anything, however, because Heyes and Curry were already running
hell-bent to save the young woman. Heyes stopped just long enough to
retrieve a length of rope from his saddle. By the time he caught up
with Kid, his partner had managed to overtake Miranda's progress
downstream.
As luck would have
it, a thick tree trunk stretched out from the bank across the
swollen river. The tree had more than likely stood proudly on the
edge of the river until the rising waters had washed away its
stability, forcing it to topple over. Now it acted as a bridge at
least a few hundred feet into the river's path. Heyes watched as Kid
shimmied out onto its slippery surface. Kid moved cautiously but
quickly, positioning himself finally in the spot where he guessed
Miranda would pass. Lying on his belly, he could almost reach the
water below him. He hoped that Miranda would have enough strength to
reach for him and that he would be able to hold onto her well enough
to pull her from the water. Otherwise, she was going to be dragged
further downstream.
"Miranda!"
he yelled as she came closer. "Grab my hand!"
The girl was coming
fast, the current moving her quickly now. There would only be a
split second where he would be able to grab her. He needed to make
that second count. "Here I am, Miranda. Get ready!"
Kid didn't take his
eyes off the girl, bobbing closer every second. He had judged well
and it seemed like she would pass directly underneath him.
"Come on, Miranda," he urged. The girl looked exhausted
from her watery struggle and he prayed silently once again that she
would have the strength to reach for him.
"Come on,
Miranda!" he said in a more commanding voice. "Reach for
me!"
He could see
Miranda's eyes shining up at him. He could see the fear and fatigue
in her eyes. At the sound of his voice, the fear faded, replaced by
a look of grim determination. She raised her arms up out of the
water and reached for his. Kid reached back. Their hands met but the
current was strong. It carried Miranda underneath the log where
Curry was perched. He lost his grip on her left hand but managed to
maintain a hold on the fingers of her right hand. The current
threatened to drag her further under the log and out of his grasp
entirely.
He heard Heyes' voice
calling from the bank, "Hold on, Kid. Just a second
longer." Heyes was busy fashioning a lasso from the rope. With
a flourish, he twirled the circle of rope over his head a few times,
calculating his throw. Smoothly, the rope sailed out over the water,
landing inches from Miranda's free left hand.
Kid saw the rope land
before Miranda became aware of it. She was gasping for breath and
trying desperately not to lose her grip on Kid's hand. "Grab
the rope, Miranda. Joshua will pull you in."
"I can't,"
she cried, choking on the muddy water. The fear had returned to her
face and Kid could tell she was too afraid of losing her grasp on
him to reach for the rope.
"Yes, you can!
Grab it! I can't hold onto you much longer. You have to reach the
rope. Now!" Her fingers slipped another fraction of an inch
away from his. "Hurry, Miranda!"
Finally realizing it
was her only hope, Miranda reached for the rope. For a terrifying
second, she felt that she wouldn't be able to reach it but a
fortuitous current steered it a few inches closer. She grabbed the
loop of rope with her left hand and held onto it for dear life. The
rope was sodden and slippery and threatened to slide away from her
fingers.
"Loop it around
your arm, Miranda. Don't let go."
She struggled to do
as Kid demanded. Once she had a firm hold on the rope, Heyes started
to pull her towards him where he stood on the bank. With a few
powerful strokes, he dragged her back to the river's edge. With
Kid's help, he pulled a cold and drenched Miranda from the river
into the terrified arms of her older sister. Both girls sank sobbing
onto the river bank as the men looked helplessly on.
Heyes wanted to grab
Molly by the shoulders and demand to know what she and her sister
were doing following them, but he didn't have the heart to do it
just then. Instead, he asked Kid to stay with them while he walked
back to where they had left their horses. When he returned, a few
minutes later, he had all four horses in tow.
Heyes grabbed his and
Kid's bed rolls from behind their saddles, unrolled them and wrapped
the blankets around the girls' shoulders. "Feeling
better?" he asked, gently.
Miranda and Molly
still clung to each other but they had both stopped crying. Miranda
looked exhausted by her ordeal in the river; Molly just looked
frightened. It was hard to say though if she was more afraid by what
had just happened or by the look on Heyes' face. Unable to find
their voices, both girls just nodded silently to his question.
"Good. Then
you'll be able to explain what the devil you're doing out
here." His voice was no longer gentle; it had taken on a
harder, angry edge, one that had turned strong men's blood to ice
water on numerous prior occasions.
Miranda started to
cry again, choking back little strangled sobs. Molly held her more
tightly and tried to look defiant in the face of Heyes' anger but
after mere seconds her resolve collapsed under the weight of his
gaze. In a small, childish voice she said, "We just wanted to
see where you were going. We wanted to come with you." She
grimaced, realizing how foolish her words sounded.
"You wanted to
come with us!" Heyes shouted in disbelief. "Have you lost
your minds? Do you have any idea what-"
"Well, we didn't
want to stay with you, if that's what you mean. We - I - just thought
it would be fun to -"
"Fun? Fun? You
call this fun?"
"Of course not,
but -"
Heyes held his hand
up to silence Molly. Irritated, he turned away and paced back and
forth a few times, rubbing his face vigorously. Suddenly, he whirled
back to face Molly, a new question rattling through his mind,
needing an answer. "How did you know we were going to be
leaving tonight? Look at you…you're wearing riding clothes. You
knew we were going to escape! How?"
A smile played at the
corners of Molly's mouth. She made a conscious effort to conceal it
though, knowing that Heyes would not be as amused as she was by her
answer still forthcoming. "I knew from the second you stole my
hairpin that you were going to be escaping tonight." Just a
hint of smugness colored her answer.
Heyes' eyes widened
in amazed disbelief. Behind him, he could hear Kid groan. 'Well, I'm
never gonna hear the end of this,' he thought. "You knew?"
He glanced sheepishly at Kid who was walking downstream away from
them. Heyes swore he heard him chuckle softly as he walked away,
shaking his head.
"Course I knew.
I mean…the kiss definitely distracted me for a minute but when my
hair started falling down as soon as I left your room, well, it
don't take a genius to figure out what happened."
"So you just
waited for us to break out? Why didn't you tell your pa?"
"What makes you
think we didn't?"
"He's not here,
is he? If you'da told him, he'd be the one chasing us down tonight,
not you two."
"Well, that's
where you've miscalculated, Mr. Heyes." Another voice, this one
masculine and familiar split the inky darkness. The moon that had
been shining brightly earlier had recently taken on a more subdued
glow, courtesy of clouds building up in the midnight sky.
"Don't draw your gun," the voice warned as Heyes reached
for his holster. "I've got you covered and I'd hate to see
anything happen before we get a chance to talk."
"Mr. Howard. I
can't say that it's nice to see you." Heyes looked around,
noticing that Kid had not returned from his stroll. His partner was
nowhere in sight. Heyes eased his body sideways, positioning himself
behind the spot where the two Howard daughters still sat huddled
beneath blankets on the ground. He hated to do it, but if Ott had an
inclination to shoot him, he'd at least have to think twice before
doing it with his daughters in the line of fire.
"Just stay calm,
Mr. Heyes."
Heyes smiled. "Ott,
if you knew anything about me, you'd know that I always stay calm…always."
There was something about Heyes' smile that made Ott's hair stand up
on the back of his neck. He was calm alright, but it was a dangerous
calm.
"Daddy? How did
you find us?"
"Your Aunt
Thelma heard something after she went to bed. She asked me to check
it out. I found our friends here missing from their room. When I saw
you girls were gone too…well, that about scared me half to
death." To Heyes, he said, "How dare you take these two
young girls with you on your dirty business, Mr. Heyes! Even if you
are outlaws, I would have given you more credit for good sense than
that."
"Now, listen -"
"They aren't to
blame, daddy. We followed them. They didn't know. It wasn't until
Molly fell into the river that -"
"What?! Molly
fell in the river?" Ott's whole body seemed to tremble with
alarm. He lowered his gun and moved to crouch near his daughters.
"Are you ok?"
"She's ok,
daddy. When she fell in, I tried to help her but I couldn't hold on
to her. Mr. Curry and Mr. Heyes saved her." Ott hugged his
daughters, forgetting the two wanted men for the time being.
Heyes glanced over
his shoulder just in time to see Kid come into sight. He was holding
his gun. In a calm, even voice he said, "Mr. Howard, I'd like
you to move away from your daughters if you don't mind. I think we
got some things to settle and we don't want them caught in the
middle of men's affairs, do we? Go stand over there."
Ott stared down the
barrel of Kid's six-shooter. Slowly he rose to his feet and moved
away from Molly and Miranda. "Joshua, why don't you go get
Ott's gun?"
"My pleasure,
Thaddeus."
"Now we don't
intend to let you take us prisoner again, Ott. So what do you think
we ought to do with you?"
"Listen, Jones…or
Curry, or whoever you are. I came out here to get my daughters back
As for you two, well I wasn't sure what I was going to do about
you."
"Why's
that?"
"Well, as you
know, this whole thing was that crazy Fletcher's idea. And when I
went to find him tonight to have him help me find Molly and Miranda…well,
let's just say he was in no condition to even sit a horse, let alone
help me chase you all down."
"Drunk?"
"Dead drunk. So
I'd already been rethinking my decision to fall in with him, you
might say. And now, after finding out what you did for Miranda…well,
it just wouldn't feel right for me to turn you over to the law.
Especially since I'm not convinced that Winnie has the right men.
Heck, I could end up being as big a laughing stock as he is. I gotta
live in this town, ya know."
"Are you |