Main Street was eerily quiet for a weekday afternoon. Riding into town on his
gelding, Chris saw more than one or two people he knew scurry indoors at his
approach. By the time he had reached the livery and dismounted, the street
looked as though it belonged to a ghost town. Its only occupants seemed to be a
mangy stray or two -- and that assessment included himself.
Frowning, Chris tied his horse's reins to the bolted livery stable door and
made his way cautiously down the street towards the jail. As he walked along the
boardwalk, boots thumping and spurs jingling, he caught sight of people cowering
down behind shop windows. Without comment, he continued on until he reached the
mouth of the alley that ran down the side of the deserted-looking jail. When a
cautious look through the nearest, filthy jail window left him none the wiser,
he edged his way around the building to the backdoor.
Holding his breath and drawing his pistol, Chris was just about to try the
door's lock when he heard a noise like someone scuffing their boot on the alley
wall just around the corner. Without trying the door, Chris moved quietly on.
Glancing around the corner, he saw the back of a thickset stranger with a
shotgun balanced over his shoulder.
Chris leaned back against the wall with a silent curse. A split second later,
he was moving decisively around the corner, grabbing the man from behind,
pressing his forearm hard against the stranger's windpipe.
"Drop it," he said low, pressing his gun against the man's temple
and cocking the hammer. "Now."
Making an odd choking noise, the man nodded and seemed ready to comply. Then
the distinct clicks of pistols being cocked echoed up the alleyway from behind
them.
"You drop it, Larabee," an all too familiar, slaughterhouse of a
voice said in return. The hairs on the back of Chris' neck stood up as the voice
went on, "Let him go and turn around slowly. Now."
"Rawlson?" Chris said without turning around. His grip tightened on
his captive so the man choked noisily. "What the hell are you doing
here?"
"What's it look like? Doing my sworn duty as Sheriff of Wolver County
and taking you in."
"For what?" Chris snapped back, almost looking around.
"There's no law against not stopping for watered down whisky."
Rawlson made a derisive snorting sound. "We got witnesses. Now drop that
gun, Larabee, or my deputies and I will shoot you in the back like the scum you
are."
"That's how you'd prefer it," Chris growled. He was already
calculating the odds of successfully whirling around and shooting Rawlson and
his deputies before they got him. However, just as he was figuring that the
shielding of his thickset captive and the element of surprise might give him the
edge he needed, his captive got the same idea and head-butted him in the chin.
Even with blood filling his mouth and red sparks dancing before his eyes,
Chris' first instinct was retaliation. He fired a couple of shots at Rawlson and
his deputies, making them dive back around the corner. He then whacked his
slightly stunned, erstwhile captive over the side of the head with the butt of
his pistol before taking the shotgun and backing off up the alley.
"Any of you boys dumb enough to poke your head around that corner'll be
going back home in a pine box," he called.
"You're the dumb one, Larabee," Rawlson shouted back. "You
ain't gettin' away. My warrant's legal and your friends know it!"
Ignoring Rawlson's jibes, Chris left the alley to edge along the front wall
of the jail. His heart was hammering in his mouth as he moved over to squint
through the cleanest part of the window -- only to scowl at the sight that
greeted him. While he had been sneaking around, fearing for their lives, it
seemed his fellow lawmen had been having a quiet game of poker.
Chris stood up against the doorjamb and took a steadying breath as he scanned
the length of the deserted street. It was only a matter of time before Rawlson
got up the nerve to come after him and he still didn't have a clue as to what
the hell was going on. His friends must have heard the shots, but there they
were, all except Vin, gathered around playing cards regardless. It didn't make
any damned sense.
Somewhere in a building up the street, a baby started crying.
Growling a curse under his breath, Chris stepped back then kicked the jail
door in. As soon as he entered the room, he felt someone move up behind him.
He almost saw the blow coming. Almost.
* * * *
Chris awoke slowly into a hazy world of pain in which everything was too dark
to see then so bright it hurt his eyes. Somewhere in the distance, he could hear
Buck and JD shouting. Every now and again, Nathan would say something that
sounded quite close by. When he had finally worked out that he was lying on one
of the rickety jail beds with Nathan carefully treated the pounding wound on the
side of his head, JD had calmed down a little but Buck was still calling Rawlson
for everything.
"Your fool of a deputy damn near took his head off and you expect us to
just let you waltz on out of here with him?"
"Now you listen to me," Rawlson retorted. "You boys let Tanner
go and--"
"No, you listen to me," Buck returned with a growl. "You can't
just handcuff us to our own damn fu--"
"You would have interfered! I did what was necessary to arrest--"
"Yeah, you hate Chris bad, don't you? You've had it in for him ever
since your brother watered his drawers trying to throw down on him."
"This ain't about my brother, Wilmington," Rawlson snapped back.
"Your friend is a killer. You all know it. He killed those men in cold
blood."
"Chris has killed some but he ain't no cold-blooded killer,
Sheriff," JD replied with conviction. "I don't know what those
witnesses saw but Chris wouldn't have shot those people like that."
"If he's going with you, we're going with him," Buck said low.
"No prisoners are getting shot 'trying to escape' on this ride."
"Better agree to that, Sheriff," Josiah added with quiet menace.
"You're not the law here and, like you said, Chris is our friend. We have a
few questions that need answering."
"I have a legal warrant for Larabee's arrest," Rawlson spluttered
angrily. "You've all seen it. Those men had families. Nine people are dead
and he's got to hang for it. You can't--"
"Now, you see," Ezra broke in smoothly, "that kind of remark
just makes us even more disinclined to trust your commitment to justice. You
have heard of the term 'fair trial', I trust?"
"I didn't shoot anyone," Chris said hoarsely, pushing Nathan's
restraining hand away to sit up. "Didn't even stop in Wolver," he
continued against waves of sickening dizziness.
"The first shootings were on Tuesday night," Nathan told him
quietly. "The others on Wednesday."
Chris swallowed back a wrenching attack of nausea and tried to focus on where
Ezra was standing in the open cell doorway, leaning casually against the metal
frame. "I was camped out over the county line Tuesday."
"You got witnesses to that?" Rawlson's voice came back at Chris
from the blur of figures across the room. "What the hell were you doing out
there? I've got sworn statements that say you killed two miners up the mountain,
four men in Wishart's Rigg then another three in Denton. Those men in Denton
might have looked at you funny and hear I those four in Wishart's Rigg spilled
your drink. Lord knows what those two poor gold-panning bastards did up at the
old Nelson place. You're one mean son of a bitch, Larabee, and this time you're
gonna pay."
During the speech, a dark presence, probably Rawlson, had moved up behind
Ezra's brightly coloured figure as if trying to enter the jail cell. Ezra,
however, had remained a study of nonchalance in the doorway, leaving Rawlson no
room to pass.
"I didn't kill anyone," Chris reiterated before another assault of
sickening pain drove him back down to the rough pillow.
"Lie still, you hear me?" Nathan said softly while applying a
mercifully cool cloth to Chris' head. "You move around now, you'll wish he
had knocked your head off."
"He all right to ride?" Rawlson asked then quickly added,
"Either way, we're moving out first thing in the morning."
"Your concern for your fellow man truly knows no beginning,
Sheriff," Ezra said dryly just before Nathan spoke up angrily.
"You ride in here with your posse and round us up like criminals, show
us your legal warrant and swear you'll take Chris in easy. You call this
easy?" Nathan stood up off the bed to confront Rawlson. "Your deputy
about stove his skull in and now you're fixin' on just dragging him back to
Denton come morning no matter what? Well, Sheriff, I got news for you, head
injuries can be serious and I'm the only healer you got. Anywhere Chris goes, I
go. Now get out of my sickroom and let the man rest."
"You heard Mr Jackson, gentlemen," Ezra announced, easing away from
the cell doorway to make shooing gestures that ushered Rawlson back. "His
patient needs his rest."
"We're not leaving him in here alone," Rawlson retorted.
"Of course not, sir," Ezra returned reasonably. "Messrs
Jackson, Wilmington, Dunne, Sanchez and myself will remain within the building
while your good self and the deputies take up positions outside."
"You think I'm going to trust you five to do any law work after that
fiasco with Tanner?"
"Who's Tanner?" Chris asked dully.
"A miscreant the good Sheriff heard was in our midst for quite some time
while we remained inexplicably unable to apprehend him," Ezra clarified.
"I believe the sheriff entertains notions that we are somehow affiliated
with this person."
"Look, Rawlson," Buck spoke up, "we're staying with Chris
tonight and me and Nathan will be riding with you to Denton in the morning.
There ain't no choices here."
Chris' ears started to ring in the long silence that followed. Eventually,
Rawlson replied, "All right. You can have it your way but if anything
messes up this arrest, even a freak snow storm, I'll have all your sorry hides
in jail quicker than you can turn around and not even Orrin Travis will be able
to save you."
After a moment's pause in which he was probably trying to stare everyone
down, Rawlson strode out of the jail followed by his boot-clumping deputies.
As the door slammed shut behind them, Chris eased up carefully onto his
elbows. "How many men does Rawlson have?"
"Twelve in town," Nathan replied, moving back over to hand Chris
the cloth to press against his head.
"But he says he's sent another four after Vin," JD added as he came
to stand by the cell with Buck and Josiah.
Chris frowned at them. "What the hell happened while I was gone? Why is
Rawlson after Vin all of a sudden?"
Josiah shrugged. "There were a couple of trappers moving through town
yesterday morning. Vin thought they may have recognised him so he made himself
scarce just in case they got any ideas."
"Seems their idea was to pass on their intelligence to an angry posse
headed in this direction," Ezra said wryly. "Our Mr Tanner seems to be
a very popular fellow in certain circles."
"And so do you, Chris, if you don't mind me sayin'," Buck added
gently, draping his arms through the bars. "You didn't get drunk and go
treeing any towns while you were gone, did you?"
Chris scowled. "I didn't shoot anyone."
"Now, hold on there, stud, we're not saying you did," Buck
returned. "But someone who sure must have looked a hell of a lot like you
did and if you were drinking it sure makes it easy for everyone else to think it
likely."
"That include you, Buck?"
"C'mon, Chris, we know you didn't shoot those people," JD broke in.
"Don't we, fellas?"
No one answered.
"Rawlson's warrant is legal," Buck finally said. "He had us
handcuffed to our damn chairs, Chris. What would you expect us to do?"
Nathan nodded in agreement. "He rode in expecting trouble."
"And we can't find out what happened to those poor souls if we're all in
jail ourselves," Josiah added.
Buck stood back from the bars. "Rawlson's got an axe to grind with you
for sure, Chris, but those men had families that need to see justice done. We
thought it best to let Rawlson have his way, leave the way clear for the rest of
us to find out what really happened."
Chris turned his attention to Ezra. "So what's the plan?"
"Simplicity itself," Ezra said brightly. "While Buck and
Nathan ride along with you, making sure the good Sheriff keeps his zeal for
justice under control--"
"Me, Ezra and Josiah will ride hard out to Wishart's Rigg and find out
what happened there," JD finished. "If there's trouble with the posse,
Buck and Nathan will set up an escape and we'll meet up at that old cabin where
those other men were killed."
"We figure Vin will have those posse boys chasing tracks somewhere in
Peru by tomorrow," Josiah said lightly. "So hopefully he'll be
watching and can lend a hand where need be."
"It seems you need do naught but rest, Mr Larabee," Ezra concluded.
"May I suggest you gentlemen go forth and gather whatever supplies we may
need for the night ahead while I remain here? I fear that if I get within close
proximity of my featherbed before morning I may never return to these less than
luxurious climes."
"Amen to that," Buck said, eying the uncomfortable cot in the next
cell before moving off with the others.
As the door closed behind them, Ezra meandered into Chris' cell, looking
around as if he'd never been inside one before. "How do you feel?"
Chris lay back and closed his eyes. "Been worse."
"Ah, verbose as usual, I see. But, then again, what else would one
expect from someone who can make grown men soil their underwear with nothing
more than a stray glare?"
Chris opened his eyes just as Ezra crouched down beside him. "What's
that supposed to mean?"
His answer came by the way of soft lips pressing insistently against his
mouth.
"Hell, Ezra!" He jerked away only to groan against the sharp pain
that lanced around his skull. "There's such a thing as windows," he
hissed, holding his aching head.
"I apologise," Ezra replied without sounding apologetic in the
least. "However, the gentlemen outside would have better luck peering
through solid rock than those filthy articles you laughingly refer to as
windows." He stroked Chris' cheek with a fingertip caress. "The
sheriff has a vindictive streak, that much is obvious, but would he go so far as
to falsify evidence?"
"Don't know." Chris shrugged a little. "How well do you really
know anyone? You don't know I didn't kill those men."
Ezra frowned but his fingers kept up their light strokes. "Do you
know?"
"You're asking if I killed them?"
"No." Ezra shook his head. "I'm asking if you got so drunk you
don't remember."
In response, Chris caught Ezra's busy fingers and kissed the palm of his
hand. "Watch your back."
"I intend to," Ezra replied hoarsely, his eyes darkening then
fluttering shut when Chris first kissed his wrist before sucking lightly at the
pulse.
* * * *
Ezra knew it was a dream. It wasn't the fact that Chris was kissing and
rubbing his naked body over every inch of Ezra's own equally naked length that
gave it away. No, Ezra had enjoyed that delicious sensation on more than one
occasion. It wasn't even the fact that they were taking their pleasure on top of
a poker table in the saloon with an admiring crowd looking on, either. No, it
wasn't the crowd; it was the money. Ezra knew it was a dream as soon as he
looked down at the thousands of dollars littering the poker table, felt them
sticking to his damp skin as Chris began to thrust in earnest. There was just no
way all that money was real.
However, Chris' attentions felt real enough and after that merciless teasing
Chris had given him just before the others had returned with their supplies,
Ezra decided to enjoy what he was owed. Unfortunately, his subconscious got
other ideas. Just as he took control of the dream and pulled Chris in for a deep
kiss, the light scratching sound the dollar bills made as they rubbed against
each other turned into the loud hissing of angry snakes. At that same moment,
the cool piles of money cushioning his body turned into a cold, squirming mass
of green vipers, rearing up and bearing their fangs...
"Hell and--" Josiah cursed as Ezra started awake, kicking out in
his panic to sit up. "Take it easy, son," Josiah continued, shaking
spilled coffee from fingers and clothes. "Dreams don't bite but hot coffee
sure does burn," he went on as Ezra sat up to find himself lying on the
larger of the two jail desks in a rather uncomfortable, makeshift bed. It was,
however, mercifully free of snakes -- green or otherwise.
"Sorry, Josiah," Ezra murmured, his heart still hammering as he
blinked around the deserted jail.
"No harm done." Josiah handed Ezra the cup and its remaining
contents. "I've had more than my fair share nightmares as well as my fair
share of the coffee pot, and now I'm wearing most of yours."
"I, ah, hope you'll forgive me for being a tad obtuse," Ezra began
with a frown. "But where is everyone?"
Josiah was just drawing breath to respond when JD came hurtling through the
doorway.
"Coast's clear, Josiah!" he gasped. "There's two posse men
backtracking but if we head out now they won't see us. I've got the horses out
front." As Josiah nodded, JD turned his attention to Ezra. "Finally
awake, huh? Well, come on." He grabbed Ezra's coffee cup and threw the
contents out the door before setting it back on the desk empty. "Let's
ride." He strode purposefully out again.
Ezra treated Josiah to his best long-suffering look.
Josiah smiled and patted him on the shoulder. "You heard the man."
* * * *
"Boy! I've heard of a one-horse town before but I've never seen anything
like this," JD said, twisting around in his saddle to see the full extent
of the dilapidated, one-street cesspit called Wishart's Rigg. "Even the
buildings look like they'd slit your throat for two bits," he continued as
a few of the town's largest and surliest inhabitants came out to glare at them
ride past.
"Disillusioned men living a life of broken dreams," Josiah said,
nodding politely to the group of men gathered outside the saloon.
"Indeed," Ezra commented with a fixed smile. "If the one horse
rode in, they'd probably eat it."
"So, do either of you boys have any ideas about how to go about this
fact finding mission?" Josiah asked as they dismounted in front of the dry
goods store. There did at least seem to be someone inside its dingy remains
buying something.
Ezra's stomach rebelled at the likely myriad of horrors lurking within the
store. "Why don't you gentlemen start with the..." He eyed the front
of the building but couldn't think up a euphemism that didn't drip of sarcasm.
"Stores and I'll start with the saloon and meet you there."
JD gave him a dry look. "I don't think these folks have anything to lose
to you at poker, Ezra."
Ezra grinned brightly. "Oh ye of little faith." He then turned to
Josiah. "Shall we say an hour?"
"An hour it is." Josiah nodded.
"Gentlemen." Ezra tipped his hat before walking off down to the
saloon.
As he approached the faded green of the batwing doors, Ezra caught a whiff of
the unsettling stench of body odour and cheap whisky that permeated the darkness
within. "Courage, Ezra, courage," he muttered, pausing to straighten
his vest before striding into the smoky depths.
It was worse than he had feared. The dead rat lying on top of the keyless
piano confirmed it.
Trying not to breathe, he made his way to the plank and barrel bar at the end
of the room. "Good day, gentlemen," he smiled at the barman and what
he assumed was a group of regulars propping up the bar. "What a fine
establishment you have here!"
The barman spat a lump of well-chewed tobacco onto the floor then continued
to watch Ezra without expression.
"A tad rough and ready, perhaps--" Ezra patted the shoulder of the
nearest regular and got a glare for his trouble. "But just the kind of
place where a man can relax after a long ride," he finished,
surreptitiously wiping his hand on the handkerchief in his pocket.
"What do you want, mister?" the barman growled.
Ezra's smile was fixed in place. "A bottle of your best and a quiet
game, perhaps?"
Without preamble, the barman plunked a bottle of watery whisky down on the
bar and nodded to where four seedy-looking miners were hunched over a table.
With a gracious nod, Ezra paid for the whisky and declined the offer of a filthy
glass before meandering over to the poker game.
"Gentlemen, may I join you?" he asked, leaning in to place the
whisky bottle in the centre of the table.
Four pairs of bloodshot eyes blinked up at him owlishly before one man broke
into a toothless smile. "Sure friend, grab a seat," he said, shuffling
along to make room at the table.
Ezra had no sooner acquired a chair and returned to sit than the
down-on-their-luck miners were distributing his bribe amongst their glasses. He
was depressed to note that they had somehow managed to come up with a glass for
him too and he was now expected to join in.
"Ah, to unexpected pleasures," he toasted -- then didn't drink a
drop of the vile concoction while the others finished theirs and refilled.
"Mighty civilised of ya, feller," one of the miners with teeth
grinned at him. "Don't often come across someone with real manners."
"Well, thank you, but that might be a thing of the past with the town
opening up and all," Ezra said lightly as he picked up the miners' deck and
shuffled. The cards were a tad sticky and liberally mottled with suspicious
stains. All in all, he didn't want to examine them too closely.
"Town opening up?" the toothless miner echoed while his friends
frowned on. "What you meanin', mister?"
"Why the gold of course," Ezra replied as he dealt a hand.
"What gold?" the miner with teeth asked in bewilderment.
Ezra blinked back at the men in studied confusion then grinned. "Oh,
come, come now, gentlemen. We all know that four men were tragically shot down
in this very establishment just a scant few days ago. In a quiet town such as
this, that only happens when there's gold in the air."
All four miners paused to stare at Ezra before bursting out laughing.
"Mister, you sure got some sense of humour," the toothless wonder
wheezed, pounding Ezra on the back in his mirth. "Gold! Here!!"
His friends roared with laughter again while Ezra looked at them dubiously.
"Gentlemen, I am reliably informed that four men were murdered here. I fail
to see the hilarity."
"Oh they were killed all right. Deader than a can of corned beef,"
the one with teeth giggled. "I saw it all with my own eyes but it weren't
about no gold."
"It were that Larabee feller," the toothless one said, pouring
another round of drinks as the laughter died down. "Mean son of a whore he
is. Killed 'em for spilling his drink."
"His drink?" Ezra scowled. "So what about the gold?"
"No gold. Not an ounce," came the sad response and the miners
stared morosely into their drinks, poker game forgotten.
"But why would a gunman like Larabee come to a town like this?"
Ezra pondered loudly.
"You calling me a liar, mister?" the one with teeth snarled.
"Not at all, sir." Ezra smiled soothingly. "I just have my
doubts as to whether the man you saw really was the infamous Mr Larabee. It is
rather dull in here and what with all the commotion..."
"It was him all right," the miner leaned in to give Ezra the full
benefit of his unique breath. "Quicker than a rattler and twice as mean.
Long, lean feller dressed all in black with a look in his eye to make the devil
himself piss his pants. Paul knew him too."
While the other miners nodded, three men approached the table from the bar
area. They were slightly better dressed than the other patrons -- but that
wasn't saying much.
"Hey fellas," the handsome, cocky leader of the trio said as they
came to stand behind the suddenly nervous miners. "You talking about
me?"
"No, Mr Paul, we ain't sayin' nothin'," the toothless miner said
before the four of them scurried away with what was left of Ezra's bottle.
Ezra gathered up the cards and smiled at the new group. "Gentlemen, may
I offer you a game of chance? It seems you have dispersed my erstwhile
partakers."
"Sure." The cocky leader, Paul, grinned and all three sat down.
"But I'm dealing."
"Of course." Ezra smiled, handing over the deck.
"Stud, nothing wild, two limit," Paul said with a warning glare
that was supposed to stop Ezra noticing him palming cards. "Heard you
asking about that Larabee business," he went on as he shuffled.
"What's it to you?"
Ezra shrugged easily. "Curiosity. I was just speculating as to why a big
gun like Larabee would come to this town if there's no gold."
"Men like me and Larabee go where we like, when we like," Paul
said, dealing the cards.
Ezra cleared his throat pointedly. "Indeed. You are acquainted with Mr
Larabee then?"
"We move in the same circles. He's a fast one all right." Paul gave
Ezra a deadly look that implied he could beat Chris to the draw. It was an
expression he probably practised in the mirror every morning before breakfast.
"I see," Ezra said against the grin tugging at his mouth before
turning his attention to the cards.
It didn't take long before the tales of Paul's dubious exploits were
irritating Ezra even more than the man's pathetic skills as a card cheat. When
Josiah and JD finally walked into the saloon, Ezra felt like dropping to his
knees in gratitude.
"Well, gentlemen..." He smiled as he raked in the last, meagre pot.
"As much as it pains me to walk away with my winnings intact, I'm afraid
it's time I was moving on."
"Wait a minute," the larger of Paul's bookend henchmen growled and
grabbed Ezra's wrist. "You've got to give us a chance to get our money
back."
"You had your chance." Ezra shook himself free and tidied the money
away. "If you gentlemen will excuse me?" he said, looking Paul hard in
the eye.
"By all means." Paul nodded and Ezra stood up to leave.
As he walked past Josiah and JD's table, Ezra pointedly ignored his friends
and made straight for the door. He was barely halfway to the dry goods store
when he heard boots clumping up the boardwalk behind him. There were three men
pursuing him and he didn't need clairvoyance to work out what they were
planning.
At the mouth of a likely looking alleyway, he turned on his pursuers, drawing
his guns.
Caught out in surprise, the trio tried a comic half-fumble for their own
weapons.
Ezra cocked his guns. "I wouldn't."
"Neither would I," Josiah agreed as he and JD came up from behind
the men and pushed them into the alley. "Ezra, I do believe these misguided
souls had an intention to rob you."
"Didn't your mothers teach you to play nice?" JD asked as he
relieved Paul and his men of their guns.
"Are you Larabee's friends?" Paul asked suspiciously.
"What makes you say that?" Josiah returned.
"You're checking up on us. You're good. It doesn't take a Philadelphia
lawyer to put two and two together."
"It would never make four the way you deal," Ezra said, holstering
one gun to step forward and pull two kings out of Paul's sleeve.
"Hey, I didn't know you were working for Larabee!" Paul protested.
"I was just running off nosey pokes like he told me."
"What else did he tell you?" Josiah asked, closing in menacingly.
"What did he pay you for besides bandying his name around?"
"Hey, what--" Paul tried to push Josiah back but got slammed
against the alley wall for his trouble.
"The Lord does the best he can with the tools he has," Josiah said,
"but I'm afraid patience was never my strong suit."
"Hell!" Paul snarled. "You're the ones he warned us
about."
"Oh, you're quick." JD grinned. "Can you shoot that
fast?"
"Listen, you better not mess with Larabee," Paul continued
urgently. "You guys might think you're hot shit but he'll chew you up and
spit you out faster than you can blink. The man is crazy. Murderin' crazy."
"Well, thank you for the advice," Ezra replied but then his tone
darkened. "However, a friend of ours is in trouble and that doesn't put us
in a very good mood. Since your Mr Larabee is miles away and we're here now, I
suggest you put aside your fear of him and tell us what we need to know."
While Paul swallowed nervously, Josiah grabbed his shirtfront and lifted him
onto his tiptoes. "Now would be a good time to unburden your troubled soul,
brother. Before my arm gets tired would be best."
"All right, all right," Paul gave in. "I didn't know he was
plannin' on killing more folks, I swear. I met him up the mountain and he told
me he'd pay me a hundred dollars if I rode into town with Josh and Dewey's
bodies and told everyone I saw him shoot them. Dumb bastards, Josh and Dewey.
Everyone knows there ain't no gold left up the mountain but they kept on trying.
I never liked them anyway."
"How very discriminating of you," Ezra commented dryly. "What
happened next?"
"Nothin'." Paul shrugged. "I waited at the pass with the
bodies and rode in at sunset like he told me. It was only then I found out he'd
killed those boys in town. I had nothing to do with the killings, honest."
"That's it?" Josiah loomed.
"That's it, I swear," Paul quickly replied and Josiah released him.
"But you guys will be writing your own epitaphs if you go up against
Larabee. He's death crazy. I saw it in his eyes. He killed three more in Denton
the next day and he ain't gonna stop at that neither."
"Yeah, yeah, get lost," JD said, ushering Paul and his two henchmen
out the alley.
"You'll get yours!" Paul called back. "Larabee'll be the death
of you all."
"Yeah, next time bring all your friends," JD called after him
cheerily. "Oh, wait a minute, you did!"
"You know, Josiah," Ezra began, holstering his gun then
straightening his shoulder rig. "Something tells me there's more to the
apparent haphazard killing of those two gold panners than previously met the
eye. Perhaps that mountain cabin merits closer inspection."
"You know, Ezra," Josiah replied lightly, "I'd have to agree
with that assessment."
"You think they struck gold?" JD asked with a frown.
Ezra grinned. "Feeling up to a little prospecting?"
* * * *
The afternoon sun was beating down and Chris' head was pounding back,
refusing to let him think or even see clearly. Vision blurring, he blinked down
at his chafing, tightly handcuffed wrists and felt Buck and Nathan edge their
horses closer to his once more. Despite the fact that Rawlson's men had tried
repeatedly to keep them back throughout the journey, Buck and Nathan had somehow
managed to end up riding alongside him for most of the way. Normally this would
have been his preferred plan, keeping his men together as Rawlson's men grew
increasingly belligerent, but Buck's constant jawing was beginning to get on his
last nerve.
"Yeah, I hear the snakes in there can get big enough to wrestle a man
off his horse," Buck said of the river they were approaching. "Damn
near big enough to wear buckskins," he went on deliberately despite Chris'
scowl.
"Oh, yeah, Buck, you're right," Nathan suddenly agreed as the rush
of water grew louder. "I saw one near big enough to wear a hat once."
"Biggest ones come from Texas, I hear," Buck added inanely.
"Yeah, those big critters just mosey on up the--"
"Quit talking back there," Rawlson bellowed at them. "There
ain't no snakes in that river. It's too fast and deep."
"That's what makes the snakes so big and mean," Buck returned as
quick as a flash. "Got to swim against the current and all. Ain't that
right, big dog?" He winked and nodded at Chris.
Chris didn't say a word; his glower spoke volumes.
"There's nothing wrong with the damn river if you're careful and go in
one at a time," Rawlson insisted as they reached the thundering banks. They
were at the only calm stretch for as far as the eye could see. "Just don't
let the horses try and trample each other and you'll be fine," he told his
men as they started to go in. "You're next, Larabee," Rawlson said
after his third man entered the water.
"Aren't you going to uncuff him first?" Buck demanded.
Rawlson shook his head. "Seems to me, if Larabee's half the horseman
folks say, he'll get across without getting too wet." He smirked.
Buck was about to respond when Chris gigged his horse down the steep bank
into the river. If something was going to happen, he wanted to get it over with.
Then maybe his head would stop pounding and he'd be able to think straight.
As soon as the water was deep enough to lap up his mount's stomach, Chris'
gelding wanted to turn back for the bank. Shivering and snorting nervously, the
horse began to frighten itself with its own chaos in the splashing water. But
Chris quickly calmed the gelding down with gentle touches and soft words and
they were soon moving for opposite bank once more. However, they had only gone
on a few strides before the gelding took fright again, rearing out of the water
as if something was attacking its legs.
Hunkering down, Chris managed to stay in the saddle until the gelding lost
its footing in its terror. Then the world was reduced to a churning fury of
freezing water and it was all Chris could do to kick away from his thrashing
horse.
He was just gaining his equilibrium, gasping some steadying breaths as he got
his feet under him, when something pulled him back under the water. He
immediately lashed out, Buck's earlier words striking panic. At first, the oddly
familiar strips of buckskin waving in the water beside him only added to his
confusion. Then he felt a strong arm tighten around his chest and the full
implication of Buck's words finally struck home. He stopped struggling and did
his best to kick through the water in time with the man holding him.
"Damn, Chris!" Vin gasped as they broke the surface in a niche of
rocks a little further down stream. "You damn near took my jaw off,"
he continued, pulling Chris coughing and spluttering up onto the rocks behind
him. "I guess Buck didn't get the chance to tell you about the plan."
Chris didn't reply; he just gulped air while Vin uncuffed him.
"They won't find us down here," Vin went on, tucking the handcuffs
between the rocks and pulling out two blankets. "We're covered from both
sides and the bank is sheer rock." He handed Chris a blanket. "We'll
stay here till dark then meet Buck and Nathan back at my camp." He watched
Chris rub at his wrists distractedly. "You all right, cowboy?"
"Guess I wasn't paying mind," Chris admitted with a shiver as they
huddled up under their blankets. "What did I miss?"
Vin wiped drips of water from his face, wincing when his fingers brushed
against the nasty swelling at his jaw. "After I got rid of those boys
tailing me, I circled around ahead of you. It didn't look good, Chris. There was
a lynch mob a-coming at you and I got the feelin' Rawlson knew they were
there."
"Figures." Chris rubbed at his arms through his soaked clothes.
"I got close enough to have a word or two with Buck. We reckoned it'd be
for the best if you drowned in the river."
Chris nodded, grinding his teeth to stop them from chattering.
"Water's damn cold, that's for sure." Vin shivered deeply and
rubbed at his own wet clothes. "Sparkling purtty on the outside but ice
underneath. I brought biscuits if you're hungry," he offered, reaching
between the rocks again to bring out a small food sack.
Shaking his head a little, Chris grinned. "Wouldn't happen to have a
firearm or two back there would you?"
Smiling, Vin reached back once more to snag an oilskin containing his mare's
leg, his rifle and spare ammunition. "Always pays to be prepared."
Chris returned the smile before nodding at Vin's swelling jaw. "It's
coming up fast." He winced apologetically.
"Had worse." Vin shrugged back.
Chris nodded, his attention returning to his stinging wrists. For a long
moment, he watched the angry welts rise to contrast even more harshly with the
shivering skin surrounding it. "I've done a lot of things I'm not proud of,
Vin." He looked up to find Vin watching him calmly. "After Ella, I
took to drifting along the border. Got in a few scrapes, treed a few
towns." He smirked at the memory. "I walked a fine line."
Vin nodded in silent understanding.
"Then I met Clancy and his gang," Chris continued, leaning back
against the rock and letting his gaze drift to the river. "Me and Clancy
looked enough alike to be brothers. Kind of drew us together. We did nothing
much but raise hell until Clancy got this idea about a Mexican bank." Chris
met Vin's gaze again. "He wanted to prove something. He could shoot but he
wanted that look, the one you only get by killing a man. I thought it was just
the whisky talking."
"Sometimes a man don't rightly know what's on his own mind," Vin
offered quietly. "Sometimes what you do is as much as a surprise to
yourself as everyone else."
"I did nothing." Chris narrowed his gaze against the memory.
"As long as I had a bottle, I didn't care what went on. They rode off
without me. Next time I saw them they were facedown in the street."
"Then this Clancy's feller's dead?" Vin asked warily.
"I thought so," Chris said with a scowl. "Until now."
* * * *
"Josiah?"
"Light that stove, JD."
"Was that a rat?"
"Josiah, could you please move the table?"
"It was either a rat or an Indian pony, JD."
"Josiah!" Ezra hissed for the third time, already breaking a sweat
despite the morning chill. "Could I get a little more room to work here,
please?"
"Hold your horses, Ezra," Josiah said as he flipped over the large,
rickety table that dominated the floor of the tiny cabin and balanced it on top
of the bed. "Those boxes aren't about to grow legs any time soon."
"No, they are not about to depart in that manner, as you so rightly
predict," Ezra said, moving to sit cross-legged on the cabin floor and work
Josiah's knife blade along the lid edge of one of the suspiciously heavy boxes
they'd found stacked under the bed. "However, I get the feeling that its
current owners would not be--" With a loud crack of wood, the lid of the
box with its faded Mexican bank stamp flipped off. "Overly pleased to see
us," he finished weakly at the sight of six perfect bars of gold glittering
up at him.
"You can say that again." Josiah whistled as he and JD bent down to
pick up a bar of gold each.
"Sure is pretty," JD said quietly.
"Pretty enough to blind," Josiah added and Ezra knew that he too
had spotted the bank stamp on the lid.
"Last time I saw this much gold, it was lead," Ezra said, picking
up a bar for close inspection. "There's another five boxes under there.
That's six bars in a box and forty troy ounces in a bar at twenty-three dollars
and seventeen cents an ounce."
"That's a helluva lot of money!" JD said.
"Nine hundred dollars a bar," Ezra supplied distractedly.
"Give or take twenty-six dollars and eight cents."
"You think that's why he killed the panners? Because they found the
gold?"
"Poor souls were in the wrong place at the wrong time," Josiah
sighed. "They found their gold. Trouble is, the Mexican government found it
first."
"We've got to get to Denton!" JD suddenly started. "Tell the
sheriff what we found. Chris didn't rob no Mexican bank."
Ezra nodded in agreement while pulling out the other boxes to check the seals
weren't broken. "You gentlemen ride to Denton to inform the sheriff. I'll
stay here and guard the gold." He barely noticed the uncomfortable silence
that followed.
"Uh, are you sure that's a good idea, Ezra?" JD asked. "I
mean, maybe..."
"Maybe what?" Ezra finally looked up from the gold. "What are
you attempting to suggest, JD?"
"Only that, well, you know, what with that money and all..." He
looked at Josiah who merely looked on. "Ezra, you said yourself we
shouldn't leave you alone with other people's money!"
"Son, this is gold," Ezra pointed out with studied calm. "It
is rather impractical, not to mention weighty and conspicuous. I suggest you
take as much as you can carry to prove our story to the sheriff."
* * * *
"I don't know, Chris," Buck said with a sigh that carried loudly
through the crisp morning air. "Do you really think it's the same
man?"
"You just got through telling me that same Mexican bank was robbed not
three months back," Chris returned, looking back to where Buck and Nathan
led their horses up the mountain path behind himself and Vin. "I don't
trust coincidence, Buck."
"The old Nelson cabin is the perfect place to hole up too," Vin
said by Chris' shoulder. "High, lonely, good water, not a lot of
visitors."
"Sounds like the kind of place you'd like, Vin," Nathan teased.
"Somewhere to hear nature around you."
"It is at that." Vin smiled back.
"I've nothing against mother nature but I'd like to see a bit more of
her feminine side, if you know what I mean," Buck said and Chris could hear
the wink in his voice. "Yes sir, I'll leave the cabin in the middle of
nowhere to you and Chris, if that's all right with you, Vin."
"Bucklin--" Vin began then drew up short.
Chris froze as he heard the telltale fall of rocks just before Vin signalled
that someone was coming down the mountain. Since there was no cover on the
narrow path, they all drew their guns for a tense wait.
However, a moment later, Chris felt Vin's tension ease and he turned to meet
his gaze.
"It's Josiah," Vin said just before Josiah and JD led their horses
around the steep corner up ahead.
"How in the hell did you know that?" Buck demanded of Vin.
"How did he do that?" he repeated the question to Nathan as Chris and
Vin moved forward to greet the others.
"Where's Ezra?" Chris asked with a scowl.
"Ezra's guarding the gold," JD replied brightly. "We found it
in the old cabin. We were taking it to--"
"Ezra's what?" Chris growled.
"You left Ezra with the gold?" Nathan asked in disbelief.
Not waiting for further commentary, Chris jumped on his horse and pushed past
Josiah and JD, driving the gelding up the steep slope as quickly as possible.
"Chris!" Buck called out as he rode up behind. "Ezra won't run
off."
"Ezra won't think straight with all that gold," Chris snapped back.
"And Clancy won't be far away."
* * * *
Ezra had no sooner stamped the floorboard back into place than the worn porch
outside gave an ominous creak. Whirling around, he drew his guns just as the
door burst open and Chris stood there. At least it seemed to be Chris. For the
merest split second, he was fooled. But then everything suddenly looked wrong.
The stance of the man was too aggressive, almost savage; the set of the face too
hard; and the eyes were stony, showing nothing of Chris' silent understanding.
It was like looking at a twisted mirror image of his lover -- and it almost cost
Ezra his life.
When the mirror image Chris cocked his gun and took aim, Ezra's own guns were
half-lowered to his sides. But instead of barking a bullet, the mirror Chris
barked a command. "Put them down. Now."
The moment over, Ezra cursed himself for the king of idiots and slowly
crouched to place his guns on the floor.
"Kick them under the stove."
"The stove is lit. Is that particularly--"
"DO IT!"
Ezra complied, taking an odd solace in the fact that the stranger's voice
barely resembled his Chris' gruff purr.
"You're one of them, aren't you?" the mirror Chris asked, seeming
to relax a little as he kicked the door shut behind him. "You're one of
Larabee's puppy dogs, following blindly wherever he leads, thinking he's it. All
hail the great gunslinger with the eyes of steel."
Ezra narrowed his gaze suspiciously. "You haven't been partaking in Jock
Steele's publications by any chance?"
"Who?"
"Never mind."
The mirror Chris scowled in a horribly familiar way. "Against the wall,
now. Flat. Arms and legs spread and don't move."
"I wouldn't dream of it." Ezra complied again, trying to listen to
the sound of the stranger moving around over the rapid hammering of his heart.
He heard nothing until he was spun roughly around from the wall to have a gun
shoved under his chin. "Where is it?" the mirror Chris snarled, anger
deepening the flatness of his eyes.
Ezra swallowed against the hard press of metal. "Where's what?"
Wrong answer. A sharp blow to the side of the head sent him to his knees,
senses swirling.
"Where's my gold, you fancy-talking bastard?" The mirror Chris
hauled him to his feet again. "Your friends didn't take any boxes out. I
watched them leave."
"Boxes?" Ezra winced with a dizziness that was only partly feigned.
"Why do you assume they were here when we arrived?"
"They were under the damn bed!"
"Really? Well, that explains it."
The mirror Chris glared. "Smart one, ain't you?"
"Well, let's just say that I have never endeavoured to hide my loot
under a bed in an abandoned cabin." Ezra smiled sweetly. "Perhaps you
should consider changing your reading habits."
The mirror Chris stepped back as if taking Ezra's measure for the first time.
"What are you to Larabee? You trying to take my gold for yourself?" He
grinned. "Were you planning on running out and leaving old Chris to the
hangman's rope? I bet you were." He ran the muzzle of his gun down Ezra's
cheek. "Smart boy like you."
"You flatter me," Ezra returned dryly against a wave of nausea.
"If you're looking for intelligence, you need look no further than your
good self, my friend. Setting Larabee up for the hangman's drop was positively
inspired, not to mention rather bloodily homicidal."
"Homicidal?" The mirror Chris shook his head with a smile.
"Those fools didn't matter. I just reckoned Larabee owed me a favour or
two. And, well, after those gold panners stumbled in on me, I thought of the
perfect way for him to repay."
"By taking the blame and smoke-screening your get away."
"Exactly."
"But why ride over to Denton?" Ezra shrugged, getting his enemy
used to little movements of his body. "Why kill nine when six would have
served?"
"What can I say?" The mirror Chris grinned. "Larabee deserved
a good send off. You don't know how people look at him. The respect, the fear in
their eyes, who wouldn't want that?"
"Forgive me for saying so," Ezra said, tensing for action.
"But I think your best course of action would have been taking the gold and
making a hasty departure."
"And miss out on the last laugh?" The mirror Chris sneered.
"You know what they say," Ezra replied softly, "he who laughs
last, thinks the slowest."
The words had barely left his mouth when he released his derringer from his
sleeve and grabbed his enemy's gun hand. But the mirror Chris was quick. As soon
as Ezra made his move, he was roughly intercepted. The derringer's single bullet
ploughed harmlessly into the wall and Ezra had to wrestle his enemy to the
floor.
* * * *
When a gunshot rang out across the clearing from the old cabin, Chris almost
fell from his horse in his scramble for cover. Fetching up in a thorn-infested
ditch, he watched Ezra's horse, a big bay horse and three mules shake free of
their tethers and take off in the opposite direction.
"See anything?" Buck asked as he joined Chris in the ditch.
Chris shook his head just as a second shot rang out and a hauntingly familiar
figure dressed in black darted out of the cabin. "Clancy!" Chris
bellowed, but the murderer had disappeared behind the cabin before he could take
aim.
"Hell." Chris looked around as the others dismounted to join them.
"Buck, take Nathan and JD and circle left. Me and Josiah'll go right. Vin
lays down cover if we need it. Let's go," Chris finished and took off low
and fast along the right line of meagre cover offered by the riverbank.
Pausing at a large bush, he felt Josiah close up behind him and saw Buck
picking out a line for his group on the opposite side of the clearing. Wanting
to reach the cabin first, Chris picked up the pace so he and Josiah had secured
the immediate proximity of the cabin by the time Buck's group had arrived.
As Chris moved towards the door, he heard someone move within and signalled
Josiah to kick the door open high while he went in low.
It was a bad idea.
Chris realised his mistake a split second later when Ezra almost blew his
head off. For the longest moment, the world seemed frozen as he was trapped in
Ezra's green-eyed glare; the threatening muzzles of his guns were almost an
afterthought.
Then Ezra dropped into the cabin's single rickety chair and holstered his
guns with a hissed curse. "Mr Larabee, if you insist on pursuing a death
wish I'd appreciate it if you took your aspirations elsewhere in the
future." Ezra was still glaring but there was a warmth in his eyes now,
warmth and pain.
"You all right?" Chris asked, noting the pulpy bruise coming up on
Ezra's temple and the distracted way he was shaking his right hand.
"Oh, just a little intense burning agony." Ezra winced over his
angry red palm as Chris glanced around the cabin. "Nothing a bucket of ice
and a few shots won't remedy."
"I heard that." Buck grinned while Nathan moved past to check
Ezra's injuries.
"Where's the gold?" Chris scowled.
Ezra met his gaze over Nathan's shoulder. "I saw no point in losing what
is bound to be a substantial reward to your doppelganger's limited
imagination."
"Ezra," Chris warned low.
"It's under the floor, safe and sound."
"Clancy's heading up the river to the west pass," Vin said, poking
his head around the cabin door. "He's on foot and bleeding," he
continued as Chris joined him outside. "Not much but its slowing him
down."
"All right," Chris said, setting off in pursuit with Vin and Buck
behind him.
They hadn't climbed far up the steep river's edge when Chris noticed the
spots of blood he was following across the rocks were getting heavier. Pausing
to check the positions of Vin and Buck on either side of him, he indicated to
them that Clancy was close. As they nodded their understanding and held their
ground, Chris moved on a little further to the shelter of a rocky outcropping.
There, he carefully peeked over the top -- and a bullet immediately whizzed
overhead.
"Chris!" Clancy called down from another outcropping further up.
"Fancy meeting you here. I thought they'd have hanged you by now."
"Give it up, Clancy," Chris called back. "There's no way
out."
"You're probably right. You're usually right, aren't you? The infallible
Larabee with the lightning shot. Only your not too good at sticking with your
friends, are you, Chris?" Clancy snarled. "But we were never really
friends to you anyway. Not to you. You could make men crap themselves with a
glare. We were just dirt to you."
"What the hell are you talking about?" Chris snapped back.
"Don't lie to me! I know what it's like to be you, to have that power.
How can anyone really be your friend when you can see them for the pathetic
creatures they are?"
"Clancy--"
"I'll prove it!" Clancy called and Chris looked up to see him
standing in front of his outcropping, gun in his holster. "This is me,
Chris, Clancy Boyer. Nothing to be scared off, huh?" he asked as Chris
slowly emerged from his own cover, holstering his own weapon suspiciously.
"When I was me, I got shot trying to take that bank. If it weren't for a
little Mexican whore, I'd be dead right now," he continued as Chris moved
warily towards him. "It took me years to hit upon the answer. You see, I
knew that with you on the team we would have got that gold. There was no doubt
in my mind."
"So you pretended to be me?" Chris asked disbelievingly.
"No, not yet." Clancy grinned. "When we robbed the bank I
acted like you would have, yeah, but I didn't really feel like you, couldn't
really know what it was like to be you until I'd killed my gang -- just like you
did."
"I didn't kill any of you," Chris returned low, barely two strides
away. "Stupidity did."
"Oh!" Clancy laughed. "You see, that's the Chris Larabee we
all love and loathe. So sure you're right all the time."
"I'm not always right but I don't blame my mistakes on anyone
else."
"No, you don't need to when they're all so willing to take the blame
themselves. I've been you, Chris, I've seen the look in people's eyes when they
look at you. When I was you, they looked into my eyes and they knew they were
going to die. They knew their lives meant nothing. When I was you--"
"You aren't me, Clancy. You never were."
"Not yet," Clancy smirked and the world seemed to slow as he
reached for his gun.
His fingers had barely brushed the butt when Chris tackled him hard to the
ground. Clancy yelped out and a breathless second later they were rolling down
the steep, rocky slope towards the murderous torrents of the river rapids.
Locked in a swirl of kicks and punches punctuated by the hard bite of rock,
Chris never saw the water's edge coming until it was too late.
There was an odd moment of weightlessness as they rolled off the rock to fall
into the river. Time seemed suspended as Chris met Clancy's gaze. Then they hit
the freezing water and Clancy was gone.
Unable to swim in the swift, choking cold, Chris tried to move with the
water, gasping breaths and dodging rocks when he could. After getting his
bearings, he used the tremendous strength of the river current to push him
towards the edge. But, by the time he reached the sheer rock bank, the chill had
seeped into his bones and his muscles refused to pull him up.
Fear and frustration welled as the river carried him on. Desperately, he dug
his fingers into a passing crevice, determined to hold on until his other
muscles obeyed him. But he knew they wouldn't; he knew it was over. Pure
stubbornness alone kept him holding on until Buck's face appeared over the rock
edge.
"Got him!" Buck bellowed off behind before wriggling over the edge
as far as he could and reaching down. "Take my hand, Chris."
Try as he might, Chris couldn't get his muscles to move.
"Chris!" Buck pleaded, wriggling a little closer. "Take my
hand."
The fear that Buck would try to reach down further and end up overbalancing
was the spur that drove Chris into action. With all the strength he had left, he
willed his body into movement. His muscles felt as if they hadn't moved for days
and his bones seemed to creak with the strain. But then Buck's warm hand had a
firm grip of his own and he was being hauled up to safety.
Buck didn't complain when Chris landed on top of him like a sopping wet rag;
he just held on tight while they gasped breaths of relief together.
"Next time," Buck finally said, "do us all a favour and just
shoot him!"
Chris shook his head as he eased out of his friend's embrace. "That's
what he wanted."
"Dead's dead," Vin's voice sounded and Chris looked around to find
him nodding down stream. "Yer Clancy feller washed up a little ways down.
Deader than a fence post."
* * * *
Chris dreamed that Ezra was watching him. He dreamed he was asleep in his
cabin, in his bed, and Ezra was standing across the room, leaning against the
wall, watching him. It was an odd dream only made stranger when he opened his
eyes to find he really was lying in bed with Ezra watching him. Just like in the
dream.
But in the dream, the room was dark; in reality, the lazy, late morning sun
was streaking through the window, bathing Ezra in its warm light. Dust motes
danced in the sunlight, giving the illusion of movement, but Ezra, standing
holding his hat in his hands, remained unusually still. For one confused moment,
Chris wasn't sure if any of it was real. Had he been asleep or had Ezra been
there all night? As he elbowed up to blink around the room, Ezra's voice echoed
in the stillness.
"For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face."
Chris frowned back at him.
"Quoth Josiah upon seeing Mr Boyer's corpse," Ezra clarified
softly. "It's taken from Corinthians. A passage about love, I
believe."
"I heard." Chris nodded but didn't add that Josiah never mentioned
where the quote came from. After a moment, he moved to sit up, trying to ignore
the aches and pains of his bruised and abused body. When Ezra continued to watch
him without speaking, Chris finally gave in. "You all right?"
Ezra shrugged and looked down to give his hat a half-hearted brush.
"Just ruminating upon our recent escapade."
"What about it?"
First setting his hat down on the seat of the nearby chair, Ezra slipped out
of his coat and draped it over the back. He then took his silver whisky flask
out of the inside pocket and wandered over to the bottom of the bed. There, he
ran his fingers over the flowing manes of the carved horses that decorated the
foot of the bed frame. "Tell me, Chris, was Mr Boyer aware of your artistic
abilities?"
His attention drawn from the play of Ezra's fine fingers to the wood they
caressed, Chris scowled at the mistaken chip in the design that always drew his
eye. "Didn't do much but raise hell back then."
"And shoot people." Ezra met Chris' gaze. "Let's not forget
your insatiable desire to shoot people who accidentally spill your drink."
He walked around to the opposite side of the bed from Chris. "And, pray,
let us not fail to mention your penchant for robbing banks," he continued
dryly, sitting down on the mattress and toeing off his boots. "For that
would make us truly remiss."
Chris watched Ezra swing his legs up on the bed to settle against the
headboard beside him. "You think this is funny?"
"On the contrary." Ezra crossed his legs and wriggled his toes.
"I generally take death very seriously. Especially my own."
It was only then Chris realised that Ezra was more than a little worse for
wear. His gaze narrowed on the whisky flask in Ezra's hand. "You been
drinking all night?"
"I wouldn't say all night, no." Ezra cocked his head to the side.
"Technically, it was morning."
Chris eyed the gun still buckled to Ezra's hip. "Maybe you should've got
some sleep instead," he concluded, reaching over to take the flask.
Ezra let him have it. "I'm afraid my bed held little appeal," he
said quietly as Chris took a drink of whisky before tucking the flask under the
mattress. "I had no reason to believe my dreams would be restful."
Taking a light hold of Ezra's fingers, Chris placed a gentle kiss on the hot
skin of his burn-reddened palm. "I dreamed about you, not Clancy."
"Really?" Ezra met his gaze with a mischievous grin. "I trust
we were engaged in something deliciously carnal?"
"Not saying," Chris returned with a smirk while reaching over to
unbuckle Ezra's gun belt.
"For shame!" Ezra mock protested while rolling his hips to
accommodate the gun belt's removal. "I believe it is your duty to inform me
of all the salacious details, Chris. I am, after all, participating in these
events in some form."
"Is that so?" Chris re-buckled the belt then hung it over the
bedpost on top of his own. "All right, you first."
"Pardon?"
Chris met Ezra's frown with a smile. "You tell me yours and I'll tell
you mine."
Ezra eyed him with suspicion then folded his arms and turned his attention
back to his toes. "I was wondering if perhaps you might like to accompany
me on an short excursion to Mexico in the near future? Thereby saving the
Mexican government the expense of escorting my monetary reward across the
border."
"Don't see why not." Chris shrugged. "I guess I'll have
stopped aching by then."
"Which reminds me," Ezra murmured, moving in to softly kiss the
particularly nasty bruise at the base of Chris' neck. "I've been wanting to
do that all night," he continued, brushing his lips over the pulse at
Chris' throat. "And that." He kissed up and along Chris' jaw.
As Ezra brought a hand up to his cheek, Chris mirrored the touch on Ezra's
face and met his lips for a light kiss.
When they parted, Ezra thumbed Chris' cheek and quoted softly, "But then
face to face."
Closing his eyes, Chris took Ezra's mouth in a deep, all-consuming kiss.
Their bodies moved eagerly together and they eased down to lie on the mattress
in each other's arms.
"Last dream I had we were in the saloon," Ezra said between kisses.
Chris reluctantly pulled back to assess Ezra's smirk. "The saloon?"
"Truth be told, the patrons rather enjoyed it."
"I bet they did," Chris returned dryly, slipping a hand under
Ezra's shirt.
"Oh, we put on quite a show." Ezra sighed contentedly then
whispered in Chris' ear, "Let me demonstrate."