Instead, he said, “What are we going to do about Cato and Rose?”

“How about they don’t bother us, we don’t bother them?” I said.

“They’ll bother us,” Wolfson said.

“Why do you think so?”

“Eamon wants to be the studhorse around here,” Wolfson said.

“And you’re in his way?”

“I guess,” Wolfson said.

“He runs a mine,” I said. “You run this place. How does that put you in his way?”

“Don’t know,” Wolfson said.

“How about the lumber operation?” I said. “Who’s way is that in?”

“Got no idea,” Wolfson said.

I didn’t believe that, either, but I could see that Wolfson had said all he was going to say on the subject, so I didn’t pursue it.

14.

I was about to get in my chair in the late afternoon on a Friday, when one of the clerks from the general store came into the saloon.

“Mr. Wolfson wants you in the store,” he said. “Bring the shotgun.”

The saloon was next to the hotel, and the store was on the other side of the hotel. We walked through the lobby of the hotel to get there. In the store were six men, sodbusters probably, gathered in front of the counter, behind which Wolfson stood with a second clerk. Everybody looked at me when I came in.

One of them said, “And we ain’t gonna get scared off by your bully boy, neither.”

The speaker was a small, dark, wiry man, with a kind of sharp angularity about him, like a farming tool. I stopped inside the door and stood against the wall with the shotgun beside my leg, pointing at the floor.

“Make your point, Redmond,” Wolfson said.

“You got no right takin’ our property,” Redmond said.

“I ain’t taken your property, Redmond.”

“We’re all in this together,” Redmond said. “You take Pete Simpson’s land, it’s like takin’ mine.”

“Simpson owed me money, and he couldn’t pay. What am I supposed to do, just give it to him?”

“Give him time. He’ll pay,” Redmond said. “Thing is, and we all know it here, you don’t want him to pay. You want his land. You want all our land.”

“I’ve already made an arrangement for Pete Simpson to stay on his land.”

“Sure,” Redmond said. “Except now it won’t be his land. It’ll be your land. And he’ll pay you rent.”

“Nobody made him run up a bill he couldn’t pay,” Wolfson said.

I looked at the other sodbusters as Wolfson talked. I wondered which one was Pete Simpson.

“So how’s he supposed to feed his cattle, or plant crops, or feed his kids?” Redmond said.

“You know, Bob,” Wolfson said, “when you come right on down to it, that ain’t my concern. Simpson and I made a business deal and he couldn’t hold up his end of it.”

“You knew he couldn’t when you went into it with him,” Redmond said.

He was a fierce little duck, with small, hard eyes on either side of his big plow-blade nose. Wolfson shook his head.

“We’re done here, Bob,” he said. “This is getting us nowhere.”

“We ain’t leaving till we get some justice,” Redmond said.

Without looking at me, Wolfson said, “Everett.”

I nodded and stood away from the wall I’d been leaning on.

“Time to go,” I said.

All the sodbusters looked at me. Redmond the hardest.

“You can’t shoot us all,” Redmond said.

“Actually,” I said. “I probably can. Got a big scatter, probably get at least two of you, first shot. Long as I don’t get too close.”

Nobody said anything. I moved toward Redmond a step.

“I get too close I’ll just mangle you.”

I stopped.

“’Bout here,” I said. “Then I get you and some people near you.”

A couple of the other sodbusters began to back up. A fat guy with pink cheeks behind Redmond spoke to him.

“Come on, Bob,” he said. “This ain’t the way we want it to go. We ain’t even got guns.”

Somebody else said, “He’s right, Bob.”

And somebody else said, “Come on, Bob.”

And somebody else opened the front door of the store and slowly, one after the other, the sodbusters backed out. Bob Redmond was the last one.

“This ain’t over,” he said to Wolfson. “This ain’t over.”

“Nice work, Everett,” Wolfson said.

I nodded.

“If they hadn’t left would you have shot them?” Wolfson said.

“They left,” I said.

“But if they hadn’t.”

“Sometime maybe they won’t leave, then we’ll find out,” I said.

“It may get rougher,” Wolfson said. “I need to know I can count on you.”

“So far so good?” I said.

“Yeah,” Wolfson said. “I guess so.”

I nodded, and grinned at him.

“Bully boy,” I said, and walked back to the saloon.

15.

Virgil Cole arrived just after sunset on a Monday. He walked into the saloon, a tall man in a dark coat and white shirt wearing a big bone-handled Colt.

He walked to the chair where I was sitting and said, “Evenin’, Everett.”

“Virgil.”

“Thought I might drink some whiskey,” he said. “You care to climb down from there and join me?”

“I do,” I said.

Virgil ordered a bottle.

“Patrick,” I said. “The stuff that Wolfson drinks.”

Patrick nodded. Virgil and I sat at a table, and Patrick brought us a bottle and two glasses. Virgil poured.

“Go easy,” I said. “Might have to shoot somebody.”

“Always a happenstance,” Virgil said.

“Heard you left Appaloosa,” I said.

“I did,” Virgil said.

Wolfson came into the saloon and walked straight to our table.

“Virgil Cole?” he said.

Virgil nodded once.

“I’m Amos Wolfson. I own the place.”

Virgil nodded again.

“I’ve heard a lot about you,” Wolfson said. “I’m very proud to meet you.”

“How do you do?” Virgil said.

Virgil didn’t offer to shake hands. He never shook hands. No reason to let somebody get hold of you, he said to me once.

“What brings you to Resolution?” Wolfson said.

“Come to drink a little whiskey with Everett,” Virgil said.

Wolfson nodded.

“Bottle’s on me,” Wolfson said. “And if you’re interested in a job, I’d be pleased to offer you one.”

Virgil nodded briefly.

“Sure thing,” he said. “Right now I’m just going to drink a little whiskey with Everett.”

“Sure,” Wolfson said, “you bet. Everett, take your time, any trouble one of the bartenders will give a yell.”

I nodded.

“Hope to talk with you soon again, Mr. Cole,” Wolfson said.

“Thanks for the whiskey,” Virgil said.

Wolfson left the table.

“Hard man to look in the eye,” Virgil said.

I smiled.

“True,” I said.

“Why’s he want to hire me?” Virgil said.

“Not exactly sure,” I said. “Seems to feel there’s trouble coming. Maybe with a fella named Eamon O’Malley, runs a copper mine back a ways in the hills.”

“That why he hired you?” Virgil said.

“I don’t know, I was looking for work. Maybe he just needed a lookout. Maybe he was planning ahead.”

Virgil splashed a little more whiskey in his glass. He held the bottle. I shook my head. He nodded.

“Had any trouble?”

“Had to shoot a local gunny named Wickman,” I said. “Worked for O’Malley.”

Virgil nodded.

“Anything come of that?” he said.

“Nope.”

“Any law here?”

“Not really,” I said. “I’m told the sheriff sends a line rider down here every few months. I ain’t seen any.”

“O’Malley replace the fella you shot?”

“Cato and Rose,” I said.

Virgil sat back in his chair a little.

“My, my,” he said.

“My thought exactly,” I said.

“You talk with them?”

“Yep.”

“Anything come of it?”

“Nope.”

Virgil appeared to suck on one of his front teeth for a moment.

“Cato and Rose,” he said.

“My, my,” I said.

We drank a little more whiskey together.

Then Virgil said, “What time’s breakfast.”

“Kitchen opens up at five-thirty,” I said.


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