“Name’s Virgil Cole,” Virgil said. “Big fella with the siege gun is Everett Hitch.”
“Want a drink?” the cowboy said.
He was young, probably no more than twenty-five, and he wore a big Colt with a black handle in a low-cut holster tied down on his right thigh.
“No,” Virgil said. “We’d like you boys to leave.”
“Leave?” the young cowboy said.
I moved away from Virgil, so that I was close to the saloon wall on Virgil’s right. He moved left, against the bar.
“Correct,” Virgil said.
The young cowboy jumped down from the bar and faced Virgil.
“What happens if we don’t leave?” he said.
“We shoot some of you,” Virgil said.
I thumbed the hammers back on the eight-gauge. It was a touch of theater, the sound of the hammers snicking back. We’d done it a hundred times before. But I also knew that Virgil was ready to shoot. He didn’t seem to have changed position, but I knew that he was balanced, knees bent a little, shoulders relaxed. He looked steadily at the young cowboy. It was a hard look to meet. But the young cowboy had the wild eyes you see sometimes in bucking horses, and he held the look. I knew Virgil didn’t care if the kid held his look or not. Virgil was in the place he goes to when it might be time to shoot. Everything registered and nothing mattered.
“You gonna shoot all of us?” the kid said.
“Depends,” Virgil said.
“On what?” the kid said.
The other cowboys had gathered behind him. All of them were heeled.
“On what you all do,” Virgil said. “You pull on me and I’ll kill you.”
“All of us,” the kid said.
“You first,” Virgil said. “Everett will get some with the scatter gun. Then we’ll see.”
The kid looked around for a moment at the other cowboys.
“Wanna go at ’em?” he said.
Somebody behind him said, “Lazy L don’t back down from nobody.”
The kid nodded. He looked back at Virgil.
He was going to try it.
You do this enough you can sense it. I knew he was going to try. Virgil knew. We maybe both knew before the kid really did.
The kid’s shoulders twitched, and Virgil drew his gun and had the hammer back before the kid reached his holster. I had the eight-gauge at my shoulder. We were far enough apart so that they’d have to decide which of us to shoot at.
The kid froze with his fingertips on the black butt of his Colt.
“Jesus Christ,” the kid said.
“Might want to back down from this one,” Virgil said.
“How’d you do that?” the kid said.
“Done it before,” Virgil said.
“For crissake, you didn’t even move fast,” the kid said.
“Fast enough,” Virgil said.
The kid slowly moved his hand away from his gun.
“I’m really fast,” the kid said.
The tension had gone out of the room.
“Sure,” Virgil said.
“You coulda killed me easy,” the kid said.
“Sure,” Virgil said.
The kid started slowly toward the door. The other cowboys followed.
Virgil turned slowly as they moved. I did, too, with the shotgun still at my shoulder.
When they were gone, Virgil holstered his Colt. I lowered the eight-gauge.
“Lazy L,” I said. “Could be General Laird’s place.”
“Could be,” Virgil said.
“If it is,” I said, “they might be getting tired of us.”
“Might,” Virgil said.
“If they are,” I said, “I s’pose they’ll let us know.”
“Probably,” Virgil said.
He found a couple of unbroken glasses on the bar and poured us each a drink. We were sipping it when the saloon doors opened a crack and Posner looked in.
“Everybody’s gone?” he said.
“They are,” Virgil said. “Care for a drink?”
13
IT WAS RAINING, a nice, straight-down summer rain. We sat on the covered front porch after supper and drank coffee and watched it. Allie and Laurel were still cleaning up inside.
“What was that we ate for supper?” Virgil said.
“Dinner,” I said. “Allie told me it’s properly called dinner.”
“Whatever we call it, it was heavy going,” Virgil said.
“I think what we ate might once have been a tough old chicken,” I said.
“Think it was,” Virgil said. “But what was in the pot with it?”
“Don’t know,” I said. “Coffee ain’t much, either.”
“Gotta put a lot of sugar in it,” Virgil said.
“Whiskey might help.”
“Suspicion it would,” Virgil said. “You got the jug over by you?”
“I do.”
Virgil held his cup out toward me.
“Whyn’t your pour a little into this coffee for me,” Virgil said.
I poured some for both of us. The rain smelled very clean, and things seemed fresh.
“Kid in the saloon today,” I said. “Was really interested in whether he could kill you.”
Virgil nodded.
“Then when he couldn’t, he was just as interested in why he couldn’t,” I said.
“Wants to be a pistolero,” Virgil said.
“He needs to get better,” I said.
“Does,” Virgil said, and sipped from his cup.
Allie and Laurel came out of the house with coffee and sat down with us.
“You drinking whiskey in that coffee?” Allie said.
“We are,” Virgil said. “Hard to drink it without some.”
“Oh, Virgil,” she said. “You know you don’t mean it.” Virgil looked at me.
“ ’Course he don’t,” I said.
“Everett,” Allie said. “You might pour a splash for me and Laurel.”
I poured some into Allie’s coffee.
“Go easy on the child,” Allie said.
“Sure,” I said.
“I met Mrs. Callico this afternoon, at a church meeting. A fine lady. Educated back east. Very good manners.”
“Like you,” Virgil said.
“Oh, Virgil, you know I don’t have an eastern education,” Allie said.
“You’re a fine lady, anyway,” Virgil said.
“Oh, Virgil,” she said. “That’s so sweet.”
Virgil smiled. The rain was making the soft noise rain can make, when it’s right.
“What are you going to do about Pony?” Allie said.
“Nothing,” Virgil said.
“I think you should tell him to move on,” Allie said.
“Thought he had four friends here,” Virgil said.
“Of course he does, Virgil. But he’s trouble,” Allie said. “For all of us. I think you should tell him.”
“Ain’t gonna do that, Allie,” Virgil said.
“It’s not him so much,” Allie said. “It’s that brother. I don’t like him. I don’t like the way he looks at me. And you know Laurel and Indians. Poor child won’t even look at him.”
“Ain’t afraid of Pony,” Virgil said.
“He ain’t all Indian,” Allie said.
Virgil stood and walked to Laurel’s chair.
“You afraid of Kha-to-nay?” Virgil said, and bent down to her.
She whispered in his ear. He nodded and whispered back to her. She whispered again. Virgil smiled.
“Says she is scared of Kha-to-nay,” he said. “But she knows Pony won’t let him hurt her.”
“Mrs. Callico invited me to have tea with her sometime,” Allie said.
“That’s nice,” Virgil said.
“We live here,” Allie said. “We own a house. It is my chance to have a regular life, Virgil.”
“Sure,” Virgil said. “I want that for you, Allie.”
“Then get rid of Pony,” she said. “And his brother.” Virgil shook his head. Laurel made a sound. All of us looked at her. It might have been the first sound she’d made since we got her. She made the sound again and shook her head violently.
Allie began to cry.
“Nobody understands,” she said. “Nobody understands me.”
“We do,” Virgil said. “All of us know you want to be a fine churchgoing lady. And all of us know that being friendly with a breed carries a knife in his moccasin don’t help that.”
Allie looked up with tears on her face.
“Then send him away,” Allie said.
Laurel made her noise again.
“Can’t,” Virgil said.
Allie stood with her hands covering her face and her shoulders shaking, and rushed into the house.
Virgil looked at me silently for a minute.