With cat like
grace Vin stalked towards the slight structure nestled against the trees,
his Winchester rested in his right hand. Not a very religious man, Vin
was still grateful for all the help they could get and gave his own
silent thanks for Josiah discovery. It was mid-morning before he had led
the last trooper through the narrow ravine that opened into the lush
green meadow surrounded by the high canyon walls. A creek ran behind the
shed, feeding into the canyon river where JD and a bunch of the troopers
were staked out to cover covering the counterfeiters’ escape route. Vin
saw movement through the window and cocked his rifle. A hand on his
shoulder made him freeze as a voice whispered in his ear, “We want them
alive, Tanner.” Major Winslow said had followed the tracker.
“Yessss… Sir,” Vin said in a low voice as his finger released
the trigger. His voice held a new respect for the soldier. Turning Vin
studied the major and was surprised at the change. The major was no
longer the raw, quiet aide that followed the colonel’s orders. No, Vin
thought, this soldier was a leader of men; you could see the determined
battle worn gleam in his eyes and the tight stretch of his mouth.
“We want Shellburne alive at any cost,” Winslow stated, his voice
laced with loathing for the mad dog. His tone softened when he added,
“Tyrone, should be the one to put a bullet through the mad man’s heart. We
all owe him that much.”
Vin was about to ask who the hell
was Tyrone, when a voice bellowed out, “You, in the shed. You’re
surround. Come out with your hands in the air.” Vin and the major turned their
heads towards the direction of the voice to see the colonel standing a
few yards from the shed, out in the open. A little way off to the
right, Buck and Josiah had taken cover behind a cluster of boulders, peeking
around shaking their heads. Half of C Troop was dismounted, rifles
drawn, fanned out surrounding the front side of the shed.
“Is
the Colonel insane?” Vin uttered.
“N,” Winslow told the tracker
with a wolfish grin on his face before he advanced closer to the shed,
taking cover behind the corral full of horses. Vin reached his side as
the soldier pulled out his revolver.
“I’m only going to ask
one more time. Throw your guns out the door and come out with you hands
in the air. You have five minute before we start shooting.” Colonel
Thomason pulled his timepiece from his vest pocket and watched the
minutes tick by; one, two not a peep out of the shed. The Colonel put his
timepiece away and slowly took off his blue coat and neatly handed it
towards the soldiers behind him. A young trooper ran and grabbed the coat,
then turned and backed away. Thomason took out his timepiece again,
checking the time. His eyes darkened with anticipation for the coming
battle.
“Ahhh…the fun begins,” Winslow said out loud as he saw
the colonel take off his uniform coat. The major turned and said to Vin,
“Here hold this,” as he handed his revolver over to the tracker. Vin
was surprised when the major did the same as the colonel and took off his
uniform coat, leaving him only in his blue checker shirt and his blue
pants. “Thank you,” Winslow said to him as he took the revolver back.
Vin stared between the colonel and the major, both wore a blue
ribbon around their upper left arm. A flag waving in the wind caught
Vin’s eyes as a trooper walked up and stood by the colonel; he too wore a
blue ribbon. The red and white flag of the First Division Cavalry Corps
flapped in the wind. Soon, two more men carrying the flags of the
Second and Third Division stood on the other side of Thomason.
“What’s going on Major?” Vin asked, his voice low and deadly. Staring at
the color flags, Vin knew C Troop wasn’t just any ordinary regiment of
troopers. He may have been young during the war, but every soldier, blue
or gray knew what a blue ribbon around the left arm meant. They were
the Blue Ghost’s men, his regiment.
“Justice,” Winslow stated,
balancing against the corral and raising his revolver as the first shot
was fired from the shed.
The return fire was deafening as the
soldiers shouted and ran for cover. A new volley erupted out of the
shed. A bullet ripped across Thomason’s shirt, leaving a bloody crease.
The Union troopers returned fire, ripping holes through the shed door and
shattering the glass windows.
“Hold your fire! Hold your
fire!” Winslow yelled out to his boys. Buck drug the wounded colonel back
toward the boulder and handed him over to Josiah.
The preacher
immediately wrapped his scarf around the colonel’s arm, controlling the
flow of blood.
“Watch out,” Vin yelled down at Winslow as he
pushed him out of the way of a bullet flying through the air. Out of the
corner of his eye, Vin saw one of the outlaws creeping out the side
window. Taking aim, Vin shot the outlaw, the man dropped to the ground.
“Did you kill him?” Winslow asked.
“Winged him in
the arm,” Vin returned.
“Too bad. If he sticks his head up
again, kill him,” Winslow ordered the tracker. Vin shrugged his shoulder, a
confused look on his face. Over the new volley of gunfire, the major
answered Vin unspoken question. “Shellburne is the only one we need
alive, the others already killed four of my men. So they forfeited their
lives in my book.” Winslow turned a rigid stare back to the tracker and
added, “Shellburne is slim, about forty, blond haired, graying around
the temples. Drop any other outlaw. I don’t want any more of my men
killed.” Both men turned their guns toward the movement behind the
shed.
“Don’t fire…don’t fire. That’s JD,.” Buck called, crawling
towards them.
“What’s that crazy kid trying to do? Get himself
killed?” Winslow growled back. All three men watched as JD climbed the
back of the shed, slipping once before he made it to the roof. His left
hand held a blue coat, soaking wet from the creek. JD crawled on his
belly until he reached the chimney. Careful not to burn himself, he
pulled himself up and straddled the chimney. Slowly he climbed to the top
and shoved the soaking coat down the stack, clogging the airway. Billows
of white smoke drifted out of the window and under the door. The door
soon slammed open and the outlaws rushed out, shooting as they attempted
to get to their horses.
Vin shot the dark haired outlaw
headed in their direction, The man dropped dead to the ground, blood flowing
from his chest. JD shot the next one through the heart as the outlaw
turned to fire up at the roof.
“JD! Get off the roof,” Buck
shouted, giving cover fire as JD slid down the roof, both guns blazing in
his hands. At the edge, the kid jumped and rolled when he hit the
ground.
“Buck watch out!” JD screamed as he fired at the outlaw
that had the womanizer in his sights. The outlaw fell to his knees with a
yell, cradling his bloody gun hand.
“Drop it!” Josiah’s husky
voice called out. He had the other two outlaws in his gun sight. Both
men dropped their guns and raised their hands in the air.
Winslow stood, gazing out among the men, before turning to say, “Tanner,
check the man over there against the shed. See if he is still alive.”
Vin nodded and cautiously walked over to the outlaw. Both the major and
Buck hastened over to the second outlaw that JD had dropped. Buck
kicked the dead man over. “Don’t know this one,” Winslow told Buck. Not
wasting time, he stepped over the body and headed towards the first outlaw
the kid had shot from the roof. Winslow bent down and turned the dead
man over. A grimace stretched across his face. “Where the hell was
Shellburne?”
“Major!” Vin called out, “the one by the
window is dead. Where’s Shellburne?” Vin’s heart turned cold at the
expression on the major’s face.
“Vin, get over here.” Buck called
over to the tracker as he reached down and pulled something out of one
of the outlaw’s pants. Vin reached Buck’s side as the womanizer slipped
Chris’ colt in his belt and then with a snarl threw his weight at the
outlaw reaching for the man’s neck.
“Wilmington, stop!”
Colonel Thomason shouted. Buck soon found his arms held as Vin and Josiah
dragged him back from the outlaw. “Where’s Shellburne?” the colonel
demanded as he advanced, holding his left arm between blood soaked fingers.
“Major Winslow, report!”
“Sir, three dead and one wounded,”
the major answered. Turning he added, looking at JD, “Good shooting kid.”
JD felt his face turning red and he turned to stare at the ground,
shuffling his feet.
“Where Shellburne?” Thomason demanded
again.
“Sir,” Major Winslow turned, facing his commander and the four
peacekeepers with a painful expression, “He’s not here,” he finally
answered. A young trooper ran over and handed the major a package wrapped
in brown paper. Winslow in turn, handed the package over to the
colonel.
“What the hell do you mean he’s not here,” Buck heatedly
shouted as the colonel opened the wrapped package. Silver plates tumbled
out of the paper.
“We have them,” Thomason said to his men,
holding up the plates.
“Colonel we don’t care about the
plates,” Vin said in a low voice before he turned his face toward the
direction of the town. “Chris is back in town with only Nathan and Ezra,” he
reminded the other three peacekeepers.
“Damn, Damn,” Buck
muttered as he followed Vin towards their horses, Josiah and JD hot on his
heels.
~~~~~~~~~
It was late afternoon before Nathan and
Ezra arrived in town with Chris riding between them. Nathan was worried;
the cool morning air hadn’t been good for Chris’ weak lungs. By the
time they reached Four Corners, Chris was covered in sweat and leaning
forward on the saddle, painful coughs emanating from deep down in his
chest. Nathan pulled Ginger’s reins to the right, pointing her towards
the livery stables. However, Chris dug his spurs into Diablo’s flank
guiding the black towards the blonde woman coming out of the Clarion.
Mary studied the frail looking gunslinger; he seemed so
fragile as perspiration poured off his pale, gray complexion. Diablo came to
a halt. Chris swung his leg over the saddle and as his right foot hit
the ground, his knee buckled under the weight. Mary’s fingers dug into
the post as Chris grabbed the horn, stopping his body from sliding to
the ground. After a dreadful bout of coughing, Chris leaned his cheek
against Diablo’s neck trying to catch his breathe as his lungs desperately
sought to release the painful burning in his chest.
“Chris,
slow even breaths or you’re going to pass out,” Nathan told the
gunslinger as his hand rubbed Chris’ back in a circling manner, trying to
smooth the tension out of the gunslinger’s shoulders.
“Mary,”
Chris choked out between coughs, “You alright?” His glossy eyes searched
her face. For a moment the gunslinger’s vision turned to the past and
Chris thought it was his mother standing in front of him. Her beautiful
blonde hair hanging around her shoulders as she stood there in her
green calico dress. Chris blinked and raised a shaking hand to rub his
eyes. Taking a step, he staggered against Nathan.
Mary gasped
as the sun hit Chris’ blond hair sticking out beneath his black hat. His
shoulders trembled as he stubbornly shook off Nathan’s hand on his arm.
“I’m fine, Chris,” Mary finally answered. She was confused - her mind
flashed back to that dreadful day many years ago. Mary looked the
gunslinger over, his feverish eyes with their glossy expression reminded her
of the young lieutenant. Could Chris be...could he be her young
lieutenant? “Nathan, bring Chris inside,” her soft voice whispered.
“I don’t need help,” said Chris before a new cough racked his chest.
Nathan turned toward Ezra and handed him Diablo’s reins, before walking
over and grabbing his medical supplies from his saddlebag and hustling
to move behind the gunslinger staggering into the Clarion.
Nathan called back over his shoulder to Ezra, “Hurry back. I’m going to
need your help.” Ezra glanced towards Chris’ back and nodded, leading
the big black towards the livery. Chris was leaning heavily on Mary’s
desk as Nathan walked in. Taking the gunslinger’s arm, the healer directed
him towards the back room. Slowly the two make their way to Mary’s
bedroom where she waited with the bed turned down. “Mary, you sure about
this?” Nathan asked.
“Nathan, don’t be a fool. Chris will never
make it up those stairs to your room.”
Nathan helped Chris sit
on the bed; wearily the gunslinger stared at the wall. Mary bent down
and took off Chris’ boots placing them beside the bed. She moved to help
Nathan lift Chris’ legs when Nathan’s voice stopped her, “Ahhh…Mary. I
think it’s best if you let me handle Chris for the moment.” Mary’s face
turned scarlet as blood rushed to her cheeks. She backed out the door,
her eyes full of concern for the gunslinger. “Come on Chris let’s get
you out of these sweaty clothes.” Nathan moved towards the gunslinger.
“Can’t stay here,” Chris’s raw voice uttered.
“Now
don’t you argue with me.” A knock on the door stopped Nathan from saying
anything more.
Mary’s face peeked around the door, holding a
glass full of liquid. “I thought you might need this.” She handed
Nathan a cup full of hot tea. At Nathan’s hesitation, she added, “My mama’s
cure for everything. Don’t worry Chris will drink it.” She glanced
towards the bed before stepping back out the door.
After taking
the glass out of Mary’s hand, Nathan sniffed the tea and a grin tugged
on his lips at Mary’s mother’s cure. Nathan walked over and placed the
cup against Chris’s trembling lips. “Here Chris drink this up.” The
gunslinger instantly drank the liquid laced with whiskey. The hot liquid
had the desired effect and soon the gunslinger’s head was hitting the
soft lavender scented pillows. “Oh no you don’t. Help me get your
clothes off first,” Nathan told the sleepy man, sitting him back up. Chris
fumbled with the buttons on his shirt as his head sunk lower and lower
towards his chest.
“No,” Chris mumbled as Nathan reached to
unbuckle his pants. “Mary’s room, not proper.” Again Nathan attempted to
unbutton the gunslinger’s black pants. “No, go home,” a deep rattling
cough escaped Chris’s lips. “Take me home.”
“I see our luminary
leader is in his usual splendid mood,” Ezra remarked as he came through
the bedroom door.
“Stop your complaining and get over here
and help me with him,” Nathan ordered. Nathan and Ezra soon had Chris
neatly nestled under the blankets in spite of the gunslinger’s hindrance.
Chris’ aching body snuggled towards the warmth as he drifted off to
sleep.
A few minutes later, Ezra stood outside the Clarion,
examining the tall man entering the saloon. He had four hours before he had
to relieve Nathan. With a gleam in his eyes, he made his way across the
street heading for the saloon and a good game of poker. He had to win
money to pay Tiny for hunting down those little piglets. Besides if he
got caught, he could always say that he was keeping an eye out on the
tall easterner. Ezra grinned in anticipation as he went through the
double doors, his gold tooth sparkling in the light.