Virgil Earp was standing in the street outside the Grand Hotel, his back against one of the posts that held up the porch, one heel hooked over the edge of the boardwalk. It was mid-September and the soft desert fall had finally broken the summer heat. Two women wearing eastern clothes came out of the hotel and paused behind Virgil.
One of them said, “What of the Apaches, Marshal?”
Virgil took off his hat and turned toward the women.
“Haven’t seen none in Tombstone, ma’am,” Virgil said.
“We heard that General Carr’s men were slaughtered and that the Apaches are coming this way.”
Virgil smiled. Every time some buck killed a wood hauler the fear of Indian attack raged through Tombstone like dysentery.
“I don’t think so, ma’am. They had a little skirmish, I think. Apaches normally head for Mexico when the Army’s after them. They might pass by here, but they got no good reason to slow themselves down by riding into town.”
“Wasn’t there a meeting at Schieffelin Hall last night?”
“There’s a lot of meetings in Tombstone, ma’am. It’s about as meeting a town as I know,” Virgil said. “No need to worry about the White Mountain Apaches. They got enough troubles without adding in Tombstone.”
The two women hesitated and then moved on as Frank McLaury turned the corner from Fourth Street and stopped next to Virgil.
“Frank,” Virgil said. His voice was easy as it always was, as if he had few problems and all the time in the world.
“I understand that you’re raising up a vigilance committee to hang us boys,” McLaury said.
“You boys?”
“You know,” McLaury said, “us, the Clantons, Ringo, all the cowboys.”
“Remember the time Curley Bill killed White?” Virgil said.
“Everybody does.”
“Who guarded him that night,” Virgil said, “and run him up to Tucson in the morning, so’s to keep the Vigilance Committee from hangin’ him?”
“I guess it was you boys,” McLaury said.
He was staring down at the dirt of Allen Street.
“So maybe we don’t altogether belong to the Vigilance Committee,” Virgil said.
McLaury shook his head, looking at the street.
“You believe we do?” Virgil said.
“I got to believe the man told me that you do,” McLaury said.
“Who told you that we do?”
“Johnny,” McLaury said.
“Johnny Behan?”
“Yes.”
“You don’t have to believe Johnny Behan about much,” Virgil said.
“He’s always been straight with us boys,” McLaury said.
“He’s not straight this time, Frank.”
“You and your brothers come for us, there’ll be shooting. I don’t intend to strangle on a rope.”
McLaury turned sharply and walked away without looking back, as if he had frightened himself a little by what he’d said. Virgil looked after him until McLaury turned into the Oriental a block up and on the other side of Allen Street.