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The Last Gunfighter: The Drifter

by William W. Johnstone

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Copyright (c)2000 by William W. Johnstone


_To Debbie and Dent Sigh_

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*One*

"Boy," the older man said, "I strongly advise you not to pull on me."

It seemed to those in the barroom there was not only a great weariness to the man's voice, but also a great sadness. Some of the spectators wondered about that. A few thought they knew why the sadness was there.

Outside, the early spring winds still had a bite to them on the late-afternoon day.

"You're nothin' but a damned old washed-up piece of coyote crap," the young man replied.

_Old is right_, the man thought. _Both in body and soul_.

"And you're a coward, too!" the young man added.

The older man smiled, but his eyes turned chilly. "Boy, you should really learn to watch your mouth."

The young man laughed. "You gonna make me do that, you old has-been?"

"I would rather not have to do that, boy. Besides, that's something your mother and father should have taught you."

"I never paid no mind to what they said."

"Obviously."

"Huh? Old man, you talk funny -- you know that? You tryin' to insult me or something?"

"Not at all, boy. Just agreeing with you."

"I don't like you, old man. I mean, I don't like you at all. I think you're all talk and no do. And I don't believe all them stories told 'bout you, neither. I don't think you've kilt no twenty or thirty men."

"I haven't."

"I knowed it!"

"Closer to forty."

"You're a damn liar!"

"Boy, go home. Leave me alone."

"Naw. I'm gonna make you pull on me, Morgan. Then I'm gonna shoot you in the belly so's I can stand right here and watch you beg and cry and holler like a whipped pup 'til you die. That's what I'm gonna do."

"Is that really Frank Morgan?" a man in the crowd whispered to a friend.

"That's him."

"I thought he was a lot older."

"'Nuff talk, old man!" the young man yelled. "Grab iron, you old buffalo fart!"

Frank Morgan did not move. He stood and watched the much younger man. "If you want a shooting, boy, you're going to have to start it."

"Then I will, by God!"

Frank waited.

"You think I won't?"

"I hope you don't, kid."

"I ain't no kid!"

"Pardon me?"

"I'm known around here as Snake."

"There is a certain resemblance."

Someone in the crowd laughed at that.

"What?" the young man yelled.

"I was just agreeing with you," Morgan said.

"Yore gonna die, Morgan!"

"We all die, kid. Some long before their time. And I'm afraid you're about to prove me right."

The kid cussed and grabbed iron.

Morgan shot him before the kid could even clear leather -- shot him two times, the shots so close together they sounded as one. The kid's feet flew out from under him and he hit the floor, two holes in the center of his chest.

"Good God Almighty!" a man in the crowd said.

"He's as fast as he ever was," another man stage-whispered.

"You know Morgan?"

"I seen him once back in seventy-four, I think it was. He shot them two Burris brothers."

It was now April, 1888.

Frank slowly holstered his .45, then walked the few yards that had separated the two men. He stood for a moment looking down at the dying young man.

"I thought ... all that talk 'bout you was ... bull-crap," the young man gasped. Blood was leaking from his mouth.

"I wish it was," Frank said, then turned away from the bloody scene and stepped up to the bar. "A whiskey, please," he told the barkeep.

"I thought you only drank coffee, Mr. Morgan."

"Occasionally I will take a drink of hard liquor."

"Yes, sir. Mr. Morgan?"

Frank looked at the man.

"The sheriff and his deputies will be here shortly. Gunplay is not looked on with favor in this town."

"In other words, get out of town?"

"It was just a friendly suggestion. No offense meant."

"I know. None taken. Thank you." _Same old story_, Frank thought. _Different piano player, same song_.

Frank took a sip of whiskey.

"The kid's dead," someone said. "Reckon I ought to get the undertaker?"

"Not yet," a man said from the batwings.

Frank cut his eyes. Three men had stepped quietly into the saloon -- the sheriff and two of his deputies. The two deputies were carrying Greeners -- sawed-off, double-barreled shotguns.

No one with any sense wanted to take a chance when facing Frank Morgan.

Frank was standing alone at the bar, slowly taking tiny sips from his glass of whiskey.

"Frank Morgan," the sheriff said.

"Do I know you, Sheriff?" Frank asked. "I don't recall ever meeting you."

"I know you from dime novels, Morgan."

"I see."

"Them writers want to make you a hero. But I know you for what you really are."

"What am I, Sheriff?"

"A damn, kill-crazy outlaw."

"I've never stolen a thing in my life, Sheriff."

"You say."

Frank set the glass down on the bar and turned to face the sheriff. "That's right, Sheriff. I say."

The deputies raised the shotguns.

Frank smiled. "Relax, boys," he told them. "You'll get no trouble from me."

"You just can't keep that pistol in leather, can you, Morgan?" the sheriff said.

"I was pushed into this fight, Sheriff. Ask anyone here."

"I 'spect that's so, Morgan. The kid was a troublemaker, for a fact."

"And now?"

"You finish your drink and get out of town."

"I've got a very tired horse, Sheriff, with a loose shoe. He's at the livery now. You don't like me -- that's all right. But my horse has done nothing to you."

The sheriff hesitated. "All right, Morgan. You can stay in the stable with your horse. Get that shoe fixed first thing come the morning and then get the hell gone from here."

"Thank you. How about something to eat?"

"Get you some crackers and a pickle from the store 'cross the street. That'll have to do you."

"Crackers and a pickle," Frank muttered. "Well, I've eaten worse."

"Understood, Morgan?" the sheriff pressed.

"Perfectly, Sheriff."

"Some of you men get the kid over to the undertaker," the sheriff ordered. "Tell him he can have whatever's in the kid's pockets for his fee."

"Them guns of hisn, too?" a man asked.

"Yes. The guns, too."

Frank turned back to the bar and slowly sipped his drink. The sheriff walked over and leaned against the bar, staring at him.

"Something on your mind, Sheriff?" Frank asked.

"What's your tally now, Morgan? A hundred? A hundred and fifty dead by your gun?"

Frank smiled. "No, Sheriff. Not nearly that many. The kid there was the first man to brace me in several years."

"How'd you manage that, Morgan?"

"I stayed away from people. I mostly rode the lonesome."

"What made you stop here?"

"My horse. And I needed supplies. I lost my packhorse and supplies to some damned renegade young Indians last week. Down south of here."

"I heard about that. Got a wire from a sheriff friend of mine down that way. A posse went after those young bucks and cornered them. Killed them all."

Frank nodded his head. "They got what they deserved. That was a good horse they killed."

"Wilson at the livery's got a good packhorse he'd like to sell, if you've got the money. I don't think he wants much for him."

"I've got some money."

"I'll amble over there and drop a word on him to let you have the horse for his lowest price. Then you get supplies and ride on."

"Thanks, Sheriff."

Without another word the sheriff turned and walked away, his deputies following.

The swamper mopped up the blood on the floor and sprinkled sawdust over the spot.

The saloon settled down to cards and low talk. The excitement was over. Killings were rare in the town, but nobody had really liked the kid who called himself Snake. He had been nothing but a smart-aleck troublemaker. He would not be missed.

* * * *

Frank Morgan pulled out early the next morning, after provisioning up at the general store. The man at the livery had tossed in a packsaddle for a couple of dollars, and Frank brought supplies, lashed them down, and pulled out before most of the town's citizens were up emptying the chamber pot.

Frank took it easy that morning, stopping often just to look around. It had been years since he'd been in this part of New Mexico territory, and things had changed somewhat. Hell of a lot more people, for one thing. Seemed like there were settlers nearly everywhere he looked.

For his nooning, Frank settled down in the shade by a fast-running little creek that came straight down from the mountains and had him a sandwich the lady at the general store had been kind enough to fix for him ... for a dime.

Frank still wondered about the change in attitude of the local sheriff the day before. Some lawdogs could be real bastards, while others were fairly decent sorts once you got past all the bluster. But it had been many a year since any badge-toter had gotten too lippy with Frank Morgan. One tried to shove Frank around down in Texas -- back around '75, he thought it was. Wasn't any gunplay involved that day, but Frank had sure cleaned the loudmouth's plow with his fists.

Frank ate his sandwich and then rested for a time while his horses grazed. Then he stood up and stretched. Felt good. Frank was just a shade over six feet, lean-hipped, broad-shouldered, with smooth, natural musculature. At forty-five years old, Frank was still a powerful man. Not the hoss he used to be, but close enough. His thick hair was dark brown, graying now at the temples. Pale gray eyes.

Frank wore a .45 Colt Peacemaker, right side, low and tied down. He carried another Colt Peacemaker in his saddlebags. A Winchester rifle was stuck down in a saddle boot. On the left side of his belt he carried a long-bladed knife in a sheath. He occasionally used that knife to shave with. He was as handy with it as he was with a pistol.

Frank reluctantly left the peaceful setting of the creek and the shade and rode on slowly toward the north. He did not have a specific destination in mind; he was just rambling.

Frank had worked the winter in a line shack, looking after a rancher's cattle in a section of the high country. He still had most of his winter's wages.

Frank did have a dream: a small spread of his own in a quiet little valley with good graze and water. He occasionally opened a picture book in his mind and gazed at the dream, but the mental pages were slightly torn and somewhat tattered now. The dream had never materialized. Twice Frank had come close to having that little spread. Both times his past had caught up with him, and the local citizens in the nearest town had frozen him out. Nobody wanted the West's most notorious gunfighter as a neighbor.

Frank let part of his mind wander some as he rode, the other part remained vigilant. For the most part, Indian trouble was just about all over, except for a few young bucks who occasionally broke from the reservations and caused trouble. Those incidents usually didn't last long, and almost always ended with a pile of dead Indians.

The Wild West was settling down, slowly but surely.

Bands of outlaws and brigands still roamed the West, though, robbing banks and rustling cattle.

In the northern part of New Mexico it was the gangs of Ned Pine and Victor Vanbergen that were causing most of the trouble. Frank Morgan knew both men, and they hated him. Both had been known to go into wild outbursts of anger at just the mention of his name.

Frank had, at separate times, backed each of the outlaw leaders down and made them eat crow in front of witnesses. They both were gutsy men, but they weren't stupid. Neither one was about to draw on Frank Morgan.

There were several names in the West that caused brave men to sit down and shut up. Smoke Jensen, Falcon MacCallister, Louis Longmont, and Frank Morgan were the top four still living.

Ned Pine and Victor Vanbergen had started their careers in crime when just young boys, and both had turned into vicious killers. Their gangs numbered about twenty men each -- more from time to time, less at others -- and they were not hesitant to tackle entire small towns in their wild and so far unstoppable pursuit of money and women ... in that order.

* * * *

Frank Morgan's life as a gunfighter had begun when he was in his midteen years and working as a hand on a ranch in Texas. One of the punchers had made Frank's life miserable for several months by bullying him whenever he got the chance ... which was often. One day Frank got enough of the cowboy's crap and hit him flush in the face with a piece of a broken singletree. When the puncher was able to see again and the swelling in his nose had gone down some, he swore to kill the boy. Young Frank Morgan, however, had other plans.

The puncher told Frank to get a gun 'cause the next time he saw him he was going to send him to his Maker.

Frank had an old piece of a pistol that he'd been practicing with when he got the money to buy ammunition. It was 1860, and times were hard, money scarce.

That day almost thirty years back was still vivid in Frank's mind.

He was so scared he had puked up his breakfast of grits and coffee.

Then he stepped out of the bunkhouse to meet his challenger, pistol in hand.

There was no fast draw involved in that duel. That would come a few years later.

The cowboy cursed at Frank and fired just as Frank stepped out of the bunkhouse, the bullet howling past Frank's head and knocking out a good-size splinter of wood from the rough doorframe. Frank damn near peed his underwear.

Young Frank acted out of pure instinct. Before the abusive puncher could fire again, Frank had lifted and cocked his pistol. He shot the puncher in the center of his chest. The man stumbled back as the .36-caliber chunk of lead tore into his flesh.

"You piece of turd!" the cowboy gasped, still on his boots. He lifted and cocked his pistol.

Frank shot him again, this time in the face, right between the eyes.

The puncher hit the hard ground, dead.

Frank walked over him and looked down at the dead man. The open empty eyes stared back at him. He struggled to fight back sickness, and managed to beat it. Frank turned away from the dead staring eyes.

"Luther had kin, boy," the foreman told him. "They'll be comin' to avenge him. You best get yourself set for that day. Make some plans."

"But I didn't start this!" Frank said. "_He_ did." Frank pointed to the dead man.

"That don't make no difference, boy. I'll see you get your time, and a little extra."

"Am I leavin'?" Frank asked.

"If you want to stay alive, son. I know Luther had four brothers, and they're bad ones. They will come lookin' for you."

"They live close?"

"About a day's ride from here. And they got to be notified. So, you get your gear rolled up, son, and get ready to ride. I'll go see the boss."

"I'm right here," said the owner of the spread. "I was having my mornin' time in the privy." He paused for a moment and looked down at Luther. "Well, he was a good hand, but deep down just like his worthless brothers -- no damn good." He looked at Frank. "You kill him, boy?"

"Yes, sir."

"Luther ain't gonna be missed by many. Only his sorry-assed brothers, I reckon. You got to go, boy. Sorry, but that's the way it has to be. For your sake. You get your personals together and then come over to the house. You got time comin', and I'll see you get some extra."

"I ain't even got a horse to call my own, Mr. Phillips," Frank said. "Or a saddle."

"You will," the rancher told him. "Get movin', son. I'll see you in a little while."

Frank rode out an hour later. He had his month's wages -- twelve dollars -- and twenty dollars extra Mr. Phillips gave him. He still had twenty-five dollars he'd saved over his time at the ranch, too. Frank felt like he was sort of rich. He had a sack of food Mrs. Phillips had fixed for him. He was well-mounted, for the foreman had picked him out a fine horse and a good saddle and saddlebags.

The other hands had gathered around to wish him farewell.

"You done the world a favor, Frankie," one told him.

"I never did like that sorry bastard," another told him.

"Here you go, Frankie," another puncher said, holding out Luther's guns. "You throw away that old rust pot you been totin' around and take these. You earned 'em, and you'll probably damn shore need them."

"What do you mean, Tom?" Frank asked.

"Frankie ... Luther was a bad one. He's killed four or five men that we know of with a pistol. He's got himself a reputation as a gunman. There'll be some who'll come lookin' to test you."

"Test me?"

"Call you out, boy," the foreman said. "You're the man who killed Luther Biggs. They'll be some lookin' to kill you. Stay ready."

"I don't want no reputation like that," Frank protested.

"Your druthers don't cut no ice now, boy. You got the name of a gunman. Now, like it or not, you got to live with it."

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*Two*

Frank drifted for a couple of months, clear out of Texas and up into Oklahoma Territory. He hooked up with two more young men about his age, and they rode together. Their parents were dead, like Frank's, and they just plain hadn't wanted to stay with brothers or sisters ... as was the case with Frank.

By then the story had spread about the shoot-out between young Morgan and Luther Biggs. Frank never talked about it; he just wanted to forget it. But he knew he probably would never be able to do that ... not completely.

The War Between the States was only a few months away, the war talk getting hotter and hotter. One of the boys Frank was riding with believed in preserving the Union. Frank and the other boy were Southern born. If war did break out, they would fight for the South.

The trio of boys separated in Arkansas when they received word about the beginning of hostilities between the North and the South. Frank joined up with a group of young men who were riding off to enlist in the Confederate Army. He never knew what happened to the other two boys.

For the next four years Frank fought for the Southern cause and matured into a grown man. He became hardened to the horrors of war. At war's end, Frank Morgan was a captain in the Confederate Army, commanding a company of cavalry.

Rather than turn in his weapons, Frank headed west. During that time he had been experimenting with faster ways to get a pistol out of the holster. He had a special holster made for him at a leather shop in southern Missouri: the holster was open, without a flap, and a leather thong slipped over the hammer prevented the pistol from falling out when he was riding or doing physical activities on foot. Frank practiced pulling the pistol out of leather; he worked at it for at least an hour each day, drawing and cocking and dry firing the weapon. The first time he tried the fast draw using live ammunition, he almost shot himself in the foot. He practiced with much more care after that, figuring that staying in the saddle with just one foot in the stirrup might be a tad difficult.

By the time Frank reached Colorado, his draw was perfected. He could draw -- and fire -- with amazing accuracy, and with blinding speed.

And that was where his lasting reputation was carved in stone. He met up with the Biggs brothers -- all four of them.

He was provisioning up in southeastern Colorado when he heard someone call out his name. He turned to look at one of the ugliest men he had ever seen: the spitting image of Luther Biggs.

"I reckon you'd be one of the Biggs brothers," Frank said, placing his gunny sack of supplies on the counter.

"Yore damn right I am. And you're Frank Morgan. Me and my brothers been trailin' you for weeks."

"I got the feelin' somebody was doggin' my back trail. Never could catch sight of you."

"Our older brother, Billy Jeff, run acrost a man who knowed you. I disremember his name. That don't matter. He said you come out of the war all right and was headin' up to the northwest. Tole us what kind of hoss you was ridin', and what you looked like now that you was all growed up. But here and now is where your growin' stops, Morgan."

"Take it outside, boys," the store owner said. "Don't shoot up my place. Gettin' supplies out here is hard enough without this crap."

"Shet up, ribbon clerk," Biggs said. Then his eyes widened when the store owner lifted a double-barreled shotgun and eared both hammers back.

"I said take it outside!"

"Now don't git all goosey, mister," Biggs said. "We'll take it outside."

"You do that."

"You comin', Morgan, or does yeller smell? I think I smell yeller all over you."

"Don't worry about me, Ugly Biggs. You go run along now and get with your brothers, since it appears that none of you have the courage to face me alone."

The storekeeper got himself a good chuckle out of that, and a very dirty look from Biggs.

"Don't you fret none about that, Morgan. I'd take you apart with my bare hands right now, 'ceptin' that would displease my brothers. They want a piece of you, too. And what is this ugly crap?"

"You, Ugly. You're so damn ugly you could make a living frightening little children."

The veins in Biggs's neck bulged in scarcely controlled anger. He cursed, balled his fists, and took a step toward Morgan.

The store owner said, "I'll spread you all over the front part of this store, mister. Now back out of here."

"I'll be right behind you, Ugly," Morgan told him.

Cursing, Biggs backed out of the store and walked across the street to the saloon.

"You want to head out the back and get clear of town, mister?" the store owner asked.

"I would if I thought that would do any good," Frank replied. "But you can bet they've got the back covered."

"You can't fight them all!"

"I don't see that I've got a choice in the matter." Frank patted the sack of supplies on the counter. "I'll be back for these."

"If you say so."

"I say so." Frank looked at the shotgun the shopkeeper was holding.

The man smiled and handed it across the counter. "Take it, mister. I don't know you, but I sure don't like that fellow who was bracin' you."

"Thanks. I'll return it in good shape." Frank stepped to the front door, paused, and then turned around and headed toward the rear of the store. The shopkeeper walked around the counter and closed and locked the front door, hanging up the closed sign.

At the closed back door Frank paused, took a deep breath, and then flung open the door and jumped out, leaping to one side just as soon as his boots hit the ground. A rifle blasted from the open door of the outhouse, and Frank gave the comfort station both barrels of the Greener.

The double blast of buckshot almost tore the shooter in two. The Biggs brother took both loads in the belly and chest and the bloody, suddenly dead mess fell forward, out of the outhouse and into the dirt.

Suddenly, another Biggs brother came into view -- a part of him, at least: his big butt.

That's where Frank shot him, the bullet passing through both cheeks of his rear end.

"Oh, Lordy!" he squalled. "I'm hit, boys."

"Where you hit, Bobby?"

"In the ass. My ass is on far, boys. It hurts!"

"In the ass?" another brother yelled. "That ain't dignified."

"The hell with dignified!" Bobby shouted. "I'm a-hurtin', boys!"

"Hang on, Bobby," a brother called. "We'll git Morgan and then come to your aid."

"Kill that no-count, Billy Jeff!" Bobby groaned. "Oh, Lord, my ass end burns somethang fierce!"

"Can you see him, Wilson?" Billy Jeff called.

"No. But he's down yonder crost the street from the livery. I know that."

"I know that better than you do," Bobby yelled. "I got the lead in my ass to prove it! Ohhh, I ain't had sich agony in all my borned days."

Some citizen started laughing, and soon others in the tiny town joined in.

"You think this is funny?" Wilson Biggs yelled. "Damn you all to the hellfars!"

Morgan had changed positions again, running back up past the outhouse and the mangled body of Wells Biggs. He was now right across the wide street from Wilson Biggs.

He had picked up the guns from Wells and shoved them behind his gunbelt. He holstered his own pistol and, using the guns taken from the dead man, he emptied them into the shed where Wilson was hiding. The bullets tore through the old wood, knocking great holes in the planks.

Wilson staggered out, his chest and belly blood-soaked. The Biggs brother took a couple of unsteady steps and fell forward, landing on his face in the dirt. He did not move.

"Wilson!" Billy Jeff shouted. "Did you get him, Wilson?"

"No, he didn't," Frank called. "Your brother's dead."

"Damn you!" Billy Jeff called. "Step out into the street and face me, you sorry son."

"And have your butt-shot brother shoot me?" Frank yelled. "I think not."

"Bobby!" Billy Jeff called. "You hold your far and let me settle this here affair. You hear me, boy?"

"I hear you, Billy Jeff. You shore you want it thisaway?"

"I'm shore. You hear all that, Morgan?"

"I hear it, but I don't believe it. You Biggs boys are all a pack of liars. Why should I trust you?"

"Damn you, Morgan, I give my word. I don't go back on my word, not never."

"Step out then, Billy Jeff."

"I'm a-comin' out, Morgan. My gun's holstered. Is yourn?"

Before Frank could reply, Bobby said, "I'm a-comin' out, too. Let's see if he's got the courage to face the both of us!"

"Bring your bleeding butt on, Biggs!" Frank yelled. "If all your courage hasn't leaked out of your ass, that is." He checked to see his own pistol was loaded up full, then slipped it into leather, working it in and out several times to insure a smooth draw.

Bobby was hollering and cussing Frank, scarcely pausing for breath.

Frank walked up to the mouth of the alley and stepped out to the edge of the street.

Bobby stopped cussing.

Billy Jeff said, "Step out into the center of the street, Morgan, and face the men who is about to kill you."

"Not likely, Biggs. The only way scum like you could kill me is by ambush."

That started Bobby cussing again. He paused every few seconds to moan and groan about his wounded ass.

The residents of the tiny town had gathered along the edge of the street to watch the fight. Some had fixed sandwiches; others had a handful of crackers or a pickle.

This was exciting. Not much ever happened in the tiny village, which as yet had no official name.

"Make your play, Biggs!" Frank called.

Billy Jeff fumbled at his gun and Frank let him clear leather before he pulled and fired, all in one very smooth, clean movement. The bullet struck Billy Jeff in the belly and knocked him down in the dirt. Frank holstered and waited. He smiled at Bobby Biggs.

Bobby was yelling and groping for his pistol, which was stuck behind his wide belt. Frank drew and shot him in the chest, and forever ended his moaning and griping about his butt. Bobby stretched out on the street and was still. The bullet had shattered his heart.

Frank never knew what made him do it, but on that day he twirled his pistol a couple of times before sliding it back into leather. He did it smoothly, effortlessly, and with a certain amount of flair.

A young boy in the crowd exclaimed, "Mommy, did you see that? Golly!"

"I never seen no one jerk a pistol like that," a man said to a friend.

"He sure got it out in a hurry," his friend replied. "And a damned fancy way of holstering that thing, too."

Frank was certainly not the first to utilize a fast draw, but he was one of the first, along with Jamie MacCallister and an East Texas gunhand whose name has been lost to history.

Frank looked over at the crowd to his left. "This town got an undertaker?"

"No," a man said. "We ain't even got a minister or a schoolmarm."

"We just get the bodies in the ground as soon as we can," another citizen said. "Unless it's wintertime. Then we put 'em in a shed where they'll freeze and keep pretty well 'til the ground thaws and we can dig a hole."

"They ain't real pretty to look at after a time, but they don't smell too bad," his friend said.

"If you don't stay around 'em too long," another man added.

"You can have their gear and guns for burying these men," Frank told the crowd. "And whatever money they have. Deal?"

"Deal," a man said. "Sounds pretty good to me. They had some fine horses. The horses is included, right?"

"Sure."

"I hope they ain't stolen," a townsman said. "Say, I heard them call you Morgan -- you got a first name?"

"Frank."

"You just passin' though, Frank?" There was a rather hopeful sound to the question.

"Just stopping in town long enough to pick up a few supplies," Frank assured the crowd.

"All right. Well, I reckon we'd better get these bodies gathered up and planted."

"I'll help," a citizen volunteered.

"I'll get their horses," another said. "I got a bad back, you know -- can't handle no shovel."

"Sure you do, Otis. Right."

Frank turned and walked away, back to the store to get his supplies and to return the shotgun to the man.

"Hell of a show out there, Mr. Morgan," the shopkeeper told him.

"Not one that I wanted the leading role in, though."

"I suppose not. Where do you go from here?"

"Just drifting."

"Back from the war?"

"Yes." Frank smiled. "My side lost."

"We all lost in that mess."

"I reckon so. Thanks, mister."

"Take care, Mr. Morgan."

Frank rode out, heading toward the northwest, his growing reputation right behind him....

--------

*Three*

Frank rode on toward the north and tried to put old memories behind him. But there were too many memories, too many bloody shoot-outs, too many killings, too many easy women with powder and paint on their faces and shrill laughter that Frank could still hear in his dreams.

And of course, there was that one special woman.

Her name was Vivian. Frank had met her in the town of Denver early in '66, and had been taken by her charm and beauty. Frank was a very handsome young man, and Viv had been equally smitten by him. She was the daughter of a businessman and lay preacher.

Frank was working at the time on a ranch in the area, and doing his best to stay out of any gun trouble.

Theirs was a whirlwind courtship, and they were married just a few months after meeting. Viv's father did not like Frank, and he made no attempt to hide that dislike. But after the wedding, Frank felt there was little Viv's father could do except try to make the best of it.

Frank was wrong.

Six months after their marriage, Frank found himself facing a drifter hunting trouble.

"I heard about you, Morgan," the drifter said. "And I think it's all poppycock and balderdash."

"Think what you want to think," Frank told him. "I have no quarrel with you."

"You do now."

There were no witnesses to the affair. The drifter had braced Frank on a lonesome stretch of range miles from town. Frank had been resting after a morning of brush-popping cattle out of a huge thicket. He was tired, and so was his horse.

"How'd you know I was working out here?" Frank asked.

"I heard in town. I asked about you."

"No one in town knew."

"You callin' me a liar?"

"This isn't adding up, friend."

"I ain't your friend, Morgan. I come to kill you, and that's what I aim to do."

"Who paid you to brace me?"

The drifter smiled. "You better make your mind up to stand and deliver, Morgan. 'cause if you don't, I'm gonna gut-shoot you and leave you out here so's the crows and buzzards can eat your eyes."

"That isn't going to happen, friend. Now back off and ride out of here."

"I keep tellin' you, Morgan, I ain't your friend."

"Tell me who paid you to do this madness."

The drifter smiled. "On the count of three, you better hook and draw, Morgan. One -- "

"Don't do this, friend."

"Two -- "

"I don't want to kill you!"

"Three!"

The drifter never even cleared leather. As his hand dropped and curled around the butt of his pistol, Frank's Colt roared under the hot summer sun. The drifter's mouth dropped open in a grotesque grimace of pain and surprise as Frank's bullet ripped into his chest. He dropped his pistol and stared at Frank for a couple of seconds, then slumped to his knees.

Frank walked the few paces to stand over the dying man. "Who paid you to do this?"

"Damn, but you're quick," the drifter gasped. "I heard you was mighty fast, but I just didn't believe it."

"Who paid you?" Frank persisted, hoping the name would not be the one he suspected.

But it was.

"Henson," the drifter said. "Preacher Henson." Then he fell over on his face in the dust.

Vivian's father.

Frank turned the man over. He was still breathing. "How much did he pay you to brace me?"

"Five hundred dollars," the drifter gasped. Then his eyes began losing their brightness.

"You have the money on you?"

"Half of it. Get ... the other half ... when you're dead." The drifter's head lolled to one side.

"Talk to me, damn you!"

But the drifter was past speaking. He was dead.

"Dear father-in-law," Frank whispered, rage and disgust filling him. "I knew you disliked me, but I didn't know your hatred was so intense."

Frank went through the drifter's pockets and then loaded the man's body across his saddle and lashed him down. Leading the skittish horse -- who didn't like the smell of blood -- Frank rode into the nearest town and up to the marshal's office. The much smaller town was miles closer than the fast-growing town of Denver.

Frank explained what had happened, sort of -- leaving out who hired the drifter, and why.

"Any reason why this man would want to kill you, Morgan?"

"No. I don't have any idea. I've never seen him before. As you can tell by looking at me, and smelling me, I suppose, I've been working cattle most of the day."

The marshal smiled. "Now that you mention it..." He laughed. "All right, Morgan. Did you go through the man's pockets?"

"Yes, I did. Trying to find some identification. I didn't find any papers, but he had fifty dollars on him. The money is in his front pants pocket."

Frank had taken two hundred and left fifty to bury the drifter and to throw off suspicion.

The marshal did not question Frank further on the shooting. "We'll get him planted, Frank. Thanks for bringing in the body. Most people would have just left him."

Frank rode back home, arriving late that night. He did not tell Viv about the shooting -- how could he? She wouldn't have believed him. He spent a restless night, wondering how to best handle the wild hate her father felt for him.

The next day he went to see his father-in-law. Frank tossed the two hundred dollars on the man's desk.

"There's your blood money, Henson. I left fifty dollars in the man's pockets to bury him."

The successful businessman/lay preacher looked up from his desk. Frank had never seen such hatred in a man's eyes. "You filth!" Henson said. "Worthless gunman. Oh, I know all about you, Morgan. You're a killer for hire."

"That's a lie, Mr. Henson. I've killed men, yes. I won't deny that. But it was in self-defense. Not for hire."

"You're a liar!" Henson hissed. "And you're not worthy to even walk on the same side of the street as my daughter. You're a hired killer, a gunman. You're filth, and always will be."

Frank stared at the man in silence for a moment. "I'm going to prove you wrong, Mr. Henson."

"No, you won't. You can't. I've had detectives tracing you all the way back to your miserable, hardscrabble beginnings, you white trash. And I know all about the rape charges that were brought against you in Texas."

"Rape!" Frank blurted. "What charges? There are no rape charges -- there have never been any."

Henson smiled cruelly at Morgan. His eyes glinted with malevolence. "There will be when my men get through doing their reports."

Frank got it then. Viv's father was paying detectives to write false reports. He was speechless.

"Leave," Henson urged. "Leave on your own, and I won't use those reports against you. I give you my word on that. Just saddle up and ride away."

"Leave? Vivian is my wife. I love her."

"Love!" Henson's word was filled with scorn. "You don't know the meaning of the word. You're a damned rake! That's all you've ever been. I'll destroy your marriage, Morgan. I will make it my life's work. I promise you that."

Frank started to speak, and Henson held up his hand. "Don't bother begging, you trash. It won't do you a bit of good. Leave. Get out. Get out of my office, get out of my daughter's life, and get out of town." He smiled. "Before my detectives return and I have the sheriff place you under arrest."

"I'll tell Viv about this," Frank managed to say.

"Go right ahead. I'll just tell her I knew all about it and was trying to protect her. See who she will believe. Me, naturally."

"I can beat the charges."

"No, you can't. I'll see you tried, convicted, and carried away in chains, just like the wild animal you are. My detectives have found, ah, shall we call them 'ladies,' who will testify against you. And they will be believed."

Frank was boxed, and knew it. Henson had wealth and power and position, and could very easily destroy him. He sighed and said, "All right. But I have to know Vivian will be taken care of."

"Of course she will be. I'll see to that personally. She'll never want for anything. You're making a very wise decision, Morgan. Do you need money? A sum within reason, of course."

"I wouldn't take a goddamn dime from you, you sorry-assed, mealymouthed, self-righteous, sanctimonious son of a bitch!"

"Get out!" Henson flared. "Get out of town right now. Don't go home. Don't see Vivian. Just get on your horse and ride out of here. For Vivian's sake, if not for your own."

Frank almost lost it. He balled his big hard hands into fists, and came very close to tearing his father-in-law's head off his shoulders. Henson saw what was about to happen, and paled in fright. But at the last possible second Frank backed off.

Frank turned and walked out of the office.

Henson looked down at his trembling hands, willing them to cease their shaking. After a moment, he rose from his chair and got his hat. He just had time to go get his daughter and escort her to the doctor's office. Vivian Morgan was pregnant.

* * * *

"Come on," Frank muttered as he rode north. "Put the memories away and close that old door."

But that was not an easy thing to do. Even though it had been some twenty years since he had pulled out of Denver, twenty years since he had last seen Vivian, the memories were still very strong, and the image of her face was forever burned into his brain.

Frank had heard little bits of gossip about Henson: the man had become a millionaire through land deals in and around Denver, and a powerful voice in his church. He had sent his daughter, Vivian, back east to live with family. She had gotten married there (somehow her father had had her marriage to Frank annulled). She had a child by her second husband.

She and her husband had returned to Denver to take over her father's business when Henson's health began to fail. By that time, Frank had learned, the boy was in college somewhere back east.

Occasionally Frank ran across a weeks- or months-old Denver newspaper and read it. Sometimes there was something in there about Vivian Browning, and Frank would wonder what she looked like now, and for a time he would be lost in "what ifs?"

"Crap!" Frank muttered as he made camp for the evening in the timber of the Sangre de Cristos, east and a little north of Santa Fe. "Put it out of your mind, Morgan. Put her out of your mind. She hasn't thought about you in years."

But as many times as Frank thought that, he always wondered if it was true.

He certainly had never forgotten her.

Frank filled the coffeepot with water and set it on the fire to boil. He settled back with a book. Frank always made camp with an least an hour of daylight left him, so he could read. He was a well-read and self-educated man. There were always a couple of books in his saddlebags -- history, government, sometimes poetry.

On this day he dug out a book by John Milton. He had bought the book weeks back from a traveling salesman. And while he would be the first to admit that sometimes he didn't know what the hell Milton was talking about; he nevertheless enjoyed his writings. Frank read for a time from something titled _Paradise Lost_. But he was not so engrossed that he did not know what was happening around him: the birds that had been singing so gaily had stopped, and the squirrels that had been chattering were silent. Frank put his hand on the stock of his rifle and pulled it close to him. Whenever he made camp for the night, he levered a round into the chamber of his rifle. All he had to do was ear back the hammer and let 'er bang.

"Easy, friend." The voice came out of the timber. "I don't mean no harm."

"Then why are you trying to slip up on me?"

"'cause I know who you are, and how quick you are on the shoot -- that's why."

Frank smiled. "Fair enough. Come on into the camp."

"Let me get my horses -- all right?"

"Bring them in."

The man looked to be in his sixties. He carried a rifle and wore a pistol at his side. He carefully propped his rifle against a tree and then saw to his animals. He joined Frank by the small campfire.

"If you ain't got no coffee, I got some in my gear."

"I have coffee. Waiting for the water to boil. What's on your mind?"

"Company for the evenin', that's all. If you don't mind."

"Not at all. I'm Frank Morgan."

"Jess McCready. I know who you are."

The water was boiling and Frank dumped in the coffee. "Be ready in a minute, Jess. What are you doing out here in the big lonesome?"

"Gettin' away from people, mostly." The older man sniffed at the heady aroma of coffee brewing and smiled. "I do like my coffee, Mr. Morgan."

"Frank. Just Frank."

"Thankee. Frank it is."

"Getting a little bit crowded for you, Jess?"

"A little bit?" The older man snorted derisively. "The territory is fillin' up. Towns sproutin' up ever'where you look. It's disgustin'."

Frank smiled and dumped in some cold water to settle the grounds. "I have noticed a few more people, for a fact." He got up and dug another cup out of his pack, then rummaged around and found the bacon and flour. "Stay for bacon and pan bread, Jess?"

"Oh, you betcha, I will. I got some taters we can fry up, and a couple cans of peaches in my gear. I'll fetch them, and we'll have us a regular feast."

"Sounds good to me."

Frank watched the man out of the corner of his eye as he got the peaches and potatoes. He made no suspicious moves and sat back down and started peeling the potatoes.

Jess grinned and held up an onion. "We'll slice this up and stick it with the taters. Gives 'em a good flavor."

"Sure does. I forgot to get me some onions when I provisioned up last stop."

"Frank, I ain't tryin' to meddle in your business. Believe me, I ain't. But are you by any chance headin' up toward Barnwell's Crossin'?"

Frank stopped his slicing of bacon to look at the man. "I never heard of that place."

"Well, it's called the Crossin', usually."

"Still never heard of it. What about it?"

"There was a silver strike there 'bout three years ago. Big one. Millions of dollars was taken out of them mines. But it was short-lived. Mines are about played out now."

"So? I've never mined for gold or silver."

"Ned Pine and Vic Vanbergen drift in and out of there from time to time."

That got Frank's attention. "Well, I see. You know about the bad feeling between Ned and Vic and me, eh?"

"Yep. I was there that time you made Vic back down. I know he's swore to kill you. And so has Ned."

"Those are old threats, Jess."

"But still holdin' true, Frank. Point is, one of the big company mines hit another strike. Got tons of damn near pure silver out and melted down. They're waitin' to transport the bars out. And the Pine and Vanbergen gangs are waitin' for them to try it."

"Why don't they hire some people to guard the shipment?"

"Don't nobody want the job. Ned and Vic done passed the word."

"I still don't see what that has to do with me, Jess."

"Well, I'll tell you. The minin' company is the Henson Mine Corporation. It's owned by Mrs. Vivian Browning. Old man Henson's daughter."

--------

*Four*

The next morning, Jess headed south and Frank headed north, toward Barnwell's Crossing. When Frank questioned the older man, Jess told him he had learned about Frank's marriage years back, from a pal of his who had worked for a man in Denver who knew Henson. Henson, Jess said, had not been well-liked. He was ruthless in his business dealings, and few had mourned his passing some years back.

Jess had told him that Barnwell's Crossing was a dying town, although it still had a couple of hundred people eking out a living there. The silver was just about all played out.

Frank didn't know how he would handle matters once he got to the Crossing. He sure didn't know how he would react if he came face-to-face with Vivian. He wondered if Vivian had told her husband about him.

Probably. Frank felt that a marriage built on a lie would not last.

Jess had given him directions on how to get to Barnwell's Crossing. After listening to the twisted route, Frank had commented that it sure seemed to be in a very isolated section of the territory ... not in an area that he was at all familiar with.

"Wait until you get there," Jess had said. "You'll think you've fallen off the earth into hell."

"That bad, eh?"

"Worser. One way in, one way out"

"A perfect setting for Pine and Vanbergen."

"You betcha."

After a week of hard riding after leaving the company of Jess McCready, Frank reached a narrow, twisty road that led off into the mountains. Miles later, at a crossroads, he saw a crossing sign. A crudely painted arrow pointed off toward the west. The road was literally cut out of the mountains in some spots, and some of the drop-offs were hundreds of feet, straight down.

Frank remembered some long-ago campfire talk about the town as he rode. He had forgotten it until now. The town had been established some thirty-five years back.

Frank couldn't recall the original name. The Apaches had raided the tiny town and burned it to the ground. It had been rebuilt, and the Apaches had raided and burned it once more. It had sprung to life again, Frank guessed, when silver had been found.

Frank had no idea where the name Barnwell came from, unless it belonged to the man who hit the latest strike of silver.

After he rode for several miles on the twisty road the town came into view. A dozen or so stores had not been closed and boarded up: a hotel, a large general store, a saloon, a doctor's office, a barbershop/undertaker's, a livery, and several other false-front stores. On all sides of the town the hillsides were dotted with mine entrances and narrow roads, all leading down to the town and the mill. Frank stared at the mill for a moment. It was still operating.

Frank rode into town, looking at the homes on either side as he rode. Some were very nice. Others were no more than shacks, thrown together. There were tents of varying sizes scattered among the houses and shacks.

No one paid the lone rider the slightest bit of attention as he rode slowly up to the livery and swung wearily down from the saddle. He wanted a hot bath, a shave and a haircut, and some clean clothing; his shirt and jeans were stiff with the dust and dirt from days of traveling.

"Take care of my horses," Frank told the young man, handing him some money.

"Yes, sir. Rub them down, curry, and feed?"

"Yes." Frank looked across the street. The livery was the last still operating business at this end of town. The reasonably nice houses across the street looked empty. "Any of those houses over there for rent?"

"All of them. See Mr. Willis at the general store, and he'll fix you up." The young man pointed. "That one is the best. Its got a brand-new privy just a few steps out back, and the man who just left installed a new hand pump right in the kitchen. It's nice."

Frank thanked the young man. "My gear be safe here, boy?"

"For a dollar, yeah. I can lock it up."

Frank smiled and gave him a couple of coins. "See that it is."

"You bet, sir. I'll do it. What's your name?"

Frank hesitated and then said, "Logan."

"Yes, sir, Mr. Logan."

Frank walked up to the general store and made arrangements to rent the house for a time, after making sure the place had a bed and a cookstove. While at the store, Frank bought some new clothes: underwear, socks, britches, shirts, and a suit coat that fit him reasonably well. He took his new purchases and walked over to the barber shop. There, he had a hot bath and a shave and a haircut while his old clothes were being washed and his new clothes pressed to get the wrinkles and creases out. He also had his hat blocked as best the man could do it.

Feeling like a new man, having washed away days of dirt and probably a few fleas, Frank walked the town's business district. The marshal's office was closed and locked, and showed signs of having been that way for a long time.

"Haven't had a marshal for several months now," said a man passing by. "Can't keep one."

"Why?" Frank asked.

"They get shot," the miner said, and walked on.

"That's one way to get rid of the law," Frank muttered, and walked on.

Frank stepped into the small apothecary shop and asked if there was anything new in the way of headache powders.

"You got a headache, mister?"

"No," Frank said with a smile. "But I might get one."

"We don't have anything new here. But I hear there is something being developed over in Germany. Supposed to be some sort of wonder."

"Oh. What's it called?"

"Don't know. Big secret. Being developed by the Bayer Drug Company. It'll be available in a few years, so I'm told. I got some laudanum, if you want it."

"Maybe later," Frank said. "Thanks."

Frank walked on down the street, stepping carefully along the warped old boardwalk that still showed signs of the times when the town had been destroyed by fire. He came to a cafe called the Silver Spoon and went inside for a bite.

Frank had the Blue Plate Special: beef and beans and a piece of pie. He lingered at the table for a few minutes, enjoying a pretty good cup of coffee and a cigarette, watching the people in the small town as they went about their business.

"You working a claim here?" the cook asked, coming out to lean on the counter. There was only a handful of people in the cafe, for it was not yet time for the supper crowd.

"No," Frank replied. "Just passing through."

"You sure look familiar to me. I know you from somewheres?"

"Could be."

Frank was sitting at a corner table, his back to a wall, as was his custom. He had a good view of much of the street and everyone in the cafe.

A woman came up and whispered in the cook's ear. The cook's mouth dropped open, and his eyes bugged out for a few seconds. He stared at Frank for a couple of heartbeats. "Good God! It really is him!" the cook blurted, then beat it back to the kitchen.

The woman -- Frank assumed she was the waitress -- looked over at him and smiled. "Remember me, Frank?"

"Can't say as I do. You want to hotten up this coffee, please?"

"Sure." The woman brought the pot over and filled his cup, then sat down uninvited across the table from Frank.

"I was married to Jim Peters," the woman said softly.

Frank paused in his sugaring and stirring. His eyes narrowed briefly; then he nodded his head. "I recall Jim Peters. He tried to back-shoot me up in Kansas."

"That's him," the woman said with a sigh. "Coward right to the end. I left him a couple of years before that shooting. Moved to Dodge. He followed me. I still wouldn't have anything to do with him. You did me a favor by killing him."

Frank sipped his coffee and waited, sensing the woman was not finished.

"That was five years ago, Frank. But the man who offered up five thousand dollars to see you dead is still alive, and the money is still up for your death -- to anyone that's brave enough to go for it."

Frank set his cup down on the table. "I never knew anything about any five thousand dollars on my head."

The woman studied Frank's face for a moment. "You really don't know, do you?"

"No."

"He's a lawyer. Works for the Henson Enterprises."

"They own a mine here in Crossing."

"The biggest mine, Frank. No telling how many millions of dollars of silver was taken out of that mine. One more shipment to go, and the mine closes."

"But they can't ship it because of the Pine and Vanbergen gangs, right?"

"That's right, Frank. And then here you come riding in, getting set to get all tangled up in something that doesn't really concern you."

"It's a long story, Miss ... ah -- "

"It's still Peters. We were never divorced. And please call me Angie."

"All right, Angie it is. And I assure you, it does concern me, greatly."

Angie shook her head. "Because of Mrs. Vivian L. Browning, Frank?"

"You know a lot, Angie. The question is, why?"

"Why do I know? I've owned cafes all over the West. People talk in cafes as much or more as they do in saloons." She smiled. "And I am a real good listener."

"I bet you are." Frank returned the smile as he studied the woman. A good-looking woman. Not beautiful, but very, very attractive. Black hair, blue eyes, and a head-turning figure. Frank bet that when Angie took a stroll men looked ... and wives got mad.

"How many men do Pine and Vanbergen have?"

"No one knows for sure. Thirty or forty at least. Probably more than that."

"Do any of them ever come into town?"

"Quite often. But never Pine or Vanbergen. The men who come in for supplies are not on any wanted list ... that anyone knows about." Angie looked out the cafe window. "Frank, there are two members of the gang riding into town now."

Frank followed her eyes, watching as two rough-dressed men rode slowly up the main street. "I know them," he said. "They're related somehow. Cousins, I think. Both of them are wanted in Arkansas on murder charges. If this town had a marshal he'd be a thousand dollars richer by arresting those two."

Frank smiled and pushed back his chair. "As a matter of fact, I could use a thousand dollars right now."

"Frank..." Angie's voice held a warning note. "This isn't your fight. Don't get mixed up in this mess."

"Watch me," Frank replied, slipping the leather thong off the hammer of his pistol.

--------

*Five*

Frank stepped out of the cafe and stood for a moment on the elevated boardwalk. It was built several feet off the ground due to a slope. The two riders stopped in front of the Silver Slipper Saloon and dismounted. They stood for a moment, giving the wide street the once-over. Their eyes lingered for a moment on Frank, and one said something to the other. The second man shook his head, and the pair of outlaws turned and walked into the saloon, apparently dismissing him as being someone who presented no danger to them.

Frank slipped the hammer thong free and walked across the street, his boots kicking up dust as he walked, his spurs rattling softly. He stepped up onto the old boardwalk and stood for a moment, thinking about his next move. He had some money on him, but he could also use a thousand dollars.

Frank was not a poor man by any means, but neither did he have money to throw around. He had some savings in a couple of Wells Fargo offices which were available to him by wire. He also had money sewn into a place behind the cantle of his saddle.

Frank was no stranger to bounty hunting. He'd done his share of tracking down wanted men for the prices on their heads. He did it only when he needed the money. The men he tracked down were always wanted for murder, and it nearly always ended in a shoot-out, for most of them would rather die from a bullet than dangle from the end of a rope with a crowd of gawkers looking on. Then Frank had to tote their stinking bodies back as proof, so he could collect the reward. It could be very unpleasant ... and smelly.

Frank had been a lawman more than once. It was a job he liked. He'd carried a badge in towns in Kansas, Texas, and several other places. But once he'd cleaned up the towns, seems like the "good" people no longer wanted him around. Frank never argued about it -- just collected what money was due him, packed up, saddled up, and rode away without looking back. He understood how they felt, and harbored no malice toward any of them. It was human nature, and Frank understood that well. Frank had done a lot of riding away without looking back in his life -- most of his life, as a matter of fact.

Frank stepped up to the batwings and pushed them open, stepping inside the saloon.

The two outlaws were at the far end of the long bar, having whiskies. They did not turn around to look at Frank as he walked in. For that time of day the saloon was doing a good business. About half the tables were filled with drinkers and card players. The young man from the livery was seated at a table with several older men. Several heavily painted, rouged, and powdered-up soiled doves were working the crowd -- without a lot of luck, Frank observed.

Frank walked to the bar and ordered a beer. He would have preferred coffee, but wanted to blend in for a few minutes without drawing undue attention to himself.

The talk was mostly about the mines playing out, the town slowly dying, and all the silver that was waiting to be shipped out. Frank could catch a few words here and there as he stood at the bar and sipped his beer.

Suddenly the talk died out, and the large room became silent. Frank sighed. He knew what had probably happened: somebody had recognized him.

"Hell," a man said, his voice unnaturally loud in the silence, "his name ain't Logan. I don't give a damn what he told you, Booker. That's Frank Morgan!"

_Booker must be the young man from the livery_, Frank thought. _Well, it's all out in the open now._

The two outlaws at the far end of the bar turned to stare. Frank ignored them.

"Well, well," one of the outlaws said. "If it ain't the man all them books was writ about. I thought you had done up and died of old age, Morgan."

"Not hardly," Frank said softly, struggling to remember the man's name. Then it came to him: Davy something-or-another. Jonas was the other fellow's name. They were cousins.

"I know some folks who will be awful happy to hear you're in town, Morgan," Jonas said. He grinned, exposing a row of yellow teeth.

"I imagine so, Jonas. But how are you going to get the news to them?"

"Huh? Why I'll just ride out of here, you dummy!"

"You'll have to go through me to do that. You feel up to that?"

"They's two of us, Morgan," Davy said.

"I can count, Davy," Morgan replied, lifting the mug of beer with his left hand. His right hand stayed close to the butt of his .45. "But I don't care if there's five of you. You still won't get past me."

The men seated at the nearest tables began pushing their chairs back, getting away from what they were sure would turn into gunplay any second.

"You got no call to do this, Morgan," Jonas said. "We ain't done nothin' to you."

"Not personally, Jonas. But you both offend me."

"We both does what?" Davy asked, quickly adding, "What the hell does that mean?"

"You offend a lot of people, Davy. And you both are wanted by the law for murder."

"That's a damn lie!" Jonas said.

"No, it isn't, boys. I've seen the dodgers on you."

Davy's right hand started moving slowly toward the butt of his pistol. Frank's voice stopped him.

"Don't do it, Davy. I'll kill you where you stand."

Davy put his hand back on the bar.

Without taking his eyes off the two outlaws, Frank raised his voice and said, "One of you men go get the keys to the jail. Right now! Move!"

Several men rose from their chairs and left the saloon.

"What do you aim to do with us, Morgan?" Jonas asked.

"Put you in jail."

"Mayhaps we don't want to go to jail," Davy said. "What then?"

"Then I'll kill you," Frank replied, taking several steps closer to the pair of outlaws.

"You're just foolin' yourself, Morgan, if you think you're man enough to take both of us," Jonas told him.

Frank just smiled and moved closer.

"You stop right where you is!" Davy shouted. "We don't want no trouble, Morgan."

"That's up to you, boys," Frank said, stepping closer. "But if you don't want trouble, drop those gunbelts and stand easy."

"You go to hell, Morgan!" Jonas said, and he grabbed for his pistol.

Frank hit him with a fast, hard left, connecting squarely with the outlaw's jaw and dropping him to the floor.

Davy cussed wildly, then panicked and tried to run. Frank tripped him as he attempted to push past, and he hit the floor. Frank jerked the outlaw's pistols from leather and, using one of them, popped Davy on the noggin, dropping him into dreamland for a few minutes.

Jonas was groaning and trying to get to his boots. Using Jonas's gun, Frank laid it against the man's head, and Jonas joined his partner, unconscious.

Frank took Jonas's gun from leather and laid all three pistols on the bar. The batwings were shoved open, and the men who had hustled from the bar reentered, one of them carrying several sets of handcuffs.

"The jail's unlocked, Mr. Morgan," one of the men said, placing the cuffs on the bar. "The keys to the cells are on the desk."

"And the mayor's on the way to talk to you," another citizen added.

"What's he want?" Frank asked, bending down and fitting the cuffs on the outlaws.

"Durned if I know. But he'll be along any minute now."

"Name's Jenkins," another citizen said, looking down at the two murderers.

"He's president of the bank," the third man offered.

"Wonderful," Frank said. "We'll wait until these two yahoos can walk, then escort them to the jail. There's a telegraph office in this town, isn't there?"

"Oh, you bet, Mr. Morgan. If the wire's up, that is."

"It's up," a citizen called from the tables. "I seen Mrs. Browning send some wires this mornin'."

_Vivian_, Frank thought as something invisible and soft touched his heart....

"And that damn brat son of hers was with her," the citizen added.

"Way he keeps that snooty nose of his stuck up in the air, he's gonna drown if he's caught out in a hard rain," another citizen said.

"Sort of an uppity young man, is he?" Frank asked.

"Uppity?" one of the men blurted. "Conrad thinks he's better than everyone."

"Conrad?" Frank questioned.

"Conrad Browning. Sixteen or seventeen years old, I'd say. Big kid. And doesn't treat his mother with the proper respect, neither."

Another man summed it up. "He's a turd."

_Vivian's father must have had a hand in raising the boy_, Frank thought.

"You know, Mr. Morgan," a citizen pointed out, "them outlaws is rumored to be part of the Pine and Vanbergen gangs?"

Frank shrugged. "I know both of those no-counts. Why hasn't the law around here done something about them?"

"For one thing, the law can't catch them. For another, nobody is willin' to step up and point the finger at any of them. They always wear masks and dusters when they're robbin' people. The third thing is, law is scarce in these parts. We ain't had a marshal here in this town for months."

"And the pay is real good, Mr. Morgan. I'm Will Moncrief, a member of the town council. The town may not have long to live as a silver boom town. Another two, three months, maybe. But while it does, we pay good money for a badge-toter. Why don't you take the job? You've wore a badge before."

"And I'm on the council, too," another citizen said. "You want the job, Mr. Morgan?"

"Maybe. But it'll take more than the two of you to OK me, won't it?"

"There's four of us on the council, and the mayor," Moncrief said. "And -- "

The batwings were pushed open, interrupting Moncrief. A man stepped inside the saloon. "And I'm the mayor of Barnwell's Crossing," the neatly dressed man said. "Mayor Jenkins. What's going on here?"

The crowd hushed up, and all eyes turned toward Frank.

"These two hombres on the floor are wanted men, Mayor," Frank said. "They're both murderers. Rewards out for them. I want to hold them in your jail until they're picked up."

"Sounds all right to me," Jenkins said. "You took them without firing a shot?"

"Yes."

"I know you. Seen your picture. You're Frank Morgan."

"That's right. You have a problem with that, Mayor?"

"Oh, no. Not at all. You're not an outlaw. You've never been wanted anywhere for anything, as far as I know. And you've worn a badge a number of times, as I recall."

"Yes, I have."

"Want to wear another one?"

Frank paused dramatically, for effect. "If the money's right, yes."

"The money will be right -- I can assure you of that."

"Let me lock these two no-counts up, and we'll talk about it, all right?"

Frank jerked the two members of the Pine and Vanbergen gangs to their feet and shoved them toward the batwings. He would send a wire to Arkansas just as soon as he locked the two down. What the state of Arkansas did after that was up to them.

Crossing the street, Davy said, "The boys will come in here and tear this town apart, Morgan. They won't let us be held for no hangin'."

"If Pine or Vanbergen and their gangs come riding into this town hell-for-leather, there's a good chance they'll be buried here."

"You say!" Jonas's words were filled with contempt.

"That's right, Rat Face. I say."

"Rat Face!"

"Yeah. You look like a rat to me."

"You go to hell, Morgan!"

Frank laughed and opened the jail office door. He shoved the pair inside and over to the door that led to the cell block. He carefully removed the cuffs from each and shoved them into a cell.

"I'll find blankets for both of you before night. And I'll build a fire in the stove that'll get the place warm before I leave."

"How about some food, you bastard?" Davy asked. "Or are you gonna let us starve to death?"

"You'll be fed. Probably from the Silver Spoon Cafe. The cook over there fixes good meals."

Frank took the time to inspect the jail. It was as solid as the rock it was made of -- shaped rock two or three feet thick. The bars were thick and solid, set deep in the rocks. Davy and Jonas would not be prying or digging out. That was a dead certainty.

Frank found a rag, sat down at the battered desk in the front office, and wiped the several months' accumulation of dust from the top of the desk. He looked around the big room. Several rifles and shotguns were in a wall rack. He would inspect and clean them later. Frank began opening the desk drawers. He found dozens of dodgers and laid them off to one side. Two pistols and several boxes of .45 ammunition. The jail log book. The last entry was a drunk and disorderly, dated several months back. He found an inkwell, empty, and several pens and pencils. That was it.

The front door opened and the mayor stepped in, followed by a group of men. Frank was introduced to the town council. He shook hands, sat back down, and waited for the mayor to say something.

"We talked it over, Frank," the mayor said. "And we think you're the right man for the job of marshal."

"I'm honored," Frank said.

The mayor smiled and named a monthly salary that was astronomically high for the time and place, and Frank accepted the offer. Frank stood up to be sworn in by the mayor, and a badge was pinned to his shirt.

"If you can find a man to take the job, you're entitled to one deputy," the mayor told him. "Congratulations, Marshal. Welcome to Barnwell's Crossing."

The mayor and town council trooped out, closing the door behind them, and that was that.

"Marshal Frank Morgan," Frank whispered. "Too bad the town is dying. I might have found a home."

"Hey, Morgan!" Davy shouted from the cell area. "We're hungry. How about some food?"

"I'm cold!" Jonas yelled. "Where's them blankets you promised us?"

Frank ignored them and got up to set and wind the office wall clock. It had stopped at high noon. Frank wondered if that was somehow significant.

--------

*Six*

Frank went to Willis's General Store and bought a few supplies for his rented house -- coffee, sugar, bacon, flour, and the like -- then began strolling the town, letting the townsfolk see him and get used to the badge on his chest. The Crossing was larger than Frank had first thought. There was another business street, angling off like the letter L, and many more houses than Frank realized, at the end of the second business street. The other business street had several smaller stores -- including a leather shop, a ladies' store right on the corner, a smaller and rougher-looking saloon, and the doctor's office.

Frank smiled and touched his hat when meeting ladies, and he gave the men a howdy-do. Most of the people returned the greeting; a few did not. At the end of the street, Frank saw a sign for Henson Enterprises dangling from a metal frame.

The building was one story, and nice. Even though it was getting late in the day, with shadows already creeping about, darkening this and that, the office was bustling with people bent over ledgers and scurrying about.

Frank forced himself to walk on. He would run into Vivian sooner or later, and he had very mixed feelings about the inevitable meeting.

Frank had just stepped off the boardwalk when a very demanding voice behind him said, "You there, Constable. Come here."

Frank stopped and turned around. A young man, eighteen at the most, was standing in the doorway of the Henson building, wagging his finger at Frank. "Yes, you!" the young man said. "I'm not in the habit of speaking to an empty street."

Frank stared at me young man for a few seconds, stared in disbelief. He was dressed at the very height of fashion ... if he were in Boston or New York City, that is. In the rough mining town of northern New Mexico territory he looked like a damned idiot.

"Well, come here!" the young man said.

Frank stepped back onto the boardwalk, his hackles already rising at the kid's haughty tone. "Can I help you?" Frank asked.

"I certainly hope so. You're the new constable, aren't you?"

_News travels fast in this town_, Frank thought. "I'm the marshal, yes."

"Marshal, constable ... whatever," the almost a man said, waving his hand in a dainty gesture that would damn sure get him in trouble if he did it in the wrong place. "There is a drunken oaf staggering about in our offices, cursing and bellowing, and I want him removed immediately."

"All right," Frank said. "Although I was just passing by, and didn't hear a thing."

"He's calmed down for the moment, but I suspect he'll be lumbering about and swearing again at any moment."

"Oh? Why do you think that?"

"Because he's that sort -- that's why. Now will you please do your duty and remove that offensive thug?"

"Lower-class type, huh?"

"Certainly. He's a laborer. They really should learn their place."

"Oh, yes, quite." Frank hid his smile and stepped into the offices. The front office seemed as calm as when Frank had first looked in only a couple of moments ago.

"In the middle office," the snooty kid said. He pointed. "That way."

"Thank you," Frank said, just as acidly as he could. Just then the shouting started.

"By God, you owe me a week's wages, and I ain't leavin' 'til I get it, you pukey-lookin' little weasel!"

"Do you?" Frank asked the young man. There was something about the kid that was vaguely disturbing to Frank. Something ... well, familiar.

"Do I what?"

"Do you owe him money?"

"Heavens! I don't know. Take that up with the accounting department."

Frank walked to the middle office and shoved open the door, stepping inside. A big man in dirty work clothes stood in the center of the room, shouting at several men seated behind desks. When the door was opened the man paused and looked at Frank, his eyes taking in the star on his shirt.

"I eat two-bit marshals for supper," the miner told Frank.

"This one will give you a bad case of indigestion," Frank responded.

"This company owes me several days' pay," the miner said. "And I'll either get my money or I'll take this office apart."

Frank looked at one of the bookkeepers. "Do you owe him money?"

"He was off work for two days," the bookkeeper said. "He was paid for four days, not a full six."

"I got hurt in the mine!" the miner shouted. "That ain't my fault."

"Is that right?" Frank asked the bookkeeper.

"That doesn't make any difference, Marshal. He worked four days. He gets paid for the time he was on the job."

Frank looked at the miner. "Did you agree to those terms before you took the job?"

"I knew how it was," the miner said sourly. "But that don't make it right."

"I agree with you. It doesn't make it right. But you agreed to the terms. You got no quarrel. Get on out of here and cool off."

"And if I don't?" the miner challenged him.

"I'll put you out. Then I'll take you to jail. The doctor can see you in your cell."

The miner laughed. "You and how many others are gonna do that, Marshal?"

"Just me," Frank said softly.

"You really think you can do that, huh?"

"Oh, I know I can."

"With or without that pistol?"

"Either way. But if you want to mix it up with me, you'll be liable for any damage to this office."

The miner laughed at that. "How would you collect the money?"

"A day in jail for every dollar of damage. You really want to spend months behind bars? Then there will be your medical expenses. And they will be many -- I assure you of that."

"You got a name, Marshal?"

"Frank Morgan."

The miner paled under his dark stubble of whiskers. He slowly nodded his head. "I reckon I'll leave quietly."

"Good," Frank told him. "You know the way out."

The miner didn't tarry. He nodded in silent agreement, left the office, and walked out of the building without saying another word.

"You certainly calmed that situation down in a hurry, Marshal," one of the bookkeepers said. "Are you really Frank Morgan?"

"Yes." Frank no longer wondered how so many people knew about him. He'd seen several of those penny dreadfuls and dime novels that had been written about him. Most of them were nothing but a pack of lies.

And he had never gotten a nickel for all the words in print about him.

"Have you really killed five hundred white men and a thousand Indians?" another office worker asked, his eyes big around.

Frank smiled. "No. Nowhere even close to either number."

"I do so hate to interfere in this moment of juvenile adoration," said the young man who had first hailed Frank. "But it's time for everybody to get back to work."

Frank had just about had enough of the kid, and came very close to telling him where to stick his lousy attitude. The only thing that saved the moment was the miner who had just left. He came storming back inside, yelling and cussing.

"No man orders me around like I was some damn stray dog!" he hollered. "Gunfighter or no, by God, let's see what you can do with your fists!"

He ran over and took a wild swing at Frank. Frank ducked the blow and stuck out one boot. The miner's forward momentum could not be halted in time, and he tripped over Frank's boot and went butt over elbows to the floor, landing with a tremendous thud. He yelled and cussed and got to his feet.

"You afraid to fight me kick, bite, and gouge, gunfighter?" he threw down the challenge.

"No," Frank said calmly. "But my warning still holds. Whatever this fight breaks, you pay for."

"I boxed in college," the haughty kid said. "And I was quite good. Allow me to settle this dispute. I can do it rather quickly, I assure you."

Frank and the miner looked at the young man, then at each other, and born suddenly burst out laughing, all animosity between them vanishing immediately.

"Are you laughing at me, you lumbering oaf?" the young man asked the miner.

Frank verbally stepped in. "Boy, this isn't a boxing match with rules. Out here there _are_ no rules in a fight. It's kick, gouge, bite, and stomp. I don't think you understand."

"I can take care of myself, Marshal. And I don't appreciate your interference."

"Fine," Frank said. "Then by all means, jump right in, boy."

It wasn't a long jump, and the young man didn't have but a few seconds to realize he had made a horrible mistake. He didn't even have time to get his feet planted and his dukes up before the big miner hit him twice, left and right. The young man bounced on the floor and didn't move.

The miner backed up and looked at Frank. "What else could I do?"

"Nothing. He attacked you." Frank knelt down and checked out the young man. He was all right, pulse strong and breathing normal. He was just unconscious, and probably would be for several minutes.

Frank stood up and told the miner, "Get out of here and stay out of sight for a few days. You might want to hunt for another job."

"I've 'bout had enough of this town, anyways," the miner replied. "At least for a while, even though I don't believe anyone's found the mother lode yet. It's out there. I know it is. I can feel it. But you're right. I'm gone for a while. No hard feelin's?"

"None at all."

"See you around, Morgan."

The miner left, and Frank looked at the office workers. They were all smiling, looking down at the young man sprawled unconscious on the floor. Frank was sure the kid was the son of Vivian -- had to be. And he wasn't well-liked, for a fact.

Suddenly there was a shout coming from the street, followed by several other very excited shouts. Someone yelled, "They found it! Found it at the Henson mine. It's big. My God, it's big!"

"What's big?" Frank asked.

"They've hit another vein," one of the office workers said. "Has to be it. Our engineers said it was there. Said it was just a matter of time."

"Who is this kid?" Frank asked, pointing to the young man on the floor, who was just beginning to moan and stir.

"Conrad Browning," a man said. "Mrs. Vivian L. Browning's son."

"I thought so. Snooty, isn't he?"

"That's one way of putting it, for a fact."

"Where is Mrs. Browning?"

"She should be along any moment now. She always comes in just at closing time to check on things."

"Let's get Junior on his feet and walking around," Frank suggested. "If Mrs. Browning sees him like this she'll likely have a fit."

"Doubtful," an office worker said. "Mrs. Browning is well aware of her son's predilection for haughtiness. Conrad has been a sour pickle all his life."

Frank smiled as he heaved Conrad Browning to his feet. "A sour pickle ... that's a very interesting way of putting it."

"Mrs. Browning's carriage just pulled up at the rear," a man said.

Frank plopped Conrad down in a chair and turned to make his exit -- too late. The door to the rear office opened and Vivian stood there.

She recognized Frank instantly and gasped, leaning against the doorjamb for a moment.

Conrad broke the spell by blurting, "Mother, I have been assaulted by a hoodlum. I am injured."

"Oh, horsecrap!" Frank said.

--------

*Seven*

Frank and Vivian stood for several silent seconds, staring at each other, before Frank took off his hat and said, "Ma'am. Your son is not hurt much. He just grabbed hold of a mite more than he could handle, that's all."

"It was not a fair contest," Conrad objected. "That thug struck me before I was ready."

"What thug?" Vivian asked.

"Mr. Owens," one of the office workers said. "He was in here again about his money."

"The man I spoke with yesterday?" Vivian asked.

"Yes, ma'am."

"Did you give him his money, as I instructed?"

"Ah ... no, ma'am. We didn't."

"I told them not to pay him," Conrad said. "He was adequately compensated for the work he performed."

Vivian closed her eyes just for the briefest second and shook her head. "Conrad, you go see Dr. Bracken. Your jaw is bruised and swelling a bit."

"Mother -- "

"Now!"

"Yes, Mother."

"I'm pretty sure it isn't broken, ma'am," Frank said. "Just get some horse liniment and rub it on the sore spot. That'll take care of it."

"Horse liniment?" Conrad blurted. "I think not. I'll be back in a few minutes, Mother." He left the middle office, walking gingerly, rubbing his butt, which was probably bruised from impacting with the floor.

Outside, the excited shouting was still going on.

"A new strike, Mrs. Browning?" a bookkeeper asked.

"Yes. A big one. We'll be hiring again. And we need Mr. Owens. If he comes back in, pay him for the days he missed while hurt and put him back to work."

"Yes, ma'am."

"I'll probably see him around town, ma'am," Frank said. "I'll tell him to check back here."

"Thank you, Marshal. Would you please step into my office? I'd like to speak with you for a moment."

"Certainly, ma'am."

In the office, behind a closed door, Vivian grasped Frank's hands and held them for seconds. Finally she pulled back and sat down in one of several chairs in front of her desk. Frank sat down in the chair next to her.

"It's been a long time, Frank."

"Almost eighteen years."

"You know my father is dead?"

"I heard."

"Frank, I want you to know something. I knew within days that my father made up all those charges he was holding over you back in Denver. I also knew that you left to protect me -- "

"Water under the bridge, Viv. It's long over."

"No. Let me finish. I did some checking of my own, and found out father had paid those detectives to falsify charges against you. I confronted him with that knowledge. At first he denied it. Then, finally, he admitted what he'd done. He hated you until the day he closed his eyes forever. He threatened to cut me off financially if I didn't do his bidding. I didn't really have much choice in the matter. Or, more truthfully, I thought I didn't have a choice. When I finally realized father was bluffing, it was too late. You were gone without a trace, and I was pregnant."

That shook Frank right down to his spurs. He stared at Vivian for a long moment. "Are you telling me that ... Conrad is my son?"

"Yes."

Frank had almost blurted out, _You mean to tell me that prissy, arrogant little turd is my son?_ But he curbed his tongue at the last possible second. He stared at Viv until he was sure he could speak without betraying his totally mixed emotions. "Did the man you married know this?"

"Yes, Frank. He did. My late husband was a good, decent man. He raised Conrad as if he were his own."

"Does the boy know?"

"No. He doesn't have a clue."

"Your father had a hand in raising him, didn't he?"

"Quite a bit. He spent a lot of time back east with us. Several years before he died, father was with us almost all the time."

"Viv, ah ... the boy..." Frank paused and frowned.

"Doesn't fit in out here? I know. He probably never will. He hates the West. He loves to ride. He's really very good. But he won't ride out here."

"Why not?"

"The way he rides, his manner of dress. He just doesn't fit in."

"He rides one of those dinky English saddles?"

"Yes."

"Don't tell me wears one of those silly-looking riding outfits."

"Yes, he does."

"I bet he got a laugh from a lot of folks the first time he went out in public, bobbing up and down like a cork with a catfish on it."

Vivian smiled despite herself. "I'm afraid he did."

"I can imagine. Wish I'da seen that myself."

Viv's smile faded. "Why'd you come here, Frank? To this town, I mean."

"Oh, I didn't have anything else to do. Besides, I heard you were in trouble up here. Had a lot of silver to ship, and nobody would take it out for you."

"Tons of it, Frank. Tons and tons of it. Worth a fortune. But getting it out of these mountains and to a railroad has proven to be quite a chore."

"How many shipments have been hijacked?"

"Several. You have any ideas on how to get it out?"

"Oh, I imagine I could get some boys in here to take the shipments through. But they don't come cheap."

"I think I can afford them."

Frank smiled. "I 'spect you can, at that."

"Look into that for me, will you?"

"I sure will. I'll send some wires first thing in the morning."

"I would appreciate it. Frank? How are we going to handle this? You and I, I mean."

"How do you want to handle it, Viv?"

"I ... don't know. I'm not sure."

"Did you love him? Your late husband."

She averted her eyes for a few seconds and said, "No. I liked him. But I didn't love him."

"There has never been another woman for me, Viv."

"Nor another man for me, Frank. Not really."

"And there it stands, I suppose."

"I suppose so, Frank."

"It would cause talk if I came calling, wouldn't it?"

"If you don't come calling, Frank, I'll have some of my miners come looking for you."

Frank smiled at her. Vivian had lost none of her beauty. She had matured -- that was all. "I'll drop by tomorrow, Viv. What time will you be in the office?"

"From seven o'clock on. We'll be working long hours for a while, now that the new strike is in."

"I'll try to get by at midmorning. You'll be ready for a coffee break by then."

"I'll be here waiting, Frank. And don't be surprised at how I'm dressed."

"Oh?"

"I've set many a tongue wagging in this town by occasionally dressing in men's britches."

"Really?" Frank smiled as he met Viv's eyes. "Now _that_ I'd like to see." Viv was a very shapely lady.

Vivian returned his smile. "Midmorning tomorrow it is, Frank."

Frank picked up his hat from me carpeted floor by his chair and stood up. He looked at Vivian for a moment, then said, "What about Conrad, Viv?"

"Let's just let that alone for the time being. It's much too soon to even be thinking about that."

"As you wish, Viv. Tomorrow, then."

"Yes."

Frank left the office, closing the door behind him, and walked the length of the building to the front, ignoring the curious looks from the office workers. He stood on the boardwalk for a moment, listening to the excited whooping and hollering from the milling crowds on the main street. By this time tomorrow, the town would be filling up again. Closed and boarded-up stores would be reopening, and new merchants coming in. Surely there would be a couple more saloons. And there would be a lot of riffraff making their way to the town.

It was going to be a money-making place for some people for a while and, above all, a place where trouble could erupt in a heartbeat.

Frank had seen it all before, in other boom towns where precious metals were found.

Big strikes were both a blessing and a curse.

Frank's thoughts drifted back to Vivian, and he struggled to get the woman out of his mind. He could dream about her in quiet moments, but now was not the time. He had his rounds to make. And any marshal in any Western town who walked the streets at night and didn't stay alert ran the possibility of abruptly being a dead marshal.

Frank walked up to the corner of the main street and stood for a moment. He rolled a cigarette and smoked it, while leaning up against a hitch rail. It was full dark now, and both saloons were doing a land-office business. Pianos and banjos and guitars were banging and strumming and picking out melodies. Occasionally Frank could hear the sounds of a fiddle sawing away.

Frank walked up to the Silver Spoon Cafe and ordered supper for the prisoners, then carried the tray over to the jail. While they were eating, he made a pot of coffee and sat at his desk, smoking and drinking coffee. Then he took down the rifles and shotguns from the wall rack and cleaned and oiled them. He took out the pistol he'd found in the desk drawer and cleaned it, then loaded it up full with five rounds. It was a short-barreled .45, called by some a gambler's gun. It was actually a Colt .45 Peacemaker, known as a marshal or sheriff's pistol. Frank tucked it behind his gunbelt, on the left side. It was comfortable there.

A little insurance was sometimes a comfort.

Frank took the tray back to the cafe, then went over to the general store and bought some blankets for the cell bunks, charging them to the town's account. Back at the jail, he blew out the lamps and locked the front door. He did not build a fire in the jail stove, for the night was not that cool. Besides, if they both caught pneumonia and died that would save the state of Arkansas the expense of sending someone out here to take them back, plus the cost of hanging them.

He walked away, putting the very faint yelling and cussing of the two locked up and very unhappy outlaws behind him. They would settle down as soon as they realized there was no one to hear them.

Frank first stepped into the Silver Slipper Saloon and stood for a moment, giving the crowd a slow once-over. He spotted a couple of gunslicks he'd known from way back, but they were not trouble-hunters, just very bad men to crowd, for there was no back-up in either of them.

Frank walked over and pushed his way to a place at the bar, between the two men. "Jimmy," he greeted the one his left.

"Morgan." Jimmy looked at the star on Frank's chest and smiled. "I won't cause trouble in your town, Frank."

"I know it. I just wanted to say howdy. Hal," he greeted the other one.

"Frank. Back to marshalin' again, huh?"

"Pay's good."

"I don't blame you, then."

"You boys bring your drinks over to that table in the far corner -- if you've a mind to, that is. I may have some work for you both."

"If it's marshalin', count me out, Frank," Hal said.

"It isn't."

"OK, then. I'll listen."

At the table, Frank laid out the problem of getting the shipments of silver to the spur rail line just across the border in Colorado.

"I heard Vanbergen and Pine was workin' this area," Jimmy said.

"Big gangs," Hal added.

"That worry you boys?" Frank asked.

"Hell, no," Jimmy said. "You let me get some boys of my choosin' in here, and let us design the wagons, we'll get the silver through. Bet on that."

"All right. Get them in here."

"It'll take a while. They're all scattered to hell and gone," Hal said.

"We've got the time. And Mrs. Browning's got the money."

"Who is this Mrs. Browning, anyways?" Jimmy asked.

"Old Man Henson's daughter. He died some years back, and she's running the business."

"Any truth in the rumor I heard years back, Frank?" Jimmy asked. "'bout you and Old Man Henson's daughter?" He held up one hand before Frank could say anything. "I ain't pushin' none, Frank, and I sure ain't lookin' for trouble. But the rumor is still floatin' around."

"Whatever happened was a long time ago, boys. Her father hated my guts. Now he's gone, and she's in a spot of trouble. That's why I'm here."

"That's good enough for me," Jimmy said. "I won't bring it up no more."

"I'll get some wires sent in the mornin'," Hal said. "Then we'll see what happens."

"Good deal," Frank said, pushing his chair back. "Where are you boys staying?"

"We got us a room at the hotel," Jimmy told him. "We picked us up a bit of money doin' some bounty huntin' work. Brought them two in alive, we did."

Hal grinned. "'Course they was sorta shot up some, but they was alive."

"What happened to them?" Frank asked.

"They got hanged," Jimmy said.

Frank smiled and stood up. "See you boys tomorrow."

"Take it easy, Frank," Hal told him.

Frank left the saloon, very conscious of a few hostile eyes on him as he walked. He had spotted the young trouble-hunters when he first pushed open the batwings: three of them, sitting together at a table, each of them nursing a beer.

Frank did not want trouble with the young hotheads who were -- more than likely -- looking for a reputation. All three were in their early twenties -- if that old -- and full of the piss and vinegar that accompanies youth. But the youthful piss was going to be mixed with real blood if they tangled with Frank Morgan.

Frank walked up and down both sides of the main street of town. All the businesses except the saloons, the two cafes, and the hotel were now closed for the night. Frank turned down the short street that angled off of Main and paused for a moment, standing in the shadows.

The street and the boardwalk were busy, but not overly crowded with foot traffic. Judging from the noise, the Red Horse Saloon was doing a booming business. A rinky-dink piano was playing -- only slightly out of tune -- and a female voice was singing -- also out of tune. Everything appeared normal.

But Frank was edgy. Something was wrong, something he couldn't quite put his finger on, or name. He had learned years back to trust his hunches. Over the long and violent years, that sixth sense had saved his life more times than he cared to remember.

Frank stepped deeper back into the shadows and waited, his pistol loose in leather, his eyes moving, watching the shadows across the street.

There! Right there! Frank spotted furtive movement in the alley between two boarded-up buildings across the street.

Frank squatted down in the darkened door stoop, presenting a smaller, more obscure target. His .45 was in his hand, and he did not remember drawing it. He eared the hammer back.

He watched as the shadows began to move apart and take better shape. Frank could first make out the shapes of three hats, then the upper torsos of the men as they stepped out of the alley and onto the boardwalk. He could not hear anything they were saying, if they were talking at all, because of the music and song from the Red Horse Saloon.

But he did catch a glint of reflection off the barrel of a rifle.

"They ain't huntin' ducks this time of night," Frank muttered.

_But are they hunting me?_ he questioned silently. _And if so, why?_ He was sure they weren't the three young hotheads he'd seen back in the saloon.

He was further intrigued as he watched the men slip back into the alley and disappear from sight. Just then a door opened on Frank's side of the street and bright lamplight flooded the street and illuminated the alley he'd seen the men walk into.

But they were gone without a trace.

"What the hell?" Frank muttered. "What in the hell is going on here?"

The door closed, and Frank sprinted across the wide street and darted into the alley. He paused, listening. He could hear nothing.

He moved on, to the end of the alley, stopping as he heard the low murmur of men's voices.

"I told you that bitch wasn't in her office this late. I told you both that."

_What bitch?_ Frank asked himself.

"So OK, so you was right. We'll grab her tomorrow night."

"Oncest we get the big boss lady, that brat kid of hern will gladly hand over the silver."

"Yes," the third man said. "Shore a lot easier than waitin' for them to ship it."

_Viv! They're after Viv._

"So what do we do now?"

Frank stepped out of the alley, his hands wrapped around the butts of both .45's. "You stand right where you are, is what you do."

The three men whirled around and the night exploded in gunfire.

--------

*Eight*

As soon as the words left Frank's mouth he sidestepped back into the alley. The three men fired where Frank had been, their bullets hitting nothing but the night air.

Frank hunkered down next to the boarded-up building and fired at the shadows to his right. One man screamed and went down to his knees. The other two fired at the muzzle flashes, and Frank was forced to duck back.

He crawled under the building. Built about two feet off the ground, it was damp, smelled bad, and was littered with trash. He slithered along like a big snake until he was only a few feet away from the two men still left standing.

"I think we got him!" one said.

"Think again," Frank said from the darkness under the building, and opened fire.

The two men went down in an awkward sprawl. Frank rolled out from under the building and got to his boots.

"My leg's broke," one of the men moaned. "Oh, crap, it hurts bad."

"I'm hard hit," another one said. "Where is that bastard?"

"Right here," Frank said. "And if either of you reaches for a gun you're dead."

"Sam?" said the one with a broken leg said. "Sam? Answer me, boy."

There was no response. The only person Sam was going to answer to was God.

"He's dead," Frank told the would-be kidnapper just as a crowd began to gather, some of them with lanterns.

"Who the hell are you?" The other outlaw groaned the question.

Frank ignored that. "Get the doctor." He tossed the command to the gathering crowd. "And someone else get the undertaker."

"Who are these men?" someone in the crowd asked. "And what did they do?"

"They're part of the Pine and Vanbergen gangs," Frank told him. "They were attempting to kidnap Mrs. Browning for ransom."

"Good God!" a man said.

"How the hell did you know that?" one of the wounded outlaws asked. "And who the hell are you?"

"Somebody talked," the other outlaw said. "That's how he knew. Man ... Ned is gonna be pissed about this."

"Who are you?" the outlaw persisted.

"Frank Morgan."

"Oh, hell!"

The town's doctor pushed his way through the growing crowd and ordered lamps brought closer to the wounded men. "That one's dead," he said, pointing. "This one's got a broken leg." He moved over to the third man. "Shot in the side. Bullet went clear through. Some of you men carry these men over to the jail. Where is Mr. Malone?"

"Right here," a tall thin man said, pushing his way through the crowd. "How many dead?"

"One. The other two will live, I'm sure."

"One is better than none," Malone the undertaker said. "If he's got the money to pay for my services."

"You bastard!" the outlaw with the broken leg said. "You give him a decent sendin' off, damn you."

"He'll get planted," Malone said. "How solemn and dignified will depend on the cash in his pockets."

"Get the living out of here," the doctor told the volunteers.

Frank spotted Willis in the crowd. "I'm going to need some extra blankets from your store."

"I'll get them and bring them over to the jail," the store owner said. "Anything else?"

"Laudanum," the doctor said.

"I'll get it from Jiggs at the apothecary."

Doc Bracken stood up. "I've done all I can do here."

"I'll be at the jail," Frank told him.

When the wounded outlaws were patched up and locked down, Frank went looking for Hal and Jimmy. He found them in their room at the hotel.

"Big doin's, huh, Frank?" Jimmy asked.

"Shaping up that way. How tired are you boys?"

"Not tired at all," Hal replied. "Matter of fact, we had just finished washin' up and was thinkin' of findin' us an all-night poker game."

Frank told them about the planned kidnapping, and that got their attention.

"What can we do to help?" Jimmy asked. "Name it, Frank. We owe you more'un one favor."

"You'll be well paid for this, I assure you. Want to stand guard at the Browning house?"

"Consider it done. Have you talked to Mrs. Browning about it?"

"I'll do that right now. You boys get dressed and we'll walk over together." Frank smiled. "That is, as soon as I find out where she lives."

* * * *

It was the grandest house in the town, naturally, with a sturdy iron rail fence around it. The gate was locked. A cord was hanging out of a gap in the fence, and Frank pulled on it.

A man dressed in some sort of uniform came out and stood on the porch. "Yes? What do you want?"

"I'm Marshal Frank Morgan. Here to see Mrs. Browning on a matter of great urgency."

"I'll tell her, sir."

"Got to be one of the servants, I guess," Frank said to Hal and Jimmy.

"Must be nice," Hal said.

"I reckon," Frank replied.

"I never been in a house this grand," Jimmy said. "Y'all stomp your boots a couple of times to get any horseshit off of 'em."

Frank smiled. "Good idea. We don't want to leave tracks on the carpet."

Conrad came out onto the porch and down the walkway to the gate, and he took his time doing it. As he was unlocking the chain he said, "I do hope this is important, Marshal. We were in the middle of dinner."

"Hell, it's eight o'clock," Hal said. "Y'all hadn't et yet?"

"Eight o'clock is when most civilized people sit down for dinner," Conrad told him.

"Pardon the hell outta me," Hal muttered.

The interior of the home was elaborately furnished. There were paintings on the walls, and vases and various types and sizes of sculptures on itsy-bitsy tables and pedestals.

"La dee da," Jimmy muttered, looking around him as they were led into the dining room.

"Don't knock nothin' over, you clumsy ox," Hal told his partner. "And don't touch nothin', neither."

"Speak for yourself, you jumpy moose," Jimmy responded.

Vivian rose from the longest table Frank had ever seen outside of a banquet hall. The chandelier over the table must have cost a fortune. Its glow made the room as bright as day. Vivian smiled and said, "Marshal Morgan."

"Evening, ma'am," Frank said, taking off his hat. "We're sorry to disturb you, but something came up I thought you ought to know about. This is Hal and Jimmy."

"How do you do, gentlemen?"

"Fair to middlin', ma'am," Hal said.

"OK, I reckon, ma'am," Jimmy told her. "Shore is a nice place you got here."

"Thank you. Would you gentlemen like something to eat, or some coffee?"

"Coffee would hit the spot," Hal said, ignoring the dirty look he was getting from Frank.

Viv picked up a little silver bell from the table and shook it. A servant appeared almost instantly. "Coffee for the gentlemen, please, Marion."

"Yes, mum."

"Sit down, please," Viv said. "Do make yourselves comfortable." She looked at Frank. "What is the matter of great urgency, Fra" -- she caught herself -- "Marshal?"

"Yes," Conrad said, entering the dining room and sitting down. "Do enlighten us."

Frank resisted an impulse to slap the snot out of Conrad. "Jimmy and Hal here are going to be your bodyguards for as long as you stay in this area, Vi" -- Damn, but it was catching -- "Mrs. Browning."

"Oh?" Vivian said, staring at Frank. "Don't you think I should have something to say about that? And what makes you think I want or need bodyguards?"

"Yes. And I must say I quite resent your coming in here and giving orders. I am perfectly capable of looking after my mother," Conrad said haughtily.

"Shut up, boy!" Frank told him. "You couldn't look after a lost calf."

Conrad's mouth dropped open, and he started sputtering and stuttering.

"Close your mouth," Frank said, "before you swallow a fly." He turned his gaze to Vivian. "I just shot three men tonight, Mrs. Browning. Killed one, and wounded the other two. They were planning to kidnap you."

--------

*Nine*

Terms of employment were quickly agreed to, and Frank stayed with Vivian while Hal and Jimmy returned to the hotel to get their belongings. Vivian wanted them to stay in the house, but both gunhands shook their heads at that suggestion. They would stay in the carriage house, behind the main house.

Conrad, his feathers ruffled by Frank's blunt comments concerning his ability to protect his mother, stalked off to bed, leaving Frank and Vivian alone in the dining room. The candles and lanterns had been trimmed, leaving the room in very subdued light.

"If you had not heard I was having trouble shipping the silver -- " Viv said. She shook her head. "I shudder to think what would have happened had you not been here."

"Well, I'm here, Viv. And Hal and Jimmy are good men. They'll get some wires off in the morning to some friends of theirs, and before you know it your silver will be safely shipped. Hal and Jimmy will design the wagons, and they'll be built right here in town. Until Vanbergen and Pine are taken care of, Hal and Jimmy will be your shadows, around the clock."

"And you, Frank?"

"I'll be around -- you can bet on that. You couldn't run me off if you tried."

She touched his hand. "I'm counting on that."

"You've got it."

"Hal and Jimmy are certainly ... well, capable looking. I have to admit that."

"They're both tough as wang leather. They're not the prettiest pair in the world, but they're one hundred percent loyal. They ride for the brand, Viv. And they're quick on the shoot. They'll stick no matter what."

"Why doesn't the law do something about this gang, or gangs, I should say?"

"You were living back east a long time, Viv. You've forgotten this is the West. It's slowly being tamed, but its still pretty much wild and wooly and full of fleas. There isn't much law out here, not in most places. And it'll be some time before there is."

"I suppose so."

"I taught you how to shoot, Viv. Do you still have a pistol?"

"No. My husband didn't like guns."

"Can Conrad use a gun?"

"No. He doesn't like guns either."

Frank shook his head. "Maybe that's for the best. He'd probably brace somebody and get himself shot."

"He's lonely, Frank. That's his biggest problem. And I don't know what to do about that."

"He wouldn't be, Viv, if he wasn't such a stuck-up fussbucket."

Vivian tried her best to look offended at that, but couldn't quite pull it off. She gave up, and with a half-smile said, "He just doesn't fit in out here, Frank. I don't believe he ever will."

"Some folks never do. But those that can't are the folks who want someone else to do for them. You were raised out here, Viv. You know all this."

"The settled East is an ideal place to forget all that," she said gently.

"I guess so. Don't know much about the east. Never wanted to go there." Frank fiddled around with his empty coffee cup for a few seconds.

"More coffee, Frank?"

"No. thanks. This will do me. Soon as the boys get back I've got to start making my night rounds and check on the wounded at the jail."

"What will happen to those men?"

"They'll be held here for trial. I'll be checking dodgers to see if they're wanted anywhere else ... and I'm sure they are."

"What if their gang tries to break them out?"

"I'll do my best to prevent that."

"You're just one man, Frank. The combined strength of those gangs, so I'm told, can be as high as forty."

Frank shrugged his shoulders. "I can't help that. I was hired to enforce the law and keep the peace. I intend to do just that."

The gate bell rang, and Marion went outside to let Hal and Jimmy in. Frank stood up. "I'll see you tomorrow, Viv. About midmorning, for coffee."

Frank stood outside the Browning estate for a moment and rolled and smoked a cigarette, then strolled up the boardwalk and stepped inside the Red Horse Saloon for a look around. It was noisy and rowdy, but that was a joyful sound. There were a few sour expressions at the sight of Frank, but that was to be expected whenever a badge showed up at a party.

Frank looked around for a moment, then quietly left the saloon without speaking to anyone. He walked the business area of the town, checking the doors of the closed-for-the-night businesses, making sure they were all secure. He stopped in at the Silver Slipper Saloon and stayed only a couple of minutes before walking over to the jail and checking on his prisoners.

The men were all asleep -- the wounded ones in a laudanum-induced slumber. Frank quietly stepped back and closed and locked the heavy door leading to the cell area. He checked on his horses at the livery and then walked across the street to his rented house and went to bed. He had missed supper, but it wasn't the first time Frank Morgan had missed a meal -- nor, he suspected, would it be the last.

He went to sleep and dreamed about Vivian, frowning whenever Conrad entered his dreams. Frank felt no closeness or affection for the young man. He felt nothing, and his sleep became restless because of that. As the boy's father, shouldn't he feel some sort of blood bond, some sort of paternal sense or awakening ... something, anything?

* * * *

Frank awakened with silent alarm bells ringing in his head. Men who constantly live on the razor edge between life and sudden, bloody death develop that silent warning system -- or die very young -- in their chosen, violent lifestyle.

Frank lay very still and listened. He could hear nothing. Perhaps, he thought, the sounds of silence were what woke him. No. He rejected that immediately. He didn't think that was it. Then ... what?

Frank slipped from bed and silently pulled on his britches and slipped his bare feet into an old pair of moccasins he'd had for a long time. He picked up his gunbelt and slipped it over one shoulder. Frank had learned years back that it was not wise to run out of ammunition in a gunfight. The loops on his gunbelt always stayed filled. He didn't bother pulling on a shirt.

He padded noiselessly to the rear of the darkened house and looked out through the window. He had not yet purchased material for some seamstress to make him curtains. He could see nothing in the rear of the house.

He walked to the front of the house and looked out. Nothing. He pulled his pocket watch from his jeans and clicked open the lid. A few minutes after four o'clock. This was the time when people were snuggling deeper into bed and blankets for that final hour or so of good, deep sleep. The best time of the night for murder.

He should get going. By the time he heated water and took a shave and a spot bath it would be five o'clock. Then he had to get over to the jail and make coffee and empty and rinse out all the piss pots from the cells. Then he had to see about breakfast for himself and the prisoners. After that, he had to see if there was any reply from Arkansas about the reward money. He would be busy for a couple of hours, at least. And he didn't want to forget to check on any bounty on the men he'd locked up last night and the one he'd killed. Yes, it was shaping up to be a busy morning.

Banker Jenkins, also the mayor, had told him as soon as he received conformation about the reward money he would advance Frank the money and have Arkansas authorities send it directly to his bank. That sounded good to Frank.

Walking about the still dark house, Frank bent down to pick up some kindling wood from the box by the stove. He heard a tin can rattle in the backyard, followed by a soft curse.

_OK_, Frank thought. _Whoever you are and whatever you want, boys, you just queered the deal._

Frank slipped to the back door and waited. There was no way he was going to open that door and step into a hail of bullets. He heard the soft creak of boards as someone stepped onto the small back porch. Frank carefully backed up until he could get the large stove between the door and himself. He eased the hammer back on his .45.

Frank heard the sound of someone carefully trying the doorknob. It was loose, and rattled when touched. "Come on in," he whispered.

But the man on the porch obviously had other ideas. He backed away, stepped off the porch, and silently faded into the coolness of night.

"Now just what in the hell was that all about?" Frank questioned.

The night was silent, offering no explanation.

Frank slipped through the house to the front room and peered out. The street was silent and empty.

He decided he'd shave at the jail. He did not want to risk lighting a lamp. He finished dressing. Then, taking a change of clothing with him, he slipped out the back of his house and cautiously made his way up the side of the house to the street. He neither saw nor heard anyone.

"Strange," Frank muttered. "Very odd, indeed."

At the jail, he rolled out the prisoners and collected the bed pots. Then he made coffee and shaved and dressed: black trousers, new red-and-white-checkered shirt buttoned at the collar, string tie, and the suit coat he'd bought at the general store the day before.

"How about some coffee and some breakfast, Morgan?" a prisoner called.

"Coffee is almost ready. I'll get your breakfast in a few minutes."

At the cafe, which was doing a brisk business, he asked Angie to fix some trays -- beef, fried potatoes, cornmeal mush -- and to cut up the meat and leave only a spoon for each prisoner to eat with.

"You going to feed them lunch, Frank?" she asked.

"Biscuits and coffee. I'll be back around noon."

The prisoners fed, Frank turned up the lamps, sat down at his desk, and brought his jail journal up to date. Then he wrote several wires to send about his new inmates and the dead man.

Dawn was busting over the mountains when he finished. Frank checked on the prisoners, then walked over to the cafe for his own breakfast. He took the empty trays with him, after carefully checking to make sure all the spoons were there. With a little work a spoon could be turned into a deadly weapon.

It was past six now, and the cafe had cleared out some.

Frank ordered breakfast and sat at a corner table, drinking coffee until the food arrived. It was pointless to ask Angie if she'd seen any strangers in town, for the town was full of newcomers. And during the next few weeks, there would be hundreds more streaming in.

Frank made up his mind to hire a deputy, and he asked Angie if she knew anyone.

"Yeah ... I think I do, matter of fact. He ought to be coming in here anytime now. He's a man in his mid-fifties, I'd guess, and he's steady and dependable. I think he's done some deputy work in other places."

"Sounds good to me. What's his name?"

"Jerry. Jerry Dobbs."

"Introduce me when he comes in."

"I'll do that."

Frank was just finishing his breakfast when Angie called out, "'Mornin', Jerry. Got someone here who wants a word with you."

"Oh?" the big man said just as Frank was pushing his chair back and rising to his boots.

The men shook hands, and Jerry sat down at the table with Frank. A few minutes later, Frank had hired a deputy.

"I'm no miner," Jerry explained while eating his breakfast. "Didn't take me long to figure that out. I've worked a lot of things in my life, but lawing is something I enjoy the best."

"It can be rewarding," Frank said. "Until the town is cleaned up. Then the people want to get rid of you."

"For a fact," Jerry agreed. "I've sure seen that happen a time or two."

"This town is going to boom for a while," Frank said. "I'm going to ask the mayor if I can hire a second deputy."

"Might not be a bad idea. I've seen these boom towns go from a hundred people to five thousand in a matter of days. The way I heard it, this is a major strike, too."

Frank liked the older man almost instantly. Jerry was big and solid and well-spoken. Frank could sense he had plenty of staying power, and once he made up his mind it would take a steam engine to move him.

Frank told Jerry about the planned kidnapping attempt against Vivian and his hiring of two bodyguards for her.

"Hal and Jimmy are known throughout the West as men who'll brook no nonsense," Jerry replied. "Not killers, but damn sure quick on the shoot. They'll take care of her."

"I'm counting on that. Jerry, there's a small living area in the jail. You want to use it?"

"Yes," the big man said quickly. "Sure beats payin' a weekly rate for a room with two other guys."

"As soon as you finish your breakfast we'll go over to the jail and see what you need for your living quarters, then go to the store for provisions."

"Sounds good to me."

"By that time the mayor should he in his office at the bank, and we'll get you sworn in. Jerry, you haven't asked about salary."

Jerry smiled. "I know what boom towns pay their lawmen. It will be more than adequate, I'm sure."

"I'll see that it is."

Angie came over and refilled their cups. The customers all had been served and were chowing down, and no one was calling for anything, so she pulled out a chair and sat down.

"Gonna be a law dog again, Jerry?" she asked.

"Beats the mines, Angie."

"I'm sure. Unless you're the owner."

"Frank Morgan!" the shout came from out in the street. "Get out here, you bastard!"

"What the hell?" Jerry asked.

Frank got up and looked out the window. A man was standing in the center of the wide street. He was wearing two guns, something that was becoming a rarity in the waning days of the so-called Wild West.

"You know that man, Frank?" Angie asked, standing just to Frank's left.

"I never saw him before, but he sure as hell is no kid."

Jerry joined them at the window. "I've seen him around town a time or two. Don't know his name."

"Morgan!" the man called. "You murderin' pile of coyote puke. Get out here and face me!"

"I don't think that fellow out there likes me very much," Frank said.

Jerry looked at Frank and smiled and shook his head at the marshal's calmness. "I think you'd be safe in sayin' that, Frank."

"Did you see anyone with the guy, Jerry, anyone at all?" Frank asked.

"No. Never. I never even seen him talkin' to anyone."

Both sides of the street had cleared of people within seconds. The few horses at hitch rails that early in the day had been quickly led away by their owners in anticipation of lead flying about.

"You either come out and face me or I'm comin' in there and drag you out, you yellow bastard!" the man in the street hollered. "By God, I mean it, Morgan!"

Frank slipped his pistol in and out of leather a couple of times. He didn't have to check to see if it was loaded. He knew it was. "Time to go see what that fellow wants," Frank said.

"Hell, Frank!" Jerry blurted. "You know what he wants. He wants to kill you!"

"Lots of people have tried that over the years, Jerry. I'm still here."

Angie put a hand on Frank's arm. "He may have someone in hiding, Frank. Not many men would face you alone. It's something to consider."

Frank cut his eyes to her. "I always take that into consideration. That's one of the reasons I'm still alive. But I'm marshal here. I can't afford to let something like this get out of hand. And it could, very easily. If it did, that would be the end of law and order in this town."

Angie opened her mouth to speak. Jerry held up a hand. "He's right, Angie. I know you've got a shotgun behind the counter. Give it to me, and I'll back him up."

"All right." Angie hurried behind the counter and returned with a long-barreled scattergun.

"It's got light loads in it," the cook said. "But at close range they'll sure put someone out of commission."

"Good enough," Jerry said, breaking open the scattergun to make certain both chambers were loaded up. He looked at Frank. "You ready?"

"You sure you want to do this, Jerry? Hell, man, you're not even on the payroll yet."

Jerry grinned at him. "Maybe you can arrange a bonus for me."

"Count on it."

"Come on out, you chicken-livered has-been!" the loudmouth in the street hollered.

"That does it," Frank muttered through suddenly clenched teeth, and moved toward the cafe door.

None of the principals noticed the young man across the street stop on the boardwalk and stand and stare. Dressed in his stylish business suit, he was as out of place as a buffalo turd in a crystal punch bowl.

"What in the world is going on?" he asked a clerk who had been sweeping the boardwalk.

"There's gonna be a gunfight."

"Why doesn't someone call the marshal?"

"Someone just did, boy. That fellow standin' in the street."

"My word!" Conrad said.

--------

*Ten*

Frank stepped out the front door of the cafe, taking his time while Jerry hustled out the back door and made his way to the street, coming up the narrow space between the two buildings. The small crowd that had gathered on the boardwalks moved left and right, out of the line of fire ... they hoped.

Frank looked more closely at the man in the street. He did not recognize him, and did not believe he had ever seen him before. "What is your problem?" Frank called.

"You! You're the problem, Morgan."

"Why? I've never seen you before. I don't know you."

"I know you."

"How?"

"You killed my brother up in Wyoming. Jim Morris was his name ... remember?"

"Can't say as I do. What's your name?"

"Calvin. The man who's gonna kill you, Morgan."

"Doubtful, Calvin, very doubtful."

"You callin' me a liar? Damn you, you back-shootin' lowlife!"

"I never shot anyone named Morris. Not in the back or anywhere else."

"You're a liar, Morgan. You ambushed him one night and shot him in the back!"

"Not me, Calvin. You have the wrong man."

"You're both a liar and a coward, Morgan!"

"You're wrong on both counts. Think about it. Don't throw away your life."

"Enough talk, Morgan. Walk out here and face me if you've got the guts."

That settled the question in Frank's mind about a second, hidden gunman. He and Morris were in full, open view of each other. So the hidden gunman must not, as yet, have a good shot at Frank. He hoped Jerry got the message.

"What's the matter, Calvin?" Frank asked. "Can't you see me? You need glasses, maybe?"

"I can see you, Morgan," Calvin said sullenly. "I don't need no damn glasses."

"Then let's get this over with. I'm tired of trying to save your life."

"Huh?"

"You seem determined to end your life this morning. I've tried to keep you from doing that. But you won't listen. So let's do it, Calvin. Enough talking."

Calvin looked up for just a second. That was all the signal Frank needed. The second gunman was on the roof of the cafe, or one of the buildings just left or right of the cafe. As long as Frank stayed under the awning, he was safe from the sniper.

"I knowed you was yeller, Morgan. I'm challengin' you to stop all this talk and step out here and face me."

"Hook and draw, Calvin," Frank said easily. "You can see me."

"You're yeller. I knowed all along you was yeller. Told everybody I'd prove it."

"And you're a loudmouth son of a bitch," Frank said without raising his voice.

That got to Calvin -- if Calvin was his real name, which Frank doubted. The man tensed, and Frank could see his expression change.

"You'll pay for that, Morgan."

"How? You going to have your buddy on the roof shoot me in the back?"

"Take him, Lou!" the man on the roof shouted. "Take him now. He's on to us!"

Calvin/Lou hesitated for just a second, then grabbed for his pistol.

Frank shot him twice just as he was clearing leather. He placed his shots fast but carefully, knocking both legs out from under the man. Jerry's shotgun boomed, and there was a scream from the gunman on the roof.

"Oh, my ass!" the sniper squalled. "You done ruint me. Oh, sweet Baby Jesus!" Then he fell off the roof, crashing through the awning and landing on the boardwalk.

Frank took a quick look at the man. His ass was a bloody mess. He had taken both barrels of Jerry's scattergun in the butt. He had landed on his belly on the boardwalk, and the wind had been knocked out of him.

Jerry stepped out of the alley, a six-gun in his hand. "Watch him," Frank said, pointing to bloody butt. Then he walked over to the fallen man in the dusty and now bloody street.

"Calvin, or Lou?" Frank asked him.

"Lou. You bastard! You done broke both my legs."

"That was my intention."

"Damn your eyes!"

"Lou what?"

"Lou Manning."

"Well, well, now. I have a dodger on you over in the office. Another five hundred dollars in my pocket."

"That's an old dodger. It's a thousand now."

"That's even better. How about your buddy over there?"

"Bud Chase. He ain't got no money on his head. You gonna get me a doctor, Morgan?"

"I see him coming now. Was that you prowling around outside my house this morning?"

"Huh? No." He groaned in pain. "I don't even know where you live, Morgan. I wish to God I'd never seen you. Where is that damn sawbones?"

"Taking a look at your buddy's butt. He's got two loads of bird shot in his ass."

"To hell with Bud's butt! My legs is busted, goddamn it."

Doc Bracken came over and looked at Lou's wounds. "Neither leg seems to be broken, but you won't be doing much walking around for a while."

"I really hurt something fierce, Doc," Lou said. "Can you give me something for the pain?"

"When we get you settled in the jail," the doctor told him.

"How's the other one?" Frank asked.

"Very uncomfortable," Bracken said with a half-smile. "And he's going to be even more so when I start probing around for those shot."

Frank waved at some men. "Get these two over to the jail," he told them. He looked at Doc Bracken. "Unless you want them in your office."

Bracken shook his head. "Jail will be fine. Neither one of them are in any danger of expiring. Your jail is getting full, isn't it, Marshal?"

"I'll have two cells left after these two are booked."

"Ummm," Doc Bracken said. "What happens if your jail gets full?"

"I'll chain prisoners outside to a hitch rail."

Bracken gave him a hard look. "And you would too, wouldn't you, Marshal?"

"Bet on it."

The doctor chuckled. "I think you'll be the best marshal this town has ever had, Morgan. Providing you live long enough, that is."

"Thank you, Doc. How soon can I ask these two a few questions?"

"A couple of hours, maybe. Probably longer. I'm going to sedate them heavily. I'll let you know."

"Good enough."

The wounded were carried off to the jail. Dirt was kicked over the bloody spot in the street, and Frank told Jerry to locate one of the town's carpenters and have him get busy repairing the awning and the broken boardwalk. He sent another man to find the mayor and arrange for a meeting.

Conrad had not moved from his spot in the doorway across the street. Frank spotted the young man and walked over to him.

"How is your mother this morning, Conrad?"

"Very well, Marshal. Thank you for inquiring. That was quite a performance a few moments ago. Do you always twirl your pistol after a shooting?"

Frank did not remember doing that. It was just something he did automatically. "I suppose so, Conrad. It's just a habit."

"Very impressive, I must say. You are quite proficient with that weapon."

"I try."

"Tell me, Marshal, if you will, how long have you known my mother?"

Frank had no idea what Viv had told the young man, but he wasn't going to start off whatever relationship that might develop with a lie. "I knew her years ago, Conrad. For a very brief time."

"Before she married my father?"

"Oh, yes."

"I see. Well, at least you both have your stories straight. Good day, Marshal." Conrad turned away and walked off toward the Henson Enterprises office building without another word.

"Boy damn sure suspects something is not quite right," Frank muttered. He also knew that he and Viv had better get their heads together and plan something out, and do it quickly.

Mayor Jenkins strolled up, all smiles. "Well, Marshal," he said, grabbing Frank's hand and shaking it, "congratulations. I was just informed about the incident. I was told that was quite a dandy bit of shooting on your part. Knocked the pins out from under that gunman quicker than the eye could follow. And I'm told you have a new deputy. Jerry, ah, what's his name? Consider him on the payroll." He named a very generous monthly sum of money -- about twice the going rate, even for a boom town. "You can swear him in. That goes with the office, Marshal. I should be hearing something from Arkansas in about a week. I'll let you know immediately. Good day, Marshal. Great job you're doing. Yes, indeed."

"Most happy fellow," Frank muttered. He went in search of Jerry to swear him in.

Frank did not notice Conrad peeping around the corner of a building, watching his every move.

--------

*Eleven*

Frank swore Jerry in as deputy marshal and pinned a badge on him. Then they went over to Willis's store and bought provisions for the small private room at the jail. Back at the jail, Frank fixed a pot of coffee and the two men talked while Doc Bracken worked on the wounded in the cell block.

"Never married, Jerry?"

"Once. Had two kids. Boy and a girl. She didn't like the West, and she really didn't like me, I guess. We lived in Kansas. Took the kids and left one day when I was out with a posse. I've not seen hide nor hair of any of them since. That was twenty years ago. Don't know where they are. You, Frank?"

"A long time ago. Right after the war. We weren't married long. It didn't work out. I've been drifting ever since."

"Yeah, me too, but I don't blame that on her. I reckon I'm just meant to wander, that's all." Jerry stood up. "I need to go back to the roomin' house and get my things, Frank. OK with you?"

"Sure. Go ahead. I've got an appointment to see Mrs. Browning this morning. I'll probably be gone time you get back."

"That's a nice lady."

"Yes, she certainly is."

Jerry left and Frank looked in on Doc Bracken and his assistant. "You going to be much longer. Doc?"

"'Bout ten more minutes. I've got all the shot out of this man's butt that I can. The rest will have to stay. Some will work out in time, but he'll be sitting on a lot of bird shot for the rest of his life."

"I'll kill that son of a bitch who shot me," the butt-shot Bud groaned through his laudanum-induced haze.

"Shut up," Doc Bracken told him. "You'll have lots of time to think up threats while you're in prison. You'd better be thankful it wasn't buckshot that hit you, fellow. You wouldn't have any ass left."

"Gimmie some more laudanum," Bud mumbled.

"You've had enough," the doctor told him.

Frank closed the door and sat down at his desk, bringing his jail book up to date. He checked all his dodgers for one on Bud Chase. There were no wanted fliers on Bud, but he did find the dodger on Lou Manning. He wrote out a wire to send to the Texas Rangers.

He glanced at the wall clock. He still had a few minutes before he was due to meet Viv. Frank leaned back in the wooden swivel chair. He did not delude himself about the likelihood of getting back with Viv. His chances were slim to none. Their worlds were too far apart now, and Frank was man enough to admit that. But they would enjoy each other's company while they had the opportunity. After that? Well, only time would tell.

Frank looked in on the prisoners, giving them a cup of coffee if they wanted it, then closed and locked the door to the cell block. He had given Jerry a set of keys to all doors, so he locked the front door upon leaving, too.

He strolled down the boardwalk, taking his time and looking over the town in broad daylight. A few of the stores that had been boarded up were already in the process of being reopened, getting ready to rent. He had been told the bank owned them. Mayor Jenkins didn't miss a bet. If there was a dollar to be made, as banker he was going to get a part of it.

Already new people were coming in from tiny communities that were close by, all of the newcomers riding in. Soon the wagons would be rolling in, and when the permanent structures were all taken -- which wouldn't be long -- wooden frames would be erected, and canvas fastened in place, forming roofs and sides. There would be a dozen makeshift saloons and eating places and what have you thrown up in less than a week. Hurdy-gurdy girls would be working around the clock, and so would the gamblers, and both spelled trouble with a capital T.

Frank walked into the Henson Enterprises building and past the workers in the front office just as Viv was coming out of her rear office. She saw him and smiled.

"Be with you in a moment. Marshal," she called.

_All very proper and correct_, Frank thought. He looked behind him. Hal was standing in the outer office. They nodded at each other. Jimmy would be working the outside, Frank figured. Every hour or so the men would swap up.

Viv motioned for Frank to come into her office. She closed the door and stood facing him. "Are you all right, Frank?"

"I'm fine."

"Conrad told me about the shooting incident."

Frank shrugged that off. "Where is Conrad?"

"At the mine. For his age, he's really a very responsible young man. He knows the business."

"I'm sure he is, Viv, and I'm sure he's a big help. He just doesn't much care for me, that's all."

"Give him time. Maybe things will change."

"Maybe they will. We'll see. Ready to take a stroll through town?"

"That will set some tongues wagging."

"That bother you?"

"Not in the least. I'll get my parasol."

With Hal and Jimmy hanging back a respectable distance, the two began their leisurely walk. _The gunfighter and the lady_, Frank thought with a smile. _That would make a good title for a dime novel._

Heads did turn as the two walked slowly toward the Silver Spoon Cafe. Vivian was dressed in the height of Eastern fashion, and was a beautiful woman. Frank wondered why women toted around little parasols and didn't open them. What the hell was the point, anyway? The sky was a dazzling, clear blue, and it sure wasn't raining. Besides, he didn't figure the dainty little thing would even do much to keep off rain.

He concluded that he would never understand women.

"Town's being reborn," Viv remarked.

"Sure is. This your first boom town, Viv?"

"Yes."

"You ain't seen nothing yet. If this strike turns out to be as big as people are saying, there'll be a thousand more people packed in here before it's all over. Maybe more than that. It'll be a great big, sometimes uncontrollable, mess."

"You've worn a badge in other boom towns, Frank?"

"Yes. Several of them."

"I've tried to keep track of you over the years. But it hasn't been easy."

"I'm sure. I did move around a lot."

"And often disappeared for months at a time. Where did you go, and what did you do during those times?"

"Sometimes I worked on a ranch, under a false name."

"For thirty dollars a month?"

"Less than that a few times."

"But somebody would always come along who recognized you." It was not posed as a question.

"Yes. Or someone would get their hands on one of those damn books ... all of them nothing but a pack of lies."

"I've read all of them."

Frank cut his eyes to the woman walking by his side. "You're joking, of course?"

"No. I swear it's the truth. I had to hide them from my husband, and from Conrad." She smiled. "It was a deliciously naughty feeling."

"Oh? Reading the books about me, or hiding them from your family?"

She poked him in the ribs and giggled. "Did you really take up with a soiled dove named Hannah?"

"Oh, hell, no!" Frank chuckled. A few seconds later he said with a straight face, "Her name was Agnes."

This time Viv laughed aloud and grabbed Frank's arm. "And she died in your arms after stepping in front of a bullet that was meant for you?"

"Slowest bullet since the invention of guns, I reckon. Took that writer a whole page to get that bullet from one side of the room to the other."

"You read them, Frank?"

"Parts of some of them. I haven't read any of the newer ones."

"I have a confession to make."

"Oh?"

"The man who writes those novels was a good friend of my husband. He lives in Boston. He used to come over to the house quite often for croquet and dinner."

"Ummm. Is that so? How difficult was it for you to keep a straight face?"

"Terribly difficult."

Their conversation ground to an abrupt halt when they met a gaggle of ladies coming out of Willis's General Store. The ladies had to stop and chat for a few minutes with Vivian and oohh and aahh about her dress and hat. Frank stepped over to one side, rolled a cigarette, and smoked and waited for the impromptu hen party to end.

When the gossiping was over and the town's ladies had sashayed on their way, Viv smiled at Frank. "Sorry about that, Frank."

"It's all right. What in the world did you ladies talk about?"

"You, mostly."

"Me!"

"Yes. They wanted to know how I knew you."

"And what did you tell them?"

"The same thing I told Conrad: that I knew you years ago when you were a young cowboy."

"Conrad doesn't believe that."

"You know something?"

"What?"

"Those ladies didn't, either."

* * * *

By nightfall, thanks in no small part to the ladies who had chatted with Viv earlier, it was the talk of the town that Mrs. Vivian L. Browning, president of Henson Enterprises, was seeing the town marshal, Frank Morgan. Tongues were wagging in every store, home, saloon, and bawdy house.

Frank and Jerry saw that the prisoners were fed and locked down, and then made their early evening rounds.

"There is the first wagon coming in," Jerry said, looking up the street. "They must have traveled all night after hearing the news off the wire."

"There'll be a hundred more by week's end," Frank opined. "We're going to have our hands full."

The sign on the side of the gaily painted wagon read:

DR. RUFUS J. MARTIN

DENTIST EXTRAORDINAIRE

"What the hell does 'extraordinaire' mean?" Jerry asked.

"Extra special, I suppose, would be one definition."

"What's so special about gettin' a tooth pulled?"

Frank did not reply to the question. His gaze was on a man riding slowly up the street. His duster was caked with trail dirt, and his horse plodded wearily. Rider and horse had come a long way.

Jerry had followed Frank's eyes. "You know that man, Frank?"

"Yes. That's Robert Mallory. Big Bob. From out of the Cherokee Strip."

"I've heard of him. He's a bad one, isn't he?"

"One of the worst. He's an ambusher, a paid assassin. He's probably got three dozen kills on his tally sheet ... at least. From California to Missouri. Most of them back-shot. He rides into an area, someone is found dead, he rides out."

"He's never been charged?"

"No proof that he ever did anything. Dead men don't talk, Jerry."

"But I've heard he's a gunfighter."

"He is. He's quick as a snake if you push him. Big Bob is no coward. Believe that. But he'd rather shoot his victim in the back."

"Frank, no one just rides into this town by accident. It's too far off the path."

"I know."

"You think he's after Mrs. Browning?"

"Only God, Big Bob, and the man who is paying him knows the answer to that. But you can bet your best pair of boots he's after somebody."

"Let's see where he lands for the night."

"The best hotel in town -- that's where. Bob goes first-class all the way. That's his style."

"Frank ... he might be after you."

"That thought crossed my mind."

"You two know each other?"

"Oh, yes. For many years. And he dislikes me as much as I do him."

"Why?"

"The dislike?"

"Yes."

"We're opposites, Jerry. He'll kill anyone for money. Man, woman, or child. And has. He doesn't have a conscience. There isn't the thinnest thread of morality in the man. And he doesn't just kill with a bullet. He'll throw a victim down a deep well and stand and listen to them scream for help until they drown. He'll set fire to a house and burn his victims to death. He'll do anything for money."

"Sounds like a real charmin' fellow."

"Oh, he is. He swore to someday kill me. Swore that years ago."

"Why?"

"I whipped him in a fight. With my fists. Beat him bloody after he set a little dog on fire one night up in Wyoming. He still carries the scars of that fight on his face, and will until the day he dies. And I hope I'm the person responsible for putting him in the grave."

"Why did he do that? That's sick, Frank. Decent people wouldn't even think of doing that."

"Because he wanted to do it -- that's why. He's filth, and that's all he'll ever be. Besides, I like dogs. If I ever settle down somewhere I'll have a dozen mutts."

"I've had a couple of dogs over the years. Last one died about five years ago. You know, it's funny, but I still miss that silly animal."

"I know the feeling. What was his name?"

Jerry laughed. "Digger. That was the durnedest dog for diggin' holes I ever did see." Jerry was silent for a moment. "Let's take a walk over to the hotel and see what name Mallory registers under," he suggested.

"His own. He always does. He's an arrogant bastard. He knows there are no dodgers out on him. He likes to throw his name up into the face of the law."

"If he isn't after you, Frank, I'm surprised he came here, knowing you're the marshal."

"I doubt if he knows."

A man came running up. "Trouble about to happen at the Red Horse, Marshal," he panted. "Gun trouble."

"Go home," Frank told him. "We'll handle it."

"I'm gone. I don't like to be around no shootin'."

The man hurried away.

"Let's go earn our pay, Jerry," Frank said.

No sooner had the words left his mouth than a single shot rang out from the direction of the Red Horse Saloon.

"Damn!" Jerry said, and both men took off running.

--------

*Twelve*

Frank and Jerry pushed open the batwings and stepped into the smoke-filled saloon. A man lay dead on the dirty floor. Another man stood at the end of the bar, a pistol in his hand. Frank noted that the six-gun was not cocked. The crowded saloon was silent. The piano player had stopped his playing, and the soiled doves were standing or sitting quietly.

"Put the gun down, mister," Frank ordered.

"You go to hell, Morgan!" the man told him.

"All in due time. Right now, though, I'm ordering you to put that gun away."

"And if I don't?" The man threw the taunting challenge at Frank.

"I'll kill you," Frank said softly.

"Your gun's in leather. I'm holdin' mine in my hand, Morgan."

"You'll still die. Don't be a fool, man. If I don't get you, my deputy will."

Jerry had moved about fifteen feet to Frank's right.

"What caused all this?" Frank asked the shooter.

"He called me a liar, and then threatened to kill me. I don't see I had no choice."

"He's right, Marshal," a customer said. "I heard and seen it all."

"All right," Frank replied. "If it was self-defense, you've got no problem. Why are you looking for trouble with me?"

"'Cause you ain't takin' me to jail -- that's why."

"I didn't say anything about jail, partner. I just asked you to put your gun away."

"You ain't gonna try to haul me off to jail?"

"No. Not if you shot in self-defense. Now put that pistol back in your holster."

"All right, Marshal," the shooter said. "I'm doin' it real easy like."

The man slipped his pistol back into leather and leaned against the bar. Frank walked over to the dead man on the floor and knelt down. The dead man's gun was about a foot from the body, and it was cocked. Obviously he had cleared leather when he was hit. Frank stood up. "I need some names."

"My name's Ed Clancy," the shooter said. "I don't know the name of the guy who was trouble-huntin'."

"Anybody know who he is?" Frank asked. "Or where he's from?"

No one did.

"Get the undertaker. Jerry," Frank said.

Jerry left the saloon, and Frank walked over to the shooter by the bar. "Where are you from, Ed?"

"Colorado. I come down here to look for gold."

"Gold?"

"Yeah. But there ain't none. Not enough of it to mess with, anyways."

The bartender was standing close by, and Frank ordered coffee. "You have a permanent address, Ed?"

"Not no more. You want me to stick around town for a day or so?"

"If you don't mind."

"I'll stay. I don't mind. Reason I got my back up was I figured you was gonna kill me, Morgan. I'm sorry I crowded you."

"That's all right, Ed. I understand. Where are you staying in town?"

"Over at Mrs. Miller's boardin' house."

"Thanks, Ed. I'll probably have all the paperwork done by tomorrow, and you can pull out after that if you've a mind to."

"Thanks, Marshal. You're all right in my book."

Undertaker Malone came in, and Frank and Jerry watched as he went through the dead man's pockets looking for some identification. There was nothing.

Malone stood up. "He's got enough money to bury him proper, Marshal. But no name."

Jerry had circulated through the crowd in the Red Horse, asking about the dead man. No one knew who he was.

"Put his gun and everything you found in his pockets on the bar, Malone," Frank said. "I'll hold it at the office."

"How 'bout his boots?" Malone asked. "They're near brand-new."

"Bury him with them on."

"That seems a shame and a waste to me. Marshal."

"Did I ask you?"

"No, sir."

"Then get him out of here. Jerry, start poking around and see if you can locate the man's horse. I'll be here for a few more minutes."

Frank drank his coffee and watched while the body was carried out. The saloon swamper came over and mopped up the blood, then sprinkled sawdust over the wet spot. Frank waited by the bar until Jerry returned.

"Man's horse was over at the livery, Frank. But no saddlebags, and no rifle in the boot."

"All right. We'll check the hotel and the rooming houses tonight. If we don't have any luck there, we'll start checking the empty houses and tents in the morning."

"Might not ever know who he is," Jerry opined.

"That might very well be true. Jerry. The West is full of unmarked graves." _I've put a few men in those unmarked graves myself_, Frank added silently.

Frank and Jerry drew a blank at the hotel and the town's several rooming houses. At the hotel, Frank pointed out a name on the register: Robert Mallory.

"Big as brass," Jerry said.

"He's proud of his name, for sure. Loves to flaunt it in the face of the law. Let's call it a night, Jerry. We'll start checking the town tomorrow."

"OK, Frank. You off to bed?"

"In a little while."

"You want me to make the late rounds? I'll be glad to do it."

"No. I'll do it. Thanks for the help tonight, Jer. See you in the morning."

Frank stepped into the Silver Slipper Saloon and ordered coffee. He stood at the far end of the bar and drank his coffee, looking over the now thinning-out crowd -- a quiet crowd, as many had gone home for the night. A few people spoke to Frank; most gave him a wide berth, accompanied by curious glances. By now everyone in town, newcomer and resident alike, knew that one of the last of the west's most famous, or infamous, gunfighters was marshal of the town.

Frank stayed only a few minutes, and when he left he used the back door, stepping out into the broken bottle and trash-littered rear of the saloon. He stood for a moment in the darkness, further deepened by the shadow of the building.

He heard the outhouse door creak open and saw a man step out, buttoning up his pants. Frank knew who it was, for few men were as tall as Big Bob Mallory.

"Big Bob." Frank spoke softly.

Bob paused for just a couple of seconds, then chuckled. "I know that voice for sure. Heard you was law doggin' here at the Crossin', Morgan."

"You heard right, Bob. What are you doing in town?"

"None of your goddamn business, Morgan -- that's what!"

"I'm making it my business. Now answer the question."

"Takin' a vacation, Morgan. Just relaxin'."

"A vacation from what? All you do is back-shoot folks a couple of times a year. Doesn't take much effort to pull a trigger. I don't think you've ever had a real job."

"Ain't nobody ever proved I shot anyone, Morgan. And you damn sure can't do it. And I do work now and then, and can prove it. I do odd jobs here and there to get by. Doesn't take much for me to live on."

"Don't screw up in my town, Bob. You do, and I'll be on you quicker than a striking snake."

"You go to hell, Morgan!"

"If you've a mind to, we can sure settle it right now."

"You must be tired of livin', Morgan."

"Anytime you're ready to hook and draw."

"I think I'll let you worry and stew for a while longer."

"What's the matter, Bob? Would it help you reach a decision if I turned my back?"

Frank watched the big man tense at that. For a few seconds, he thought Bob was going to draw on him. Then Mallory slowly began to relax.

"Good try, Morgan," Bob said. "You almost had me goin' then."

"What stopped you?"

Bob refused to reply. He stood there, silent.

"Don't cause trouble in this town, Bob. Any bodies show up without explanation, I'll come looking for you and I'll kill you on sight."

"That's plain enough."

"I hope so."

"Mind if I go back in the saloon?"

"I can't legally stop you, Bob. I could order you out of town. But" -- Frank paused -- "I won't do that. Not yet."

"Getting soft in your old age?"

"You want to keep running that mouth and find out?"

Bob laughed. "I don't think so. Maybe later."

"Anytime. Face-to-face, that is."

"It'll be face-to-face, Frank. When the time comes. You can count on that." Bob walked up to and then past Frank without another word. He opened the back door of the saloon and stepped inside, closing the door behind him. The night once more enveloped Frank.

"Getting real interesting around town," Frank muttered. "Hope I can stay alive long enough to see how it all turns out."

--------

*Thirteen*

Frank slept well that night, and no one came prowling around his house in the quiet of darkness. Jerry had fed the prisoners when Frank reached the jail the next morning. There had been no new additions to the cell block during the night. The two men walked over to the Silver Spoon to have breakfast.

"Any luck on finding out the dead man's name?" Angie asked, filling their coffee cups.

"Not yet," Frank told her. "We're going to try again after breakfast. But I have my doubts about whether his rifle and saddlebags will ever show up."

"Another unmarked grave," Angie said before moving off to take the order from another customer. "People ought to carry something on them in the way of identification."

"She's right about that," Jerry said.

"I reckon so," Frank replied, sugaring and stirring his coffee. "There might even be a law about that someday."

The men ate their breakfasts and watched as the town's population grew by about fifty people in just the time it took them to eat their food.

Several men, their clothing caked with the dirt of hard traveling, stepped into the cafe. "Where's the gold strike?" one of them demanded in a very loud and irritating tone.

"What gold strike?" Angie asked.

"Lady, don't act stupid," the second man said. "We've come a long way for this."

"There is no gold here," Frank said in a low voice. "Silver, not gold."

"Who the hell asked you?" the man asked.

"And this is only a small sample of what we'll be facing in the weeks ahead," Frank whispered to his deputy. He pushed his chair back and stood up, facing the two men. Their eyes flicked briefly to the star on Frank's vest. "I didn't know I needed an invitation to speak."

"That two-bit star don't mean a damn thing to me," the man said.

"Yeah," his partner said. "Why don't you sit down and be quiet, Marshal?"

"I don't believe this," Jerry muttered, pushing back his chair and standing up.

"Back off, mister," a customer said softly. "That's Frank Morgan."

Both miners went suddenly slack-jawed and bug-eyed for a few seconds. They exchanged worried glances. The bigger of the pair finally found his voice. "Sorry, Marshal Morgan. I guess we stepped over the line there."

"It's all right, boys," Frank told them. "Sit down and have breakfast and cool down. The food is mighty good here."

"Good idea," the other miner said. "I am hungry as a hog. Ain't neither one of us et since noon yesterday. After we eat maybe we can talk about the big gold strike."

"Right," Frank agreed with a small smile. "The big gold strike."

Frank and Jerry sat back down and Jerry said, "We're really in for it if there is a rumor about gold here."

"More than you know, Jerry. I've been in towns after several hundred very angry miners learned strike rumors were false. It can get real ugly in a hurry."

"Look there," Jerry said, cutting his eyes to the street.

Frank turned his head and watched as a dozen or so riders, all leading packhorses, rode up the street. "Yeah. And it'll get worse."

"At least they're not gunslicks."

"Not yet," Frank said. "They'll come next, with the gamblers and con artists and whores."

"There's Mrs. Browning's son," Jerry said. "Sneakin' around like he's been doin' for the past couple of days. He seems to be watchin' you, Frank."

Frank looked and shook his head. "I thought I saw him yesterday snooping around. That boy is mighty curious about me."

"Any reason he should be?"

Before Frank could reply, the front door burst open. "It's the Pine gang!"

"Here?" Frank blurted, jumping to his feet.

"Well..." the man said. "One of them."

Frank relaxed just a bit. "One?"

"Who is it, Pete?" Angie called.

"That Moran kid. I seen him personal on the edge of town. He's just sittin' his horse and watchin'."

"Kid Moran?" Frank asked. "Here? Part of the Pine gang?"

"Yes," Jerry replied. "But that can't be proved. At least no one's ever come forward. I don't think there are any dodgers out on him, either."

"Why would he be comin' here?" a customer asked.

"Probably to try me," Frank said. "He's a gun-happy kid looking for a reputation.

"He's already killed five or six men," said the man who brought the news. "Maybe more than that."

"About that," Frank said. "Wounded two, three more. He's quick, so I hear."

Jerry had a worried look. "Moran is young and fast, Frank."

Frank smiled. "And I'm older and faster, Jerry. But maybe it won't come to that. We'll see." Frank picked up his coffee cup and drank the last couple of swallows. Then he walked toward the door.

"Frank," Angie called.

With his hand on the door handle, Frank cut his eyes.

"It might be a setup," she said.

"Might be, Angie. We'll see." Frank stepped out onto the boardwalk and looked up the street. The Kid was still there, sitting his horse. Frank leaned against a support post and waited for The Kid to make the first move.

Kid Moran spotted Frank and began slowly walking his horse toward the center of town. Frank got his first good look ever at the young man with the growing reputation as a gunslick. The Kid was of average height and weight, and slender built.

As he drew closer, Frank could see only two things that were menacing about the Kid: the matched pair of .45's belted around his waist. But Frank also knew that some people saw beauty in a scorpion, a tarantula, and a rattlesnake.

Kid Moran was as deadly as they came, Frank knew, and he also knew that The Kid was lightning fast.

The Kid rode slowly toward Frank. He touched the brim of his hat and smiled at Frank as he rode past. _More of a smirk than a smile_, Frank thought as he held up one hand in return greeting.

He watched The Kid rein in at a hitch rail in front of the general store and dismount. Frank decided against going over to the store ... at least not yet. He did not want to provoke an incident with The Kid. Frank felt The Kid would try him, sooner or later.

Conrad Browning walked up the boardwalk -- Frank had not seen him cross the street -- and stopped just to Frank's left. "Good morning, Marshal Morgan."

"'Mornin', Conrad. You always up this early?"

"Always. I like to open up the office for mother. It's just one less thing for her to do."

"Very conscientious of you."

"Marshal? May I ask you a question?"

"Sure."

"Sometimes you speak as if you had attended some sort of institution of higher education. Other times you don't. Why is that?"

Frank smiled at the question. "I read a lot, Conrad. I always have at least one book in my saddlebags. I enjoy reading."

"I see. Who is your favorite author?"

"I don't think I have one. A while back I did get interested in this fellow Plato. He has quite a way with words."

"Plato? Ummm. Yes, I would say he does."

Hal was across the street, watching Conrad as he chatted with Frank. Jimmy and Hal were taking no chances, figuring that if the outlaws couldn't grab Vivian they might try for her son. Kid Moran was still inside the general store.

"Who is that young man that just rode into town, Marshal?" Conrad asked. "He seems to be of great interest to you."

"A gunfighter. Calls himself Kid Moran."

"Kid Moran. How quaint. He appears to be still in his teen years."

"He's about twenty, I reckon. But he's shot more than his share of men."

"Why?"

"I beg your pardon?"

"Why did he shoot them?"

"I reckon 'cause he wanted to. Trying to build himself a reputation as a gunslick."

"And that's important out here?"

Again, Frank smiled. "Well ... it is to some folks, Conrad."

"Sort of like being the town bully, I suppose."

Frank nodded his head. "Yes, that's a very good way of putting it."

"But with a gun."

"Yes."

"Thank you, Marshal. I believe I have a better understanding of the West now. You have a nice day." Conrad strolled off toward the Henson office building.

"Strange boy," Frank muttered, "In many ways, more man than boy."

Kid Moran stepped out of the general store and leaned against an awning post. He stared across the street at the marshal.

_What's wrong with this?_ Frank thought. _Something isn't right, but I can't put my finger on it._

Frank looked up at the buildings across the street. Was there a second shooter on a rooftop somewhere? If so, was it in front or behind him? Had Pine or Vanbergen sent The Kid in to check out things, or had The Kid come in on his own?

The cafe door opened behind him and Jerry asked, "What's wrong, Frank?"

"I don't know, Jer. Maybe nothing. But I've got a funny feeling about this thing."

"Far as I know, this is the first time The Kid has ever ridden in alone."

"He's been here before, then?"

"Oh, yes. But always with others. Never alone. Frank, I'm goin' to check out the back of this block of buildings. Don't step out until you get a signal from me."

Jerry exited the rear of the cafe while Frank waited on one side of the street, Kid Moran on the other. They leaned up against awning support posts and stared at each other without speaking.

As it nearly always happened in Western towns, the word spread fast and the main street became quiet -- no riders, no one walking up and down.

"All clear back here, Frank," Jerry called from one end of the block.

"OK, Jer." _Then why am I so edgy?_ Frank wondered. He wasn't afraid of facing The Kid in a hook and draw situation. Frank made it a point to find out all he could about any and all gunfighters, new and old, and he knew that while The Kid was very quick, it was reported that he almost always missed his first shot. Frank used to be the same, until he began spending countless hours practicing, making that all important first shot count.

Fear wasn't a factor in the edgy feelings Frank was experiencing.

Frank again searched the rooftops of the buildings across the street. As near as he could tell, there was no one up there. The Kid was still leaning against the post across the street, staring at him.

"All right," Frank muttered. "I've had enough of this. I'm going to find out what The Kid has on his mind." He stepped off the boardwalk and into the street.

The Kid immediately straightened up and began walking away from Frank, heading down toward the end of the street. Frank signaled Jerry to stay put, and began following The Kid. He didn't have a clue as to what was going on ... but something was up -- he was sure of that.

The Kid suddenly stopped and looked around him -- everywhere but directly at Frank. Then he crossed the street.

Frank was now standing in the middle of the wide street.

"Well, damn!" Frank muttered.

Half a dozen fast shots blasted the early morning air, as near as Frank could tell, coming from near the Henson office building. He looked for The Kid, but Kid Moran had vanished.

"Goddamn it!" Frank yelled, and took off running.

--------

*Fourteen*

Frank rounded the corner of the street just as Hal went down in another roar of lead from several pistols in the hands of men standing in the middle of the street in front of the Hanson building. The bodyguard spun around, hit several times, and slumped to the dirt. Frank shot the first assailant in the belly, and his second round knocked another down in the street, hip-shot. Frank was forced into an alley as several hidden gunmen opened fire, the bullets howling and whining all around him. The third gunman in the street jumped behind a water trough.

Frank had caught a quick glimpse of Conrad, huddled in the doorway of the office building. He didn't appear to be hurt, but was apparently too frightened to seek better cover. And Vivian was due to arrive at any moment.

Frank snapped a quick shot at a man standing in a doorway.

The bullet knocked a chunk out of the door stoop and sent splinters into the face of the man. Screaming in pain as one of the splinters stuck in his eye, he stepped out of cover. Frank put a bullet in the man's guts that doubled him over and sent him stumbling into the street. He collapsed facedown in the dirt, and was still.

Jerry's six-gun cracked from the other end of the street, and a man yelled and went off the roof of a boarded-up building. Anyone within earshot could hear his neck break as he landed in the street.

"This ain't workin'!" a man yelled. "Let's get the hell outta here!"

Frank and Jerry waited.

"How?" another man shouted.

"Through the pass, you nitwit. Just like we planned."

There was silence for a moment, then the sounds of several horses being ridden hard away from the edge of town.

Jerry ran over to Frank, a pistol in each hand. "Are you hit?"

"No. Let's see about the boy. I don't think he's hurt, just scared."

Conrad was getting to his feet when Frank and Jerry reached him. His face was ashen, and he was trembling. "They were going to kidnap me!" Conrad blurted. "Hal pushed me down and stood in front of me." He looked at Hal, bloody and dead in the street. "Oh, my God!" Conrad started to move toward Hal, and Frank stopped him.

"Easy, boy. No point. He's beyond help."

"You don't know that!"

"I know, boy. I saw him take three rounds in the center of the chest."

"I liked that man. I didn't at first. But I really liked him. He saved my life."

"That's what he was paid to do, Conrad."

Jerry was checking the dead and the wounded. "Two alive, Frank. And one of them ain't gonna be for long."

"Good," Frank said. "The jail's gettin' full." A crowd had gathered at the mouth of the street. "One of you get Doc Bracken, and someone get the undertaker. Move!" He turned to Jerry. "See if you can locate Kid Moran. Don't brace him, Jerry. Just see if he's still in town."

"Will do."

Jimmy and Vivian walked up. Vivian was pale with shock, and Jimmy was killing mad. Frank could read it in his eyes. "Settle down, Jimmy. They're gone."

"Me and Hal been pards for a long time, Frank. I ain't likely to forget this."

"See to Mrs. Browning and her son, Jimmy. Right now!"

Jimmy nodded and took Viv's arm, leading her and Conrad toward the front door of the office building and inside. Jimmy stood in the doorway for a moment, looking at the bloody and still body of his longtime friend. The man touched the brim of his hat and walked inside the office, closing the door.

Someone called that the doctor had been roused out of bed and was on his way, as was Malone, the undertaker. Frank walked over to the hip-shot gunman. On closer investigation, he recognized him -- Max Stoddard. He was wanted in several states for murder, and there was a hefty reward for his arrest.

"You boys are making me a princely sum of money, Max," Frank told him.

"Go to hell."

Frank smiled at the outlaw. "Time I get through here, I'll be near'bouts able to retire, I reckon."

"Damn you, Morgan!"

Frank reached down and slipped an over-and-under derringer from the outlaw's left boot. "Were you thinking I'd forget about this little banger, Max?"

"I was hopin' you would, you bastard."

Frank laughed at him and took a long-bladed knife from the sheath on the outlaw's belt. "Not likely, Max. I haven't stayed alive this long by being careless."

"Ned or Vic will get you, Morgan. You can count on that. They'll get you 'fore this is over."

Doc Bracken was pushing his way through the still gathering crowd, cussing loudly and ordering the gawkers to get the hell out of his way.

Mayor Jenkins was right behind him, both of them looking as though they had jumped into their clothes, unshaven and with disheveled hair.

"What the hell happened here?" the mayor shouted.

"These men tried to kidnap Conrad Browning," Frank said, pointing to the dead and wounded in the street. "Conrad's bodyguard was killed. Conrad and his mother are safe. They're in the office building."

"My God!" the mayor whispered. "Do you know any of these men, Marshal?"

"I know this one. Max Stoddard. He's wanted for murder in several states. All these men are part of the Pine and Vanbergen gangs."

The mayor patted Frank on the arm. "Wonderful job, Marshal. Superb."

The mayor wandered off into the crowd. Frank turned his attention to the doctor, watching him work on Stoddard for a moment.

"No permanent damage to the hip," the doctor said. "But he won't be walking for a while. Some of you men take this hombre over to the jail." Doc Bracken moved quickly to the other outlaws. "Dead," he said twice. "And this one won't last long. Some of you men make him as comfortable as possible. He'll be dead in a few minutes."

"Damn you to hell, Morgan!" the dying man said.

"Here, now," Dr. Bracken admonished him. "That's enough of that. You best be making your peace with God."

The outlaw started cussing, spewing out a stream of profanity. Suddenly he began coughing. He arched his back, and then relaxed in a pool of blood.

"He's gone," Doc Bracken said.

Frank went with the undertaker and searched the pockets of the dead men. They had no identification on them. He took their guns and walked back to his office. Jerry met him on the way.

"Kid Moran left town when the shooting started, Frank. Half a dozen people seen him hightail out."

"All right. What about this pass the outlaws took to get out of town?"

"Cuts through the mountains yonder," he said, pointing. "But it's tricky, so I'm told. If you don't know the way, you can get all balled up and lost and find yourself dead-ended on a narrow trail."

"Can't go forward, and you have hell going back?"

"That's it."

"You been up there?"

"No. It's outlaw controlled on the other side of the mountains. Only the outlaws use it, and they don't use it very often. Men and horses have been killed up there, slippin' off the narrow trails."

"So the Pine and Vanbergen gangs are headquartered just over those mountains?"

"Yep. Not five miles away, as the crow flies. But they might as well be plumb over on the other side of the moon, if you know what I mean."

Frank nodded his head. "I do. Let's go see about our new prisoner and then arrange a nice service for Hal."

* * * *

A week after the shoot-out in which Hal was killed, a deputy U.S. Marshal came by train to Denver and then took the spur line down to the border and went from there by horse to the Crossing and picked up two of the prisoners Frank was holding. Frank's bank account grew substantially. Ten days later another deputy U.S. Marshal rode in and promptly rode out with Max Stoddard. Stoddard had a two thousand dollar reward on his head, and so did one of the other dead men. Frank gave half of the money to Jerry, and Jerry almost pumped his arm off shaking his hand. Frank's bank account grew even larger.

Hal was buried in the local cemetery, and Vivian bought a nice headstone for the grave.

Barnwell's Crossing grew by almost a thousand people in two weeks. Most were coming in because of the rumor of a major gold strike, and nothing anyone could say would make them believe it wasn't true.

"Hell with them," Frank told Jerry one morning. "When they get tired of digging they'll leave."

The county now had a judge -- Judge Walter Pelmutter -- assigned to the town of Barnwell's Crossing, and that made the disposition of those arrested a lot faster. The marshal's office got two dollars out of every fine, and Frank split that with Jerry. Judge Pelmutter was a no-nonsense, by-the-book judge who cut no slack to anyone for anything. The jail was usually full at night and emptied out the next morning after court.

Frank checked the wall clock. Eleven o'clock. He had a lunch date with Vivian at her home in half an hour. After lunch they were to go riding and spend the afternoon together. Conrad would stay at the office. That would give Jimmy a much needed break. Frank had offered to hire another bodyguard, but Jimmy had said he didn't want to work with anyone else ... not for a time yet Jimmy was gradually working his way out of his grieving over the loss of his saddle pard, but he still had a ways to go.

"I'm going to go home and wash up some and change clothes, Jerry," he told his deputy. "Then I'm over to Mrs. Browning's house. We're going riding down in the valley."

"Don't worry about a thing, Frank. I'll take care of any problem that comes up. Y'all have fun and relax."

At his house, Frank cleaned up and changed clothes -- black trousers with a narrow pinstripe, black shirt. He tied a red bandanna around his neck and slipped on a black leather vest. He combed his hair, put on his hat, and then inspected himself as best he could in the small mirror he'd bought at Willis's General Store.

"Well, Morgan," he said to the reflection. "You're not going to win any contests for handsome. But you don't look too bad, considering what you have to work with."

He buckled on his gunbelt and stepped out onto the small front porch. The day was sunny and cloudless, the sky a bright blue -- a perfect day for a ride in the country.

He rode the short distance over to the Browning estate and talked with Jimmy for a few minutes before walking up to the porch and being admitted inside the grandest house in town.

"You look lovely," he told Vivian, as she opened the door and he stepped inside.

"You wouldn't be the least prejudiced, now would you, Frank?" she teased.

"Not at all. You're as pretty as the day we married."

"And you tell great big fibs, Frank Morgan. But do continue."

Lunch was fried chicken, hot biscuits, mashed potatoes and gravy.

"Did you fix this?" Frank asked.

"I certainly did. The servants have the afternoon off. And I told Jimmy to take off as soon as you got here."

"How about Conrad? Is Jimmy going to the office?"

"No. I asked a couple of my miners to look after him. Those men have been with me for years. Completely trustworthy."

After lunch, over coffee, Vivian said, "I'm going to change clothes, Frank. I hate to ride sidesaddle. Will you be shocked if I change into britches?"

Frank chuckled. "I knew you pretty well a long time ago, Viv. I think I'm past being shocked by anything you do."

She laughed. "Don't say I didn't warn you."

She came out of her bedroom a few moments later wearing very tight-fitting men's jeans and a checkered shirt, open at the collar. Frank almost choked on his coffee.

"Damn, Viv!" he managed to say, wiping a few drops of coffee off his chin.

"You don't approve, Frank?" she teased him.

"'Approve' is ... not quite the word."

"Come on, let's get saddled up and get out of this town. I want to forget business for a few hours. I want us to be totally alone, and I want a good, hard ride."

Frank grinned and held his tongue on that one ... but oh, what he was thinking.

She caught his smile. "You're naughty, Frank. But don't ever change."

"I'm too old to change now, Viv."

Five minutes later they were riding out of town, heading toward the mountains and a pretty little valley that lay in the shadows of the mountains.

Shortly after they rode out of town, four men dressed as miners rode out. They occasionally exchanged smiles as they followed the man and woman. They had traveled a long way to get to the town of Barnwell's Crossing. The five thousand dollars that Vivian's father had placed on Frank's head had grown to ten thousand over the years, and the man who was overseeing the bounty, controlling the purse strings -- a close friend of the family, and legal advisor -- had added ten thousand, plus a substantial bonus if the body was never found, for Vivian's death.

The four paid assassins had been lounging around town for a week, staying out of sight and waiting for the right moment ... and this was it.

--------

*Fifteen*

The valley was an oasis of green surrounded by mountains, a profusion of multicolored wildflowers and gently waving grass in the slight breeze.

"It's lovely," Viv whispered as she and Frank rested their horses at the mouth of the valley. "So beautiful and peaceful."

Frank had carefully checked out the valley a few days before, and had been pleasantly surprised to find it as Vivian had just described it.

"A little creek is over yonder," Frank said, pointing. "Water is cold and pure. I had me a drink, and it numbed my tongue."

"Large enough to take a swim?"

"No. If you're brave you could stick your feet in it, though. But you won't leave them in there for long."

"I'm thirsty."

"We'll ride down and have us a drink. Fill up our canteens."

"I wrapped up some of that chicken and biscuits."

"I'm so fall now I'm about to pop, Viv. But it'll sure taste good later."

Vivian took off her fashionable boots and put her feet into the fast-running creek ... for about one second. She squealed, jerked her feet out, and immediately began rubbing them. "I have never felt water that cold!"

"I warned you," Frank said with a laugh. He quickly cut his eyes to the horses, grazing a dozen yards away. Their heads had come up quickly, and their ears were pricked. The nostrils on Frank's horse were flared, and his eyes were shining with a wary and suspicious light.

"Stay put, Viv. Don't move unless I tell you to. And if I tell you, get behind that clump of trees just to your left."

"What's wrong, Frank?"

"I don't know. But the animals suddenly got jumpy, and I've learned to trust that big horse of mine. He's saved my skin more than once."

Frank stayed low and worked his way over to his horse. Using the big animal for cover, he pulled his rifle from the boot. He opened a pocket on the side of the boot and took out a box of cartridges and slipped them in his back pocket. Frank preferred the rifle because it packed a hefty wallop and had excellent range.

He crawled back to Viv and motioned for her to head for the copse of trees he had pointed out.

In the trees, she looked at him through worried eyes. "What's wrong?" she repeated.

"I saw one man, maybe two, slipping around on that ridge over there, dead in front of us."

"The Pine and Vanbergen gangs?"

"Maybe. Can't be certain about that. But folks who slip around are damn sure up to no good."

"Conrad!"

"The boy will be all right, Viv. You've got people looking out for him, and Jimmy will be in town and so will Jerry. Don't worry about him."

She peered through the weeds at the ridge. Frank felt her stiffen beside him.

"What's wrong, Viv?"

"I just caught a glint of sunlight off of something."

"Where?"

"Way over there to our right. In those rocks."

"That's three men, then. At least."

"We're in deep trouble, aren't we, Frank?"

"Well ... yes and no. To get behind us would take some doing. It's all nearly wide-open meadow for a long way on either side of us. An Indian could do it easy enough, but these men aren't Indians."

"The question is, who are they and what do they want?"

"You or me, or both of us."

"So we do ... what?"

"We wait, Viv. By now they're sure to have figured out we've spotted them, so surprise is out of their plans. That's a plus for us."

"The minus is, there appears to be only one easy way into this valley, right?"

Frank smiled. "You're still a very observant lady, Viv. That's right. There are a half-dozen ways in and out, but only one easy way. And they've got it covered."

"And the other ways out?"

"Rough. Danger of slides, mostly. To the north is completely out of the question. That pass is controlled by the Pine and Vanbergen gangs."

"Well ... we've got a little food and plenty of water. I can stand to lose a few pounds, anyway."

Frank chuckled. "You're a tough lady, Viv. Tougher now than when we first met."

"Dealing with male heads of business and shifty attorneys can do that."

"I 'spect you're had plenty of practice in dealing with both over the years."

"Running a conglomerate of businesses is tough enough for a man in a man's world, Frank. Being a woman makes it doubly tough."

The ugly whine of a bullet put an end to that conversation. The bullet slammed into a tree behind the pinned-down pair and tore off bits of bark.

"They sure know where we are," Viv remarked, raising her head and looking around.

Frank did not immediately reply. He was trying to determine where the bullet came from. He had a hunch it came from the location of a fourth man. Finally he said, "I'm sure there is another man behind the rocks near the entrance to the valley, Viv. That makes four."

"The odds just keep getting worse."

"We've got good cover, and that bullet came nowhere near us. I'm not even sure they know exactly where we are. They may be just trying to flush us."

"You will excuse me if I don't share your cool calmness, Frank. I'm a stranger to this type of thing."

"You're doing fine, Viv." He looked up at the sun. About five hours of good daylight left, maybe less. "If it comes to it, Viv, I can lead us out on foot come dark."

Another bullet bowled into the copse of trees; then several more came whistling in.

"I think they have guessed we're here, Frank."

"I think so, too. This was the logical place for us to take cover."

"I counted four rifles."

"Yes. Me, too. I think someone is using a .32-.20. Another sounds like a .45-.70."

"Is all that supposed to mean something to me?"

Frank grinned at her. "When we get out of this pickle I'll give you a short course in firearms."

"I can hardly wait. In more ways than one."

The gunmen on the ridges and in the rocks opened up again, and Frank and Vivian could do nothing but huddle behind cover, all thoughts of talk obliterated by the roar of gunfire and the bowling of bullets.

"This is beginning to make me mad," Frank muttered, when the gunfire ceased for a moment.

Viv looked at him in astonishment. She had taken off her hat, and her hair was just slightly disheveled. Her white blouse was spotted with dirt and grass stains. "You're just now getting angry, Frank?"

"Yeah. That bunch of yellow bastards over yonder is really annoying me now." He lifted his rifle to his shoulder and mentally figured the range before squeezing off a round. The bullet was low, and he compensated for that before squeezing off another round. This time the bullet must have come very close to the hidden sniper, for both Frank and Viv heard a yelp of surprise.

"You hit?" the question was shouted.

"Naw. But that bastard can shoot."

"We all knowed that startin' off, Dick."

There was more conversation between the snipers, but it was so faint neither Frank nor Viv could make out the words.

Then one of the gunman called, "This ain't workin' out, boys."

Frank and Viv looked at each other.

"What do you mean, Rob? We got 'em cold. All we got to do is wait 'em out."

Another voice was added. "Yeah? But for how long?"

"That's right. Them two got good cover, and we can't get to them to finish this."

"He's right 'bout that," another called. "It's all open twixt us and them."

"Goddamn it, no names, you idgits!"

"Rob and Dick," Frank muttered. "Remember those names, Viv."

"Forever," she whispered.

There was more murmuring of words between the gunmen, again so faint that Frank and Viv could not make them out. They waited in the copse of trees.

Then there was nothing but the gentle sighing of the wind in the valley.

"Have they gone?" Viv asked.

"I don't know, honey. It may be they just want us to think they've left."

"If wishes were horses..."

"What?"

"Nothing," she said with a quiet laugh. "Don't pay any attention to me. I'm babbling."

"Babble on, Viv. I'm going to ease out of here and take a look around."

She cut her suddenly alarm-filled eyes to him. "Frank -- "

"Relax. I'm not going far, and I'm not going to take any chances. Take it easy, Viv. I'll be right back."

"Promise?"

"Cross my heart. You want to spit in my palm?"

She smiled, and Frank could see her tension ease. "Get out of here, you nut!"

Frank eased out of the trees and wormed his way down to and over the creekbank, then worked his way about fifty feet. Easing up behind a clump of weeds, he gave the rocks and ridges a good visual going-over. He could see nothing moving. His and Viv's horses had moved a few yards during the gunfire, but were now grazing calmly. His big horse was showing no signs of being alarmed.

Frank crawled over the creekbank and quickly got to his feet, running toward the horses. No shots boomed; no lead came howling in his direction. He led the horses over to the thick copse of trees.

"They're gone, Viv. Come on. I want to take a look at the ridges. I might find some sign that I can use."

Frank found some brass from a .45-.70 and a .32-.20. But it was the butt-plate markings that caught and held his attention. They were strange looking.

"What's wrong, Frank?"

"The butt-plate on this rifle. It's the strangest I've ever seen." He snapped his fingers. "I know what it is. It loads through the buttstock. I'll bet you it's a bolt-action military rifle."

"Are they rare?"

"They are out here."

"And if you find a man in town who has one, it's a good bet he's one of the men who attacked us."

"That's it, Viv. Come on, let's ride. It's a good hour back to town, and we're not taking the same trail back we used to get up here."

Frank found the tracks of the men who'd attempted to kill them, and there were four horses. The hoofprints led straight toward town. Frank cut across country, and they made it back to town in just over an hour. Frank saw Vivian back to her house, where Jimmy was waiting on the porch.

Jimmy saw the dirt and grass stains on their clothing and asked, "Trouble?"

Frank explained what had happened.

"I bet that's one of those Winchester-Hotchkiss so-called sportin' rifles," Jimmy said. "The army has some of them, but they're rare out here."

"Keep your eyes open for one, Jimmy."

"Will do."

At the office, while Jerry made a fresh pot of coffee, Frank told him about the events of that afternoon.

"You think they were after you, or Mrs. Browning?"

"Both of us. And I'm getting damn tired of it."

"You think the Pine and Vanbergen gangs were behind the ambush?"

Frank shook his head. "I don't think so, Jerry. They want to kill me, yes. But I believe there are other forces working to kill both of us."

"Who?"

Frank explained in as much depth as he knew about Viv's father and his deathbed desire to have him killed. He ended with, "This attorney, whoever he is -- and Viv told me they have a couple of dozen lawyers, maybe more than that, working for the company -- has some big ideas, I think. Ideas about controlling the various companies that make up Henson Enterprises. But first he has to get rid of Vivian."

Jerry slowly nodded his head. "OK. But that still leaves the son."

"Who is not twenty-one years old, and legally can't do a damn thing until he is."

"Ah! Yeah. I'm getting the picture now. But you have no proof of any of this."

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