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Three-Ten to Yuma and Other Stories

Page 5

by Elmore Leonard


  A heavyset man stood in the doorway with a Colt pointing out past the thick bulge of his stomach. “Leave that shotgun where it is.” Timpey stood next to him with the coffeepot in his hand. There was coffee down the front of his suit, on the door, and on the flooring. He brushed at the front of his coat feebly, looking from Scallen to the man with the pistol.

  “I couldn’t help it, Marshal—he made me do it. He threatened to do something to me if I didn’t.”

  “Who is he?”

  “Bob Moons…you know, Dick’s brother….”

  The heavyset man glanced at Timpey angrily. “Shut your damn whining.” His eyes went to Jim Kidd and held there. “You know who I am, don’t you?”

  Kidd looked uninterested. “You don’t resemble anybody I know.”

  “You didn’t have to know Dick to shoot him!”

  “I didn’t shoot that messenger.”

  Scallen got to his feet, looking at Timpey. “What the hell’s wrong with you?”

  “I couldn’t help it. He forced me.”

  “How did he know we were here?”

  “He came in this morning talking about Dick and I felt he needed some cheering up; so I told him Jim Kidd had been tried and was being taken to Yuma and was here in town…on his way. Bob didn’t say anything and went out, and a little later he came back with the gun.”

  “You damn fool.” Scallen shook his head wearily.

  “Never mind all the talk.” Moons kept the pistol on Kidd. “I would’ve found him sooner or later. This way everybody gets saved a long train ride.”

  “You pull that trigger,” Scallen said, “and you’ll hang for murder.”

  “Like he did for killing Dick….”

  “A jury said he didn’t do it.” Scallen took a step toward the big man. “And I’m damned if I’m going to let you pass another sentence.”

  “You stay put or I’ll pass sentence on you!”

  Scallen moved a slow step nearer. “Hand me the gun, Bob.”

  “I’m warning you—get the hell out of the way and let me do what I came for.”

  “Bob, hand me the gun or I swear I’ll beat you through that wall.”

  Scallen tensed to take another step, another slow one. He saw Moons’s eyes dart from him to Kidd and in that instant he knew it would be his only chance. He lunged, swinging his coat aside with his hand, and when the hand came up it was holding a Colt. All in one motion. The pistol went up and chopped an arc across Moons’s head before the big man could bring his own gun around. His hat flew off as the barrel swiped his skull and he went back against the wall heavily, then sank to the floor.

  Scallen wheeled to face the window, thumbing the hammer back. But Kidd was still sitting on the edge of the bed with the shotgun at his feet.

  The deputy relaxed, letting the hammer ease down. “You might have made it, that time.”

  Kidd shook his head. “I wouldn’t have got off the bed.” There was a note of surprise in his voice. “You know, you’re pretty good….”

  At two-fifteen Scallen looked at his watch, then stood up, pushing the chair back. The shotgun was under his arm. In less than an hour they would leave the hotel, walk over Commercial to Stockman, and then up Stockman to the station. Three blocks. He wanted to go all the way. He wanted to get Jim Kidd on that train…but he was afraid.

  He was afraid of what he might do once they were on the street. Even now his breath was short and occasionally he would inhale and let the air out slowly to calm himself. And he kept asking himself if it was worth it.

  People would be in the windows and the doors, though you wouldn’t see them. They’d have their own feelings and most of their hearts would be pounding…and they’d edge back of the door frames a little more. The man out on the street was something without a human nature or a personality of its own. He was on a stage. The street was another world.

  Timpey sat on the chair in front of the door and next to him, squatting on the floor with his back against the wall, was Moons. Scallen had unloaded Moons’s pistol and placed it in the pitcher behind him. Kidd was on the bed.

  Most of the time he stared at Scallen. His face bore a puzzled expression, making his eyes frown, and sometimes he would cock his head as if studying the deputy from a different angle.

  Scallen stepped to the window now. Charlie Prince and another man were under the awning. The others were not in sight.

  “You haven’t changed your mind?” Kidd asked him seriously.

  Scallen shook his head.

  “I don’t understand you. You risk your neck to save my life, now you’ll risk it again to send me to prison.”

  Scallen looked at Kidd and suddenly felt closer to him than any man he knew. “Don’t ask me, Jim,” he said, and sat down again.

  After that he looked at his watch every few minutes.

  At five minutes to three he walked to the door, motioning Timpey aside, and turned the key in the lock. “Let’s go, Jim.” When Kidd was next to him he prodded Moons with the gun barrel. “Over on the bed. Mister, if I see or hear about you on the street before train time, you’ll face an attempted murder charge.” He motioned Kidd past him, then stepped into the hall and locked the door.

  They went down the stairs and crossed the lobby to the front door, Scallen a stride behind with the shotgun barrel almost touching Kidd’s back. Passing through the doorway he said as calmly as he could, “Turn left on Stockman and keep walking. No matter what you hear, keep walking.”

  As they stepped out into Commercial, Scallen glanced at the ramada where Charlie Prince had been standing, but now the saloon porch was an empty shadow. Near the corner two horses stood under a sign that said EAT, in red letters; and on the other side of Stockman the signs continued, lining the rutted main street to make it seem narrower. And beneath the signs, in the shadows, nothing moved. There was a whisper of wind along the ramadas. It whipped sand specks from the street and rattled them against clapboard, and the sound was hollow and lifeless. Somewhere a screen door banged, far away.

  They passed the café, turning onto Stockman. Ahead, the deserted street narrowed with distance to a dead end at the rail station—a single-story building standing by itself, low and sprawling, with most of the platform in shadow. The westbound was there, along the platform, but the engine and most of the cars were hidden by the station house. White steam lifted above the roof, to be lost in the sun’s glare.

  They were almost to the platform when Kidd said over his shoulder, “Run like hell while you’re still able.”

  “Where are they?”

  Kidd grinned, because he knew Scallen was afraid. “How should I know?”

  “Tell them to come out in the open!”

  “Tell them yourself.”

  “Dammit, tell them!” Scallen clenched his jaw and jabbed the short barrel into Kidd’s back. “I’m not fooling. If they don’t come out, I’ll kill you!”

  Kidd felt the gun barrel hard against his spine and suddenly he shouted, “Charlie!”

  It echoed in the street, but after there was only the silence. Kidd’s eyes darted over the shadowed porches. “Dammit, Charlie—hold on!”

  Scallen prodded him up the warped plank steps to the shade of the platform and suddenly he could feel them near. “Tell him again!”

  “Don’t shoot, Charlie!” Kidd screamed the words.

  From the other side of the station they heard the trainman’s call trailing off, “…Gila Bend. Sentinel, Yuma!”

  The whistle sounded loud, wailing, as they passed into the shade of the platform, then out again to the naked glare of the open side. Scallen squinted, glancing toward the station office, but the train dispatcher was not in sight. Nor was anyone. “It’s the mail car,” he said to Kidd. “The second to last one.” Steam hissed from the iron cylinder of the engine, clouding that end of the platform. “Hurry it up!” he snapped, pushing Kidd along.

  Then, from behind, hurried footsteps sounded on the planking, and, as the hiss of steam died away�
�“Stand where you are!”

  The locomotive’s main rods strained back, rising like the legs of a grotesque grasshopper, and the wheels moved. The connecting rods stopped on an upward swing and couplings clanged down the line of cars.

  “Throw the gun away, brother!”

  Charlie Prince stood at the corner of the station house with a pistol in each hand. Then he moved around carefully between the two men and the train. “Throw it far away, and unhitch your belt,” he said.

  “Do what he says,” Kidd said. “They’ve got you.”

  The others, six of them, were strung out in the dimness of the platform shed. Grim faced, stubbles of beard, hat brims low. The man nearest Prince spat tobacco lazily.

  Scallen knew fear at that moment as fear had never gripped him before; but he kept the shotgun hard against Kidd’s spine. He said, just above a whisper, “Jim—I’ll cut you in half!”

  Kidd’s body was stiff, his shoulders drawn up tightly. “Wait a minute…” he said. He held his palms out to Charlie Prince, though he could have been speaking to Scallen.

  Suddenly Prince shouted, “Go down!”

  There was a fraction of a moment of dead silence that seemed longer. Kidd hesitated. Scallen was looking at the gunman over Kidd’s shoulder, seeing the two pistols. Then Kidd was gone, rolling on the planking, and the pistols were coming up, one ahead of the other. Without moving Scallen squeezed both triggers of the scattergun.

  Charlie Prince was going down, holding his hands tight to his chest, as Scallen dropped the shotgun and swung around drawing his Colt. He fired hurriedly. Wait for a target! Words in his mind. He saw the men under the platform shed, three of them breaking for the station office, two going full length to the planks…one crouched, his pistol up. That one! Get him quick! Scallen aimed and squeezed the heavy revolver and the man went down. Now get the hell out!

  Charlie Prince was facedown. Kidd was crawling, crawling frantically and coming to his feet when Scallen reached him. He grabbed Kidd by the collar savagely, pushing him on, and dug the pistol into his back. “Run, damn you!”

  Gunfire erupted from the shed and thudded into the wooden caboose as they ran past it. The train was moving slowly. Just in front of them a bullet smashed a window of the mail car. Someone screamed, “You’ll hit Jim!” There was another shot, then it was too late. Scallen and Kidd leapt up on the car platform and were in the mail car as it rumbled past the end of the station platform.

  Kidd was on the floor, stretched out along a row of mail sacks. He rubbed his shoulder awkwardly with his manacled hands and watched Scallen, who stood against the wall next to the open door.

  Kidd studied the deputy for some minutes. Finally he said, “You know, you really earn your hundred and a half.”

  Scallen heard him, though the iron rhythm of the train wheels and his breathing were loud in his temples. He felt as if all his strength had been sapped, but he couldn’t help smiling at Jim Kidd. He was thinking pretty much the same thing.

  4

  Long Night

  NEAR THE CREST of the hill, where the road climbed into the timber, he raised from the saddle wearily and turned to look back toward the small, flickering pinpoints of light.

  The lights were people, and his mind gathered faces. A few he had seen less than a half hour before; but now, to Dave Boland, all of the faces were expressionless and as cold as the lights. They seemed wide-eyed and innocently, stupidly vacant.

  He rode on through the timber with what was left of a hot anger, and now it was just a weariness. He had argued all afternoon and into the evening. Argued, reasoned, threatened and finally, pleaded. But it had ended with “I’m sorry, I’ve got my supper waiting for me,” and a door slammed as soon as his back was turned.

  He felt alone and inadequate, and for a moment a panic swept him, leaving his forehead cold with perspiration. The worst was still ahead, telling Virginia.

  Wheelock had been in the hotel dining room and he had approached the big rancher hesitantly and told him he was sorry to bother him….

  “Mr. Wheelock, I paid you prompt for that breeding. The calf was too big, that’s why it died. I did everything I could. If you’ll breed her again—”

  “I heard the calf strangled. Son, when you help a delivery, loop your rope around the head then bring it good and tight along the jaws, and a few turns on the forelegs if they’re out.” He drew circles in the air with his fork. “Then you don’t strangle them to death.” And he laughed with a mouthful of food when he said, finally, “The breeding fee generally doesn’t include advice on how to deliver.”

  E.V. Timmons leaned back from the rolltop and palmed his hands thoughtfully as if he were offering a prayer. He looked at the ceiling for a long time with a tragic cast to his eyes. When he spoke it was hesitantly, as if it pained him, but with conviction….

  “Buying trends are erratic these days, Dave. Tomorrow, demand might drop on a big item and I’d have a heavy inventory on my hands and no place to unload. It means you have to maintain a working capital.”

  Tom Wylie was sympathetic when he told him about most of his stock dying from rattleweed poisoning.

  “That’s mean stuff in March, Dave. Got to keep your stock out of it. You know, the best way to get rid of it is to cut the crowns a few inches below the soil surface. It generally won’t send up new tops.” He asked Boland if he had seen Timmons. And after that he kept his sympathy.

  John Avery was in the hotel business. He was used to walls and space limitations. “If my cows got into rattleweed I’d put fences up to keep them the hell out. You got to organize, boy!” Avery’s supper was waiting for him….

  Virginia would understand.

  Hell, what else could she do? He saw her pale, small-boned face that now, somehow, seemed sharper and more drawn with their child only a few days or a week away. She would smile a weak smile, twisting the hem of her apron—and it would mean nothing. Virginia smiled from habit. She smiled every time he brought her bad news. But always with the same sad expression in the eyes. Sometime, in the future, perhaps there would be a real reason to smile. He wondered if she would be able to. Now, with the baby coming…

  Virginia had waited tables in a restaurant in Sudan because she had to support herself after her folks died suddenly. She was a great kidder and all the riders liked her. Broadminded, they said. He used to pass through Sudan a few times a year when most of the Company herds were grazed near the Canadian. After a while, he went out of his way and even made excuses to go there. She never kidded with him…

  When he told the others about it, they said, “She’s a nice girl—but who wants a nice girl? You get bone-tired pushing steers from the Nueces to Dodge; but, son, you can throw off along the way anytime you want—”

  It had been raining hard for the past few minutes when finally he led his mare into the long, rickety shed, unsaddled and pitch-forked some hay.

  The rain, he thought, shaking his head. The one thing I don’t need is rain. He tried to see humor in it, though it was an irritation. Like an annoying, tickling fly lighting on a broken leg.

  He walked up the slight grade toward the dim shape of the adobe house, passing the empty chicken coops, then skirted Virginia’s vegetable garden, moving around toward the front of the house. He saw a light through a curtained side window. At the front of the house he called, “It’s me,” so as not to startle her, then lifted the latch on the door and pushed in.

  Virginia Boland stood next to the oilcloth-covered table. She twisted the hem of her apron—she did it deliberately, her fingers tensed white straining at the material—and her eyes were wide. No smile softened the pale, oval face. Her dark dress was ill-fitting about her narrow shoulders and bosom as if it were sizes too large, then rounded, bulging with her pregnancy to lose any shape it might have had before.

  Boland said, taking his hat off, “I guess I don’t have to tell you what happened.”

  “Dave—” Her voice was small, and now almost a whisper. Her eye
s still wide.

  He came out of his coat and brushed it halfheartedly before throwing it to a chair.

  “I saw all of them, Ginny.”

  “Dave—”

  He looked at her curiously now across the few feet that separated them…. There was something in her voice. And suddenly he knew she wasn’t saying his name in answer to his words. He moved to her quickly and held her by the shoulders.

  “Is it time? Are you ready now?”

  She shook her head, looking at him imploringly as if she were saying something with her eyes, but she didn’t speak.

  She didn’t have to.

  “Hello, Davie boy.” The voice came from behind Virginia.

  He stood in the doorway of the partitioned bedroom with the curtain draped over his shoulder. The white cloth dropped to the floor showing only part of him; damp and grimy, trail dust streaked and smeared over clothes that had not been changed for days. A yellow slicker was draped over his lower arm and his hand would have gone unnoticed if the long pistol barrel were not sticking out from the raincoat.

  “Been a long time, hasn’t it!” he said, and came into the room carefully, lifting the slicker from his arm to drape it over a straight chair. “I almost didn’t recognize little Ginny with her new shape.” He grinned, winking at Boland. “You didn’t waste any time, did you?”

  Boland stared at the man self-consciously, feeling a nervousness that was edged with fear, but he made himself smile.

  “Jeffy, I almost didn’t recognize you,” he said.

  “Wait’ll you see Red.” His head turned to the side and he called to the bedroom, “Red, come on out!”

  Boland looked toward the curtained doorway and then to the dirt-caked figure next to him. “I wouldn’t have known you by sight, but your voice—”

  “You didn’t forget that Cimarron crossing two years ago, did you?”

  “Of course I remember,” Boland said. “You saved my life.” He tried to show friendship and appreciation at the same time and smiled when he said, “What are you doing here, Jeffy?”

  “You’re a regular babe in the woods, aren’t you?” His head turned again. “Red! Dammit!”

 

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