The Legend of Perley Gates

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The Legend of Perley Gates Page 29

by William W. Johnstone


  “Yes.”

  Duff smiled. “All right, my friend, I hate to do this to you, but ’twill be good for m’ soul to see someone else fail, after I have failed so many times.”

  Wang bent his arm at the elbow and held the palm of his hand toward Duff with the fingers extended forward, clawlike.

  Duff waited for a couple of seconds; then he snapped his fingers closed around the coin. Wang didn’t move until Duff started to close his hand. Wang’s hand returned, with his own fist closed.

  “Ha!” Duff said. “Dinnae get the coin, did you? Well, don’t feel bad about it. You gave yourself an impossible task.”

  “Return the coin to me,” Wang said.

  “Aye, ’twill be a pleasure.” Triumphantly, Duff opened the hand that had held the coin.

  The hand was empty.

  “What?” he shouted in shock.

  Wang opened his hand to show the coin.

  “How did you do that?”

  “I let the hand think,” Wang replied.

  * * *

  One month later, after going through a series of drills, Duff was able to snatch the coin from Wang’s hand ten times out of ten, not beginning his own move until Wang started to close his fist around the coin he was holding.

  It took but a week to apply that newly acquired skill to drawing a pistol—doing it so fast that, to the observer, the actual draw couldn’t even be seen.

  “Duff,” Elmer said, after watching Duff draw with lightning speed and shoot with unerring accuracy, “you are twice as fast as the fastest man I have ever seen. ’N I’ve seen the best. No,” he added with a smile, “I am seeing the best.”

  CHAPTER 2

  Under a leaden gray sky and swollen clouds, the stagecoach rolled westward, the passengers inside cushioned from the imperfections in the road by the thoroughbraces that absorbed the shocks. They were passing between thickets of brush, mixed with sumac and spruce. Occasionally, a deer or a coyote would come to the edge of the road to watch them pass.

  Thunder muttered sullenly above the rolling hills, and lightning played across the sky.

  “Hope that lightnin’ don’t get too close,” the man riding alongside the driver said.

  “Afeared of lightnin’, are you?” the driver asked. He had identified himself as G. F. Guy, and the man riding beside him was a passenger who had volunteered to ride up top, because the coach was full.

  “Damn right, I am,” the passenger replied, punctuating his comment with a spit that squirted brown tobacco juice over the spinning front wheel. “Some years ago, when I was helpin’ to bring a herd up from Texas, I seen a feller that got hit by lightnin’ oncet. It knocked ’im right off his horse. Kilt ’im, too.”

  “Yeah, well, it seems off a ways, so I don’t reckon we’ll have any problems with it,” Guy said, holding the six-horse team to a steady trot.

  * * *

  Duff MacCallister and Wang Chow were two of six people who were inside the coach. Duff was by the window, Wang was in the middle, and a whiskey drummer was on the other side of Wang. Across from Duff was an attractive young mother with two children, a boy of about twelve and a girl around ten.

  Duff and Wang were returning to Chugwater, Wyoming, from Bordeaux, Wyoming, where Duff had bought a new saddle for his horse and Wang purchased a set of knives for the kitchen at Sky Meadow. The saddle and knives were on top of the coach.

  The whiskey drummer had been talking ceaselessly about places he had been and things he had done.

  “I saw Wynton Miller once,” he said. “Yes, sir, it was in the Long Branch Saloon in Dodge City, Kansas. Chalk Beeson—he owns the Long Branch, you know—is a good customer of mine. Anyhow, I was in the Long Branch when Wynton Miller came in.

  “‘Angus Quince?’ he calls. Angus Quince was a bounty hunter, and real good with a gun, so a bunch of outlaws got together and hired Miller to go after him.

  “‘Yeah, I’m Angus Quince,’ a man says from the other end of the bar.

  “Miller, now, he was dressed all in black, with a real low-crown black hat that had a silver band around it. I remember that silver band.

  “‘I’m Wynton Miller,’ he says, ‘and I have been hired by a group of men who find your profession as a bounty hunter to be abhorrent to them. They have asked me to put an end to it.’

  “‘Wynton Miller, you say?’ Quince says back to him. ‘Well, now, there’s quite a reward out for you.’

  “‘You’ll never collect one dollar of it,’ Miller says.

  “And with that, Quince went for his gun, drawing it quick as lightning, but Miller was even faster, ’n when the smoke cleared, Quince was lyin’ dead on the floor of the Long Branch.”

  “Sir, I wish you wouldn’t tell such horrible stories in front of the children,” the woman passenger said.

  “That’s all right, Mama,” the boy said with a big smile. “I think it was a real excitin’ story.”

  “I beg your pardon, ma’am,” the drummer said, lifting his hat briefly.

  “Where is Wynton Miller now?” the boy asked.

  “Nobody knows,” the drummer replied. “He hasn’t been heard from in three or four years. Most people think he is dead.”

  “Is it going to rain, Mama?” the little girl asked.

  “It certainly looks like it,” the attractive young mother replied, thankful that the subject had been changed.

  “We’ll get wet.”

  “No, we won’t,” the little boy said. “We can close the curtain ’n the rain can’t get in.”

  “What if the other people won’t close their curtain?”

  “Sure, ’n if it starts to rain, I’ll be for closing my curtain, too, so you’ll not be getting wet,” Duff said.

  “You talk funny,” the little girl said.

  “Emma Lou, that’s a terrible thing for you to say!” Emma Lou’s mother scolded.

  “There is no harm done, ma’am. ’Tis sure I am that the Scottish brogue that rolls off m’ tongue sounds a bit queer to the wee lass.”

  “I didn’t mean bad funny,” Emma Lou said, trying to make amends.

  “’N it wasn’t bad the way I took it,” Duff said.

  “We’re going to see Gramma,” the little girl said. “She lives in Chugwater.”

  “Does she, now? Chugwater is a mighty foine place, with many good people. If your nana lives there, then she must be a good person, too, especially to have a pretty wee lass like you as a granddaughter.”

  “Do you like pie?” Emma Lou asked.

  “Aye, pie is one of my favorite things.”

  “What kind do you like best?”

  “Oh, cherry, I think. ’N what would be your favorite?”

  “I like anything my gramma makes. She has a store in Chugwater where she makes pies.”

  “Tell me, lass, your nana wouldn’t be Mrs. Vi Winslow, now, would she?”

  “You know my mother?” the woman asked, surprised by Duff’s comment.

  “Aye, but then Mrs. Winslow’s pies are so good that everyone knows her.”

  Suddenly, there was the sound of gunfire outside, and the coach came to a quick stop.

  “Oh! What’s happening?” the woman asked.

  Someone’s head appeared in the window of the coach. The face was covered with a hood.

  “Everybody out,” the stranger ordered, brandishing a pistol.

  He jerked the door open, and Duff and the others had to step outside. In addition to the man who had ordered the coach emptied, there were two more masked men, both of whom were mounted. And, like the man on the ground, they held pistols.

  “Now you, driver, throw down the bank pouch,” the man on the ground ordered.

  “What makes you think we’re carrying a bank pouch?” the driver replied.

  “I ain’t a-tellin’ you again. Throw that bank pouch down.”

  “And I told you, we ain’t carryin’ a bank pouch,” G. F. Guy insisted.

  Without so much as another word, the outlaw shot the old cowh
and who had been riding beside the driver. Hit in the head, the man tumbled across the wheel, falling to the ground. It took but one glance to know that he was dead.

  “Maybe you’ll listen to me now.”

  “Mister, you done kilt a innocent man, there, for no good reason,” the driver replied, the fear in his voice evident. “I told you, we ain’t a-carryin’ nothin’ of any value.”

  The masked man turned his pistol toward Wang.

  “No, don’t shoot the Chinaman,” one of the mounted robbers said. “There don’t nobody give a damn if a Chinaman gets kilt. Grab the little girl. If he don’t throw the pouch down, kill her. ’N if that don’t work, we’ll kill the boy.”

  “No! Take me instead!” Emma Lou’s mother shouted.

  As the coach robber on the ground reached toward Emma Lou, neither he nor either of the riders noticed the almost imperceptible nod between Duff and Wang. Then, moving so quickly that it was done before any of the three outlaws realized what was happening, Wang brought the knife-edge of his hand against the back of the outlaw’s neck, and he went down. Even as the outlaw was falling, Duff drew his pistol.

  “What the hell? Kill ’em! Kill ’em all!” one of the two mounted outlaws shouted.

  The two men raised their guns, but neither of them got so much as a single shot off. Duff fired twice, and the saddles of both horses were emptied.

  Emma Lou had rushed to her mother’s side and wrapped her arms around her. Her brother, rather than be frightened, clapped his hands in glee.

  “You killed both of them!” he said. “They sure made a mistake tryin’ to steal from us, didn’t they?”

  “That they did, sonny, that they did,” the drummer said. He looked at Duff. “Mister, I don’t know who you are, but I’ll tell you true—I believe you’re near ’bout as fast as Wynton Miller.” He pointed to the man Wang had hit. “I suggest we tie this one up before he comes to.”

  “He will not wake,” Wang said.

  “What do you mean, he won’t wake up? He wasn’t shot.”

  “His neck is broken,” Wang said.

  “How can you be sure about that?”

  “I am the one who broke his neck.”

  “Just by hittin’ ’im like that?”

  “Mister, I have seen Wang break boards one inch thick,” Duff said. He pointed to the man on the ground. “’Tis for sure this man will nae be waking up.”

  “What are we goin’ to do with ’em?” the driver asked. “We can’t just leave ’em here on the road.”

  “Would ye be for knowin’ the name of the cowhand?” Duff asked.

  “Yeah, we was talkin’ quite a bit. I don’ know his last name, but he tole me to call ’im Billy. He’s a rider for the Pitchfork brand. That is, he was,” the driver added.

  “We’ll put him on top of the coach for now, ’n when we get back to Chugwater, we’ll send word to Mr. Allen out at Pitchfork. ’Tis sure, I am, that he’ll be wanting to make some arrangements for the burial of his hand.”

  “What about these here others?” the driver asked. “Think we should throw ’em up there with Billy?”

  “Nae, Billy was a good mon,” Duff said. “I would nae wish to make him have to enter the hereafter with such brigands. We’ll throw their bodies across their horses, then tie the horses onto the back of the coach.”

  * * *

  The arrival of a stagecoach always drew attention from the citizens, but this time nearly half the town turned out, their curiosity aroused by the three horses, each horse with a body belly-down over the saddle.

  Sheriff Sharpie approached the coach as soon as it stopped, and he looked toward the bodies.

  “You didn’t take the hoods off?” he asked.

  “I dinnae want the wee ones to have to see their faces,” Duff said.

  Sheriff Sharpie nodded. “Yeah, I reckon I can see that. I’ll take ’em on down to Mr. Welsh. Looks like the county will be paying for the burials.”

  “The man on top o’ the coach is named Billy, ’n rides for the Pitchfork brand,” Duff said. “I expect Dale Allen will pay for his burial.”

  “Billy? Oh, I expect that would be Billy Hughes. A good man—he’s been with Mr. Allen for a long time, so I expect he will want to make the arrangements. I’ll send Deputy Logan out to the Pitchfork and let them know what happened.”

  “You said you were going to get some pie,” Emma Lou said.

  “Aye, lass, that I did. ’N what about you, Johnny? Will you be wanting some pie as well?”

  Johnny was Emma Lou’s older brother, and Duff had gotten to know the whole family better over the last few miles of the trip.

  “I like pie,” Johnny replied with a broad smile.

  Fifteen minutes later, Duff, Wang, and Ethel May Joyce and her two children, Johnny and Emma Lou, were seated around a table at Vi’s Pies. Mr. Jordan, the drummer, declined the invitation to join them, because he had business to attend to.

  “Emma Lou told me that you like cherry pie the best,” Vi said. “But didn’t I already know that, the way you go through a piece whenever you and Elmer pay me a visit? And Wang, fried bow ties and honey for you?”

  Wang smiled and dipped his head. “A thousand thanks, Madam Vi,” he said.

  “I’m so thankful to the two of you for saving the lives of Ethel Mae and my two grandchildren,” Vi said.

  “’Tis sorry I am about the violence in front of the wee ones,” Duff said.

  “Oh, don’t be silly, Mr. MacCallister,” Ethel Mae said. “I’m just thankful that you and Mr. Wang were on the coach. Why, there’s no telling what might have happened if you hadn’t been.”

  * * *

  As Duff, Wang, and the others enjoyed the dessert provided by Vi Winslow, down at the opposite end of the street, several people were gathered around the three upright coffins, each occupied by the body of a would-be stagecoach robber.

  “I don’t know what ever give them the idea that Jim Bob was carryin’ a bank pouch,” one of the onlookers said.

  “I don’t know, neither. All I know is, it’s a good thing Duff MacCallister ’n that Chinaman that works for him was on the coach, or more ’n likely that little girl woulda been kilt. ’N Mr. Guy, too, I’m a-thinkin’.”

  “You know who that feller there in the middle is, don’t you?” one of the crowd asked, pointing toward the center coffin. “That, there, is Zeke Bodine.”

  “Zeke Bodine? The gunfighter?”

  “Yes, ’n he’s got ’im a brother, Lucien Bodine, who’s even faster.”

  “If you want to talk about fast, what about MacCallister? The stagecoach driver told me that the two men he shot already had their pistols drawed, but that didn’t make no nevermind to MacCallister. He drawed his own pistol ’n shot ’em afore it was that they could do anything.”

  “More ’n likely, Bodine’s brother is goin’ to raise some hell when he hears about this.”

  “Yeah, but that’s liable to be a while. I hear tell that he’s down in Texas now. Or maybe it’s New Mexico or Arizona. I ain’t quite sure where it is, but I just know for sure that he ain’t nowhere close around here.”

  * * *

  As Duff and Wang were leaving Vi’s Pies, they saw Dale Allen, owner of the Pitchfork Ranch. Though not as large as Sky Meadow, Pitchfork was quite large, and employed a dozen full-time hands. Allen was driving by in a buckboard, but he stopped when he saw Duff.

  “I heard you were on the stage when Billy got hisself killed,” Allen said.

  “Aye, I was.”

  “Nothin’ you coulda done to stop it, I don’t suppose.”

  “I’m sorry. ’Twas no way to know that the brigand was about to shoot your mon.”

  “No, I don’t reckon there was,” Allen said. “Mr. Guy told me what happened, ’n how you saved the little girl. I’m glad you were able to do that.”

  “’Twas Wang who saved the lass.”

  “Yes, well, what’s done is done. And I’m damn glad that the son of a bitch who kilt Bi
lly is dead now. I thank you for that.”

  Allen nodded at Duff, who returned the nod; then Allen slapped the reins on the back of his team, and the buckboard jumped ahead.

  When Duff and Wang returned to Sky Meadow, Duff’s ranch, they were met by Elmer Gleason.

  “Well, that’s a good-lookin’ saddle you bought while you was over in Bordeaux,” Elmer said, running his hand across the tooled leather. “And what about you, Wang? Did you get the knives you wanted?”

  “Very good knives.”

  “You won’t be sneakin’ up on me to cut my throat in the middle of the night, will you?”

  “You do not need to worry,” Wang said.

  “Yeah, so you say. But who can trust a heathen?”

  “You will not feel a thing.”

  Duff and Elmer laughed.

  “Oh, did you hear about Clifford Prescott?” Elmer asked.

  “Aye, I heard that he passed.”

  “Well, it warn’t no surprise to no one, bein’ as he’s been at death’s door for two or three months, now,” Elmer said.

  “I’ll be attending his funeral,” Duff said.

  “Yeah—me, too. He was a good man.”

 

 

 


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