Gunman's Rhapsody, стр. 28

Forty

Recorder’s Court was across the street in one of Dick Gird’s block of buildings. Ike sat on one of the benches holding a handkerchief against the oozing cut on his head.

“I’m going to go find Judge Wallace,” Virgil said.

Morgan leaned against the wall holding Ike’s weapons. Wyatt sat on the bench next to Ike, turned so he could face him. The courtroom was crowded, and everyone in it stared at them.

“I’ll get even for this,” Ike said. “I had something to shoot with, I’d fight you all right now.”

Morgan smiled and held out a Henry Rifle, muzzle down. Ike stared at it. People around them in the courtroom scattered into the street.

“I’ll tell you what, Ike,” Morgan said. “I’ll pay your damn fine if you’ll fight us.”

Ike didn’t move.

“You thieving sonova bitch,” Wyatt said. “You’ve been threatening our lives, and you know it. I could shoot you right here and be justified.”

“Fight is my racket,” Ike said. “All I want is four feet of ground.”

Morgan continued to hold out the rifle. Ike continued not to take it.

“Okay, how about a six-gun too,” Morgan said and offered Ike the Colt he’d taken from him earlier.

Ike didn’t move. One of Behan’s deputies, a squat muscular man whom Wyatt didn’t know, stepped in front of Ike.

“No fuss now,” the deputy said, “I don’t want any fuss.”

Judge Wallace entered the room in back and walked toward the front. There was a big cast-iron stove near the bench. The judge took off his overcoat and hung it on a hook behind his bench. Then he sat down and looked at Clanton and the Earps. The onlookers, who had scattered when the rifle was offered, trailed back in behind the judge. The people close to the stove took off their coats. It was too hot to wear them on the side that faced the stove, though it was cold without a coat on the side away from the stove. The people farther from the stove kept their coats on.

“Nor do I want a fuss,” he said. “What are the charges?”

“Apprehended Ike Clanton carried a concealed weapon on Fremont Street,” Virgil said.

“Rather vigorously, I would say,” Judge Wallace said, looking at Ike’s bleeding head. “How do you plead?”

“Guilty, I guess… Your Honor.”

Judge Wallace nodded.

“Twenty-five dollars.”

Ike took money from his pocket and walked toward the judge with it. Wallace shook his head.

“Not me,” he said, “give it to Mr. Campbell.”

Ike looked embarrassed and veered to the clerk and handed him the money. The clerk wrote out a receipt and gave it to Ike.

“Next case,” Judge Wallace said.

“Where you want to pick up your hardware, Ike?” Virgil said.

“Anyplace you won’t be hitting my fucking head with your six-gun,” Ike said and walked out of the room.

Virgil looked at Morgan and shrugged.

“Drop them off with the bartender,” Virgil said, “over at the Grand.”

Morgan left. Virgil stood with Wyatt in the courtroom, where the spectators still jostled one another and the cast-iron stove reeked unevenly of heat.

“This ain’t gonna go away,” Virgil said.

“No it ain’t.”

“Ike’s a gasbag,” Virgil said.

“It ain’t just Ike,” Wyatt said. “The McLaurys are wound up too, and you know that it’s Behan did the winding.”

“Which means probably that Brocius will be in,” Virgil said.

“And Johnny Ringo.”

“Too bad,” Virgil said.

“Yes, I like him too.”

“Maybe I should settle this with Behan,” Wyatt said.

“Behan won’t fight you,” Virgil said. “He’s got Ike and the cowboys to do that.”

Wyatt didn’t say anything.

“Besides which, he’s the goddamned sheriff,” Virgil said.

Still, Wyatt was silent, watching the business of the courtroom slowly proceed.

“Maybe,” Wyatt said, “we ought to get to it instead of waiting around for one of them to back-shoot us.”

“I’m the city marshal, Wyatt.”

“I’m not,” Wyatt said.

“You shoot somebody down in the street,” Virgil said, “I’m going to have trouble covering that.”

“My guess is, they ain’t going to give us a choice.”

“If they don’t,” Virgil said, “they don’t. We’ll play the cards that turn up.”

Forty-one

Wyatt was glad to be outside. After the stove-tainted courthouse he liked the cold air, the smell of impending snow. The feel of a storm approaching was about right. He walked up Fourth Street, nodding to Bauer the butcher and another man whose name he did not know. Coming toward him from the corner of Allen was Tom McLaury. McLaury slowed for a moment as if he might turn and go another way. Then he seemed to right himself, and continued toward Wyatt. McLaury had the thumb of his right hand hooked into his belt.

“What have you boys done to Ike Clanton?” Tom said.

“Run him in for carrying a concealed weapon,” Wyatt said. “He whistle for you and your brother?”

“I got a right to be in town,” McLaury said.

“And I got a right to ask what you’re doing here.”

Wyatt could feel the cold fire at the center of himself. It sharpened everything for him as it always did. Every pore in McLaury’s face seemed discrete and obvious, his eyelashes individuated.

Wyatt could smell things sharply and hear things clearly. He was focused microscopically and yet intensely aware of things at the very faint periphery of his vision. He felt solid and quick.

“You got no reason to talk to me like that, Wyatt. I’m a friend of yours.”

“Not if you’re a friend of Ike’s,” Wyatt said. “You here backing Ike?”

“I never done nothing against you boys,” McLaury said. “But if you’re looking for a fight, I’ll fight.”

“You heeled?” Wyatt said.

“Maybe I am,” McLaury said.

“Then jerk your gun,” Wyatt said.

With his left hand he slapped McLaury across the face. With his right he pulled the big smooth-handled Colt that he’d once used to face down Clay Allison. McLaury staggered back from the slap, his right hand still fumbling at his belt. Wyatt slammed him across the face with the four-pound revolver and McLaury went down and stayed. Wyatt looked down at him for a moment, then stepped past him carefully and walked on toward Hafford’s Saloon at the corner of Allen Street.

Wyatt bought a cigar at Hafford’s, and got it lit and burning evenly before he went back outside and stood on the boardwalk in front of the saloon. He was halfway through the cigar when Frank McLaury rode up Allen Street on the other side with Billy Clanton and Major Frink. They dismounted, tied their horses and went into the Grand Hotel.

The smell of snow was strong. Wyatt took the cigar from his mouth and examined the glowing tip of it, turning it slightly to see that it was burning evenly. Then he put the cigar back in his mouth and leaned his back against the wall of Hafford’s and waited.

The cigar was an inch shorter when Frank McLaury and Billy Clanton came out of the Grand Hotel, crossed Allen, trailing their horses behind them, and headed down Fourth Street. If they saw Wyatt standing outside of Hafford’s, they gave no sign.

Wyatt watched them as they went and then tossed the cigar into the street and stepped off behind them. He felt strong and compact. His muscles felt easy. His breathing was easy. The cold desert air filled his lungs. Halfway down Fourth Street, there was a crowd of people outside of Spangenberg’s Gun Shop, maybe a dozen, maybe more. Frank and Billy pushed through the crowd and went in. Wyatt drifted along toward the crowd and several people moved out of his way when he got close. Frank McLaury’s white-stockinged bay horse was on the sidewalk with his head in the door of the gun shop. Past the horse, inside Spangenberg’s, Wyatt could see Ike Clanton, his head still bleeding, Tom McLaury, Billy Clanton and Frank McLaury. Wyatt took his hat off with his left hand and shooed the horse off the sidewalk and into the street. While he did it he kept his eyes on Spangenberg’s door. The four cowboys appeared in the doorway. Billy Clanton had his hand on his gun.