Billy Whelan levered a round up into the chamber of his Winchester. The sound cut through the hot morning like a bell. Some others of Hooker’s hands drifted into the yard and stood loosely scattered on all sides of the posse. Ringo paid them no attention. He looked silently at Wyatt, and Wyatt looked silently back.
“You can’t ride into a gentleman’s yard and call him a sonova bitch. You want trouble, let’s get to it. Right now.”
“No,” Behan said and made a damping gesture. “No, no. We ain’t here for trouble. We need to rest our horses,” Behan said, “and get something to eat.”
Wyatt and Ringo continued to look at each other.
“I’ll sit at table with you, John,” Hooker said. “But I won’t eat with this rabble you brought with you. We’ll set up a table for them in the yard.”
As the Behan posse dismounted, Ringo edged his horse closer to Wyatt.
“You kill Curley Bill,” Ringo said.
“I did,” Wyatt said.
“Always knew it would turn out like this,” Ringo said. “Now I’m going to have to kill you.”
“If you can,” Wyatt said.
Fifty-nine
He took her bag with his left hand and opened his arms, and she seemed to jump into them, pressing herself against him.
He carried her suitcase in his right hand and held her hand with his left as they walked up 16th Street toward Larimer, to his hotel at the intersection. Josie talked. About the dress she was wearing and the train ride from San Francisco and the way the troubles in Tombstone were being written up in the San Francisco papers. Wyatt listened without exactly hearing what she said. He was listening to her voice, the way he might listen to music, and what he felt, as he heard the voice, made the content irrelevant. At the Broadwell Hotel, they had tea sent up to the room. They drank the tea as Wyatt listened to the music of her voice. Then the music modulated slightly.
“Is it over?” Josie said. “You and Johnny and the cowboys?”
“Almost,” Wyatt said.
“
“Yes.”
“And somebody named Cruz.”
Wyatt nodded.
“It said in
“Papers say a lot of things.”
Josie knew that the conversation should go in a different direction.
“Have you seen Johnny?”
“Behan?”
“Yes.”
“Saw him at Hooker’s ranch. Him and his posse.”
“What happened?”
“What do you think happened, it being Johnny and all?”
Josie sipped some tea and paused to add sugar and sipped it again to see that she’d added enough.
“Nothing,” she said.
Wyatt smiled.
“That’s what happened,” he said.
Josie knew better than to press the point, and she didn’t want to spoil the moment, but she couldn’t let it go.
“You didn’t exactly answer my question.”
“I said ‘almost.’”
“Is it Ike Clanton?”
“Ike’s all gas and liquor,” Wyatt said. “He never shot any of us.”
“So you don’t care about Ike?”
“Somebody else will shoot him soon enough.”
“Who, then?”
“Ringo.”
“Why?” Josie said. “Was he involved with Morgan and Virgil?”
“Don’t know,” Wyatt said. “But he was close with Brocius. He said he’d kill me for shooting Bill.”
“Maybe he was just talking,” Josie said.
“No. John doesn’t do that, except when he’s drunk, and he wasn’t drunk. Says something sober, he keeps his word.”
“He won’t find us,” Josie said.
Wyatt was quiet. He drank the tea the way he drank coffee, holding the cup in both hands, his eyes very still, over the rim as he looked at her. His big revolver lay on the night table near the head of the bed. It looked so strange in the chintz and linen room.
“Well, he won’t.”
Wyatt nodded.
When the tea was gone, Josie bathed. When she was finished bathing, Josie came naked to the bed.
“You’re going to go and find him, aren’t you?” Josie said.
“Josie,” Wyatt said, “you’ve been talking since you got here.”
“Do you think it’s time for me to stop?”
“I thought so a while back,” Wyatt said and opened his arms.
Josie hesitated for a moment and then let it go, and put herself into his arms and closed her eyes and kissed him with her mouth open.
Sixty
Wyatt said, “John.”
Ringo said, “Wyatt.”
He was drunk. Wyatt could tell by the care with which Ringo spoke.
“You come back,” Ringo said.
Wyatt nodded.
“Where’s your horse?” Wyatt said.
“I fell off him a ways back,” Ringo said. “Landed on my head. Horse run off while I was laying there.”
“He wearing your boots?” Wyatt said.
Ringo shook his head seriously.
“I think I left them in a crib north of Sixth Street,” he said.