Chapter 19
The Kid and Marshal Tate reached Dodge City the next day. Since the vast buffalo herds that once covered the prairie for seemingly endless miles were all gone and the railroads had extended their reach into Texas, ending the cattle drive era, Dodge had lost its two main reasons for being. Its boom days were long over, but the settlement clung to existence as a small town serving the needs of the farms and ranches in the surrounding area.
Travelers sometimes stopped there, and The Kid and Tate fell into that category. As they rode into town late in the afternoon, the old lawman said, “I hate to admit it, Kid, but I’m not as young as I used to be. Sleeping out on the trail is hard on these old bones of mine. You reckon we could get rooms in the hotel and spend the night here? Sleep in a real bed?”
“I don’t see why not,” The Kid answered. “We’re not in any big hurry to get where we’re going. We can pick up a few more supplies while we’re here, too.”
They turned their horses toward the Dodge House. The hotel had its own stable out back, so they didn’t have to hunt up a livery. After they’d rented adjoining rooms, The Kid turned the horses over to the hostler and carried their gear upstairs.
He found Tate standing at the window in one of the rooms, looking out at the street. He glanced over his shoulder at The Kid. “Lots of memories in this town. The Mastersons, the Earps . . . It was a wild place in the old days, you know, but at the same time so vital, so alive . . . You never knew what was going to happen in Dodge. Now it just seems . . . sleepy.” He sighed. “Sort of like me, I guess.”
Tate seemed pretty lucid at the moment.
The Kid said, “It’ll be getting dark soon. Why don’t we go hunt up some supper?”
Tate brightened. “We can go to Delmonico’s,” he suggested. “Best steaks you’ll find this side of Kansas City.”
The Kid didn’t know if Delmonico’s was still there or if it existed only in Tate’s memory, but he said, “Sure, Marshal, let’s go.”
As it turned out, Delmonico’s was not only still there, but the food was excellent. Steak, potatoes, greens, corn on the cob, huge fluffy rolls with steam rising from them when torn open, peach cobbler, all washed down with fine coffee . . . Tate had been right. For a sleepy little former cowtown, the meal was a lot better than The Kid expected.
When they finished, Tate said, “I’d like to stroll around town a little, Kid, if you don’t mind.”
“Sure, that’s fine,” The Kid replied with a shrug.
“You can go back to the hotel if you want. I’ll be fine.”
Tate had seemed fine the whole day. He hadn’t done anything odd or displayed any lapses of memory or judgment. The Kid knew he couldn’t rely on that condition continuing, though. To keep from offending Tate, he said, “Why don’t you show me around? I’d really like to hear about the old days when you were a peace officer here and Dodge City was the Queen of the Prairie.”
Tate chuckled. “You shouldn’t ask an old man to reminisce. You might get more than you bargained for.”
“I’ll take my chances,” The Kid said with a smile.
“All right, then. Over here is where the Long Branch Saloon used to be . . .”
They spent a pleasant hour walking around town while Tate pointed out the landmarks, the ones still standing as well as the locations of those that were gone, and told at least one story to go with every place they came to. The Kid had heard plenty of yarns from his father over the years, and Tate’s were similar, full of colorful characters and blood-and-thunder adventure.
Those must have been exciting times in which to live, The Kid mused. The West had settled down considerably since then.
Of course, his own life was ample proof there were still pockets of violence on the frontier. With a new century coming soon, people talked about how the Wild West was dead. The Kid knew good and well that wasn’t true.
They were ambling back toward the hotel when several men rode into town and dismounted in front of one of the saloons a few doors down from the Dodge House. The Kid didn’t pay much attention to them as he and Tate stepped up onto the hotel porch. The glow from the lamps in the lobby came through the windows and lit up their faces.
A man suddenly yelled, “There he is, by God! There’s Tate!”
Hearing the menacing tone in that shout, The Kid whirled toward the men who had stopped in front of the saloon. All three of them were clawing at the guns on their hips.
Tate was unarmed and had been ever since he’d mistaken The Kid for Brick Cantrell and tried to shoot him. The Kid grabbed the old lawman’s arm with his left hand and gave Tate a hard shove that sent him crashing against the double front doors of the hotel. The doors flew open, and Tate stumbled and fell across the threshold. He was out of the line of fire, at least for the moment.
At the same instant, The Kid’s right hand dipped and came up with the Colt. The revolver rose with blinding speed. The three men had cleared leather; they were pretty fast themselves. Shots crashed from their guns.
The Kid heard the wind-rip of a slug past his ear as he triggered twice. One of the would-be assassins went down, doubling over as The Kid’s lead punched into his guts.
Standing tall, The Kid thrust his arm out and fired again. A second gunman fell, spinning off his feet from the impact of the bullet.
The tail of The Kid’s coat jerked as a shot tugged on it. Almost faster than an eye could blink, he squeezed off two more shots. The last of the gunmen staggered, but didn’t go down. He struggled to lift his weapon and get off another shot.
The Kid’s revolver was empty. As a precaution he kept the hammer riding on an empty chamber. Only five rounds had been in the gun. Without taking his eyes off the wounded man, he opened the cylinder, dumped the empties, and pulled fresh cartridges from the loops on his gun belt. He thumbed them in, his fingers moving with smooth, practiced efficiency. He snapped the cylinder closed and raised the gun, ready to fire again.
It wasn’t necessary. The last man’s gun slipped from nerveless fingers and thudded to the boardwalk. The man fell face-first right after it.
But there were only two men in the street, The Kid saw with something of a shock. He had hit all three of the would-be killers, but one of them was gone.
The missing man was the second one who had fallen. The hombre could have crawled off while The Kid was trading shots with the third gunman. The dark mouth of an alley was only a few feet from where he had fallen.
The Kid pressed himself against the wall. For all he knew, the missing man was on his feet and drawing a bead on him from the alley.
“Kid!” Tate called softly from the open doors of the hotel. “Kid, are you all right?”
“I’m fine. Stay back, Marshal. One of the varmints is unaccounted for.”
“Who in the world are they?”
“Don’t know,” The Kid replied curtly. “Somebody with a grudge against you, from the sound of it.” He hadn’t forgotten how one of the men had yelled out Tate’s name just before the shooting started.
A glance at the downed men told him they hadn’t moved since they’d fallen. The Kid would have felt better about it if he was sure they were dead, but if he stepped out there to check on them, he’d be making himself a better target.
He watched them from the corner of his eye as he slid along the wall toward the alley. If either of them moved, he’d put another bullet in them.
The street had cleared in a hurry when the shooting started. Enough people in Dodge still remembered the old days and knew to hunt cover when the bullets began to fly.
Shouts of alarm were going up, and The Kid knew it wouldn’t be long before the local law arrived on the scene. He needed to find the third man and deal with him before things got more complicated.
As he reached the corner and was about to turn quickly around it and cover the alley with his gun, someone in the hotel yelled, “Look out!”
The roar of a shot immediately followed the warning cry.
The Kid bit back a curse as he whirled away from the alley and lunged toward the hotel entrance. He knew without being told what had happened: the wounded man had made it to a back door and entered the hotel. It was likely he was gunning for Jared Tate.
The Kid leaped through the doors as another shot blasted. Padding flew from an overstuffed chair to his right as a bullet ripped into it.
Tate crouched low behind the chair. He looked to be unharmed so far, but that wasn’t likely to last.
The Kid snapped a shot at the gunman crouched behind the front desk counter. Splinters flew as the bullet struck the desk.
The gunman stood, switched his aim, and threw a slug at The Kid. It whistled past his ear.
The Kid fired again. The bullet found its mark, smashing into the gunman’s shoulder and slewing him around sideways. The man threw his gun up for another shot. His weapon and The Kid’s Colt blasted at the same time. The man flew backward into the rack holding room keys as The Kid’s bullet hammered into his chest.
He bounced off the wall and sprawled across the counter as the gun slid from his fingers and fell to the floor.
As the deafening echoes of the shots began to fade in the lobby, The Kid looked over at Tate. “Are you all right, Marshal?”
Tate nodded. “He nearly winged me, but close doesn’t count.”
That was certainly true, The Kid thought as he walked quickly across the lobby, keeping the fallen gunman covered as he approached the front desk. He went around the corner of it, grasped the man’s shoulder, and shoved him onto the floor. The boneless way he fell told The Kid he was dead.
There was no sign of the clerk. He had lit a shuck out of there just as soon as the trouble started.
“Better stay down,” The Kid told Tate as he turned back toward the entrance. “I need to make sure the others aren’t a threat anymore.”
As he stepped onto the porch, running footsteps came to a stop close by and a man called, “Hold it right there, mister!”
A couple men wearing badges were carrying shotguns. The Kid held up both hands, the Colt still in his right, to show that he meant no harm.
“Put that gun down and back away from it,” one of the lawman ordered.
“I’d be glad to, but one of you had better keep an eye on those two.” The Kid nodded to the gunmen in the street. “They’re the ones who started this fandango.”
“Just do what I told you,” the star packer snapped.
The Kid bent and placed his Colt on the porch. He stepped back from it, still keeping his hands in plain sight. He didn’t want to give anybody carrying a shotgun an excuse to get nervous and trigger-happy.
The man who’d been doing the talking told his companion, “Check on those two, like he said.”
The lawman circled the bodies warily, then came close enough to get a good look at them. “They both look dead to me, Marshal.”
“Keep an eye on them,” the marshal ordered. To The Kid, he said, “Who are you, mister, and what the hell was all this shooting about?”
“Those two and another one who’s inside the hotel tried to ambush me and a friend of mine. They opened fire first.”
“The one in the hotel, I reckon he’s dead, too?”
The Kid shrugged. “There wasn’t time to get fancy.”
“You didn’t tell me your name.”
“It’s Morgan—”
“And he’s with me,” Tate said from the hotel entrance. “I’m Marshal Jared Tate from Copperhead Springs.”
That brought a frown to the face of the law badge-toter.
“You’re a lawman?”
“Retired,” Tate said. “Mr. Morgan and I are on our way to Wichita. What he told you is true, Marshal. Those men attacked us, and he acted in self-defense.”
The local man lowered his shotgun slightly. “Why were they gunning for you? Do you know them?”
“Let me take a look, and I might be able to answer that.”
The marshal hesitated for a second, then nodded. “Sure, go ahead.”
Tate walked along the porch, then stepped down to the boardwalk and approached the two dead men. He studied their faces in the light coming through the saloon windows. After a moment he pointed at one of them. “This man is Carl Jenkins. Several years ago I was trying to arrest his brother Ted. I had to shoot him when he resisted and nearly cut my head off with an ax. There’s a resemblance between these two men, so I suspect they’re brothers as well. Wouldn’t surprise me if the one in the hotel is a Jenkins, too.”
Tate had picked a good time to remember things, The Kid thought. His answers sounded utterly convincing, and for all The Kid knew, they were correct.
The second lawman, who was probably a deputy, said, “I think the old-timer’s right, Marshal. I’ve seen this one on a wanted poster. Seem to recall he was wanted for train robbery.”
“Ted Jenkins was a train robber, too,” Tate said. “It must have been the family business.”
The local marshal sighed and nodded to The Kid. “All right, I reckon you can pick up your gun. It’s pretty clear these fellas had a revenge killing in mind when they threw down on you. Have they been trailing you?”