Chapter One
A sneeze shattered the quiet of the morning stillness inside the saloon. It was
followed immediately by a low groan.
"Bless you, Chris," Buck offered over his black coffee, eyeing his old friend
intently.
Chris glared and then continued to drink his own early blend, laced with a shot of
whiskey.
"You still nursing that cold, cowboy?" Vin asked, unsteadily shoveling some
eggs and salted ham into his mouth with his left hand. His other arm was in a sling, the
shoulder pierced by a bullet only a few days ago, the victim of a rowdy bunch of drunk
wranglers.
Chris grunted and shook his head, but a cough betrayed him as it gripped his chest. He
turned away from the table and tried to clear it. When it passed, he took a slow, shallow
breath in case it came back. He twisted around only to be greeted with the disbelieving
stares of his men.
"Did you drink those herbs Nathan gave you before he left to see Rain?" Buck
asked.
Chris cleared his throat. "Tastes awful," he griped. He had tried to drink
the bizarre mix of herbs, but it made him sleepy more than anything else. And that made
him uncomfortable. Deep sleep only brought him disturbing dreams. There were things in his
mind that were better left alone. He'd rather be miserable with the cold than left to the
miseries that awaited him in Morpheus' arms.
"But it would help you with that cough," Vin said.
Chris said nothing but shifted in his seat. He eyed Vin. "Are you supposed to be
up and around already?" Chris was more than willing to deflect the attention to his
friend. "I thought Nathan left strict orders."
Vin paused in his eating, like a wary cat, fork poised halfway to his mouth. He
regarded the others. "Nathan ain't here," he said slowly. "You gonna squeal
on me?"
Chris just grinned devilishly which abruptly changed into a grimace. He twisted away
and sneezed again.
"Bless you," Buck said once more.
Vin sat back and regarded the sick man draped in black. He decided to make a deal.
"You keep my secret and I'll keep yours."
"You forget," Chris noted, inclining his head in the scoundrel's direction.
"What makes you think I'm gonna talk?" Buck countered defensively. It hurt
him slightly that the two men sitting with him saw him more as the opposition rather than
as an accomplice.
Chris sobered for a moment. He caught Buck's eye. "You always talk," he said
quietly.
Buck stiffened. Leave it to Chris to always bring that up. The incident with
Mary Travis had happened far enough in the past not to be thrust up in his face every time
they talked about trust. Of course, Chris was probably more worried about what was coming
up a few days from now than he was of the past few months. Hell, far be it from him to
speak of that matter, Buck thought angrily.
Buck drained his coffee cup, scraping back his chair as he stood. Dust swirled around
him as he slammed the empty cup upon the table top.
Chris' face screwed up again, fighting it, but in the end, he lost. A sneeze racked him
again.
This time Buck did not offer a blessing but strode straight out of the saloon.
As the man across from him dug out a handkerchief, Vin queried, "Something up with
you two?"
Chris indicated no with a shake of his head and rose to go make the rounds. With
everyone else gone and Vin laid up, they were shorthanded suddenly. As much as Chris
wanted to curl up and die somewhere and forget the aches and pains of this miserable cold,
he knew he couldn't.
Vin watched the hunched gunfighter draw his coat collar tighter about his neck as he
walked outside, the wind buffeting the man slightly. Vin noted that Chris automatically
went in the opposite direction Buck took. He wondered if that was planned or not. Chris
wouldn't say what was between the two old friends, but Vin hadn't been blind to the
gradual distance growing there.
Trust was a big thing with Chris. It had taken Ezra a long time and some very foolhardy
escapades after that Seminole business to reestablish that bond again with Chris. It had
almost cost the gambler his life on many occasions. It was obvious that Chris had absolved
Ezra on that account, but for some reason Ezra continued with his dangerous acts of
heroism. All that to rebuild a trust.
However, this thing happening with Buck and Chris seemed to go deeper. Maybe because
they were friends for so long, it was far more personal. Vin knew that he had butted
unknowingly into a friendship born of many years. But after Sarah and Adam's brutal
deaths, Chris needed someone more low key. Buck had been a reminder of everything Chris
lost, and Chris needed time and space to accept things. And worse, Buck didn't. He wanted
to remember and reminisce. Buck needed that friendship only Chris couldn't oblige him, not
on the same level as before, not anymore. And so the two men had grown slowly apart.
Vin yawned tiredly, the heavy thoughts making his head spin. He winced as the slight
stretch pulled sore, torn muscles. He stood carefully and made his way back to Nathan's
room, thinking that a few hours sleep would clear his mind. Maybe afterward, he'd be able
to see the answer to the problem.
Chris was glad when the day finally come to an end. It had been a long and miserable
one. He ached all over and his throat felt as dry as the malpais. The night wrapped itself
around him as he huddled in the corner between the mercantile and the boarding house.
There was little protection against the wind and it cut through him with enough force to
chill his bones to the marrow. He'd give it another hour and then he'd pack it in for the
night. He figured no one was going to be bothering Four Corners on a night like this.
They'd be more interested in finding a warm bed to sleep in. He knew he was.
A shadow moved toward him, but before he could react, he heard Buck's quiet voice.
"Just me, pard." He darted into the alcove with Chris, clutching his buckskin
jacket tighter around him. "Damn, it's colder than my Aunt Wilma's Sunday
dinner."
Chris almost cracked a smile. He had had Aunt Wilma's Sunday dinner. Buck had
pegged that one right. Then he shut his amusement down. He wasn't in the mood.
Buck waved a telegram at Chris. "It's from JD. It says he and Ezra will be back
tomorrow afternoon. The prisoner transfer went smooth as silk."
Chris nodded.
"None too soon neither. I'm getting plumb wore out with all these extra shifts. A
man needs his sleep," Buck complained. Not that it mattered. Blossom was out of town
anyway and the cold nights without his personal bed warmer made sleeping almost an
impossibility. Buck gave a shudder that was part real and part exaggerated. "I
haven't felt cold like this since that time out on the Pecos when we were hunting for
Tsoe, that renegade Apache. You remember him?" Not waiting for a reply since he knew
none was coming, he continued. "Those two days were the coldest ones I ever
experienced. I thought my butt was gonna freeze to the saddle. You almost had to pry me
off the damn thing with a johnnycake flipper."
"Is that the reason it took you so long to fire back when Tsoe almost shot my head
off? Or was it because you fell asleep in the saddle?"
A pained look fell over Buck. "Oh, as if a man could sleep while his butt was
frostbit," he muttered.
Chris grunted and then muffled a cough.
Buck relented. Chris really did look miserable, more so than usual. "Hey, at least
I didn't ask you to help warm me up." The annoyed look Chris shot him was almost
worth the heat he'd take from that comment later. He laughed. "Why don't you head in,
pard? I've got this place covered. There ain't nuthin' movin' out here 'cept some frosty
tumbleweeds."
"It's too early. Could still be trouble." The man sounded like he had a
cupful of sand coating his throat, making his voice about two octaves lower.
"Hell, there's no one out here but us frozen icicles." Buck looked out into
the forlorn night. They hadn't even lit the street fires tonight for fear the wind would
take the burning embers and deposit them on the nearby buildings. "This night is
about as pitch as that time with ol' Tsoe was too. Couldn't see past the ears of your
horse. We're lucky he found us, cause we sure as hell would have rode right past
him." He regarded the older man. "Around the same time of year too, wasn't
it?"
Chris straightened abruptly, stepping off the sidewalk. "I'll take another sweep
around town," he said curtly. He had had enough reminiscing. He knew where Buck was
leading the conversation and he didn't want to be anywhere near it. It took only a second
before the darkness swallowed him whole.
Buck scowled, cursing Chris Larabee and all his martyr-like antics. He folded his arms
tightly as the wind pulled and tugged at his coat, his collar flapping wildly against his
cheek. "Hell, I'm callin' it a night if you ain't." He strode off toward the
saloon. "Damn, pig-headed man."
Chapter Two
Thankfully, the night passed without any altercations and a new sun rose over the
horizon. Chris curled on his side away from the window, pulling the blanket up from where
he had kicked it off during the night. Now he was freezing. He breathed heavily through
his mouth, his nose too congested to be of any use. God, he hated colds. He hadn't had one
in years, not since Sarah and Adam.
Sarah had tried to take care of him, make him rest, eat nourishing soup. He had fought
her every step of the way, insisting that he felt well enough to do the ranch work. It had
been a lie and he had been miserable, but he had done it, foregoing her love and
attention. How he wished to have her tender touch and soft words ease his misery now. But
all that was gone and he was left to only wish for squandered moments. No more would he
experience the special way she could soothe his every ache. That part of his life was gone
forever.
His mouth tightened. Well, except for Buck.
Buck and his penchant for nostalgia. Why couldn't the man just let the past rest? Chris
didn't want to remember it. And if he did, he would do so in private. He didn't want to
talk about it with anyone, especially not Buck. The pain was still too much for him to
bear. Three years and it still stung with all the fury of a thousand wounds. When would it
get easier? Why didn't the pain stop? Was he just too stubborn to let his family rest in
peace? Perhaps it would end when he found the man who had ordered their deaths.
A part of Chris wanted that to be true, but another part of him doubted it. This kind
of pain would never ease inside him. It seemed branded there, as bright and as painful as
if a burning timber had struck him square in his heart.
A knock on the door disturbed his thoughts and he sat up in the bed. "What is
it?" he croaked. He sounded terrible and he tried to clear his throat.
It was Mrs. Higgenbottom, the woman who ran the boarding house. "Mister
Larabee?" Her voice was hesitant through the door. "Judge Travis wants to see
you, Mr. Larabee."
"I'll be down," he answered. "Thank you," he added after a moment.
"Alright."
Chris listened to her footsteps fade away. He groaned, throwing back the warm covers
with a twinge of regret. He dressed quickly in attempt to avoid the cold air. Maybe the
Judge would provide the perfect excuse to get out of town for awhile. The thought of what
may lay ahead the next few days unnerved him. Regardless, he had to get out of town.
Buck spotted Chris flinging his bulging saddlebags onto his horse which was tied to the
rail in front of the Sheriff's office. It took Buck by surprise even though at heart he
knew he should have expected it. He watched it happen all too often. Chris was running
again.
"Chris, where you headin'?" Buck was desperate not to let his annoyance creep
into his voice.
"Out. On business," was the curt reply.
"For who? The Judge?" Buck had seen the Judge come into town early this
morning.
A grunt from Chris was his only answer. That and a cough.
"Hell, Chris! You sound worse today than yesterday. Why don't you let me take care
of this?"
"I need to handle it personally."
Buck raised an eyebrow, then quickly came to a decision. "Just wait till JD and
Ezra get back. I'll ride with you." The glare Chris turned on his old friend made
Buck pause.
"I don't need company."
"You need someone to watch your back, Chris. A few more hours won't make
a difference, will it?"
"I'm going to Yuma now," he growled sternly. "Stay with Vin and
take care of the town."
Buck bristled a bit at the man's stubbornness. He wanted to point out that someone
needed to take care of Chris for a change, but he knew better than to broach that topic.
Besides, it wasn't something men talked about anyway. He stood in silence, watching Chris
mount his black gelding and wheel the horse past him. Their eyes met for a moment and Buck
immediately noticed the hard, long-suffering set to his friend's gaze. Chris was going to
brush them all off on this one. The man certainly was a pain in the ass to deal with
sometimes!
Later that day, Buck sat outside the saloon, his chair tipped back against the wall, a
glass of beer cradled in his large hands. His eyes were sharp and clear, however, and
intent on the main street. He knew that any minute now Ezra and JD would return.
Vin came out of the saloon to his right and settled carefully into the empty chair next
to him. "You know, a watched pot ain't gonna boil. Best to do something else and
occupy your mind."
"I just want to know where the hell they are. It's damn near two o'clock!"
"They'll get here, Buck. Just give 'em time."
Catching sight of something at the edge of the town, Buck let his chair rock forward
and pitch him from the seat. "There they are!"
JD, Ezra, Josiah and Nathan rode together down the street, looking bone tired and
dirty. The four men had met up the road coming into town and traveled the last few miles
as one. They had plenty of stories to tell each other, but they were too exhausted and too
dry to bother. As they drew up at the rail in front of the saloon, Nathan's eyes spotted a
familiar form disappear through the bat wing doors.
"Hey Buck," JD said as he dismounted. "Everything quiet around
here?"
"Quieter than an empty cemetery," Buck answered with exasperation. "High
time you fellows got back. I need to..."
"Was that Vin I just saw out here?" Nathan inquired, his mouth twisting in
irritation. The man was supposed to be in bed.
Buck turned around and was surprised to find himself standing alone on the boardwalk.
Vin must have slipped back inside the saloon. He regarded Nathan and shrugged, deciding to
give Vin a hand. "Don't ask me. I don't know nuthin'!" He stepped down to the
ground and slipped past them. "Well, folks, I pass the mantel of Four Corners' safety
on to you. I am hereby relieving myself of duty." He beelined toward the livery.
"Buck, where you headin'?" JD peered around the other end of his horse, one
hand resting on the rump.
He paused in the street, looking back. "After Chris. He's on some errand for Judge
Travis."
"He feelin' better then?" Nathan asked, easing himself wearily from the
saddle. If the man was up to handling a job, then his remedy must have worked. However,
his hopes were dashed when Buck gave a derisive snort.
"Hell, Nathan, he sounds worse--which is why I'm headin' out after him. He needs
me to watch his back while he's sneezin'."
"Is the Judge's request of a serious nature?" Ezra inquired, already praying
that the answer would be in the negative. He stretched out a particularly annoying crick
in his back that had nagged him the entire way home. All he wanted was to lay down on his
nice soft bed and sleep for the next three days. He assumed his other three compatriots
felt the same way.
"I don't know. Chris wouldn't say and the Judge left early this morning."
Nathan grumbled in exasperation. "Well, come see me before you leave. Tastanagi
gave me something that might work better. You can take it with you." The old chief of
the Seminoles had many interesting thoughts on herbal medicines and Nathan was grateful
for any assistance in local cures.
"The man don't want company, Buck," Vin said from the saloon's doorway. He
had given up his concealment, mainly because there was no way to get back to Nathan's room
without going past the man himself. Besides, he was a grown man and if he wanted to walk
around a bit, he damn well could.
"Oh, he'll be happy enough to see me once he finds out what I brought. 'Sides,
Chris don't always know what he wants."
"But you do?" Vin asked with a touch of skepticism.
"Damn straight." A mischievous grin filled his face. "I just have to
convince him that I do."
Laughing, JD slapped Buck on the shoulder. "Good luck to that!"
Nathan folded his arms and regarded Vin with an evil eye. "And what do you think
you're doing?"
Vin shuffled his feet, looking down at the ground. Then he straightened, remembering
his earlier resolve. "I was just... I needed to ..." Nathan's hard gaze was
unwavering. Vin sighed with defeat. "Aw hell."
Nathan relented, smiling. He grabbed Vin's good arm. "If you feel well enough to
go wandering around, then I reckon you're well enough for me to take out those stitches.
Then you can go do whatever it was you wanted to do so badly."
Vin's mouth turned down with an expression of dismay. He wasn't looking forward to
getting his stitches out. Nathan tended to lose his gentle touch toward the end of one's
recuperation, especially when you didn't obey his orders. The man could be downright mean
Nathan turned his head toward Buck. "Don't forget to stop by before you leave,
Buck."
Buck waved a hand over his shoulder as he headed down the street. "I won't,
Nathan. You'll be giving me the perfect excuse to track that jug-headed mule down."
Chris rode at a leisurely pace. He did so for many reasons. First, he was still feeling
under the weather and he didn't want to tax himself. He was just happy to be out on his
own for a bit, away from the scrutiny of others. If there was one thing Chris hated was
people watching him. Friends or strangers, it didn't matter. He hated it when people
looked at him, as if trying to gauge his mood, or in this case, his health.
Secondly, he was in no hurry. Nothing warranted it, and it was nice to be out of town,
all alone. He wanted to relish the moment. Peace and quiet was all that he craved, a
little time away from everything and everyone. Chris Larabee was not a social man. That
wasn't to say he wasn't trying, but it was time to give himself a break from it all. And
damn, he needed one of late.
Chris almost sighed as a soft breeze blew gently across him. He almost relaxed. If he
didn't ache all over, and if he wasn't keeping his senses tuned to the world around him
just in case of trouble, he'd almost be tempted to fall asleep in the gently rocking
saddle.
He had done it often enough in his youth, on dusty drives or on long marches. But back
then, he had been young. Right now, he felt as if he was a hundred years old. Some of that
was being ill, he knew. Some of it was the years of drinking his grief into oblivion, but
the remainder was just time passing him by. The many years had caused more wear and tear
on him than most folks his age. The many brawls, the endless gunfights, and the habit of
sticking his nose where it probably didn't belong had aged him far beyond any normal man.
Not that he was normal. He had a penchant for trouble. He found it no matter where he
was. He didn't claim to understand it. At one time, he had even enjoyed its company. But
lately he was just bone weary of it.
Once again, like a soft whisper, the call of a quiet life beckoned. He had tried
ranching once and it had failed; but maybe this time, he'd do it alone. He needed just a
small tract of land, nothing fancy. He was saving his money to buy some good stock and go
back to breeding horses. He had an eye for them and produced some fine horses in his day.
Some day he'd do it again and live out the rest of his life in peace--all by himself.
His horse shifted suddenly to the right and Chris almost didn't shift with him. He
righted himself and looked down the road behind him to see what had spooked his mount.
Chris's quiet time was shattered by a loud whoop as an approaching rider waved his hat in
his direction.
Chris couldn't help the curse that fell from his lips.
Buck pulled up his lathered mount beside Chris. "Well, hey there, pard! Fancy
meetin' you out here."
"Buck," Chris all but snarled. "What the hell are you doing? I said I
could handle this."
Buck dropped his hat back on his head. "I know that, and you
know that, but I had a hard time convincing Nathan of that."
"Josiah and he back in town?"
"Yup, the lot of them rode in this afternoon. As soon as they were settled, I rode
out after you."
"And you can just ride back out the way you came. " He would have said more
but he had to turn away abruptly and sneeze as the drifting cloud of Buck's dust finally
swept over them.
"Aw, Chris, no sense taking that attitude. I left the town in good hands. Out of
the goodness of my heart I rode out here to offer my help. And to give you this." He
pulled a bag from his coat pocket. "Nathan has a new remedy for you. Says it will
knock that nasty cold right out." He handed it to Chris who took it reluctantly, a
scowl plastered on his face. Buck smirked. "Not to mention knocking some of that
surliness out too."
Chris glared at him beneath his hat brim as he stuffed Nathan's concoction into his
saddle bag.
Buck shrugged, unfazed by the famous Larabee Glare. "Yeah, I sort of doubted that
last claim, too. Nothin's that powerful."
"Now that you delivered your message, Buck, go back to town. I'm handling this one
on my own." Turning in the direction of Yuma, Chris legged his horse into a jog.
Buck came bouncing up beside him a moment later. "I get the feeling you're
avoiding my sweet company, Chris."
Chris just looked over at him with an expression that said 'you just figured that
out?'
"There's nothing wrong with good friends riding along together. Maybe I'm just
heading in the same direction as you, ever think of that? Blossom's in Yuma visiting her
beau and nothing says I care like a surprise visit from Buck."
Chris ignored him, knowing from experience that Buck wasn't going to be deterred
easily.
"So where you headin'?" There was no answer. Buck sighed. "Say Chris,
would you mind slowing down a bit. Lulabelle here is a mite tired from catching up to
you." He patted the grey's wet neck. Buck had driven her hard in hopes of finding
Chris before nightfall.
Chris' response, unfortunately, was to ride faster. Without a backward glance, the man
in black disappeared down the road ahead of him.
Buck coughed, waving at the dust in the air. He pulled his grey to a walk. He wasn't
going to chase after the man no more. What did that parable say anyway? The rabbit can run
as fast as he wants but eventually the turtle always wins. He rubbed Lulabelle's neck.
"Come on, girl. We'll just make our own pace. I know where he's going and he ain't
gonna lose me."
Chapter Three
It was evening before Buck found Chris again. The gunfighter had found a secluded spot
just off the road. The campfire's light could be easily seen by passing riders.
Buck called out to the camp just in case and rode in. Lulabelle gave a greeting to
Chris' gelding which stood placidly between two trees in a half doze. Buck lifted a hand
to Chris who sat back in the notch of his saddle beside the fire. There was no
acknowledgment from either of them. Buck and Lulabelle tried not to take it personally.
Buck took a deep breath of the aroma drifting on the night air as he dismounted.
"That smells good, Chris, whatever it is." Stripping his rig from his weary
horse, he lifted it to his shoulder and carried it into camp. "I'm as hungry as JD
with a hole in his stomach."
Chris didn't move, but just held his plate in his hand. "Who says I made any for
you?" The man's voice didn't even sound like Chris, scratchy and rough. If Buck
hadn't seen Chris sitting there, he would have thought the words came from an utter
stranger.
Buck wasn't worried though. Chris was tough enough to get around some measly cold. Buck
was worried about dinner however. He didn't think that Chris would be cruel
enough to deny his friend sustenance. A man's stomach was a horrible thing to toy with. It
smelled like Chris had caught himself some fowl and the smell of it was making Buck's
mouth water. Buck hadn't brought along that many provisions since he had been in a hurry
to catch up to Chris.
Buck pretended not to be concerned. "Of course, you did. You wouldn't do that to
your ol' pard Buck, would you?" Buck dropped the saddle to the left of Chris and
flopped down tiredly beside it.
"I wasn't expecting company."
"Well, you should've been. You didn't think you'd actually lose me, did you? I'm
like the dust, I'm with you wherever you ride."
That's the problem, Chris griped to himself.
"Enough left there for me?" Buck asked hopefully, indicated the roasting
fowl.
"Nope," was Chris' quick, rough response.
Of course, that was an obvious lie. Over half a bird lay on the crude spit over the
fire. Buck ignored the grouchy gunslinger and proceeded to pull off a leg for himself.
"What is it? Pheasant?"
Chris shrugged, meaning it had been moving and it had been easy enough to shoot. He had
eaten a bit of the meal but his throat hurt so damn much he had quickly lost his appetite.
However, he knew the meal wouldn't go to waste.
Tearing the tender, juicy meat off, Buck nearly sighed in ecstasy. Chris was the one
man whose field cooking was better than most women with a pantry full of spices. "Now
this is good," he murmured, licking his fingers of the excess fat. He glanced over at
Chris who stared distractedly into the darkness of the night. He could tell Chris was
drifting off where he alone liked to tread, the dark corners where his pain and misery
manifested.
That was Chris Larabee, a man steeped in all the hate and violence the world had to
offer. But Buck remembered a different man than the one that shared the fire with him
tonight. There was a time when Chris was fun to be around. He wished the others could have
known Chris before he lost his family. He used to smile a lot. Seeing him now, like this,
it hurt. It was like he had been crippled.
Buck knew Chris resented him for holding the memory of a happier time. Buck held the
same precious gift as Chris. The difference was he cherished his, while Chris' memories
only tormented him. For Buck, those memories made him stronger. He could only hope that
someday Chris would want to remember them too, and for all the right reasons. Buck owed
him everything. He owed Chris his life. God, he missed that man.
Chris had been wild in his youth and in more trouble that a passel load of JDs. Chris,
of course, had tempered somewhat when Buck met him, but there had been and always would be
that element of unpredictability just because of the reputation he had slowly garnered
over time. Thanks to all that, the man had developed nerves of steel and a will born to
command. And it wasn't long before it came into play.
The Army had suited both of them even if the War hadn't. When the fighting broke out,
they were lucky enough to be in the same squad and it wasn't long before Chris had command
of it. Their squad had the best record and were often given the dirtiest of assignments.
However, if serving in the Army was bad, serving under Chris Larabee was exactly the
opposite.
A friendship was quickly forged. Through each battle they fought, through each comrade
they lost, and through each drop of blood spilled in defense of the other, the two men had
become brothers.
It was that bond that Buck refused to abandon. It had sustained them throughout the War
and it had carried them when they started the ranch after the War's conclusion.
It had faltered only once.
Buck saw Chris' gaze was now locked onto the campfire's flames. He knew where Chris was
at present. He wished he could ease his friend's anguish, make him see that life was still
worth living, if only the man would open his heart.
Buck tossed a bone into the fire, breaking Chris' concentration as the ashes shifted,
throwing sparks into the air to dance for a moment. Chris turned his way and Buck's own
heart almost broke at the sadness he saw in his friend's face.
Buck grabbed another piece of meat and then leaned back into his saddle. He waved the
chicken leg at Chris. "Damn, this is good. You get him with one shot?"
Chris eyed Buck suspiciously for a second but then eventually nodded, not quite sure
where his friend was trying to head with the conversation. However, he didn't think that
one piece of information would be dangerous.
Buck smirked. "Remember that time at Pea Ridge when I was in charge of gettin'
supper?"
Chris' brow furled for a moment as his mind searched for that particular memory. The
small smile that tried to lift the corners of Chris' mouth showed his success.
Buck continued. "Yup, I flushed out a whole lot more than just grouse that
day."
Chris couldn't resist. "You were being awfully generous to invite all those
Confederates to our dinner."
Buck laughed heartily. "Well, how was I supposed to know that grouse liked to bed
down in the same kind of hollow as Rebs?"
Chris' eyes had closed for a moment as Buck spoke but then he opened them again to
regard his old friend and Sergeant. "Perhaps you should have been thinking more with
your head than with your stomach." He cocked an eyebrow at Buck for emphasis.
Buck snorted. "Hey! You sure as hell thought it funny back then. You laughed for a
whole ten minutes while I was dodging bullets. I'm glad that you now see the seriousness
of the situation, even if it is ten years after the fact."
"I have to give you credit." Chris twirled his hand around in crazy circles
indicating Buck's erratic route. "You held onto that grouse the whole time you were
running." His small chuckle turned into a cough. Chris tried to stifle it, but it got
the best of him. After a moment, it ceased and he sat back with a scowl and a wince as his
aching body protested the abuse. Laughing was a painful business.
"Did you take any of that medicine I brought?"
Chris threw a scowl Buck's way.
"Nathan swears it will work this time. It'll have you feelin' right as rain in no
time."
Chris admitted grudgingly, "Nathan's stuff has a way of catching up to you."
He gave Buck an exasperated glance. "Much like everything else."
Buck snickered and smacked his lips, tossing another clean bone into the fire.
"Well, I brought it to you 'cause I care. I'm tired of hearing you hack and wheeze
all day and night. I couldn't concentrate on my poker game with you over there sniffling
and sneezing all the damn time."
"You were losing hands long before this. 'Sides, it's about run its course, I
expect."
"Yeah, that's why you look like death warmed over." Buck helped himself to a
cup of thick black coffee, smelling the aroma waft up to his nose. He refilled Chris' cup
too, watching as the man's eyelids drooped down only to be jerked wide again. "Why
dontcha go to sleep, Chris. I'll keep watch tonight. You need a good night's rest."
Chris just sat there as if he hadn't heard his friend. Buck gave an exasperated sigh.
There was little anyone could do if Chris Larabee made up his mind against you. He
regarded his old friend worriedly. "So is there a reason to post a guard? Are you
expecting trouble?"
Chris slanted his gaze toward Buck. He cleared his throat with some difficulty before
answering. "Trouble already walked in."
Buck rankled at bit at that. "What is it with you and me, Chris? Don't we have fun
anymore together?"
Chris stared at his old friend for a while and then finally shrugged.
"I thought we've done pretty good lately. Thought things were maybe closer to
where they ought to be."
"Things are the way they are, Buck," was the quiet response.
"We've been through a hell of a lot these past few months. Don't they count for
something?"
Chris eyed his old friend warily. "What do you want them to count as?"
It was Buck's turn to shrug. "I don't know, but things are different between
us."
Chris was silent for a time, digesting Buck's words and debating whether he really
wanted to continue this discussion. It could only end badly. He shifted uncomfortably,
feeling the saddle horn dig into his shoulder. "They're supposed to be different. A
lot has happened." His throat was tight and painful and it wasn't from the cold.
Buck dropped his gaze to the toes of his boots. "We just seem to disagree a whole
lot more. It was never like--"
Chris interrupted firmly. "Of course, it was like that. We argued all the damn
time. You just don't remember."
"Oh, I remember, but things aren't like they used to be and you know it."
Chris grew exasperated with the conversation. It hurt too much to talk about it this
way. And that was the trouble with Buck. He didn't see that. He was only after what was,
not the way things were. "Things will never be that way anymore, Buck."
"Why the hell not?! You and Vin seem to be..." Buck abruptly cut himself off.
He hadn't wanted to voice that. He regretted it as he witnessed Chris' eyes narrow.
"Damn you, Buck." Chris grimaced, fighting the anger that immediately swelled
at Buck's statement. "Vin and I get along because he doesn't push. Face up
to it, we're different now. I'm different. Don't expect me to be what I was, not
after..." Chris let his voice trail off. It ached with loss.
Buck realized he was pushing his luck with this conversation. He leaned back further
into his notch and tried to toss the next question out as nonchalantly as possible.
"Well then, what the hell annoys you so much about me lately? I'm the same as I ever
was."
Chris sighed in an attempt to wash away his ire, recognizing Buck's self-mocking tone.
His voice came out low and sad. "You try too hard." There was a moment of regret
in Chris' face, just a glimpse before the mask was firmly back in place. "You always
did." He shook his head. "I'll never understand why."
Buck regarded his friend sadly. "I guess if you don't know by now, there ain't no
sense in telling you."
Chris kept his eyes riveted to the fire, fighting the pain that rose. He knew he had
hurt Buck. It had hurt him too. He hated discussions like these, all the misery they
caused. With a weary determination, Chris tried to ease the tension with a small
half-hearted smile. "I guess I have seen you do a whole lot more for a whole
lot less."
Buck caught a glimmer of humor in the older man's eyes and grew suddenly wary. Then he
remembered what Chris was referring to. "Hell, Chris, a man will do a lot of things
if'n he ain't got all the proper answers to his questions." He waggled a finger at
Chris. "I know what you're talking about, pard, and that time don't count. If you had
told me the truth, I wouldn't have followed you up that damn hill." Buck leaned back
in his saddle, arms folded. "Tempting seasoned, thirsty men with the promise of ten
cases of fine whiskey, that ain't fair." He pinned Chris with an accusing stare.
"Especially when you come up with only one case afterwards. You skunked
us!"
Chris shrugged. "How was I supposed to know the quartermaster couldn't
count."
"How could you trust a gap-toothed, slack-jawed old man, hailing from a place
called Coulee, Virginia? Everything about the man screamed hillbilly!"
"It got you boys up the hill, didn't it." Chris coughed and then took a sip
of the warm coffee to ease his throat. "It's amazing how good a motivation it turned
out to be." A trace of gratitude creased his lips. "Lucky for me."
Buck scowled for a moment but couldn't hold it. Buck had saved Chris from a sniper that
day too. It was good that Chris still remembered. They had always watched each other's
backs. The promise of liquor had little to do with the devotion of Chris' squad. Buck and
the others would have followed Chris Larabee into the very jaws of the Devil. It was just
the way it was. Chris instilled in others the same passion and conviction that he himself
held. Buck had seen it happen many times. The Seven's own bond was testament to that fact.
Grinning, Buck realized this was the Chris he remembered. It felt good to talk this way
again with his old commanding officer and his friend. Chris seemed suddenly willing to
talk about the days of the War and so Buck obliged him. He talked of all the things he
could remember loving about the Army. There had been some good times then despite the War.
It had suited both men.
The night wore on and Buck spun tale after tale. Chris merely listened, adding only a
little here or there. Not that it mattered. Buck liked to talk, and the sound of his own
voice was a melody he never tired of hearing. He reminisced about everything he could
dredge up, all humorous anecdotes and all usually centering on his own daring exploits, on
and off the field of battle.
Buck turned to Chris about to ask him whether he recalled the time when old Colonel
Johnson had mysteriously lost his britches the same day General Mayborne was to arrive,
but his voice abruptly trailed off.
Chris was asleep, coffee cup in hand, his chin to his chest. Buck could hear the deep,
tell-tale breathing of an exhausted slumber. Buck shifted, reaching over to remove the
cup.
Chris woke with a start and Buck grabbed the cup before the man spilled it all over
himself. Chris stared at Buck with owlish eyes, blinking rapidly.
"Go to sleep, Chris."
Like a small child, Chris protested, mumbling he wasn't tired, but his body betrayed
him. He suppressed a yawn. He knew he wasn't going to remain awake no matter how much
coffee he drank. Giving in, he leaned back into his saddle and pulled his blanket up
higher, fighting off a shiver. "You can clean up," he muttered to Buck. Within
seconds, the steely gunfighter was curled on his side and blissfully asleep, snoring
mildly.
Buck chuckled. There were few people who ever witnessed the great Chris Larabee weak
and pitiful as a kitten. Even fewer did Chris trust enough to watch his back while in that
condition. That Buck still counted as one of those few made him feel good inside. He
stirred the embers of the dying fire and added some more wood. Buck wasn't going to bed
yet and it was probably better to keep Chris warm for a bit longer. 'Sides, apparently
there were dishes left to clean.
Chapter Four
The next morning brought some surprises--a beautiful warm day with a clear sky and the
loss of Chris Larabee's voice.
This delighted Buck to no end. Now the surly shootist couldn't order him home, not that
he could have anyway. And Buck had free rein to talk to his heart's content on any subject
he saw fit, short of topics where he knew Chris would shoot him from the saddle. However,
Buck felt confident he knew which ones those were.
Chris had gulped down a gallon of coffee hoping it would lubricate his throat enough to
get more than just the deep rasping sound to issue forth, but to no avail. He was stuck
with laryngitis and Buck Wilmington to boot. He sighed resignedly and saddled his gelding,
all the while listening to Buck's continuous chatter about every mundane topic he could
lay his mind to.
Chris glared at the man over the seat of his saddle as he gathered the reins, wishing
he could lay his own hands on the verbose scoundrel and call a stop to his tall tales. It
was giving him a headache. Why couldn't it have been Buck who was struck down with no
voice? Surely God would have loved that irony. Chris knew he would have. With a
creak of leather and a grunt of annoyance, he mounted his horse.
Buck hurriedly finished adjusting his own saddle since Chris was already heading toward
the road. Buck tossed his saddlebags over his shoulder and threw his foot into the
stirrup, bouncing alongside on one leg since his horse was already moving. With a final
heave, he hit the saddle. Lulabelle immediately turned to follow Chris' black gelding
without guidance from her rider. It was instinctive. They had rode out many times like
this in the past and the deep rooted memory was still there.
"So I was saying," Buck began again as he caught up to Chris, "Blossom
told me she was thinking of leaving Billy. I'm not sure what I think of that. I mean where
would be the excitement then? Not to say Blossom's not an exciting woman, because she's
all that!" Buck waggled his eyebrows and purposefully ignored Chris' clenching scowl
even though the man's gaze was still forward. "But without the prospect of Billy
bursting in on us whenever he escaped from Yuma Prison, where's our fire gonna come
from?"
Chris looked over at Buck with a meaningful glare, intending to tell Buck where exactly
his fire could go, but only a cough ensued in an ridiculous attempt to clear his stubborn,
irritated throat. Frustrated, he gave up and looked away.
Buck, however, provided his own interpretation. "Don't you worry, Chris, Blossom
and me, we'll find another way of stoking that inner heat. Maybe we'll just get you and
Vin to pull another stunt like that first day in Four Corners, eh?" Buck laughed.
"You damn near gave me a heart attack with all that banging. 'I'll skin you, you
rabbit,'" he imitated in a near perfect impression of Vin Tanner. "Hell, I'm
lucky I fell on something soft out there." Buck couldn't tell if Chris' face was
growing red from the sun or from something else, but the man looked as if he was going to
burst wide open in a minute.
Chris was fuming. He really didn't care about Buck and Blossom right now. As far as he
was concerned, the two of them should just call it quits or get the hell wed. Of course,
that poised a problem since Blossom was already a married woman.
Buck smiled as if reading his old friend's thoughts. "I know you don't think much
of Blossom, Chris, but I swear I don't mind the way she is. You know me, I'm not the
settling kind. Even if she asked me, I'd probably high tail it for the hills. I like the
arrangement just fine the way it is."
Chris sighed. Buck was right about that, and Blossom probably knew it too which is why
she hadn't said anything before now. Chris wondered what brought on the change now since
she was going to have it out with Billy in Yuma.
Buck was quick to provide the answer. "She's just mad at Billy, I suppose. He
hasn't written her in months and you know how fanatical he was about that. It's why she's
in Yuma right now. To figure out the problem."
Chris raised an eyebrow at Buck.
Buck quickly held up his hands in defense. "I'm just going for moral support!
That's all!"
Chris rubbed his forehead in exasperation. Buck was going to get himself killed.
Buck grunted. "It's not as if Billy's even gonna know I'm there." He settled
back in his seat, content. "I'm just gonna sneak around the hotel a bit and let
Blossom know I'm there if she needs me." He watched Chris frown but knew that the man
was just looking out for him. He had gotten a lecture a time or two from Sarah and Chris
on his rowdy ways. It was nice to know Chris still cared. It was a step in the right
direction for the man.
It had been a long time since the two men had had a moment to themselves to just talk.
Though today it was a little more one-sided than usual, but still even that was a cut
above a normal conversation of theirs of late. Chris was a man who used the fewest words
possible. Apparently, though, they still knew each other well enough to get past that.
Buck had forgotten how it used to be between them. Maybe because he had been replaced as
Chris' confidant.
Buck had resented how Vin had taken over his usual role. At least he had at first. He
had gotten over it soon enough. The bounty hunter and the shootist had a rapport that Buck
didn't understand but neither would he contest. The ability to read another man so
completely that no words were necessary was a rare thing to find.
There was a time during the War when Chris and Buck had been like that, but through the
passing of time and events, it had waned. They were operating on different levels now.
Chris was right. He was a different man. Vin understood him but Buck did not, not
anymore.
He supposed their priorities had changed. Once Buck and Chris had wanted the same
things-- a family, a home, a ranch. However, that had changed with the swiftness of a
fire's spark. Chris' priorities were very different now. They scared Buck. Hell, there was
a lot about Chris Larabee that scared Buck, but he still understood what drove the man.
Buck knew the pain and he knew the grief. He also knew the man. It would take a long time
to get past all that. He knew Chris would someday, but it would take a matter of revenge
to put it to rest. Until Chris found the person responsible for his pain, everything else
had to wait. That included his rage, his future, his friends, and unfortunately, even Mary
Travis.
Buck felt sorry for the lovely blonde widow. He could see the attraction. Hell, the
whole town could see it. But Chris would never allow it to go beyond that. He claimed it
was for a lot of reasons, but in the end they were all selfish. Again, Buck understood. He
knew why Chris couldn't let himself love again. He had seen it with his own eyes. It was
just too bad that so much time was passing while Chris searched. The man was risking
everything on the one small chance of bringing peace to the Larabee name.
Buck hoped Chris would find the men responsible soon. Neither of them were getting any
younger.
Chapter Five
By the time it was noon, Chris was fighting a headache the size of Ezra's ego. Buck
hadn't shut up for the last three hours. If Chris had had the energy, he would have
dropped the man where he sat, but instead he had bore through it stoically as Buck
continued his stroll down memory lane.
God, there is nothing worse than a nostalgic Buck Wilmington.
Chris rubbed the nagging pressure above his eyes. Not that some of the stories he
related where bad ones. Buck and he had had some wild times. Chris hadn't thought of them
in many years.
"Chris, let's stop for a bit. I'm starving. Chris! Hey Chris!"
Buck's voice finally broke through Chris' rumination. He turned to Buck with a
quizzical look.
Buck pulled his horse to the side of the trail. "I need to eat and Lulabelle needs
a rest."
Annoyed but compliant, Chris followed after. Maybe Buck would shut up for a while if
his mouth was full. They were only a few more hours outside of Bent Creek. They could rest
there for the night which suited Chris fine. He dreaded another cold night on the ground.
Wearily dismounting, he proceeded to loosen the girth on his black. Then he walked over
to plop down beside Buck. He suffered in silent misery as he watched Buck start a small
fire and put on a pot of hot water.
Buck eyed his friend and then went over to the black gelding. Grabbing the saddlebag
from the animal, he returned to the fire. He pulled out the herb package Nathan had given
him and dumped some of the contents into a tin cup. Chris eyed him with an beleaguered
grimace.
"You can sit there and glare all you like, pard, but just think on this. How badly
do you want to tell me to shut up?"
Chris' response was a barely audible hiss.
Buck taunted the devil beside him and pretended not to hear. He cupped a hand around
his ear. "Eh? Did you just say something?"
"Knoc--" Chris' throat spasmed and he stopped, willfully holding the cough at
bay. His face flushed red at the effort.
Buck relished his victory. He let the water come to a boil and, after ransacking Chris'
saddlebags, fixed himself a biscuit full of the smoked venison he found in there. Vin had
been smoking this particular cut of meat for a while now and had been willing to share
with his friend. Buck was glad that Chris had had the foresight to bring some along. Yup,
there were definitely upshots being the friend of Vin Tanner.
"I figure we'll just spend the night at Bent Creek. No sense sleeping outdoor if'n
we don't have to." Buck didn't look Chris' way. That only invited an argument. There
was no way in hell Buck was going to allow the two of them to sleep on the cold ground
when a warm bed beckoned right over the ridge. With any luck, Nathan's medicine would just
make the crabby gunfighter more relaxed and maybe more complacent about Buck taking charge
of this little adventure.
Buck offered a stuffed biscuit to Chris, who declined gruffly. Buck leaned back against
a sturdy tree and wolfed his down. Mumbling around the food, Buck continued. "I
haven't been to Bent Creek. Any good?" Realizing Chris couldn't answer him, he waved
a hand. "Don't matter to me, of course. Any town is a good town if it's got a
saloon."
The water began to boil but before Buck could rise, Chris was already removing it
carefully from the flames. He poured some of it into his cup and then some into Buck's
sitting beside it with a few coffee grounds from this morning. He'd be able to get one
last good cup of coffee out of it. He put the pot to the side of the fire to keep it warm
and then sat back while the drinks steeped and cooled.
The sun felt good beating down on him, the black of his coat absorbing the heat and
wrapping him in a soothing embrace. He was drifting asleep before he knew it. The next
thing Chris knew Buck was shaking him awake.
"Come on, pard, time to get a move on."
He felt something shoved into his hand, warm and round.
"Here, drink this while I get the horses ready."
Chris blinked against the glare of the late afternoon sun. Geezus, how long did I
sleep? He drank the coffee in his hand only to realize a second later it wasn't coffee. He
nearly gagged on the large swallow he had gotten of the vile stuff.
Damn! It was Nathan's tea. He stared down into the muddy mixture. It had
steeped far longer than it needed and was now strong and bitter. However, with a grimace
plastered firmly on his face, he reticently drank the rest. His throat was so sore and dry
he'd drink Buck's bath water right now in order to lubricate it. Afterwards, he threw out
the grounds at the bottom of the cup, banging it against a nearby rock. He stood slowly,
his body stiff and aching. Then he stretched, fighting a yawn. At least his headache had
eased off.
He walked over to the horses to find his gelding ready to go. He stuffed the cup into
his saddle bag and glanced over at Buck who just dropped down his stirrups after
tightening the girth on his mare.
"You ready?"
Chris nodded. He swung up in his saddle.
Buck quickly did the same, pulling his horse in front of Chris. "You feelin'
better?"
Chris nodded again. Actually his throat pain did seem to be less. Maybe that concoction
was going to do the trick after all. Maybe he should have brewed a bit more for the road.
"I filled your canteen with some of that tea of Nathan's. You can nurse it till we
get to Bent Creek." He regarded the setting sun. "Which should be right after
nightfall." He winked at Chris. "Just in time for the saloon to get
lively."
Chris grunted, mildly amused. He studied his long time friend as they turned their
mounts back to the road. He never realized just how good Buck was at reading him. It had
been too long since he had taken the time to notice. He felt regret at that. Buck was a
good friend, always had been. Buck just tended to want to get too close, and Chris didn't
want that. The risk was too high. He was tired of loss, tired of grief. His soul could
only handle so much. One more tragedy and he would be lost. He feared for all of them,
especially Vin.
He hadn't realized that even a man like the distant Vin Tanner had wormed his way close
enough. It had taken Chris unawares and now it was too late. He had another friend. Hell,
he had six of them, more if he counted the Travis'. It only invited trouble-- and yet he
tolerated it. He was drawn to it even. There were times he tried to push them all away,
became a veritable bastard at times, and still they hung around. Half of them annoyed the
crap out of him and yet he enjoyed their company. He tried to leave a few times but he
never got far. He knew that one day, sooner or later, he was going to regret it. He just
hoped his soul had healed enough to endure it.
Chapter Six
It turned out Buck was as good as his calculations. The sun had just set when Bent
Creek loomed on the horizon, the street fires winking gently at them from a distance. It
was a small town, but certainly lively. Buck could hear the tinkling of piano keys
already.
It wasn't long before they reined in at the hotel. The air temperature had dropped
considerably after the setting of the sun, and both men were perfectly content to spend
the cold night indoors. Luckily, there was a single room available. They would share it.
They both headed wordlessly to the saloon as soon as their gear was stowed and the
horses seen to. As much as his body wanted to rest, Chris needed a drink more. His short
nap had made a sound sleep practically impossible so he decided to kill a little time in
the only place he felt at home--a noisy saloon.
He was feeling a tad better anyway. His throat felt improved and his congestion was
easing off. His aching body had finally settled for being pleasantly numb. Overall, he was
more relaxed than he had been in a while.
Bent Creek's saloon was smaller even than Four Corner's modest establishment, making it
a bit more crowded, but they were still able to procure some seats. It wasn't a table
exactly to Chris' liking. He preferred to have his back to a wall, but he didn't plan on
staying long. He just wanted a drink before giving in to an evening's slumber. He could
put up with a bad chair and Buck's ceaseless monologue for that much longer.
While Buck retrieved a bottle and two glasses from the proprietor, Chris acquired a
table. Then they settled down. Chris wasted no time in pouring himself a shot. He took a
long, stiff swallow of the whiskey. It burned like acid as it hit his sore throat, making
his eyes water. He exhaled slowly and waited till the room ceased its teetering. Blinking
rapidly, he set the glass down and cleared his throat a bit.
Buck regarded him curiously but then smiled as Chris refilled his class. "Is that
what you were cravin'?"
Chris glanced askance at his friend and felt a small smirk lift the left corner of his
mouth. It certainly didn't hurt.
Buck laughed. The bedeviled expression on his friend's face spoke volumes.
There were two other men at the table beside them and they warily looked each other
over. But soon they welcomed the tall, mustached stranger and his dark, ominous friend.
The two cowboys had come in from a local ranch. Buck sized them up quickly and decided
they wouldn't be trouble. One was fidgety and young, but the older man seemed capable of
holding him in check.
The latter offered a hand to Buck. "Name's Rusty. On account of this red
hair." He tugged at his bushy side burns which were the color of a brick. He then
gestured to his compatriot. "This is Willy. We work at the Double C ranch just north
of here."
Buck nodded, shaking the man's hand. "Name's Buck. That's Chris." He didn't
see the need to throw last names around. Young Willy looked nervous enough. Buck was
curious as to why. "We're just passin through," he told them.
Introductions done, they settled in to enjoy the atmosphere. Buck slouched in his
chair. "God, I love a smoky saloon. You always feel like you're at home no matter
where you are. No troubles, no worries."
Chris reclined also, holding his glass and nursing this drink slowly. He nodded in
response to Buck's observations; he felt very much the same way. The two of them had
certainly seen their fair share of them too. Some were memorable, some were not. This one
ranked about midway on their scale.
"Remember that one in Tombstone?" Buck asked. "The one with the lady
swinging in the chair above our heads. Now that was a classy joint!"
Chris, however, recalled the fact that they gotten thrown out on account of Buck not
keeping his hands to himself. It turned out that that particular lady had a jealous
boyfriend. Buck and he had been forced to hide out at Aunt Wilma's.
Buck caught Chris' expression. "I wasn't talking about what happened after, just
the saloon! How's a man supposed to resist temptation when they dangle such things over
your head. You might as well hang a chicken's skinny legs in a fox's den."
Chris laughed. It came upon him suddenly and took him by surprise. He hadn't meant to
do it and he immediately coughed to cover it. Luckily, Buck seemed to have missed it.
Chris didn't want the man thinking he was enjoying all this reminiscing.
"Good thing Aunt Wilma was an understanding woman," Buck continued. "It
was a fine place to crash. Food, a roof..."
Chris' eyes rolled. Aunt Wilma was many things but understanding wasn't one of them.
They ate cold leftovers and slept in a leaky barn. Understanding my ass, thought
Chris.
The men looked at each other to determine whether the other was swallowing that
particular load of bull. Immediately after, they burst out into laughter.
Buck bent over the table and gasped out. "Guess there's no hidin' the fact that my
Aunt Wilma was a demented harpy, toting a double-barreled shotgun!" He wiped at the
tears leaking from his eyes. "Oh and the dog! What was the name of her dog?"
Chris laughed even harder and rasped out, "Pickles."
It brought them both down onto the tabletop, howling. Neither one noticed that Chris'
voice was actually audible this time, if not a little slurred.
Buck raised his head up, his hands brushing back his shaggy hair, his face flushed.
There were some curious looks from the cowboys sitting at the table next to them. Buck
felt obliged to explain. "My Aunt Wilma had a dog that weren't no bigger than a loaf
of bread. Had to escort it outside with a shotgun in case something tried to make off with
it."
"Like a field mouse," Chris suggested, snorting into his whiskey. Soon they
were in hysterics again.
Buck was laughing so hard and loud he could barely breathe. But he did nudge Chris with
a hand and managed, "You can talk?"
Willy glanced at Chris. "You mean he's a mute?"
The two shootists laughed even harder and it was a full minute before either of them
could speak sensibly. Buck leaned back and took a deep painful breath and regarded the
young cowboy. "Some might say that."
Chris' laughter suddenly turned to coughing and Buck pounded him on the back. Chris
reached for his glass and gulped down some more whiskey.
Then it hit Buck. Chris was laughing.
No, not just laughing, nearly sobbing hysterics. Buck's jaw dropped open. Something
wasn't right. Chris never laughed, not like that, not since before Sarah's and
Adam's deaths.
"Chris, you okay?"
Chris turned toward him, having just finished getting his breath back. It was then that
Buck noticed the glazed look in Chris' eyes. Geezus, what's wrong with him? The
man had always held his liquor, and besides, he had only had two shots. Hell, one really.
That second glass couldn't have possibly hit him yet.
Chris grinned widely at Buck. He slapped at his friend's shoulder, but missed, smacking
Buck's elbow instead. "I'm fine, Buck!" he shouted. He shook his head, trying to
keep the saloon from rocking back and forth.
Buck winced, not out of pain, but concern. Chris was one hell of a loud drunk. He
always had been. But how the hell had he gotten so drunk so fast?
Suddenly it dawned on him. Nathan's medicine. There was little doubt that it didn't mix
well with alcohol. Damn! I should have thought of that!
He rubbed his face. "Oh boy," Buck murmured, not relishing Chris' hangover
tomorrow. He debated trying to get the woostered shootist to their room to sleep it off,
especially before he downed anymore liquor, but then he regarded Chris' smiling face. How
long had it been since the two of them had done something like this? Had honest to
goodness fun? There was a time they had enjoyed each other's company and spent many long
evenings reminiscing their acquaintances with laughter and drink. Just like tonight.
Chris apparently was enjoying himself, and Buck certainly was enjoying this long lost
side of Chris. So long as Chris didn't spiral down into his usual destructive state, Buck
was willing to let this play out. Though he knew he was going to regret that decision come
morning. Chris' hangovers were a wonder to behold.
That thought sobered Buck immediately. He rose and made for the bar. "Back in a
minute, pard." Chris waved distractedly at him as he sipped from his third shot of
whiskey.
Weaving his way through the crowd, Buck motioned the bartender over. Buck slapped some
money on the bar. "Give me your most watered down whiskey."
The bartender just stared at him strangely.
"I'm bein' serious here, friend."
The bartender shrugged and pulled a bottle from under the counter. "Sorry, we
don't get many folks asking for this label. We mainly keep it around for our
girls. Keeps them on their feet longer. It's mostly water with some coffee in it for
color."
Buck smirked. With any luck, Chris wouldn't even notice. "Believe me, I have my
reasons," he commented to the bartender. He raised the bottle in a salute and
meandered back toward Chris.
Chapter Seven
"BUCK! Where you been?!" Chris demanded.
Buck patted his drunk friend on the shoulder as he resumed his seat. "Oh, I just
wanted to fetch us another bottle 'fore the crowd thickened." He set the new bottle
next to the full strength one which was already near half empty.
"Smart thinkin'!" Chris blinked rapidly a few times and then his attention
centered on the piano player and the gaggle of women around it.
Buck took advantage of the distraction to swap the bottles. He handed the old one to
Rusty sitting next to him. The old cowboy lifted his eyebrows in surprise, but quickly
snatched it from Buck's hands in case the scoundrel changed his mind. Chris didn't seem to
notice the exchange.
Slugging back the rest of Chris' whiskey, Buck quickly refilled it with the new
concoction and then he waited. When Chris finally took a sip, Buck's heart nearly ceased
working, waiting for the tirade that he felt sure would follow. Even half drunk, Chris
could keep his wits about him.
But instead, Chris didn't make a sound. He just sat there staring off into space.
Letting loose with a relieved sigh, Buck relaxed. His ploy was working. My genius
astounds me sometimes! He waved to a pretty barmaid who was staring at him with the
largest blue eyes he had ever seen. She smiled and waved back.
He let the noise and smoke permeate his very soul. For the first time in a long while
he felt at ease around Chris. It didn't seem as strained a relationship as it usually was
of late. Chris just didn't understand Buck no more. He wasn't willing to tolerate his
shenanigans like he used to. Instead they wore on Chris, almost to the point of gunplay.
But thankfully it had never come to that. Buck had the rest of the Seven to thank for
that. Vin in particular.
Vin had a special way of calming Chris. The quiet, unassuming friendship had been just
what Chris needed to allow him to begin living again. Buck had resented the fact that he
himself had been unable to help Chris. He had tried so hard and for so long after the
fire, but it had taken too much out of him as well.
He had finally admitted defeat after a year of constant abuse, both physical and
verbal. His efforts had left him feeling wasted and worn. He loved Chris as a brother, but
eventually he had nothing left to offer the grieving man. Buck had thrown himself time
after time up against the wall of Chris' anguish. He hadn't been able to breach the
fortress his friend had erected, and so Buck had walked away. And it had broken him.
It had wore on him every day since he had abandoned his friend. Had he made the right
decision? His departure had felt selfish at first. He had left his oldest friend to grieve
alone, knowing that Chris was harboring a death wish. He had seen it manifest quickly
afterwards and it had terrified Buck. Chris no longer planned campaigns as he had once
done in the Army. He became reckless. He let trouble find him, and there had been no end
to the number of people who had lined up to try and take down the famous Chris Larabee.
They all thought he would be an easy mark, weighed down by grief and alcohol. But Chris
wasn't. His family's death only made him far more dangerous, as many slick young men had
learned. Most never lived long enough to utilize their new-found wisdom. All the while,
Chris continued to live the careless life of a suicidal gunfighter.
No, Buck had been wise to leave Chris when he did. If he hadn't, Chris might have
called him out one day in a drunken rage, and it would be Buck lying in the street of some
no-name town.
But time had brought Chris back from the brink. When Chris found his old friend again,
Buck's joy was insurmountable. He had at first assumed the old Chris was back. He had been
wrong, but at least through the dark shadows, a glimmer of the man he had come to respect
still shimmered. Buck could work with that. Chris' family was gone. There was little to be
done to change that, but Buck would make sure that the thing they held dear was kept safe.
Buck would be damned if he ever left Chris' side again. Not till the man was on his feet
for good. Maybe the day be married Mary...
Chris slapped Buck on the shoulder. "BUCK!"
Buck jumped out of his musing and nearly fell from his chair. "WHAT??"
Chris didn't seem to notice, he merely continued trying to focus his vision on his
friend. "Wha's the nam this song?"
Buck turned his attention to the piano player. After listening for a few seconds, a
broad grin broke over his face. "I haven't heard this song in a long
time!" He looked at Chris who was still expecting an answer though by the look of
him, he couldn't quite remember the question.
Buck started singing the chorus which had just come around again. "I'm a
rover, seldom sober. I'm a rover o' high degree. And when I'm drinkin', I'm always
thinkin' how to gain my love's company."
Chris' face relaxed finally and then he too remembered the words. To Buck's utter
amazement, he joined him in singing the next verse, rather loudly and slightly garbled,
not that it mattered since the rest of the saloon joined in as well.
"I stepped up to her bedroom window, kneelin' gently upon a stone; I rapped at
her bedroom-window, 'Darlin' dear, do you lie alone?'
"She raised her head on her snow-white pillow, with her arms about her
breasts. 'What is that at my bedroom window, disturbin' me at my long night's rest?'
"'It's only me, your own true lover, open the door and let me in. For I have
come on a long journey, and I'm near drenched to the skin.'
"She opened the door with the greatest pleasure, she opened the door and let
me in. We both shook hands and embraced each other until the morning we lay as one.
"I'm a rover, seldom sober. I'm a rover o' high degree. And when I'm drinkin',
I'm always thinkin' how to gain my love's company."
Somewhere near the third refrain, Buck had that pretty little filly, who had been
making calf eyes at him earlier, sitting on his lap. She was a frisky thing too which
delighted the ladies' man to no end.
He craned his neck around her rush of golden locks to observe how Chris was doing. His
good mood faded as he saw Chris just sitting there morosely, his eyes glistening and his
face steadily hardening. Buck tried to think quickly why. What had set Chris off?
As the final chorus of the song ended, practically shouted in his ear by his new
lap-mate, he remembered. This was a song taught to them by Sarah herself. The woman knew
more drinking songs than the whole of America thanks to her Irish bred father.
Buck cursed his lax attention. To him it had just been a bawdy bar song, but for Chris
it was far more. Buck was about to call a halt to the evening's festivities and scoot the
lady off his lap when the voice beside him tore that idea all to shreds.
"Whatcha doin' with my gal?"
"Aw hell," Buck murmured. He looked over his left shoulder and saw the
fidgety cowboy from their table. "This your girl, Willy?" Buck inquired in as
innocent voice as he could muster. It was too bad that Buck hadn't been able to keep rein
on his animal magnetism this one time, but as usual, it was out of his control.
"Hell, yes, that's my girl! Annie, get over here!"
Annie didn't like being bossed around and she made it perfectly clear to everyone.
"I ain't your girl, Willy Hertog!" She ran her fingers through Buck's thick
hair. "I can do what I please." She gazed into Buck's eyes with all the warmth
of a barnyard stray in heat. "And I please to stay here with this one."
Buck tried to politely grab her hands. "Now, now. Let's not cause trouble for ol'
Buck tonight. I understand all about prior claims." Well, not really, he didn't.
Usually he wouldn't have given such a thing a second thought. Let the better man win and
all that, but tonight was different. He had Chris to worry about. The shootist was so out
of it right now, the snot-nosed kid might actually have a chance of beating Chris in a
shoot-out. Of course, Chris might just pull his gun right now and shoot the kid for making
too much noise. Or, the way Chris had looked over at him just now, the man in black might
only fall flat on his face. None of those options were particularly appealing.
"Come on, cowboy," Annie purred in Buck's ear, "don't let Willy scare
you."
Buck laughed. "Scare me? Honey, that pint-sized, bow-legged heifer don't scare
me." He pulled her roaming hands away again. "It's just that--and I can't
believe I'm saying this--but I ain't in the mood."
There! He had said it! I must be loco. Buck stood, forcefully disengaging
Annie this time.
Willy quickly grabbed her arm and pulled her roughly toward him. She tried to push him
away but Willy gave her a shake which rattled her teeth. "I'll teach you to cheat on
me!"
Buck felt his blood begin to boil, though his eyes were cold, belaying the smile he
still had on his face. He deftly picked up his whiskey with his left hand. "Here son,
why don't I just buy you a drink." Then with a slight stumble, Buck bumped into
Willy, spilling the drink on the cowboy's clean shirt.
Willy immediately reacted. "You idiot!" He released Annie and wiped at his
soaked shirt.
"So sorry," Buck said, still standing close to him and gently putting himself
between Willy and Annie. The saloon girl immediately took her cue and disappeared into the
crowd.
Willy's head snapped up with fury blazing. "What are you?! Stupid?!" His hand
dropped swiftly down to his holster, but only slapped empty leather.
A voice as cold as the night wind spoke from just behind him. It raised the hairs on
the nape of Willy's neck.
"You looking for something?"
Willy turned around and stood nose to chin with the black-clad man who was sitting at
Buck's table. Suddenly, he wasn't the drunken, slack individual he was only a few moments
ago. The man's eyes were dead sober.
Willy swallowed stiffly, trying not to let his fear show as he looked up into those
eyes. "That's my gun."
Chris handed it to the bartender behind him. Chris' next statement gave an implied
order with which he fully expected the bartender to comply. "When you're old enough
you can get it back from the Sheriff." The bartender swiftly removed the weapon from
sight. The last thing he wanted was a shoot-out in the saloon.
Buck grinned at Chris. He had seen his friend sidle up behind the kid while Buck held
his attention. They worked so well as a team, each one anticipated the other's actions. It
had always been that way. It still was to some extent, Buck realized suddenly. There had
always been that silent communication between them, just like there was between Chris and
Vin. Buck just hadn't noticed it as much lately. Maybe because he was spending too much
time being resentful of Vin's friendship with Chris. Suddenly, Buck felt a whole lot
better, relishing this moment between them. Even if Chris didn't remember come morning, it
was okay. Buck would, and for just this small time, it was enough. Just knowing the
instinct was still there gave Buck hope.
He glanced at the poor kid in front of him and couldn't help the grin that emerged.
Willy had no idea who or what he was tangling with. The kid was too thick-headed to let
this altercation go. Maybe Buck should have done some name dropping after all. Maybe then
the fool would have thought twice before attempting his next move.
Furious, Willy waded in, throwing a fist at Chris.
Chris had been expecting it, but that didn't mean his medicine-soaked, whiskey-laced
body could react fast enough. He leaned back in what he thought was blinding speed.
Instead, it was sluggish and the kid caught him a glancing blow on the chin. He stumbled
back into the crowd.
It was unfortunate that the crowd became riled because of it. There were obviously some
friends of the kid's within and they shoved Chris back into the fray, unbalanced and
disoriented. That didn't stop Chris though. He'd been in enough brawls to react
instinctively, sober or not. He swung out with a stiff arm and whopped the kid on the side
of the head. Willy fell like a brick to the floor. Suddenly the bar erupted into a
full-fledged bar fight.
Chapter Eight
As the pandemonium began, Buck tried to step forward to help Chris, but found his arms
yanked behind his back. He let out a shout and attempted to throw off his attacker.
Suddenly there was a shower of glass against the back of Buck's neck and the weight was
gone. He saw a flash of red hair amongst a huge grin and a fist holding up the broken
bottle of whisky that Buck had given as a gift.
"Came in right handy," Rusty shouted.
Buck laughed and waved his thanks at Rusty who was distracted long enough to receive a
right to the jaw. Buck winced in sympathy.
Rusty's head snapped around, but he kept his feet as the whole saloon broke out into a
wild brawl, people choosing sides faster than Ezra dealing cards. Buck dodged a poorly
aimed fist but couldn't avoid the chair that came crashing down on his back. He stumbled
forward into the arms of his previous attacker who was just struggling to his feet. They
both went down in a heap.
Meanwhile, Chris shoved someone away from him and was satisfied with the responding
grunt and subsequent impact of a body on the floor. Brawls were rarely organized fights.
Instead, they were more a tangle of bodies and limbs. So Chris grabbed the nearest arm
that was flailing his way and landed a hard right on the body to which it was connected.
He hit something solid though he didn't exactly know what. Not that it mattered, the arm
went limp.
Then he was rushed from behind. He saw the floor come up fast and he hit heavy and hard
thanks to the extra weight on his back. His chin struck first and then his nose. He felt
the warm gush of blood as his breath exploded from his lungs in a red spray.
Damn it! He couldn't draw in another breath and spots danced before his eyes.
With a shout of rage, Chris jammed his elbow into the behemoth laying on top of him.
The body quickly rolled off him with a sharp cry, and Chris was rewarded with the ability
to fill his aching lungs once again.
He scrambled drunkenly to his feet, swaying unsteadily and wishing his vision would
straighten out. He looked for his next victim with a wild eye but then he caught sight of
Buck. Two cowboys were whaling on him. Without another thought, Chris propelled himself
into them.
The four men went down, cushioned this time by the crowd of brawlers right behind them.
There was a moment where they all jockeyed for position and a wrestling match ensued. But
when it ended, the cowboys were beneath Chris and Buck.
From his prone position, half sprawled over Chris, Buck smirked triumphantly down at
his friend. He slapped Chris on the back. "Thanks, pard!"
"BUCK!" Chris shouted.
"What?"
"GET THE HELL OFF ME!"
Buck laughed and stood, bending down to haul Chris to his feet. Chris wobbled so much
that Buck didn't relinquish his hold on the man's elbow. By Chris' puzzled expression, he
probably didn't even know why he was unsteady. Then Buck caught a glimpse of something
behind Chris.
"CHRIS!"
"WHAT?"
"DUCK!" Buck shoved Chris' head down and rammed a fist over him and into the
face of a man about to attack Chris with a glass of beer. The man dropped with a
resounding crash. There were worse ways to go than at the mercy of a glass of his favorite
brew, Buck thought.
Chris straightened, his thanks given in the form of a wicked grin. He stared at Buck
with large, glassy eyes. Despite the fact that he was bleeding and sore, he was having a
hell of a good time. If only he could remember where the hell they were and why the hell
they were fighting.
One look at Chris' happy, almost dopey, expression and Buck knew he didn't have much
time. It wouldn't be long before Chris dropped. The man was running solely on a canteen of
medicated tea and three shots of hard whiskey. Sooner or later, they would work their
magic and bring the man down. Buck intended for them to be out of the saloon before that
happened.
"Come on! We're getting out of here!" He pulled Chris along as best he could
toward the saloon door which thankfully was only a few feet away. Chris only once tried to
grab at a nearby cowboy with intent to do bodily harm, but one good yank by Buck brought
him stumbling after. They made the door and slipped through into the icy air. It
immediately hit both men like a bucket of cold water. Chris blinked and for a moment the
world righted.
"Buck? Where are we going?" He straightened a bit away from Buck, shaking his
head.
"The hotel." He pulled Chris down the street away from the saloon. "This
way."
Just in time too for the Sheriff and his deputy were converging on the saloon carrying
heavy sticks. Keeping as low a profile as possible and sticking to the long, dark shadows,
Buck slunk away to their accommodations for the evening, Chris shambling behind him.
By the time they made the lobby of the hotel, however, Buck was half supporting Chris
again. Whatever lucidity the man had gained was wearing off quickly. Buck had to literally
carry him up the stairs. It was late and there wasn't anyone around to help.
"Figures," Buck mumbled, desperately trying to get a better grip on Chris. He
propped him as best he could against the door jam as he tried to get the key into the door
of their room. Unfortunately, Chris kept sliding sideways. Buck grabbed him a third time
and with a curse of exasperation, shoved a shoulder mercilessly into Chris' chest to pin
him to the wall.
Seconds later, they were in. He practically threw Chris' dead weight on the bed. Once
rid of his burden, he slumped to his knees. Two arms resting on the edge of the mattress,
Buck hung there trying to catch his breath. Blood dripped down from a split lip and he
licked it absently. Then he smiled. "What a night."
Chris opened his eyes for a moment and looked without seeing at the cracked, plastered
ceiling above his head. He blinked a few times and then turned his head to stare at Buck
who was pleased to see a hint of recognition in Chris' eyes. The shootist had a bewildered
expression on his face.
"We a' Ant Wima's?" Chris asked in a slurred voice.
Buck regarded Chris a moment and then burst into laughter. This situation did seem to
bear a striking resemblance to that long past event in Tombstone.
Chris unfortunately didn't let the matter drop. "If I see tha' dog, 'm gon shoot
'em."
Buck's head dropped into the coverlet to muffle his mirth. He pushed at his friend with
a wayward arm. "Shut up. My ribs hurt too much for this."
Chris closed his eyes with a smirk lingering on his lips. "Jus so's ya kno."
That said, he let loose a sigh and then the man in black fell soundly asleep.
Buck raised his head and wiped the moisture from his cheeks. He patted his friend's arm
and then dragged himself to his feet. "Rest, Chris. Just rest." He walked
wearily over to the wash basin and examined his damage. A cut above his eye was minor,
though he was going to sport a nice shiner tomorrow morning. He washed his face and
toweled it off, dabbing his swollen lip gently.
With a fresh towel he walked over to Chris and proceeded to clean him up too. His
wounds were small as well. Luckily, the man's nose wasn't broke. Of course, that still
wasn't going to be any consolation in the morning. Chris wouldn't even feel that pain over
the agony of his hangover.
Buck studied Chris. It wasn't till the man was quiescent that one realized just how
overwhelming Chris' waking presence was. Without a word, he could dominate a room. Buck
smiled sadly. Despite the fact that Chris was dead to the world, Buck used soft, gentle
strokes to wipe the blood from his old friend.
Something had changed between the two men tonight, Buck could feel it. He just wasn't
sure if it was because Chris had been unsure of the year or whether it was just that old
habits died hard. He hoped it was the latter. He hoped that despite the horrendous
hangover tomorrow, Chris would remember that the past can also bond two old friends
together as well as drive them apart.
He set the towel to the side and proceeded to pull off Chris' boots. He removed the
holster and set it over the post of the headboard. Then it took only a moment to roll
Chris under the blankets. Chris muttered something but it was nothing intelligible.
Sitting on the other side of the mattress, Buck pulled off his own boots and clothes,
leaving his underwear on against the evening chill. He crawled under the covers and was
promptly as dead to the world as his friend.
Chapter Nine
The first thing that penetrated the mire that was Chris Larabee's brain was a heavy
clanging. It started soft and distant but then suddenly the sound began reverberating
around his skull. With each impact it got louder and more intense. He cracked open his
left eye and swiftly regretted it as blinding light poured in to split his skull.
He screamed.
Buck glanced back at the bed as very small groan indicated the first sign of life from
the form still lying there. Buck set down his fork and knife on the breakfast tray.
"You awake there, pard?"
There was no answer. Buck wandered over and peered down at Chris who had managed to
bury his face under the pillow. He could hear some mumbling and figured it was probably
better he couldn't quite understand what the man was saying.
Just for fun though, he yanked the pillow away. "Rise and shine, cowboy!" No
sense coddling the man when his mood was already bad, he thought, walking back to his food
with the pillow tucked under his arm.
The curse that erupted from Chris' lips was easily understood this time. Buck grinned.
He also just managed to avoid the spurred boot flung blindly in his direction by a groggy
Chris. Damn, the man's reflexes were sharp, even hung over. Good thing, Buck had moved
Chris' pistol rig further away this morning.
"If you want to head out of this town before dark, I suggest you haul your carcass
outta bed."
The response was Chris' hand rising and searching for his pistol which usually hung
from the bed post.
Buck praised his forethought. "Uh-uh, Chris. If you want to shoot me, you're gonna
have to get up to do it."
With a painful groan, Chris rose, his hair sticking up in a wild disarray, his eyes
bloodshot and squinty, looking very much like a man ready to kill anything that crossed
his path. The trouble was with Buck moving all about the room, Chris had lost track of
him. He decided to just sit there and gain his bearings again. Sooner or later he'd have
his revenge when Buck wandered once more into his sight.
"So do you want to head out today? We don't have to, you know. We can lollygag
right here if you like. I fancy myself a lollygagger today."
Chris scrubbed at his hair and bit down on the groan that went with it. Even that
hurt, damn it! He ceased doing it, letting his arms drop back down to grip the
mattress. He skewed his eyes against the glare of sunlight coming in from the window in
front of him. He determined that it was about mid-morning. Dragging his mind through his
fuzziness, he tried to remember what had happened last night to no avail. He couldn't
figure out why was he sore all over.
Buck looked hopeful. "So, we lollygagging?"
"No."
Disappointment quickly fell over Buck. He hadn't been kidding about wanting to relax a
little. Since coming to Four Corners over two years ago, life suddenly never seemed to
slow down. Occasionally but never for very long. Buck was seeing this little jaunt with
Chris as a vacation almost, even though he had no idea what mission they were on from the
Judge. Chris had remained tight-lipped about that for some reason, but the man certainly
wasn't behaving as if it was crucial. What was another day or so?
Then again, after last night's little fracas, it was probably safer to get out of town.
He was surprised no one had come knocking on their door in the wee small hours,
particularly the Sheriff. Besides, maybe that hothead, Willy, was still around and Buck
sure would hate shooting that little twerp so early in the day. Not only that, Chris was
so ornery right now that he sure as hell didn't want to stir up any more trouble than
necessary. Chris was a trouble magnet. If they stayed in town long enough, something was
bound to happen and Chris was miserable enough to face it head on.
That decided, Buck gathering his things. "Well, let's get a move on then or
Blossom will be done and gone by the time we get there." He threw Chris' boot back at
him.
It landed heavily and Chris winced at the harsh sound of it. He just stared at the limp
boot trying to figure the best way to bend down and still manage to keep his skull
attached to his body.
"You want me to dress you?"
Chris cast a glare at Buck, the pain momentarily forgotten. "No."
Buck held up his hands. "Fine. I'll see you downstairs when you're ready. If you
fall on your face just bang on the floor and I'll come back up." He swung his
saddlebags and blanket over his shoulder and ambled out the door.
Chris breathed out a sigh as much of relief as just letting his anger ebb. He hated
Buck sometimes, especially when he was hung over. Buck always seemed to be so damn happy
in the morning. It was a hard thing to tolerate when you were miserable. Hell, there was a
lot about Buck that was hard to tolerate. Of course, that didn't mean Chris didn't care.
He himself was a hard man to tolerate. He never understood why people hung around him,
even after he had shoved them away at the end of blade. Chris reached down for the boot
with fierce determination, vainly attempting to keep his eyes focused. Once in his hand,
he struggled to put it on. The third time was the charm.
Maybe he had overstayed his welcome in Four Corners. He should be looking for an
opportunity to take off. He was willing to walk away from everything he had built in town,
because it had become so difficult to deal with day after day. He was afraid he'd again
lose all he had built. Lose Vin or JD or Buck or any of them, Mary and Billy in
particular. He was still immersed in violence and bloodshed, and sooner or later, the odds
were that it would once more sully someone next to him, perhaps irrevocably. He had made
his own peace with Death three years ago. But facing someone else's was a different story.
It was the one thing he was terrified to face a second time.
Somewhere along the line he had allowed these men to see a side of himself that he had
long since kept hidden. At first he had assumed Buck was the culprit, gossiping to Mary
Travis and the thereby the rest of the town. His fury and sense of betrayal was almost
insurmountable. But he knew that wasn't it, not all of it anyway. Vin and the others had
managed to coax a little bit of his soul back to the light again. He had stepped out the
shadows for a time, revealing small aspects of himself. He should have known that staying
too long in one place would eventually chip away at his armor and leave him vulnerable.
There was no one to blame. No one but himself.
He tugged on his other boot roughly. They should be glad when they were finally rid of
him. Why couldn't they just leave it alone, accept his departure and let him move on?
He resented the fact that neither Buck nor Vin were letting him do what he wanted. They
were always meddling in what Chris thought were perfect ways to escape. Yet as much as he
hated it, he knew they were both justified. But that didn't make it the best thing all
around. They just didn't get it.
He doubted anyone would understand his reasoning. Hell, he didn't always himself. It
was just safer for everyone concerned if he just left. Most likely they'd all drift apart
and go their separate ways. He would meet up with Vin and deal with Tascosa like he
promised, but then the association had to end. It was just too hard for him to accept the
pain. God, what would happen if they failed? He couldn't stand by and watch Vin hang.
His mouth soured. He was desperate to avoid everything that was painful, that included
Buck and the others. It included Mary and Billy too. He damned the fact that his cold hard
shell had slowly been eroding away. He was starting to fancy taking up a life again and
sometimes it scared the crap out of him.
He lay back on the bed, his arm thrown across his throbbing forehead. His jaw
tightened. A part of him wanted a home, a family again. But every time he looked at Mary
and Billy and desired those things, he felt like he was betraying Sarah and Adam's memory.
At times, he could feel his wife's essence standing beside him on the streets when the
lovely blonde widow would pass his eye. His body would immediately react. It didn't care
who knew it either and it shamed him. He was falling in love with Mary Travis. How Sarah
must hate him for what he thought at those times.
Yet, he knew that she didn't. Sarah had forgiven his idiocy, just like everyone else.
Well, except maybe for Mary. She was angry and hurt and he couldn't blame her. It was what
he had expected his cross attitudes and sudden departures to have wrought. He just never
expected to be around later to see it.
He rose and carefully walked around the bed to the table. He caught a glimpse of his
face in the mirror and his eyes widened in surprise. What the hell had happened last
night? He gingerly fingered his swollen nose and his eyes watered at the surge of pain. He
now dimly remembered backing Buck against some loudmouth brat, but from there the rest
remained fuzzy. And why did he keep seeing that stupid little dog...Pickles? Exhaling
slowly, he reached instead for his holster which lay on the chair next to the wash basin.
As he strapped it around his lean hips, his mind settled back into his musing. He
couldn't blame Mary's aloofness at times. He deserved it. But she had to understand that
he couldn't accept this new life until he had settled his old one. Fowler was dead but the
man he hired was still out there, and Chris was going to run him to ground if it took the
rest of his life to do it. His fierce scowl caused the barely healed wound on his chin to
reopen but he ignored it.
He had wanted to tell Mary all that, but he couldn't. She needed to figure that out
hereself. But each time he took off, he would fall a little in her eyes and that fact hurt
him far more than he ever thought possible. If ever he wanted to bridge the gulf between
them, he was going to have to work hard to do it.
He cursed. That's what he had been avoiding in the first place. Mary was everything he
wanted in a woman but no longer deserved. Courting her was painstaking and full of
memories and pitfalls. Chris hadn't been certain he was ready to do a serious relationship
again. The worst thing, Mary was sure. However, he couldn't decide if his hesitancy was
because he wasn't ready to commit or whether he was just stringing her along until he
could make up his mind. Neither was fair to her.
What a fool he was.
He picked up his bedroll and saddlebags wearily and moved to open the door. But he
paused just in front of it.
Now another milestone was upon him and again he found himself running. Buck knew it
too, otherwise, he wouldn't have bothered coming along. That whole story about supporting
Blossom in her hour of need was most likely a ruse. Buck didn't care one way or another if
Blossom stayed with Billy. Blossom had enough love in her to take care of both men and
that was enough for Buck.
No, Buck was riding along because he was afraid Chris was going to do something
stupid--again. What Chris couldn't understand is why the man bothered. Why did any of them
bother?
Because that's what friends do, he told himself curtly. He had better face up to the
fact that people cared about him and that was all there was to it. He cared about them
too. It terrified him but he had finally accepted it. They had bonded so completely that
there was no way to just walk away from it. They were stuck with each other now. Hell, no
one else but Buck and the rest would take this kind of crap from him. He had to accept the
fact that they were willing to take the risk in order to stick together. Fate be damned.
Chris was beginning to believe it too. For every time Chris had run from Four Corners,
something had stopped him long before the Seven found him. He never made it far. Was there
something out there trying to make him see reason? He wasn't a man who gave credence to
such things but the constant messages he was receiving made even a believer out of Chris
Larabee.
He didn't understand who or what was behind it all, but he had his suspicions. He took
a deep breath and rubbed the back of his head. He wouldn't be surprised if it was Sarah
herself slapping him across the back of the head for being so stupid all the time.
He smiled slightly. "I'm getting the message, love. Slowly but surely."
He turned the latch and headed downstairs to his waiting friend. Buck was killing time
by drinking some coffee in the lobby. Chris carefully placed a foot on each stair, keeping
the thump of his boots as soft as possible. Otherwise, he thought his head would jar
loose.
Buck looked at him critically as he made the main floor. He noticed the fresh smear of
blood on Chris' chin. "You scowled, didn't you?" he surmised with a trace of
amusement.
In response, Chris scowled again and he immediately felt the small well of wetness. He
let out a resigned sigh. A bandanna appeared before him, dangling at Buck's fingertips.
Snatching it, Chris dabbed at his chin. He lifted his gaze to his old friend.
"Thanks," he said. He flashed immediately back to the past when Buck had saved
his life time after time. After a moment, suddenly serious, he nodded with definite
conviction. "Thank you."
Buck caught the look in his friend's eye and was taken by surprise with the sincerity
he saw there. He wanted to break out in a huge grin and shout his joy to the entire
establishment, but he instinctively knew better. Instead, he merely shrugged and said,
"Anytime. You know you can always count on me."
That said, the two men walked slowly to the livery. Buck was whistling jauntily, his
spirits lifting even higher at the beautiful day. Everything was going to be fine. Things
were where they needed to be and it was someplace both men could tolerate.
Chris' left eye was twitching at the high pitched sound coming from his right. He tried
to dismiss it and as a reward he got a flash of something from last night. He looked over
at his friend, a glint of evil in his eye. "Oh, and Buck?"
The tall, mustached man turned toward him. "Yeah, pard?"
"Don't ever try to pass off watered-down coffee as good whiskey again or I'll
shoot you."
Buck's jaw dropped open. Oh lord, he remembers! He turned quickly away.
Chris couldn't stop the huge grin from emerging on his face. To his pleasure, that
particular move didn't reopen his cut.
Chapter Ten
A night after the two men left Yuma, Buck found a quiet spot amidst some scraggy pine
trees. A small stream running behind them provided a fine meal of fresh trout. Buck leaned
back, patting his stomach, swollen to near bursting. "Pard, I am as full as a
tick!"
Chris continued stirring the embers of their small fire. He looked remarkably better
than he had the last two weeks. The cold had finally relinquished its hold on him. His
mood was better and he seemed very much relaxed out in the bush.
Buck nibbled on his last bit of fish. "You know, all those fishing trips with
Billy must be paying off. Your skills have greatly improved." They had caught
numerous fish with little effort.
Chris reclined against his saddle, tipping his hat brim low. He peered at Buck from
under it with all the ease of a man with no cares. "I don't suppose it mattered that
a hatch was just coming off," he commented dryly.
Buck smirked. "I reckon that helped some. Still, I think Billy must have taught
you something." He observed Chris' reaction to that and was surprised by the sight of
a small smile playing about the man's lips.
"I suppose he might have at that," Chris muttered.
"So when's Billy coming back to Four Corners? He's been at the Travis' long
enough."
Chris shrugged. "I think the Judge is bringing him home on his next circuit."
At the mention of the Judge, Buck's mind immediately began thinking about Chris'
mysterious mission to Yuma. The man still hadn't said one word what it was all about.
Chris had separated from Buck immediately after they made town.
Buck had quickly found out that Blossom had left Yuma the day before so he had gone to
find Chris only to find him already sitting in the saloon. Whatever business Chris had had
for the Judge had taken all the time it takes for a rooster to flit from one hen to the
next.
Buck frowned. What the heck could have been so important to ride all the way out here
and only take a minute to resolve? It hadn't been a letter since Buck had been through
Chris' saddlebags and coat while the man was comatose at the hotel in Bent Creek. So what
the hell was it?
It was then that Buck had an epiphany. He looked over at his friend. "There wasn't
anything really from the Judge, was there, Chris?"
Chris regarded him sharply but said nothing.
Buck sighed and shook his head, tossing the fish bone into the fire. "I never seen
a man work so hard to avoid his birthday."
Chris groaned. What he has been dreading this whole trip had finally come to pass.
"I just wanted to be left alone."
"On your birthday? No one should be alone on their birthday. Least of all you. You
know, it's as much for your friends as it is for you. They deserve the right to celebrate
the day."
Chris straightened off the saddle notch. "You told them, didn't you?" Leave
it to Buck to stick his nose into business that didn't concern him. Here we go again,
he grumbled to himself. "You were supposed to bring me back. Damn it, Buck. I'm not
ready for all this ... caring. I need time, ease into things."
Buck just offered a small smile and said quietly, "I didn't say a word to
them. I know you too well for that, pard." Buck was pleased that Chris was just
talking to him. That alone was monumental. Baby Steps Larabee, that was Chris. However,
his old friend had opened the door just a little bit for Buck and that was enough. Buck
had big enough feet to keep the door opened permanently.
Chris' face sagged with surprise. He couldn't say nothing. He was grateful beyond
words, as was indicated by his relieved sigh.
Buck just winked at his old friend. "Happy Birthday, Chris."
The End