Heroes
Adam
I have always been amazed by Joe’s propensity to be in the wrong place at the
wrong time. As a youngster, you could tell him to stay outside the corral, then
you’d turn around and he would’ve climbed under the fence and was on his way to
crowd the feet of a nervous horse. Tell him to stay in the buggy to keep his
church clothes clean and before you know it he’s found the only mud puddle in
Virginia City and has managed to transfer the whole thing to the front of his
shirt.
Now that he’s grown, he’s not only kept but honed that talent for always being
where he shouldn’t, and like I said, his aptitude for it amazes me.
No. ‘Amaze’ is not the right word, exactly. The way he turns up everywhere
except where he should be, or at least where we expect him to be—well, it
exasperates, frustrates, infuriates me.
And today it horrifies me.
For the past three minutes—it seems a lot longer, but there’s a clock on the
wall opposite me, and, believe me, I know exactly how long it’s been—I’ve been
lying on my belly on the plank floor of the bank with my hands clasped behind my
head. I’m wedged between Hoss and Pa, who are lying in the same uncomfortable
position I am. A few feet away are Mr. Ludlow, the bank president, and Arlen and
Jonah, two of the clerks. Beyond Jonah is Mrs. Hayword; my heart goes out to her
as she tries to choke back quiet sobs. The poor woman is terrified, but there’s
nothing I or anyone else can do for her at the moment.
On Mrs. Hayword’s other side is Ralph Layton, pale and perspiring, his eyes
squeezed shut. I make a mental note to myself not to rely on Ralph in case we
have to do something drastic. Right now he looks like he’d shatter if somebody
whispered ‘boo’ in his ear.
I hope he doesn’t do anything foolish. Not that I don’t understand Ralph’s fear.
He has good reason to be afraid. They are amateurs, these men robbing the bank,
obviously nervous, looking as if they want to bolt and run as much as we do. It
has been my experience that placing a gun in the hands of a nervous man can
sometimes be more dangerous than giving one to a flat-out mean one.
Very carefully, I raise my eyes to watch the men holding us at gunpoint. There
are five of them—three out here watching us and two behind the counter. The two
behind the counter are hastily dumping money into gunny sacks. All of them are
shouting at each other, and the way their fingers are twitching against the
triggers of their guns unnerves me. They have our guns, and we are at their
mercy.
Yes, I understand Ralph Layton’s fear. I’m afraid, too. But I push my fear down
and hold it there so that I can think clearly. We’ve got to be careful. You
never know what direction a nervous man might leap.
We’re in a sticky situation, all right, but if we all do as we’re told, we might
end up living through this. If we all lay still and quiet and keep our heads,
chances are these men will take the money and run, and we’ll be left with the
chance to get up off the floor and walk away. Later we can work on capturing the
robbers and putting them behind bars where they belong, but for now, we need to
work on staying alive.
Some might not think lying still is the most heroic action to take, but there’s
a time for heroics, and there’s a time for common sense. Right now, heroics
would be a pretty sure way for all of us to end up dead. So we lie still on the
floor, all of us, praying that they’ll just take the money and go.
The gunmen have drawn the blinds, but one of the windows still has a narrow slit
between the blind and the window sill, and the bright afternoon sun manages to
find its way through it. A shaft of sunlight streams across the floor in front
of my face, and dust motes swim in a nonchalant dance, indifferent to the human
concerns around them.
My eyes drift again to the gunmen. I know better than to antagonize these men.
And yet, when I realize that one of them is staring back at me, I can’t bring
myself to drop my gaze. I look him solidly in the eye, even though I have to
crane my neck back to do it. I know I’m inviting trouble, but I can’t help
wanting him to know that he’s not going to get away with what he’s doing.
That’s when I hear Joe’s laughing voice out on the sidewalk outside the bank,
and everything shifts.
Dear God, he’s coming in. He doesn’t have a clue about what’s going on here
inside the bank, and he’s coming in. I hear Hoss groan a soft oath into my right
ear. With horrified fascination, I stare at the door along with everyone else.
Joe has paused outside the door, and he’s shouting good-naturedly back and forth
with someone across the street. Through the curtained glass I can see the
silhouette of his head and torso as he gestures in loud and idle conversation
even as he sidles closer to the door.
The gunmen’s jitteriness increases tenfold as they watch him. Their attention is
swinging back and forth from us to the door, and so are their guns. They are
hissing warnings at each other, concerned that their plan is falling to pieces
now that someone is coming in from the street, and panic is starting to wash
over their faces. For the first time in my life, I find myself wishing that Joe
had gone to pass his time in the saloon while he waited for us.
Out of the corner of my eye, I see Pa furtively unclasp his hands from behind
his head. I, too, prepare to move, although I still have no idea what we can do
to avoid the catastrophe looming our way. It is happening too quickly, and we
are unprepared. We had no intention of having to face death on this fine day.
Hoss and I hadn’t even intended to come in, but we had gone to Hubert’s Saddlery
to drop off a saddle that needed repair, and when we passed by the bank, we saw
that Pa was still inside. We decided to wait for him and went inside, tipping
our hats at the small group of men waiting in the lobby.
“Mr. Ludlow will be with you in a few minutes, gentlemen,” Arlen was telling
them. But as it turned out, they were no gentlemen, but criminals intent on
robbing the bank. We were unsuspecting and unaware at the wrong moment, and
these men took advantage of that.
And now they are in control of our very lives as we lie at their feet.
Outside, Joe chuckles at something, and I hear him call a name. Seth.
Keep him out there, Seth. For God’s sake, talk him into having a drink.
Anything. Just don’t let him come in.
But although Joe keeps up his good-natured shouting across the street to his
friend, he makes no move away from the bank door. Once more Pa shifts, and this
time one of the gunmen notices. He instantly places the end of his gun barrel
against Pa’s head. All my own thoughts of making a break for it freeze inside my
skull.
“One more move and you’re a dead man,” hisses the man holding the gun, and my
father stops moving.
“Lewis! Keep fillin’ them bags!” the man at the window orders, but he keeps his
eyes on my brother’s sun-rimmed shape. I watch the man’s fingers tighten on his
trigger as he aims his gun at the door.
“Just let him come in,” I say quickly. I am immediately ordered to shut my
mouth, but I continue on, talking quickly. “He doesn’t know you’re here. Just
let him come in, and he’ll lie down on the floor with the rest of us.” Dear God,
I hope I know what I’m saying. Joe, reacting with caution rather than leaping
into action—it’s a long shot. But he’s coming in, regardless of what anyone can
do to stop it. All I can do is try to calm the nerves of these nervous gunmen so
that they don’t shoot him out of sheer reflex.
“He won’t give you any trouble,” I insist, and I hope my own doubt does not show
on my face.
They look quickly at each other, trying to decide what to do. Their nerves are
keeping them balanced on the edge, and I can feel my breath shortening into
shallow pants, for I know they can’t be counted on to hold their fire.
Joe calls something else out to whoever it is that he is talking to, and then he
reaches for the doorknob. He’s still laughing, and I can see that his head is
still turned out toward whoever he has been calling to. I look back at the
gunmen; they are tensing, ready to shoot—too ready. I turn my head to stare at
the turning doorknob as the whole world slows down into tiny, precise crystals
of time, and then I swing my gaze back to Pa. His dark eyes meet mine. Gun aimed
at his head or not, he is no more inclined than I am to lie still while my kid
brother walks into a barrage of bullets. On my right, I feel Hoss’ big body go
rigid, and I know he, too, is going to make a move.
Our choice of lying still and compliant has been taken away from us. Whether we
move or not, whether we take action or not, something is about to happen, and it
won’t be anything good.
Each fragment of time is magnified and spread out in the oddest way. I become
aware of every movement in the room—every tiny flinch of the gunmen’s fingers on
their triggers, every drop of sweat trickling down Mr. Ludlow’s face. On the
wall across the room, the second hand on the clock moves with infinitely slow
precision. At the same time, my sense of hearing seems to be peculiarly
distorted. I can hear the robbers yelling at us to stay down, but it’s as if
their voices are coming out of a deep tunnel, muted and indistinct. Yet I can
hear the tick of the clock; it is inordinately loud, as is the click of the door
latch as it opens.
The moment seems to stretch out forever as the door swings open, and Joe’s
smiling profile comes clearly into view as the door opens. His face is still
turned toward the street as he waves again. One lean leg stretches out into the
room; he turns his face toward us and his smile slips into confusion as in a
twinkling of time he tries to make sense of what he’s seeing. Beside me I hear
Pa shout a warning at him. Then the room explodes as both Pa and Hoss lunge for
the two gunmen nearest them.
I move, too. I’m on my feet faster than I thought possible, plowing into the
third gunman. I hear the breath rush out of the man as my head thuds into the
softness of his belly. He drops his gun; I grab it and ram a knee into his
stomach, not waiting to see him fall before I whirl and bring the gun up.
The entire world is one of shouts and screams and gunshots. I have no time to
think. My only option is to shoot, and that is what I do. I shoot as fast as I
can, even though I know I’ll never be able to get off nearly as many shots as
I’ll need.
Joe is staggering back against the door as it swings shut behind him, his eyes
huge in his face, his hand whipping his gun from his holster. He screams my
name, and I turn to my left just in time to see one of the gunmen raise his gun
toward my face.
I’m too late. I know that. Even though I try anyway, I know I can’t get a shot
off in time. I wait for the impact of the bullet, and I’m surprised when the
gunman suddenly rocks back. Someone else’s gun has found him first. When I look
back to my right, I know it was Joe’s. He is already shooting again.
Across the room, Hoss is pounding the daylights out of one of the men. I swing
my gun in the direction of a robber who is drawing on Pa, and I pull the
trigger. The man goes down. He’s still holding onto his gun, though, and he
turns it toward me. I shoot again, but my balance is off, and my aim goes wide.
Then something icy hot slices across my left side, and I fall back.
My head spins, and suddenly I’m on the floor again without even being sure how I
got here. There are more shots. I raise my gun to fire, but somebody kicks me
hard in the hand. The pain is intense; I know right away that my hand is broken,
but as my gun goes spinning across the floor away from me I scramble and reach
out for it anyway. It is quickly kicked out of my reach.
Another shot, close by me. I look up to see Joe spin and then slam back into the
door as if somebody has picked him up and thrown him against it. He looks mildly
surprised, his eyes wide and his mouth slightly open. His gun slips out of his
hand, and he slides slowly down to sit on the floor, leaving a streak of red to
mark his trail down the door.
Oh, God, oh, God, oh, God. Everything—everything has gone wrong. I start
crawling across the floor toward Joe, but somebody’s boot lands hard in my
belly, flipping me over to land on my back. I try to draw in a breath and find I
can’t. I can hear roars of outrage coming from Hoss, and then muffled, sickening
thuds—and then nothing. Nothing from Pa, either. Are they still there? I want to
look, I want to find my family, but I’m lying on my back and the ceiling of the
bank is heaving over me like an undulating sea.
I fight against the pain in my hand and belly and side, and I roll over to lie
with my cheek pressed against the floor, and I try again to breathe, but it’s as
if my lungs have forgotten how to function.
Is Pa gone? My brothers? I wonder whether I should wait for the world to stop
spinning, or just hope that it will fade away.
*********
Joe
I’m numb. All over, I’m numb. I’m pretty certain I’ve been shot, but I never
even felt it. Is that possible? To be shot and not have any pain?
I’m not real straight on anything that just happened.
Up until the last few seconds, though, my memory is pretty clear. I had finished
loading the wagon with supplies at the mercantile, so I went to the saddlery to
catch up to my brothers. Mr. Hubert said they’d left already, so I knew they
were probably at the bank waiting on Pa. Impatient, I headed that direction.
Normally I would’ve been happy as a bedbug to just sit in the saloon and have a
couple of beers while they got their business done, but today was different. I’m
taking Janie Williams to the dance in town tonight, and I promised her I’d pick
her up at seven o’clock, so I’m anxious to get home and get all shined up. It’s
taken me weeks to convince her pa to let her go, so I don’t want to mess things
up by being late. Adam has been harping on me for years about my habit of being
late. He says a lack of punctuality gives people the impression that you don’t
care. At least as far as women are concerned, I instinctively know he’s right.
So because I don’t want to be late tonight, I started getting jumpy. I decided
to try to hurry my family along.
My buddy Seth had hollered at me as I crossed the street, and we traded some
friendly insults as I walked up to the bank. The last thing I yelled at him was
that I’d see him at the dance.
I knew things weren’t right as soon as I opened the door to the bank and saw
everyone on the floor, but there was no time for it to register on my brain. The
shooting started as soon as I stepped inside; seemed like everywhere I turned,
there was a gun. I saw someone point a gun at Adam’s head, and I thought I was
going to choke on my own fear. I didn’t have time to choke on anything, though—I
was too busy shooting the man to keep him from killing Adam.
Then I saw that there were more gunmen back behind the counter—I didn’t know how
many. They were shooting, and I was shooting back, and then—and then the back of
my skull met the door, and for a minute I thought I was going to black out from
the force of it. But I didn’t. Instead, my legs went all rubbery and I just kind
of sank to the floor. I wanted to stand back up but I couldn’t. My legs just
wouldn’t work right.
I am fast with a gun. It’s something I enjoy working at in my spare time, even
though Pa frowns on it. He doesn’t see any reason for a law-abiding man to work
at being a fast draw. Says if I’m not careful it will get me into more trouble
than it will ever get me out of. But I’ve always enjoyed the feel of the cool
weight in my hand, the satisfaction of hitting a target dead-on center. I like
practicing, shooting until I can do it faster and faster.
I guess I need more practice, though, because today I wasn’t near fast enough.
I look down now at the right side of my chest and I can see a hole in my jacket.
It’s small, no bigger than what I could fit my finger through, but dark red
blood is slowly soaking up through the green fabric, and I know it’s true: I’ve
been shot, despite the fact that I feel no pain.
I feel so strange. There’s still shooting going on, but I can’t bring myself to
care. I hear Hoss shouting, and he’s angry, but I’m not sure why. I want to tell
him to simmer down, but I don’t have the energy. I can’t seem to find him,
anyway. And then he stops yelling, so I stop looking for him. It’s hard to keep
my eyes focused on anything. Then the shooting stops, and all of a sudden I just
feel tired; all I can think about is how good it would feel to just close my
eyes. I feel myself sagging forward.
But then Adam starts up. I can hear him even over all the racket that’s going on
in that bank lobby. He’s yelling—at me, although I can’t imagine what
I’ve done wrong, and he sounds so mad that he forces me to straighten up and
open my eyes. I can sometimes get away with ignoring Hoss, but anytime I’ve ever
tried it with Adam, I’ve only gotten myself into deeper trouble. So I raise my
head to try to find him.
And there he is. He’s lying on the floor, and he’s got his arms wrapped around
his middle, and there’s blood seeping between the fingers of his left hand. It
scares me, all that blood; it looks so much worse than the small amount on the
front of my jacket. I stare at it, wondering how bad he’s hurt, but he’s still
yelling at me, so I force myself to focus on his face. He’s looking right at me,
and he’s yelling my name, over and over.
He’s yelling, but I can’t seem to attach any meaning to his words. I concentrate
less on watching him and more on listening to him.
“Look at me, Joe. Joe, look at me!”
I am looking at him—aren’t I? But, no, I guess I’m not, because I realize that
my eyes have dropped again to around the vicinity of my legs, which are
stretched out in front of me like I’m getting ready to take an afternoon siesta.
With an effort, I raise my head until I can look my brother in the face. He
looks scared, really scared, and that bothers me; Adam so seldom lets it show
when he’s afraid. I wonder how bad off he is, and I start to ask him how bad
he’s been hit.
Before I can say anything, one of the gunmen swings the butt of his rifle hard
into Adam’s head. I suck in a choked, startled breath as the force of the blow
sends Adam rolling over the floor away from me. He ends up with his back to me,
and he doesn’t move again.
Anger surges up within me, and I try to get up to help my brother, but my body
refuses to cooperate. I come nowhere near standing up. Instead, I end up
toppling over. I’m lying on the floor, my back still up against the door, and
the back of my shirt feels sticky and warm. I can still see Adam lying on the
floor across the room, but he’s fading off into the distance, as if I’m moving
away from him.
The last thought I have is that I’m going to be late picking Janie up after all.
**********
Ben
My thoughts are in scattered disarray as I come to, but even so, I remember
where I am. I continue to lie still, both to calm the hammer pounding in my head
and to prevent the gunmen, if they’re still here, from noticing that I’m awake.
I’ve got to take stock, to figure out what I can do to get my boys and myself
out of this unholy mess.
The bank robbers are still here, all right; they’re arguing loudly amongst
themselves about what to do next. I don’t know how long I’ve been out, but it
can’t be long. The smell of gunsmoke is still strong in the air, and in the
background I can hear poor Mrs. Hayword’s quiet sobs coming in little broken
hitches. Arlen is whispering to her, trying to calm her. Heavy boots tread
rapidly back and forth across the floorboards.
I do not hear my sons, and it is that which makes me abandon my intention of
lying still. I raise my head and open my eyes, and the first thing I see is
Hoss’ large bulk lying next to me, his chest moving steadily up and down, and I
release a small breath of relief. I can’t help wincing, though, when I see his
face. He has been brutally beaten, and the marks on his face indicate pistol
stocks, not fists. But he is alive.
Anger rises up strong and bitter within me as I look at him, and then fear
immediately takes its place as I remember the rest. I look for my oldest son,
and I find him lying just behind Mr. Ludlow’s desk. At first I am afraid he is
not alive; the blood in my veins ices over, and it is hard for me to draw in a
breath. Adam is lying on his left side, his pale face toward me; he is curled
into himself, and his right side is drenched in blood. Then he moves, just the
tiniest bit, and lets out a soft moan, and suddenly I am once more among the
living myself.
My oldest son is alive, but he is in trouble. The front of his shirt and both
his hands are covered in blood.
“Adam.” My boy’s name rushes past my lips of its own volition, and my initial
instinct to lie quietly disappears as I struggle to sit up. One of the gunmen
immediately screams at me to stay down, and he points his gun in my direction,
but his threats are lost on me. When a father sees his son lying helpless and
bleeding, the fear for that son consumes him; there is no room for anything
else. So I glare at the gunmen and shake my head.
“I’m going to see to my son.”
“The hell you are. You’re going to stay put like I told you, or I’m going to put
a hole right through you.”
I shrug my shoulders. “Then do it if you think you have to.” I am not bluffing;
I will let him shoot me before I will lie still and watch my child bleed to
death. For an instant the man’s face hardens, and I think he is going to pull
the trigger. But there must be something in my eyes that causes him to change
his mind, because he suddenly snorts in disgust and spits at the floor.
“Go ahead, then. But if you try anything, I’ll cut you in half.”
I ignore the pounding in my head and scramble across the floor to Adam before
the man can change his mind, although his attention has already been diverted
from me by one of the other gunmen.
“Bartell, people are running down the street toward the bank. All that shootin’…we
gotta get outta here!”
The man who had just threatened to shoot me grits his teeth. “Don’t you think I
know that? Just stay at the window and shut up.” He looks toward the back of the
bank. “Lewis, how’s J.D. doing?”
“He ain’t good. Bleedin’ like a stuck pig. I’m tryin’ to get it stopped.”
Good, I think. At least one of them is down. My thoughts are racing as I fumble
with Adam’s shirt, pulling it up to see the damage. The amount of blood sends my
heart into the pit of my stomach, but as I wipe at it with my neckerchief, I see
that the wound itself appears to be a shallow one. There is a bloody crease
across Adam’s side, a furrow a quarter-inch deep that the bullet plowed out as
it whipped by him. I shudder, thinking how close my boy came. Still, the
bleeding is bad, and he’s not out of the woods yet. None of us are.
“Henry’s gone. The kid got him.”
The kid. Flashes of what happened pass through my mind. I press against the
wound in Adam’s side, and I look around for Joe, but I can’t find him. The last
time I saw him, he was shooting from the doorway, but my line of vision to the
door is blocked by the desk. Did he make it out of the bank? I pray that he did
even as I crane my neck, trying to see, but a small noise from Adam gains my
attention.
“Pa?” Adam’s voice is hoarse and uncharacteristically squeaky, but I’ve never
heard it sound more beautiful. I look into his eyes as they flutter open, and I
try to sound unafraid when I speak. One of the first things we learn as parents
is that our children’s feelings feed off of our own. Even though my sons are now
men, I know that, in times of crisis, they still look to me for reassurance,
whether they see fit to admit to it or not. I try hard now to give Adam that
reassurance.
“I’m here, son. You’re all right. Just lie still.”
“Got hit…”
He sounds almost apologetic, and I give him what I hope is a reassuring smile.
“Yes, but we’re going to take care of that.” I look back at Hoss, and I know I
need to check on him more closely now that I now Adam is alive. I am torn
between my sons, and I know the first thing I must do is to determine which one
is in the most immediate danger. I lean down to Adam. “Can you hold my
neckerchief against your side for just a moment? I need to see to Hoss.” I take
his hand to guide it to the neckerchief, but he flinches hard and sucks in a
breath.
“It’s broken,” he gasps, and I see immediately what he’s talking about. His hand
is already turning blue and purple, and he pulls it in close to his side as if
to protect it. He maneuvers his left hand up to hold the cloth against his
wound. “Go to Hoss,” he whispers. “I’m all right. I’m a little winded, but I’m
okay.”
‘A little winded’ is a ridiculous understatement, but I have no choice, and Adam
knows that. Whether or not my oldest is truly all right, and I don’t think he
is, I have other sons who need my help. I nod, and leave him to crawl back to
Hoss, who, to my relief, is starting to groan and move around. Gently, I stroke
his battered face, and my anger surges back as I look at him. My middle son does
not go down easily, and his very strength sometimes works against him by
inviting more violent assault than a normal-sized man would draw. He has
certainly taken more punishment today than most men could endure.
But he is coming to. The relief of that added to the fact that my oldest is
alive means that my blessings, few as they are on a day gone so wrong, have just
doubled.
Hoss blinks, and I can see the pain in his expression. “Take it easy, son,” I
tell him. “Everything’s all right.”
Clarity comes into his blue eyes along with fear, and he begins to struggle to
sit up despite my efforts to keep him from doing so.
“Adam and Joe…“
“Adam’s here. He’s hurt, but I think he’s going to be all right, for now anyway.
I still have to find Joe…“
“Joe’s shot, Pa. They shot him.”
The pain in Hoss’ voice has nothing to do with the beating he’s received, and my
insides go cold. I was hit on the back of the head and saw nothing of what
happened to Joe, but the look on Hoss’ face terrifies me.
I don’t wait for him to say more. Instead, I immediately I get to my feet to
find my youngest son.
“Get down!”
It is Hank again, standing in front of me, waving his gun in my face. I glare
back at him.
“My son…”
Hank throws Adam a quick glance. “You saw to him already,” he says curtly. He
nods toward Hoss. “And that one, too. So sit down and shut up.”
“No,” I say, frustrated that I’m having to explain myself, “my third son. He
came in later…after you had us lie down on the floor.”
Hank looks surprised. “You mean the kid that waltzed in here and messed
everything up?” He laughs, but it is a sound without mirth. “Mister, your boys
sure have a way of bringin’ trouble down on their heads.” He shakes his head.
“Go ahead, but make it quick. Looks to me like you’re wastin’ your time on him,
though.”
He steps to the side and indicates the door, and my knees almost buckle. A
streak of red has been smeared down the length of the door, an abhorrent
guidepost to where my youngest son lies unmoving on the floor. I’m not even
aware of moving, but suddenly I am on my knees in front of him, running my
fingers over his white face.
“Joe,” I whisper, but I already know he can’t hear me. Over the humming in my
ears, I can’t even hear myself. I slide my hand down his neck and the faint beat
of his pulse throbs almost imperceptibly against my cold fingertips. I choke
back a groan of relief and turn my attention to the small, bloody hole high up
on the right side of his chest. I pull his jacket and shirt apart to see the
damage, ripping at the fabric, and then I pause. The wound is deceptively
innocent looking, but I look again at the blood streaked across the door and I
know that I haven’t seen the worst of it. Sure enough, as I roll Joseph’s body
toward mine, I can better see the destruction the bullet has wrought. The exit
wound is slightly below and just to the right of his shoulder blade. Blood is
still flowing freely from it, and the hole is three times bigger than the one in
his chest.
I rip the sleeve from my own shirt and wad it up against the wound, but the
fabric is quickly soaked. I close my eyes in dismay, but then I become aware of
Hoss arguing loudly with Hank, and I look over my shoulder. Hoss is standing and
he’s trying to convince the gunman to allow him to help me with Joe, but Hank is
having none of it. He looks like he is ready to end the argument by shooting
Hoss point-blank, and I quickly call Hoss down.
“Joe’s alive, Hoss,” I tell him. “Just do what they say, son.” I see that Adam
has gotten himself into a sitting position, and I nod warningly at him. “You,
too, Adam. Just sit tight.”
My voice sounds so confident and sure. It surprises me. I have never been less
sure in my life. I sit here, holding my youngest child’s head in my lap, and I
wonder how long he can last. I wonder if any of us will last. But I will fight
with my last breath to try to save my sons, and for the moment, that means
keeping my oldest two calm.
I look over and for the first time, I see Jonah, the bank clerk, lying on the
floor. His eyes are open and vacant, and I know that he is dead. I wonder how
his young wife will be able to bear the news. It won’t matter to her that he
died bravely, trying to overpower these men who have come into our town, our
bank, to take by force money that our friends and neighbors have sweated blood
for years to accumulate. All that will matter to her is that Jonah will be dead
and cold in his grave, his young life extinguished in seconds by men who decided
it was easier to simply take than to work.
I look down at Joseph’s head cradled in my lap and I know that it is very
possible that I, too, will be grieving before the day is done. I press harder
against the wound in Joe’s back and I begin to pray in earnest.
**********
Hoss
I’m scared. Real scared. To see the look on Joe’s face when that bullet caught
him…well, I don’t have words for the way he looked. It was as if in that tiny
little bit of time, he was already gone. Just that quick. The time it takes for
a bullet to travel a few feet is more than enough time for a brother to leave
for good.
Pa’s sittin’ on the floor over by the door holdin’ him, and I can’t see much
around Pa’s back—just the curls on Joe’s head layin’ against the crook of Pa’s
right arm, and Joe’s legs stretched out on the other side of him. Seeing Joe’s
legs makes me even more scared, because they’re still. Joe’s legs are never
still. Whenever he’s been in bed sick, or even when he’s asleep, lots of times
his legs will keep shiftin’ around like they know he’s got other places he wants
to be.
But not now.
“Pa?” I call. Pa ain’t said anything for a long time, and I got to know.
I got to know.
Pa doesn’t answer. I glance at Adam, still over by Mr. Ludlow’s desk, and I see
him look toward Pa and then shut his eyes, like he’s hurtin’ too bad to hold ‘em
open. Adam’s hurtin’ all right; I know that. He’s sittin’ up now, although he
probably shouldn’t be, and he’s still got his left hand clamped tight against
his side, and it don’t look like the pressure is doin’ much to stop the bleedin’.
But I don’t think it’s just the pain in his body that’s makin’ him shut his
eyes. He saw what happened to Little Joe same as I did.
“Pa,” I call again. My voice hitches a little, and this time Pa slowly raises
his head and looks back at me. He knows what I’m askin’ just by calling his
name. But the grief written across his face steals my breath from my lungs, and
for a moment I believe Joe is already gone. Then Pa manages to put a tiny,
sickly sort of smile on his face and he shakes his head at me.
“He’s here. He’s fighting,” he says quietly, and even though the relief of it
makes me weak, I am scared because he has nothing more encouraging to tell me.
He turns his face from me to stare at Adam. “How are you doing, son?” he asks,
and I know already what Adam will say.
“Fine as frog hair, Pa,” Adam says, and I have to admire the way Adam makes it
sound true. If it weren’t for my brother’s pale skin and all that blood, I might
even be inclined to believe that he really is fine.
“Shut up! If you three don’t quit your yammerin’, I’m gonna shoot the lot of ya
right here.” The one they call Bartell is waving his gun at us, and I look up at
him, wishin’ I could get a chance to wrap my hand around his throat. He’s the
one that shot Little Joe, and I swear to myself that he ain’t gonna get away
with it. He motions to the others to watch us, and then he goes to look out the
window again. He stands there and I watch him for a long time, wondering if I
will ever get a chance to make him pay for what he’s done.
A tiny sound from Adam makes me forget about Bartell for the moment. I look at
my brother, and I know I can’t keep sittin’ here. Adam isn’t doin’ good. He
looks sick, and his body is wavering back and forth like grass fluttering in the
breeze.
I don’t care what Bartell does. I ain’t gonna sit and watch it all just happen.
I don’t know what I can do for either of my brothers, but if we’re gonna die
today, we ain’t gonna do it scattered across the room from each other.
I stand up and Hank yells at me to sit back down. I act like I can’t hear a
word; I start walkin’ toward Adam, and Hank yells again and the other gunmen
start yellin’, too. I hear the soft clicks of gun hammers being cocked, and I
know there’s a good chance I might be beatin’ Joe and Adam to heaven, but that’s
okay. I’m used to clearin’ the way.
I keep movin’.
**********
Adam
I’m sick. I don’t know what’s brought it on; the pain, maybe. At any rate, my
stomach is churning. My side stings like nobody’s business and my hand is
throbbing and my head is spinning, and I know I need to lie down again, but I
don’t want to. Pa’s got enough worry on his mind with Joe; he doesn’t need to
know how awful I’m beginning to feel.
But Hoss knows. Like always, he knows, and he’s up and striding toward me, his
chin jutted out in the way it does whenever he’s decided that enough is enough.
The gunmen are snapping to attention and screaming at him, but he keeps coming
anyway.
I stiffen; I’ve already noted where the four remaining gunmen are positioned,
and I wonder if I have it in me to try to jump at least one of them before they
gun my brother down. Something like divine intervention steps in though, because
Bartell shouts at them to hold their fire.
“Let him go,” Bartell shouts. “We got bigger fish to fry than worryin’ about
them. In fact, get ‘em all up against that wall together. Easier to watch ‘em
that way, anyway.”
Hank spits a wad of tobacco at Hoss’ feet. “All right, big man, you heard him.
Get your brother here out of the way and then get back over to that wall. The
rest of you, get over there.”
While Mr. Ludlow and the others scurry to do what they’re told, Hoss speeds his
pace and in seconds he’s beside me, hunkering down next to me.
“That was a stupid thing to do,” I tell him in a low voice, and I sound angry
because I am angry. I’m angry because I can’t control what is happening, so I
fall back on trying to control what happens to my brothers. It’s a ridiculous
reaction, and I know it, but I snap at him anyway. “You know better than to mess
around with men like this. They’d think nothing of killing you, especially not
at this point.”
But Hoss doesn’t seem to notice that I’m upset with him. He smiles, but the
worry in his blue eyes waters the smile down. “Yeah, well, I was getting’ a mite
lonely sittin’ over there all by myself. Can you walk?” He lays a big hand
gently against my back.
I know Hoss is perfectly capable of carrying me, and I’m feeling bad enough to
let him. But then I notice Pa staring hard over his shoulder at me, and I know
I’ve got to keep up appearances for his sake. The eldest child in a family
carries certain responsibilities that his siblings will never know, and keeping
up a facade of strength during times of stress is one of them.
“Yeah, I can walk,” I tell Hoss, and I let him help me to my feet. The floor
pitches and I would drop flat on my face, but my brother has a tight hold on me,
and I do little more than hang onto his shirt as I stumble across the room.
Before I know it, I’m leaning against the wall next to Mr. Ludlow, and then he
and Hoss ease me down until I’m sitting on the floor.
“I’ll be right back,” Hoss murmurs, and then he turns and heads toward Pa and
Joe.
“What the hell do you think you’re doin’? Just stop right there and get back
against the wall,” Bartell growls from the window, and raises his gun.
Hoss stops, but he makes no move to come back. “I’m goin’ to move my brother out
of the way of the door,” he says, nodding toward Pa and Joe. Moving Joe probably
won’t help him any, but I know why Hoss wants to do it; he wants us all
together, where we can protect one another, at least to some extent. The look on
Bartell’s face tells me that he’s not going to allow it, but Hoss comes up with
the one reason he should.
“There’s two ways outta here—the front door and the back. You’re gonna have to
go through one of ‘em, and right now my brother’s body is blocking the front.
Seems to me you’d better make sure the coast is clear if you get the chance.” He
speaks matter-of-factly, and I am amazed at how calm and collected my brother
has remained through all of this.
It is a laughably simple argument and yet a logical one, and Bartell gives a
short nod. “Fine. Get him outta the way then. But after that, you pin yourself
against the wall and you stay there, you got that?”
Hoss nods brusquely and hurries over to Pa. He bends and picks Joe up as if he
weighs nothing at all, and Pa quickly rises to help even though Hoss doesn’t
need any. The disparity in my brothers’ appearance has been noted all their
lives, but it has never struck me harder than it does at this particular moment.
Still and quiet in Hoss’ big arms, Joe looks small and fragile, almost
childlike. Hoss’ face has taken on a hard brittleness, as if it wants to crack,
and I notice that he refuses to look down at Joe while he crosses the floor back
over to us.
I look back at the door as they move away from it, and my stomach rolls again,
and this time it’s not just because I’m hurting. I grit my teeth to beat back
the nausea. Joe’s blood is already drying on the white-painted wood, an uneven,
dark streak snaking down the length of the door, an obscene testament to the
violence of a warm summer’s day shattered by a group of men we don’t even know.
A small puddle of blood has collected where Joe lay in Pa’s arms; even now it is
being tracked across the wooden plank floor by the gunmen as they move from one
window to the next. There is something about the sight of my brother’s blood on
the bottom of their boots that enrages me so fiercely that I find I can hardly
breathe because of it.
I watch as Pa and Hoss lower Joe to the floor in front of me.
“Leave his jacket on, Hoss. He’s shivering.” Pa takes off his own coat and
stuffs it under Joe’s head as a pillow. Joe never moves; worse, he doesn’t make
a sound. That shakes me more than I’d ever admit, because Joe isn’t one to keep
quiet when he’s hurt. When he’s really in pain, he lets out little whimpers and
grunts and groans, kind of like a wounded pup.
Not now, though. He lies stretched out on the floor, absolutely still and silent
except for that slight, periodic shivering, while Hoss and Pa press bandanas and
their bare hands hard against his back, desperately trying to stop the bleeding.
Viciously, Hoss rips one of his shirt sleeves off to use in an attempt to stop
the blood. He looks up at me and starts to shake his head, but then remembers Pa
and catches himself.
No, don’t shake your head, Hoss. Not like that, not with that desperation in
your eyes. You look like a drowning man reaching for a hand that’s not there.
Only it’s not you that’s drowning; it’s Joe, and we’re all reaching for him, and
I don’t know if any of us will be able to save him.
I shudder, and then the sound of tearing cloth draws my attention. Mrs. Hayword
is ripping the bottom ruffle from one of her petticoats. She thrusts it at Hoss.
“Here,” she says, “use this as a bandage.”
Hoss nods a quick thanks and reaches beneath Joe’s jacket to press the cloth
against his back while Pa holds the boy up on his side. After a few minutes Hoss
withdraws the scrap of petticoat again; the pristine white cloth has been soaked
through with red, startling in its brilliance, like a hunter’s kill in a field
of snow.
I know my own dismay is reflected in the eyes of my father and brother. So much
blood. I hear cloth ripping again. Mrs. Hayword tears strip after strip from the
creamy froth peeking from beneath her skirts. Hoss keeps taking them, keeps
pressing hard against Joe’s back while the rest of us watch. I see my kid
brother’s life leaving bit by bit; it gleams on those immaculate petticoat
ruffles, as brilliant and dazzling as his short life has been, and in my mind
I’m going over everything that happened, wondering what I could’ve done to
change things. The day’s events play out again and again in my imagination. I
could’ve jumped faster, shot faster, done something…anything.
“Bleedin’s slowed down,” Hoss finally mumbles, and I look up, slightly startled
by his words. I realize now that I had not expected to hear them. Pa sighs a
heavy breath of relief and nods, and I wonder if it’s true or if they are only
trying to convince one another, and perhaps me. But they wrap a strip of
petticoat around his torso and bind it tightly so that it holds the makeshift
bandage in place, and sure enough, only a small amount of blood insists on
seeping through. Pa pulls Joe’s shirt and jacket back into place, and they
settle him as comfortably as possible on the floor with his head pillowed on
Pa’s coat. Pa’s hand lies gently against his cheek and lingers there for a
moment before he scoots back a couple of feet to settle against the wall between
me and Mrs. Hayword. I realize, as my father does, that they’ve done what they
can for my brother, at least for the moment. Hoss sits against the wall on my
other side, and I notice that they are more or less propping me up between them.
And here we sit, helpless, while my kid brother in all likelihood lies dying at
our feet. All of our eyes are on him, like we’re afraid he’ll leave if we look
away.
I must’ve made some sound, because Pa and Hoss both look sharply at me.
“How are you feeling, Adam?” Pa’s slightly unsteady voice is soft and concerned,
and I want to lift some of the worry from his shoulders, but suddenly the effort
to put on a front is way too much effort.
“Like hell,” I answer honestly, and for once the lapse into mild profanity
doesn’t even cause my father’s brow to rise. He simply pats me on the leg and
shifts so that more of my weight is leaning on him.
“Everything is going to be all right,” he promises, just as I’ve heard him
promise a thousand times throughout my life. Usually he’s been right, too—but
not always. I know it’s nothing good to dwell on, but thoughts of times he’s
been wrong crowd into my head. When Hoss’ mother was struck by that arrow, Pa
told me everything would be all right—and it wasn’t. The same thing happened in
those first moments after Marie fell from her horse—only by then I was old
enough to realize that Pa’s words were meant to keep himself from collapse as
much as they were to comfort his sons.
And now I look at Joe, and I know as well as Pa does that if we don’t get him
into a doctor’s care very soon, he is going to die. Pa can make all the promises
he wants, and it’s not going to do a bit of good in the end.
I swear again, and Hoss and Pa look at me, and I can see the worry increase on
their faces.
I am suddenly so angry—angry at the robbers, angry at Joe for not waiting for us
at the mercantile like he said he would, or at least at the saloon the way we
would normally expect him to do, angry that Seth didn’t keep him talking for
five more minutes. Dear God, I find I’m even angry at little Janie Williams. Joe
mentioned several times earlier today that he was anxious to get back home
because of her, and I know that’s why he came to the bank. He wanted us to get a
move on so that he wouldn’t be late for the dance.
“He was in a hurry to get out of town because he couldn’t wait to pick Janie
up,” I say. “A dance. That’s what he’s dying for. A dance and a girl. I hope
she’s worth it.” My voice drips with bitter resentment.
Hoss is surprised and irritated at my outburst. He looks at me as if he thinks
I’ve lost my mind. “What are you talkin’ about? This ain’t nobody’s fault except
those yahoos with the guns. It ain’t Joe’s fault, and it sure ain’t got nothin’
to do with little Janie.”
I rub my good hand hard over my eyes and leave it there, my anger dissipating as
quickly as it surfaced. Hoss is right, of course. I can’t imagine why such an
irrational thought ever jumped into my mind, much less out of my mouth.
Ridiculous. It’s the pain, I suppose. Has to be the pain. And the worry over
Joe, of course. My emotions are running rampant over my good sense, and it
occurs to me that my conduct is astonishingly like that of the brother who lies
on the floor in front of me.
The thought draws a mirthless chuckle out of me. When I take my hand from over
my eyes, Pa and Hoss are still watching me, and I can tell how concerned they
are.
I look at Pa, and inexplicably, soft laughter continues to bubble out of my
throat. To my dismay, I realize that tears are forming in my eyes, which again
is behavior more like Joe’s than my own. I must be worse off than even I
realize.
Pa reacts to my odd response by pulling my head gently into his shoulder, and I
give a shuddering sigh and go quiet. I lean on Pa and I try to watch the gunmen,
but mostly I watch Joe. I feel so very tired; I want to shut my eyes and sleep
until this is all over, but I’m afraid that if I do, I’ll wake up to find my kid
brother gone.
**********
Ben
My fear threatens to overwhelm me. Two sons badly wounded, and I have no idea
how to get them the help they need. Outside, I hear Roy Coffee calling to the
robbers to give themselves up. Bartell answers by shooting through the window at
him.
It becomes more obvious every minute that action will have to take place, and it
will have be initiated from within the bank; otherwise there is no telling how
long we will be holed up here. I look at the terrified customers and bank
officials sitting against the wall next to me, though, and I wonder if they are
up to doing what must be done.
Against my side, I can feel Adam taking hard, heavy breaths. He is in worse
shape than he has led me to believe. We need to take a better look at him. His
dark head is still buried in my shoulder; I look over it at Hoss, and give my
middle son a pointed nod. Hoss nods back, knowing what I need him to do. He
leans away from Adam so that he can get at his side.
“Just gonna check your wound again, older brother,” he says quietly, and lifts
Adam’s shirt. If Adam even notices, he gives no indication.
From where I sit on Adam’s right, I can’t see the wound, and I don’t want to
disturb Adam my shifting my position, so I watch Hoss’ expression carefully. He
leans down and studies Adam’s ribcage as he pushes his shirt up out of the way.
His mouth tightens in a grim line, and I know the news is bad even before Hoss
looks at me and gives his head a slight shake.
“Bleedin’ again,” he says softly.
“How bad?” I ask, and I’m thankful for now that Adam doesn’t appear to be
listening.
“Bad,” he sighs, and holds up a palm wet with red blood.
I mentally kick myself for not noticing the seriousness of the wound earlier.
Adam had assured me that he was alright, but still, I should have known. A
father should always know, shouldn’t he?
“I thought it was just a crease,” I say to Hoss. “I thought the bullet passed
through…“
Hoss nods as he squints at his brother’s side. “It did. I can’t figure out why
he’s losing so much blood. Maybe it nicked a vein or somethin’…”
“Quit pokin’ at it, and stop talking about me like I’m not here,” Adam mutters.
I would feel relieved that he has entered the conversation except for the fact
that he doesn’t lift his head from my shoulder and his voice is slurred. His
hand, now swollen and blue, lies limply in his lap, his left arm across it as if
to protect it.
Mrs. Donovan, bless her heart, hears our subdued conversation and offers more
pieces of petticoat. I shoot her a look of gratitude before I tend to my boy.
Her tears have long since dried, and I make a mental note to tell her husband
how bravely she behaved during all this. He’s bound to know by now what is going
on—the entire town must know—and I can only imagine what he must be going
through.
Hoss and I press against the wound, just as we did for Joseph a few minutes ago;
I try to keep the panic out of my movements, but it’s hard. Adam’s blood, like
that of his youngest brother, is flowing too freely, and I don’t like the ashen
tone of his skin.
“Adam, let’s get you lying down,” I say, and I’m not surprised when he tries to
refuse. I pay no attention, and we soon have him lying beside Joseph. The two of
them suddenly look so young and helpless that a fleeting memory of them both as
children passes through my mind. Terror of losing them surges through me, and I
shake my head to clear it.
Adam’s prone position seems to help, and Hoss and I eventually get the bleeding
slowed to a more manageable level. We use yet another strip of petticoat to
fashion a sling to hold his injured hand close to his body. We are careful as we
move the hand, and Adam doesn’t complain, but I see him wince, and I know how
much he’s hurting, which makes me wince as well.
“It’s all right,” I tell him again, even though of course it isn’t. But what
else does a father say when he has nothing else to give?
I look around in desperation. The four remaining gunmen are still agitated;
although they’ve stopped paying as much attention to us, one of them, the
injured one, stays hovering near and watching us warily, his gun barrel still
pointed in our direction. Two of the others are at the windows, taking care to
stay out of the sights of the guns now pointed at them from across the street.
The fourth man is posted at the back door, dividing his attention between the
alley and us.
This standoff could go on all night. We can’t wait. Adam, and Joe in particular,
can’t wait. There has to be a way out for us, but I can’t see it. God help me, I
can’t see it.
I think about all the years I’ve protected my sons, sheltered them, given them
love and advice and tried to make sure they become the sort of men a father and
a country can be proud of. I think of the times I’ve nursed them back from both
injuries and grief, of the times we laughed together, and the times we cried
together. I think about the agonizing loss of their mothers, and how I myself
was brought back from the brink of despair by the love and needs of my small
sons. I think about nights spent in front of a welcoming fireplace while the
winter wind swirls around the house, my sons and I happy and secure in the arms
of each others company.
Is it all to end like this, then? Late on a sunny afternoon, with me helplessly
watching while two of my sons die on a dusty bank floor?
**********
Hoss
It ain’t right. I watch my brothers sufferin’, and it’s all I can think—it ain’t
right, what these men have done today.
I don’t like to see nothin’ get hurt. Not animals, not people. But right now,
with my brothers lyin’ in front of me, I know I won’t hesitate to hurt these men
if I can get my hands on them. I stare at the one holdin’ the gun on us, and
it’s like he knows what I’m thinkin’. His eyes narrow and he raises his gun up
slightly to point it more in my direction.
I glance at Pa beside me, and I see his eyes dart from one gunman to the next; I
know he’s tryin’ to think of some way out. If Joe and Adam weren’t hurt, we’d
likely bide our time and wait for the right moment to make our move. These men
can’t stay on their toes forever. Sooner or later, they’ll make a mistake.
Only we ain’t got that kinda time. My brothers need help, and they need it now.
Little Joe ain’t moved yet, and I wonder if he’ll ever move again. I swallow the
sick feelin’ that rises up in my belly, and I push that thought out of my head,
and I look at Adam. He’s shifted until he’s lying right up next to Joe, his left
shoulder pressed up against Joe’s right. Adam’s eyes are closed, but I know he’s
awake. He’s awake, and he’s listenin’, and he’s tryin’ to be ready the best he
can if somethin’ happens.
Every so often, the robbers fire a shot out the window. They ain’t listenin’ to
Roy, that’s for sure.
I lean closer to Pa and whisper, “Pa, we gotta do somethin’.” It’s a foolish
thing to say; I know I’m not tellin’ him anything he doesn’t already know, and I
ain’t got no ideas on how to get out of this mess. But Pa looks at me and gives
a slight nod, and the flash in his dark eyes lets me know that whatever happens,
the Cartwrights won’t go down with a whimper.
We’ll go down fightin’ with everything we got.
**********
Joe
Shots fired. Not a volley of shots; just one or two every few minutes. I try to
block them out, but I can’t.
I’m waking up, drifting up from a thick bank of fog, and I feel as though I’ve
been asleep for a long, long time. My head feels as clogged with cotton as my
mouth does, and it’s hard to think. I struggle to clear my head, and I remember
the shooting, but not much else. My body is stiff and cold, as if I’ve spent the
night laid out on a slab of rock, and I shift to ease the discomfort.
The movement causes new pain to burst through my right shoulder blade, and a
groan slips out of my mouth before I can stop it. It’s pain like I’ve never felt
before, white-hot and unbearable, and if staying awake means dealing with it,
then I’m going back to sleep.
“Joe?”
Adam’s voice, soft, questioning. Worried. I turn my head slightly toward the
sound of it, but my eyes won’t open the way I want them to, and after the first
try, I don’t care if they open or not. The pain in my back intensifies with such
raging viciousness that I try again to climb back into the fog.
“Joe.” Adam’s still there, but I’m already turning away from him.
“Pa! He’s trying to wake up.”
No. No, I’m not. I’m not staying here, not like this. Dear God, the pain is
threatening to eat me alive….
“Son? Joseph, listen to me. You need to wake up. Joe, come on, it’s important
that you open your eyes and look at me.”
No, Pa. What’s important is that I escape whatever it is that’s chewing my back
apart. I’ll just sleep for a little longer, Pa, and when I wake up again, it
will be better….
“Little Joe!”
Hoss… For pete’s sake, you don’t need to yell, brother. Can’t you see that I’m
hurting, that I don’t feel well? I thought I wanted to wake up, but I don’t.
It’s too hard…. I’m going back for more shut-eye, but I’ll be back….
“He ain’t breathin’…he ain’t breathin’!”
What the heck are you talking about, Hoss? ‘Course I’m breathing. I’m just
needing some more sleep, that’s all. The pain is just so bad…so bad….
More shouting from Pa and my brothers, but I don’t try to make out what they’re
saying. I’m drifting away from them, and the pain is better already. Soon it’s
gone altogether, and their voices are a distant murmur. ‘Bye, Pa. I’ll see you
later, brothers. I got places to go, trails to ride… I see Cochise standing and
waiting for me, his head and tail up, his nostrils wide with the anticipation of
a flat-out run through open grass. And on his back…on his back is a lovely woman
with chestnut hair and green eyes. She’s smiling at me, and she’s holding out
her hand as though to beckon me near. I smile back, and I start moving toward
her.
I’ve always been a sucker for a pretty face. Just ask my pa and brothers,
they’ll tell you. But this woman…I don’t know, there’s something about her…
“Joe!”
“Little Joe!”
Not now. Go away, brothers. I’ve got better places to be….
I’m jogging through a field of impossibly green grass toward Cochise and this
beautiful woman, and all I can think of is how I want to be close to her…
Something hovers just at the edge of my memory, something warm and comforting.
I’m jogging now in my hurry to go to her, but she’s shaking her head. She’s
smiling, but she’s shaking her head, and she’s turning Cochise and riding away….
No, don’t go! I’m running hard now, trying to catch her, but Cochise is loping
through the grass, carrying her away. She looks back over her shoulder at me,
and she’s saying something. I can’t hear her voice, and yet I know what words
her lips are forming.
Go back, Joseph. Go back.
No. Don’t leave me. Please don’t leave me.
I’m still running, stumbling in my hurry to follow, and I’m sobbing, begging her
to wait for me, but she’s fading away….
I stumble and my chest hits the ground hard—so hard that it knocks the breath
right out of me. My eyes flutter open with the shock of it. And just like that,
I’m slammed back into the pain. And I find that it’s not the ground that’s hit
me in the chest. It’s Hoss. He’s bent over me, face red, tears streaming down
his cheeks…and he’s hitting me. Hitting me, right in the chest! Adam and Pa are
trying to pull him off me, and they’ve got tears on their faces, too.
They astonish me, those tears. Something has happened, and I’ve missed it.
Pa and Adam are straining to pull Hoss off of me, although poor old Adam doesn’t
look like he’d be able to flick a gnat off a horse’s hind end right now. They’re
both telling Hoss to leave me alone, but Hoss isn’t paying them any mind. He’s
too busy yelling at me.
“I ain’t gonna let you do this, Little Joe. Do you hear? I ain’t gonna let you!”
And he raises up one of those big fists and cocks it back to get ready to whack
me again, even though Pa is hanging onto his arm for dear life to keep him from
doing it.
And all of a sudden, I get mad. What’s he thinking, this big galoot of a
brother, pounding on me when I’m already hurt? I suck in a noisy, shuddering
gasp of air and throw up my left arm to keep him from hammering that fist into
me one more time—and he stops dead.
The look on his face would make me laugh if I thought I had enough gumption to
do it, which I don’t. His mouth drops open, and I swear, if I could gather the
energy to reach up and shove him, he’d fall over like a dead tree in a strong
wind.
Pa and Adam look much the same. Then they begin to smile the most ridiculous
looking smiles, like they want to laugh and cry at the same time. But not me; I
don’t feel like smiling. A strange sadness washes over me. I suddenly feel as
though I’ve lost something precious, like I’ve left something valuable beyond
price back in that dream with the emerald-green grass.
The pain is pushing hard against me, and for just a moment, I consider running
away again, back into that gauzy dream, back to the lady with the angel’s face.
I can still find her, I know I can. I shut my eyes, ready to hurry back to that
green, green field.
“Joseph? Look at me.”
It’s her! My eyes snap open.
But disappointment threatens to overwhelm me. It’s not the lady with the
chestnut hair and green eyes. This woman’s eyes are brown and her hair is
auburn, and after I blink a few times I realize that it is Mrs. Hayword. I
remember getting a brief glimpse of her when the shooting started. She was lying
on the floor, screaming….
She smiles at me. I’ve always liked Mrs. Hayword. I hate to disappoint her now,
but I have to hurry…I have to go back. My eyelids flutter shut once more.
But Mrs. Hayword is insistent. She taps gloved fingers against my cheek, and I
feel obligated to look at her again.
“Joseph, pay attention now. I spoke to Janie Williams this afternoon.”
Janie.
“She told me all about how you’re taking her to the dance tonight. She’s very
excited about it, Joseph. You don’t want to disappoint her, do you?”
No, I don’t. I like Janie very much, and I’ve been waiting for this night for
weeks. But it’s obvious that I’m not going to be dancing anytime soon.
“No dancing tonight,” I whisper. “Janie’s not…gonna be happy.”
Mrs. Hayword smiles. “I’m sure she’ll be very understanding, Joseph, but you’re
going to have to explain things to her. If a gentleman can’t keep a commitment,
it’s up to him to tell a young lady why, isn’t it?”
She’s right. I have to stick around to talk to Janie again. In that instant, I
know I can’t just walk away. It wouldn’t be right to leave like this, to leave
Janie. To leave Pa and Hoss and Adam.
So I gather my strength and prepare to work through the pain. I know I can do
it. My Pa and brothers are close by, and I know when my strength runs out I can
lean on theirs.
And when I picture the lady with the chestnut hair again, she’s smiling and
nodding and telling me I’ve done the right thing.
She’ll wait for me. She’ll wait as long as it takes.
**********
Adam
Hoss is calling me seven kinds of a fool as he’s trying to get my wound to stop
bleeding again. My hand is throbbing, and I turn my face away from Hoss so that
he won’t see how much it hurts.
Joe is asleep again, but this time it is a natural sleep, disturbed though it is
by the pain his injury is causing him. Pa is bent over him, holding his hand and
murmuring softly to him. I hope the gunmen don’t order Pa to move back to the
wall, because I know he won’t do it. Death itself wouldn’t pull him away…I
shiver as the phrase slips through my mind.
“You didn’t have no business movin’ around like that,” Hoss grouches at me, but
then he stops and just shakes his head. He knows why I had to move, and he
knows, as I do, that it’s something we’ll never be likely be able to talk about.
Joe was gone. We all know it. We watched him take that last, soft, shuddering
breath, and then—nothing. We watched his young face change in that vague but
unquestionable way that happens when life is no longer present, and then…and
then something happened that I simply do not understand.
When Joe stopped breathing, panic and heartache instantly dealt us all a hard,
unforgiving blow. While Pa and I sat stunned, Hoss’ grief exploded into
something wild and uncontrolled. When he doubled up a fist and started pounding
Joe in the chest, we tried to stop him, but there is no stopping Hoss when his
emotions overtake him. I myself have been on the receiving end of Hoss’ fists,
but I’ve never seen him touch our kid brother like that. I know it was raw
anguish that lead him to do it, but my heart broke anyway as it happened, and I
know Pa’s did, too. We tried to stop him, we begged, we pleaded, but Hoss is too
strong.
And then, the miracle.
I don’t understand it, but it happened, and I know it’s something that I will
remember even after I’ve grown to be an old, old man.
Everything is going to be all right. I hear my father’s words again, and
I wonder if they are simply a statement of belief in miracles. A faith in
Providence stepping in and changing something as abominable as a man’s fist
striking his dead brother into a thing of blessed reprieve….
I shiver again and allow Hoss to push me back down onto the floor as he presses
new bandages against my side, and I watch Mrs. Hayword tear yet more strips of
petticoat from beneath her dress to hand to him. Some women these days choose to
go about with a bare minimum of petticoats; thank goodness Mrs. Hayword is a
more fashionable type. More of Providence’s work there, I expect. I watch her,
and I wonder how she knew just what to say in those few seconds while Joe had
that peculiar expression on his face. Though Hoss had inexplicably brought him
back, somehow I knew he was hovering between this life and the next, as though
he couldn’t make up his mind about where to go.
But when Mrs. Hayword brought up Janie Williams’ name, I watched something shift
in my brother’s eyes, and I knew in that moment that the fight was won.
I wonder if Mrs. Hayword’s husband knows what a treasure he has in her.
“You look awful.”
Surprised, I turn my head toward the soft voice. Joe’s eyes are open again, and
although they’re glazed with pain they regard me steadily.
I conjure up a smile for him. “You look great,” I say, and my little joke is
rewarded by a weak, almost silent version of that cascading chuckle for which my
kid brother is famous. He cuts it off short because of the pain it causes, but
the sound of it comforts me anyway. I look up at Pa, and the corner of his mouth
twitches up at me.
We have much to be thankful for on this treacherous afternoon. We’re here, all
of us alive, huddled on the floor and bizarrely insulated from the gunmen by
nothing more than a brace of family solidarity and the robbers’ growing concern
over their own immediate futures. They still have one man holding a gun on us,
but even he is becoming overly preoccupied with what is transpiring outside the
bank. He did little more than cast a few glances our way even while Hoss was
pounding on Joe’s chest, and his own injury is beginning to wear on him. I watch
him for a moment, wondering if this is the weak link that will give us our
chance.
Hoss gives the binding around my torso a last tug. Then our attention is drawn
by Bartell shooting out the window again.
“That’s what I think about your offer, Sheriff!” he shouts. “A fair trial,” he
smirks at his partners. “He must think we’re really stupid.”
“Well, maybe we are,” Hank barks back. “This was supposed to be quick and easy.
Get in, get out, that’s what you said. Now we’re stuck in here with a whole damn
town waiting to gun us down if we step foot outside.”
Hank glances at us, and ice forms in the pit of my stomach.
“What about them?” he says.
Bartell shakes his head. “What about ‘em?”
Hank shrugs. “Hostages. They ain’t gonna shoot through their own to get to us.”
Bartell stares at us, and then slowly nods. “Yeah, maybe you’re right.”
One of the fears that has been twining through my mind since this all started
now takes firm root. In my experience, hostages used as shields have a fairly
poor survival rate, especially when nervous men are involved.
“One of these ones that are shot up, then,” J.D. calls to them, his eyes pinned
on us. “Less likely to give trouble.”
Bartell grunts an agreement. “Yeah, alright, let’s do it. This ain’t gonna get
no better.”
I gather myself, pushing Hoss’ hands away to sit back up again; if they have me
or Joe in mind, it is not going to be Joe. The rough handling would be enough to
finish him off. I’ll be the one.
But Mrs. Hayword is quicker than I am.
“I’ll go,” she says, and stands up.
Hoss stands, too, as if to shield her. “No. You don’t want no woman slowin’ you
down. I’ll go. I won’t give you no trouble.”
Bartell bursts out laughing. “Oh, yeah, right, big man. I ain’t that stupid. No,
I think I like the idea of bringin’ a woman along. More sympathy from the posse
that way. And I think more than one hostage is an even better idea.”
“Then take me,” Mr. Ludlow says, and I look at him, surprised. He rises to his
feet, shoulders back, chin out, and he has never looked like a larger man to me.
My father immediately shakes his head, and moves to get up. I know he won’t
hesitate to sacrifice himself.
I stare at Mr. Ludlow, still surprised. He’s been so quiet during this entire
episode, staying low, trying not to draw attention to himself. It’s a funny
thing, how bravery sometimes chooses unexpected moments to make an appearance.
It is the most extravagantly generous offer that can be made, one’s own life for
that of another, but it’s one I cannot possibly accept. I struggle to get to my
feet, despite Pa’s sharp “Adam!” and Hoss’ big hands attempting to gently press
me down again.
“All of you, sit down until I say to move!” Bartell roars. “None of you got any
say in this, so shut your traps or I’ll shut ‘em permanent-like.”
We all ease back to the floor, but J.D. rolls his eyes and winces as he flexes
his bullet-creased arm. “It don’t matter who we take. The woman, the little
fella on the floor—it don’t matter. Let’s just do it and get the hell outta
here.”
“Yeah, yeah, okay,” Bartell mutters, and fires a last warning shot out the
window.
The uncertainty of just who they will use is the last straw for me. If I knew it
would be just me, I’d be inclined to try to just go with it, rather than risk
more people getting hurt in the gunfire that will be sure to ensue if we try to
resist. But that’s just it—there is no way of predicting who they will grab in
the end, and I cannot in good conscience sit by while an older man or a woman or
perhaps even my kid brother gets pulled into the line of fire while these men
try to make a run for it.
I look at Pa, then at Hoss, and their eyes meet mine. They know it’s time. I
look down at Joe, whose eyes have grown hard and clear, and he shows me with a
nod that he knows, too. He shifts and I see his muscles tense. The kid is hurt
so badly, and he’s scared, but he trusts his family to see him through this. I
reach out with my good hand to pat him on the shoulder, and I quietly say what
I’ve heard Pa say to all of us, over and over, throughout all the hardships in
our lives.
“It’ll be all right.”
Such a simple phrase, possibly even meaningless, but Joe’s face shows gratitude
for it nonetheless. Pa gives his hand a final squeeze, and then we prepare to
move. Hoss nods in the direction of Mrs. Hayword and the others, and they, too,
know what is about to happen. Mrs. Hayword raises her hand, and her fingers
listlessly stroke the strand of pearls encircling her throat. I watch Mr. Ludlow
and Arlen the bank clerk each take a deep breath and sit up straight.
On the other side of Arlen, Ralph Layton blanches, and slowly drops his face
down onto his raised knees. I know now, as I knew in the beginning, that he will
be no help, but I feel only pity for him. It must be a terrible thing to be so
frozen with fear that you can do nothing but wait for death to come for you.
It’s coming for us all now, and it may even catch us, but my father didn’t raise
his sons to meekly stand and wait for the slaughter. We will rise to meet it,
and we will fight it.
Pa is closest to J.D., the one who has been posting watch over us. He gives us
one last look, and then he lunges for the man, hitting him in the knees. Bartell
and Hank both turn, surprised, and run in our direction, raising their gun
barrels as they move. I’m unaware of my own pain as I rush toward Hank. I see
Hoss moving toward Bartell, and I can’t see how either one of us are going to
make it before they gun us down.
For the second time on this long, long afternoon, time slows down, hanging like
a trembling water droplet on the edge of a leaf just before it crashes to earth.
Shouts, screams, shots firing, bullets whining, all at an impossibly lingering
pace …I see so much, hear so much—and it is a cruel perception, for I also see
how hopeless it is. Bartell is drawing a bead on Hoss even as Hoss tries to
reach him; Pa is struggling with J.D., and my foolish little brother has managed
to scrape himself off the floor and is grappling with Lewis at the back door.
And me…the black mouth of Hank’s gun muzzle yawns before me; in another instant,
it will devour me whole.
Did Hoss bring Joe back just to have us go before him? Is that how this will all
end? So be it, then. Joe never liked being by himself much, and I don’t expect
that he would feel any differently about traveling alone to heaven. We’ll go, if
that’s how it has to be, and we’ll all go together.
But now I see a flash of buttery yellow skirts out of the corner of my eye. In
this oddly slowed passage of time, they furl and ripple around Mrs. Hayword’s
trim ankles like the waving of a flag, and I feel a deep regret. Oh, Mrs.
Hayword, please get back. Stay down. But she doesn’t. She grabs at the pearls
around her neck, and she jerks them loose.
They glimmer and flash in the light as they fly, those pearls, and I watch their
journey even as I brace myself against the impact from the guns. Like bullets
from angels, the pearls scatter and bounce across the dusty plank floor. It is
all I see, because I suddenly slip and go down hard on the floor, the jolt to my
broken hand sucking my breath away.
Around me, though, other men fall—Bartell, Hank. Hoss, too. The floor shudders
with the weight of their bodies crashing against it. Guns clatter against the
wooden planks and go skidding away. It’s ridiculous, really. I’d laugh outright
if the situation wasn’t so serious.
Bartell staggers to his feet only to slip and go down again, and Hoss manages to
get close enough to grab for his lower legs. The man goes down like a tree. In
front of me, Hank is reaching out across the floor for his rifle. I kick out
hard, and my boot catches him solidly in the elbow. He yelps and then reaches
for the gun once again, but I’ve already got it, awkward though it is in my left
hand. I am close enough to him, however, that I could likely hit him regardless
of my aim, and he knows it. He backs up, his hands already rising in surrender.
I sit up slowly, panting hard. I’m not going to stand up. I don’t think I’ve got
it in me to try. But it’s alright. It’s finished. Off to my right, Mr. Ludlow is
helping my father finish off J.D., and at the back door Arlen has a gun digging
into Lewis’s ribs. Joe lies slowly writhing on the floor a few feet in front of
them, but he looks at me and tries to smile as Pa rushes over to him.
“Layton!” I bark. Ralph still sits against the wall, arms wrapped around his
head as if to protect himself. At the sound of his name, he cautiously raises
his head.
“Get the door,” I tell him, and I’m appalled at the tremor in my voice. The
light in the room is slowly going dim, and I know I’m about to be pretty
worthless. “Tell Sheriff Coffee it’s over,” I say. Ralph stares around the room,
and then at me. “Go!” I shout, and he scrambles to do as I say.
I hear the sound of metal hitting wood, and I realize it’s the sound of the gun
leaving my hand. Suddenly my cheek is resting against the floor, and then Pa is
there. One solitary pearl glides past my face as Pa kneels to look into my eyes.
“Just hang on, son,” he says, and rests a quiet hand on the back of my neck.
“Everything will be all right.”
And I know he tells the truth.
**********
Hoss
They’re all shaking our hands and calling us heroes. It’s been three weeks, and
the word still makes me as dadburned uncomfortable as it ever did. I watch my
brothers’ cheeks redden every time somebody brings it up, and I know it bothers
them as much as it does me.
Naw, I don’t think we’re heroes. We only did what we had to do, and we didn’t do
it for reasons that had anything to do with heroics or glory. It had to do with
saving what’s most precious to us—each other. That’s it. That’s all.
I’m in a hurry. The package we’ve been waitin’ on finally arrived from San
Francisco today. I’ve got the little box in my hand, all purtied up with a pink
ribbon that Mrs. Schuster down at the mercantile tied on for me. I rush down the
street to Doc Martin’s, and everybody looks up when I blow through the door.
“Did you get it?” Adam reaches out and snags the box before I can even answer. I
frown at him. For somebody that was never any good using his left hand, he’s
sure gotten a lot quicker with it while his right one’s been in a cast. He’s
standin’ too close to Joe’s bed, though, and little brother ends up swipin’ it
right out of his hand.
“Hey, watch it,” I caution. “You’ll mess up the purty bow on it. Mrs. Schuster
worked right hard on wrappin’ it up nice.”
Joe pulls a face, but he holds the box more carefully. “Did you look at it
before Mrs. Schuster wrapped it?”
“Yeah, I looked at it…”
Adam grabs the box again and holds it up over his head and squints at it as if
he can see through the box. “Did the new ones match the original?”
“What? Yeah, they matched all right…“
“The color? The size?” Adam is lookin’ at me now, and I don’t much like the
snappy questions he’s amin’ at me, ‘cause I’m not exactly sure how to answer
‘em.
“Well…yeah, they matched. I think.”
“You think? You think?”
How come Adam can make me sweat with just two little words?
I grab the box out of his hand and push my chest out at him.
“Look, you told me to go get it and I done that. You didn’t tell me I had to
stand and stare at it all day.”
He glares at me, and swipes the box back. Joe lunges for it, which makes Doc
look up from his paperwork and yell at him.
“I know I said you could go home tomorrow, Little Joe, but that doesn’t mean I
can’t change my mind. If this is the kind of shenanigans you intend to pull—”
“You listen to him, Joe,” Mr. Ludlow tells him, and shakes a pudgy finger at
him. “You don’t want to pull those stitches, young man.”
“He’s right, Joe,” Arlen adds, and I have to grin. For once, Adam and I have
plenty of help in keeping Joe where he’s supposed to be.
“Okay, okay,” Joe mutters, and he lies back obediently, the pout on his face
lifting only when Adam grins and hands the box to him. We both know Joe doesn’t
want to do anything that might extend his stay—poor kid’s been holed up here at
Doc Martin’s ever since the robbery. Doc refused to allow him to be moved, and
truth be told, we felt better havin’ him right under the doc’s care. There were
a couple of times when we thought we might still lose him. And even after he
started gettin’ better, there were times when we caught him starin’ off into the
distance, like he was workin’ hard at rememberin’ somethin’ important. It
bothered me when he looked like that. Bothered me a lot, and I can’t put my
finger on why, exactly.
Adam was in pretty rough shape, too, of course, and Doc Martin kept him under
his thumb right alongside Joe. Adam actually stayed on extra days even after Doc
gave his okay to go home, just so Joe wouldn’t be by himself. ‘Course, he didn’t
let on to Joe about that. Joe woulda seen it as babysittin’, and he never woulda
stood for it.
But now they’re both on their way to bein’ mended, although it looks like I’ll
be doin’ their chores for a good long bit yet.
The door bursts open again. It’s little Janie Williams, and the excited glow on
her cheeks makes her even purtier than she normally is. Yep, I can sure see what
Joe sees in that gal.
“They’re coming!” she says breathlessly. “Your pa is walking them down the
street right now. Did you get it?”
“Right here.” Joe holds up the box. Janie sails over to the bed and plants a
kiss on his cheek. From the look on both their faces, I expect that kiss would
be a lot different if me and Adam and the others weren’t around.
“Do the new ones match the original?” Janie asks.
I feel my smile leave my face. “Dadburnit, why does everybody keep askin’ that?”
Janie looks at me, her eyes wide. “But it’s important, Hoss.”
“He thinks they matched,” Adam explains.
“They matched close enough!” I explode. “And anyway, there’s nothin’ we can do
about it now. They’re almost here.”
It’s true. Pa and Mr. and Mrs. Hayword are right out front, and now here they
come through the door, laughing and talking and shouting hellos. Soon the room
is filled with happy noise that makes Doc grumble somethin’ about
‘convalescence’, but nobody pays him any mind. Mrs. Hayword has hugs and kisses
for all of us, and when she kisses Joe on the forehead, he brings the little
pink-ribboned box out from beneath his blankets.
“This is for you,” he says soberly, and the room goes quiet, although we’re all
still smiling.
She’s surprised, I can tell. She looks around the room at all of us, lastly at
her husband who looks for all the world like a proud new bridegroom, and she
very slowly and carefully begins to undo the ribbon. Beside her, Joe fidgets,
and I have to laugh. He was never the sort to unwrap a present any way but fast.
Finally the box is opened, and we all watch her face.
“Oh. Oh, my,” she whispers, and tears well up in her eyes as she pulls a strand
of pearls from the box.
Joe is looking anxious. “Pa and Hoss gathered up all the ones they could find in
the bank, but some slipped between the cracks in the floor, and Hoss crawled
underneath the building and found a couple more in the dust, but the rest—”
“We found as many as we could, but the rest were lost and had to be replaced
with new ones,” Pa finished. “I entrusted the job to a jeweler I know in San
Francisco. I…I hope it is satisfactory.” Now even Pa is looking anxious. We all
know what that necklace meant to Mrs. Hayword. It belonged to her grandmother,
and she wore it almost every day before…well, before that day at the bank.
“Satisfactory?” Mrs. Hayword smiles even as a tear slips down her cheek. “Dear
Ben, it is beyond satisfactory. It is beautiful. John, would you?” She turns her
back to her husband, who gently clasps the necklace around her neck.
Adam clears his throat. “We know it can’t really replace the original, but—”
She shakes her head. “Nonsense. It’s better than the original. Old pearls from
my grandmother mixed with new ones from friends I care very much about. I love
it. Thank you all so very much. I’ll treasure it forever.”
Dang, that Mrs. Hayword is sure a practical sort of woman. A lot of ladies
would’ve mourned the loss of those pearls for a long time, but I reckon she’s
the sort that knows what’s really important. I look at Mr. Hayword watching his
wife, and I know he knows what’s important, too.
“Looks like a party in here!” It’s Roy Coffee, pokin’ his head in the door and
grinnin’. “Well, if this don’t beat all. A room full of heroes, right here in
Virginia City.”
There’s that blasted word again. I grimace at Roy, and he winks back at me. He
knows how it bothers me to hear it. I reckon that’s why he keeps insistin’ on
sayin’ it.
Naw, we ain’t heroes.
Not that there aren’t heroes in this world. I’ve seen ‘em. But they don’t always
come in the shape or size you’d expect. Sometimes they wear yellow dresses and
pearls and they think of ways to win that no man could come up with.
I remember something Joe’s mother used to tell us. It’s something I've held onto
all my life, especially during times when I’ve been scared, and I reckon it’s
something that Mrs. Hayword knew all along.
“Courage is simply fear that has said its prayers.”
*****End******
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