Winchester 1887 (2 page)

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Authors: William W. Johnstone

BOOK: Winchester 1887
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Because you wanted this gun.
He started to sink back into the chair then remembered something else. His hand slid into the pocket and withdrew the badge, a tarnished six-point star. He dropped it on the table, read the black letters stamped into the piece of tin.
 
D
EPUTY
U.S.
M
ARSHAL
 
“Jimmy wanted you to have this, too,” Millard said. He had to sit. His legs couldn't support his weight anymore.
James Mann sat, too, after he righted the chair he had knocked over.
Letting out a sigh of relief, Libbie returned to comforting Kris and Jacob.
“The man who killed Uncle Borden—” James began, but stopped.
“Danny Waco,” Millard said numbly. “Rough as a cob, a cold-blooded killer. Posters on him from Texas to Montana, and as far west, probably, as Arizona Territory. He killed Jimmy, too, but Jimmy got him.”
Revenge,
Millard thought.
Was it worth it?
“He took a bullet, Jimmy did, that would've killed a kid. Stopped a bank robbery. Stopped Waco. The law's been trying that for a number of years. Folks in Tascosa, even Amarillo, said Jimmy was a hero. Died a hero.”
The curtain drew open, and Libbie came into the kitchen, her arms around Jacob, a sobbing Kris close behind.
“Maybe,” Kris said, “maybe we can buy a monument—one of those big marble stones—and put it on Uncle Jimmy's grave.”
“Maybe,” Millard said. Jimmy's grave had been marked with only a busted-up Winchester, another '86, that he had used, somehow, to end Danny Waco's life. Not even a crude wooden cross or his name carved into a piece of siding.
“Put a gun on it,” Jacob said, still sniffling.
“Maybe.” Millard managed a smile.
“A gun on a tombstone?” Kris barked at her brother.
“Uncle Jimmy liked guns!” Jacob snapped back.
“That's ridiculous,” Kris chided.
“Hush,” Libbie said.
The children obeyed. Millard stared at his oldest son, who sat fingering the badge, his shoulders slumped, at long last accepting the fact that Jimmy Mann was indeed dead, wouldn't be coming back ever again.
Jacob became interested in the badge and left Libbie's side. He moved toward his big brother and looked at the piece of tin. “Why'd Uncle Jimmy want you to have this?”
James didn't answer, probably had not even heard, and Jacob looked at his father for an answer.
“I'm not sure,” Millard said.
“Uncle Jimmy didn't make James a lawman, did he?” Jacob asked.
Millard tried to smile, but his lips wouldn't cooperate. His head shook. “No, he couldn't deputize anyone. At least, not officially.”
“Was Uncle Jimmy a good lawman?” Kris asked.
Millard shrugged. “I reckon. He did it for some time.”
“Can we go see his grave?” Jacob asked.
“Sure. Sometime.” Millard, however, had little interest in seeing the dead. Maybe that was why he left Jimmy in Tascosa. He had not gone to Borden's funeral, mainly because of the expense and time such a journey to the Midwest would have taken. He had never been to the graves of his parents. Never had he cottoned to the idea of talking over a grave. The dead, he figured, had better things to listen to than the ramblings of some old relation.
James left the boxcar without speaking.
“Where's Jimmy going?” Jacob asked.
“James,” his sister corrected. “You know he don't like being called Jimmy. That was Uncle—” She stopped and brushed back a tear.
“But where . . . ?”
“Just for a walk,” Libbie answered with a sigh, stepping toward the open doorway.
Alone with his grief.
Millard felt some relief. His son had walked out with the badge, turned toward the corral. Walking away his troubles, his thoughts. But at least—and this really made Millard feel better—James had left the .50-caliber Winchester '86 on the table.
C
HAPTER
T
WO
Mountain Fork River, Choctaw Nation
An ounce of lead ripped into the hardwood, sending splinters of bark into Jackson Sixpersons' black slouch hat. The old Cherokee dived to his right just as another slug tore through the air and thudded into a tree. He rolled over and brought up the big shotgun, not lifting his head, not firing, just listening.
Many years earlier—too many to count—he had learned that in gunfights, it wasn't always the quickest or the surest who survived, but the most patient.
Another bullet sang through the trees.
Sixpersons freed his left hand from the shotgun's walnut forearm and found his spectacles. He had to adjust them so he could see clearer, but all he saw above him was a blur. “Sweating like a pig,” is how that worthless deputy marshal he partnered with, Malcolm Mallory, would have described it. Idiot white man. Pigs don't sweat.
He found one end to his silk wild rag and wiped the glasses free of perspiration. His right hand never left the Winchester, and his finger remained on the trigger.
A Model 1887 lever-action shotgun in twelve-gauge, it weighed between six and eight pounds and held five shells that were two and five-eighths inches long (ten-gauge shells were even slightly bigger). The barrel was twenty-two inches. When Sixpersons got it, back in the fall of '88, the barrel had been ten inches longer, but he had sawed off the unnecessary metal over the gunsmith's protests that the barrel was Damascus steel. Thirty-two inches was too much barrel for an officer of the U.S. Indian Police and the U.S. Marshals.
“Did you get him, Ned?” a voice called out from the woods.
“I think so. He ain't movin' no-how,” came Ned's foolish reply.
“He was a lawdog, Ned,” the first voice, nasally and high-pitched, cried out. “I see'd the sun reflect off'n his badge, Ned.”
“He's a dead lawdog now, Bob.”
“Mebbe-so, but you know 'em federal deputies—they don't travel alone.”
That reminded Sixpersons of his partner. Where in the Sam Hill was Malcolm Mallory?
Footsteps crushed the twigs and pinecones as someone moved away from Sixpersons.
The Cherokee lawman rolled to his knees and pushed himself up. He was tall and lean, had seen more than sixty-one winters, and his hair, now completely gray, fell past his shoulders. His face carried the scars of too many chases, too many fights. He kept telling his wife he would quit one of these days, and she kept telling him as soon as he did, he would die of boredom.
In the Indian Nations, deputy marshals did not die of boredom.
Sixpersons rose and moved through the woods—like a deer, not an old-timer.
Tucked in the southeastern edge of Choctaw land just above the Red River and Texas, that part of the country could be pitilessly hard. The hills were rugged, the ground hard and rocky, and trees, towering pines and thick hardwoods, trapped in the summer heat. The calendar said spring. The weather felt like Hades. He didn't care for it, but passed that off as his prejudice against Choctaws. Cherokees, being the better people, of course, cared little for loud-mouthed, blowhard Choctaws.
He could hear Ned and Bob lumbering through the thick forest, thorns from all the brambles probably ripping their clothes and their flesh.
Sixpersons figured where they were going, moved over several rods, and ran down the leaves-covered hillside, sliding to a stop and disappearing into another patch of woods. Ten minutes later, he pushed through some saplings and stepped onto the wet rocks that made the banks of the river.
The country was green. Always seemed to be green. The water rippled, reminding him of his thirst, but Jackson Sixpersons would drink later. If he were still alive.
He stepped into the river, the cold water easing his aching feet and calves, soaking his moccasins and blue woolen trousers as he waded across the Mountain Fork. A fish jumped somewhere upstream where the river widened. He had picked the shallowest and shortest part of the river to cross and entered the northeastern side of the woods. He moved through it, heading back downstream, hearing the water begin to flow faster as he moved downhill.
How much time passed, he wasn't sure, but the water flowed over rocks—running high from recent spring rains—when he dropped to a knee and swung the shotgun's big barrel toward the other side of the Mountain Fork.
Bob and Ned burst through the forest, fell to their knees, and dropped to their bellies, slurping up the water, splashing their faces, and trying to catch their breath.
Through the leaves and branches, Sixpersons could see the two fugitives clearly. Luck had been with him. Well, those two boys weren't bright or speedy. He wet his lips, feeling the sweat forming again and rolling down his cheeks.
“C'mon, Bob,” Ned said as he pushed himself to his feet. “This way.”
Sixpersons waited until they were near the big rock in midstream, not quite waist-deep in the cool water. Only then did he step out of the forest and bring the Model 1887's stock to his right shoulder.
He did not speak. He didn't have to.
The two men stopped. Their hands fell near their belted six-shooters, but both men froze.
Slim men with long hair in store-bought duds, they had lost their hats in the woods. Their shirts were torn. One of them wore a crucifix, another a beaded necklace. Not white men, but Creek Indians—Cherokees didn't care much for Creeks, either. Jackson Sixpersons didn't consider these two men Indians. Not anymore.
They were whiskey runners, selling contraband liquor, some of it practically poison, to Indians, half-breeds, squaw—men, women, even kids. Jackson despised whiskey runners. He had seen what John Barleycorn could do to Cherokees . . . and Creeks . . . and Choctaws . . . and Chickasaws . . . and all Indians in the territories. He recalled all too well that wretched state liquor had often left him in.
He had, of course, been introduced to bourbon. Grew to like it, depend on it, even became a raging drunk for twenty-two years. Until his wife told him that if he didn't quit drinking, she would pick up that Winchester of his when he passed out next time and blow his head off.
No liquor, not even a nightcap of bourbon, even when he had an aching tooth, had passed his lips since '89.
Ned and Bob could see the six-pointed deputy U.S. marshal's badge pinned on Sixpersons' Cherokee ribbon shirt. Sixpersons figured he didn't have to tell those two boys anything.
“He can't kill us both, Bob.” Ned, the taller of the two Creeks, even grinned. “He's an old man, anyhow. Slower than molasses.”
Jackson Sixpersons could have told Ned and Bob that they would likely get two or three years for running whiskey, maybe another for assaulting a federal lawman, but Judge Parker, being a good sort, did show mercy, and probably would have those sentences run concurrently. It wasn't like those two faced the gallows.
Instead, he said nothing. He never had been much for talk.
“Reckon he's blind, too.” Bob grinned a wild-eyed grin.
Silently, Sixpersons cursed Malcolm Mallory for not being there, but waited with silence and patience.
“Die game!” Bob yelled. He clawed for his pistol first.
The shotgun slammed against the Cherokee marshal's shoulder. His ears rang from the blast of that cannon, but he heard Bob's scream and ducked, moving to his left, bringing the lever down and up, replacing the fired shell with a fresh load.
Most lawmen in Indian Territory favored double-barrel shotguns, and Jackson Sixpersons couldn't blame them. There was something terrifying about looking down those big bores of a Greener, Parker, Savage or some other brand. With cut-down barrels, scatterguns sprayed a wide pattern.
Yet that master gun maker, old John Moses Browning—old; he had turned thirty-two in '87—knew what he was doing when he designed the Model 1887 lever-action shotgun for Winchester Repeating Arms. That humped-back action was original, even compact considering the '87s came in those big twelve- and ten-gauge models. When the lever was worked, the breechblock rotated at lightning speed down from the chamber. Closing the lever sent the breechblock up and forward, with a lifter feeding the new shell from the tubular magazine and into the chamber. This action also moved the recessed hammer to full cock.
A double-barrel shotgun could fire only twice. The '87 had four shells in the magazine and one in the chamber. It fired about as fast as a Winchester repeating rifle.
Jackson Sixpersons didn't need five shots. Ned's shot hit nothing but white smoke, and the big twelve-gauge roared again.
When the next wave of smoke cleared, Ned lay on the rock, faceup, his chest a bloody mess. The current had swept Bob's carcass downstream a few rods before he got hung up, facedown, on some driftwood on the far bank.
Birds had stopped chirping. Sixpersons set the shotgun's half-cock safety notch, rose, the joints in his old knees popping, and stepped into the stream.
He reached the rock, closed Ned's eyes, and looked for the pistol the Creek had carried, but the weapon must have fallen into the river. It was likely nearby, but Sixpersons wasn't bending over to hunt for some old pistol. Likely, he would get wet enough just dragging the dead punk across the cold, fast-flowing river.
Cursing in Cherokee, then English, he moved toward Bob's body. At least this one had the decency to die near the bank. Sixpersons laid his shotgun on dry ground and pulled the dead whiskey runner onto the bank. The blast had caught Bob in the stomach and groin, and he had bled out considerable. Still heavy, for a corpse. Probably from all the buckshot in his belly.
Sopping wet by the time he got Ned onto the bank, out of breath, and sweating, the deputy cursed the two Creeks. “Die game.” He shook his head. “Die foolish.”
After wiping sweat from his forehead, he looked at the woods he would have to travel across. Getting those two boys to Fort Smith would prove a big challenge, and that caused him to laugh. He had taken Deputy U.S. Marshal Jimmy Mann deer hunting up in the Winding Stair Mountains where Jimmy had bagged a twelve-pointer with a clean shot from his Winchester. But it was Sixpersons who had butchered the deer and hauled it those grueling four miles back to camp.
Shaking off the memory, he reloaded the Winchester before he drank water from the stream or wrote in his notebook—still dry—what would pass for a report on the attempted arrests and subsequent deaths of Bob Gooty and Ned Yargee, whiskey runners, Creek Nation.
He found a couple corndodgers, stale but salty, and a tough piece of jerky in his pocket. That was all he had to eat. The rest of his food lay in his saddlebags on the horse he had tethered to a pine back near where the whiskey runners had camped. Their horses had run off when they started the ball after Sixpersons had demanded their surrender.
Three miles. Not as many as he had had to cart that deer Jimmy Mann had killed. But there were two carcasses this time.
It would have been easier in the old days. All he would have had to do was cut off their heads, stick those in a gunnysack, and carry them to the Indian court. But Judge Parker and the Senate-confirmed U.S. marshal, Mr. Crump, frowned on such things in the civilized word.
And the ground was too hard to bury the Creeks and come back later with horse and pack mules.
Sixpersons was ready to call it quits, just leave them there for coyotes and ravens, and forget any reward that might have been posted, when he heard a horse's whinny.
He came up with the Winchester, aiming at an opening in the woods a quarter-mile downstream. A dun pony stepped out and into the water, and the shotgun was lowered.
The rider eased the horse out of the river and up onto the bank, grinning at Jackson Sixpersons. “Howdy,” Deputy Marshal Malcolm Mallory said.
Sixpersons didn't answer with word or nod. The fool hadn't even ridden out of the woods with pistol or rifle ready.
“Dead, eh?”
The Cherokee's head bobbed, though it was one stupid question.
You kill 'em?”
He answered. “No, Wild Bill Hickok shot them.”
Mallory laughed like a hyena and dismounted, which was one good thing.
“I'll hold your horse,” Sixpersons told him. “You put the bodies over your saddle.”
“But—”
“How else are we getting them back to Virgil Flatt's tumbleweed wagon?”
Deputy U.S. marshals did not work alone. At least, they weren't supposed to. It was too dangerous. But sometimes Jackson Sixpersons wondered exactly what U.S. Marshal George J. Crump, appointed and confirmed by the Senate back in April of '93, was thinking.
Working with Malcolm Mallory and Virgil Flatt, Sixpersons might as well be working alone.
It was Flatt's job to drive the tumbleweed wagon, which was basically a temporary jail on a wagon bed. Iron bars were affixed to the reinforced wooden floor, with a padlocked door swinging out from the rear of the wagon. The roof leaked, and if the prisoners got too rough, they could be chained to the floor. Painted on the side of the wagon was U.S. C
OURT
.

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