"I wasn't in."
"Up to the territorial prison, were you? I hear it's not so bad there, at least not as bad as it used to be."
"I wouldn't know."
"The warden is a good friend of mine. I'm going to wire him and ask him a few things."
"Ask him anything you want."
He stared at me a long, silent moment. The clock on the west wall tocked. Out in front, around the potbellied stove, a man laughed.
"Your name really Chase?"
"Yes."
"Why were you in prison?"
"I wasn't in prison."
"Be a man, Chase. Tell me the truth."
"I robbed a bank."
"There. You said it. Now we can cut out the horse-shit." He stared at me some more, tilted back in his chair. "You shoot anybody when you robbed this bank?"
"No."
"You ever shoot anybody?"
"No."
"So you're not a violent man?"
I shrugged. "Not so far, anyway."
He smiled around his pipe. "That's an honest way to put it. 'Not so far, anyway.' " He sat up in the chair. "I'm going to make some inquiries about you."
"Your friend the warden?"
"You can be a sarcastic sonofabitch, you know that?" He shook his head. "What I was going to say, Chase, is that except for your disappearance tonight, you've been a damned good officer. Everybody likes you and trusts you, especially the merchants, and that's very important to me. So believe it or not, I'm not going to fire you just because you raised some hell when you were younger. You've got a family now, and that changes a man. Changes him a lot." Hard to believe this was the same man who, half an hour ago, had been beating a handcuffed prisoner. "I'm going to write the warden, like I said, and if your story checks out-if you really didn't shoot anybody and if you were a good prisoner-then I'm going to forget all about that letter." He put his hand out, palm up, and I laid the letter on it.
He checked the clock. "Hell, I'd better be going home. My wife was visiting her cousin tonight and she'll probably be getting home about now."
"You want me to keep working tonight?"
"Of course I do, Chase. If you've been honest with me tonight, you don't have anything to worry about."
"I appreciate this, Chief."
"Get back to work, Chase, and forget about anything except doing a good job."
I stood up, nodded good-bye, and left.
I had a cup of coffee out next to the stove and then I went back to work.
Ev Hollister was one complicated sonofabitch, and those are the men you always have to be extra careful of.
13
The young man with the white shirt and the celluloid collar and the fancy red arm garters peered at me from behind the bars of his teller's cage and said, "Three other police officers have their accounts here, too, Mr. Chase." He had a face like a mischievous altar boy. He wore rimless glasses to make himself look older.
I smiled. "Then I must be doing the right thing."
I hadn't ever wanted to step inside any bank that Reeves owned. But I wanted to see the place that Lundgren and Mars were going to rob, because by now I knew what I was going to do.
The layout was simple. For all its finery, the flocked wallpaper, the oak paneling, the elegant paintings, the massive black safe built into the wall, which resembled a huge and furious god-for all of that, the bank was really just one big room divided up by partitions into four different areas. The safe would be relatively easy to get to because, except for a wide mahogany desk, nothing stood in the way. Women in bustles and picture hats, and men in dark suits and high-top shoes, walked around, conducting whispery business. The air smelled of gardenia perfume and cigar smoke.
I looked over at the side door that Lundgren and Reeves had talked about the other night. It used to open onto the alley, I was told, before the bank had been remodeled. Now it was never opened for any reason, though I had the key to it on my ring.
"She's a beauty, isn't she?"
"Beg pardon?"
"The safe," the teller said. "Barely six months old. Straight from Boston. I doubt even nitro could open it." He smiled. "Saw you looking at her. Must make the police feel a lot safer."
"A lot."
"But that's Mr. Reeves for you."
"Oh?"
"Sure. Always buying the best and the newest and the most reliable."
Yes
, I thought, and probably spending his partner's money to do it.
I started hacking then, so much so that it got embarrassing. This morning my throat had been so sore, I could barely swallow, and the chills now came on with a sudden violence.
"Well, here's my first deposit," I said when I'd finished hacking.
I handed the teller ten dollars. He found a smart little blue bankbook and took an imposing rubber stamp and opened the book and stamped something bold and black on the first page. He then turned the page over and wrote $10.00 in the credit column. Then he wrote the date in the proper place and gave me the book.
"It's nice to have you as a customer, Mr. Chase."
"Thank you. I'm sure I'll like doing business here."
"I shouldn't say this, being so partial and all, but I think we're the best bank in the whole territory."
"I'm sure you are."
With that I turned and started back to the front of the bank. Then the front door opened and there stood Reeves, sleek and slick as always, staring right at me.
He was obviously angry to find me here, but he couldn't say anything with all the customers wandering around.
He came in, closing the door on the bright but chill afternoon.
He walked right up to me and said, "I'm glad to see you're still wearing that uniform."
"The chief is a more understanding man than you give him credit for."
"Maybe I'll just have to write him another little note about you." He frowned. "Why the hell don't you just get out of this town, Chase? I'd even be willing to give you some money if you just took that wife and daughter of yours and left."
"How much?"
"Maybe ten thousand."
"Maybe?"
"Ten thousand for sure."
I grinned at him. "No, thanks, I kind of like it here. Especially when I get a chance to ruin your day like this every once in a while." I started out the door and then said, quietly, "Be sure to give Lundgren and Mars my best wishes."
He looked around to see if anybody was watching. They weren't. "You don't know what you're getting into, farm boy."
"See you around," I said, and left.
I stood on the boardwalk for a while, enjoying the pale, slanting sunlight, enjoying the town, really, the clatter of wagons and horse-drawn trolleys, the spectacle of pretty town women going about their shopping, the way folks greeted me as they passed.
They liked me, the town folks, and I enjoyed that feeling.
I was a happy man just then, and I walked down the street with my lips puckered into a whistle. I tried not to notice how bad my throat was hurting.
14
That night, feeling even sicker, I dragged myself home and went right to bed…
In the darkness.
"Chase?"
"Huh?"
"I wanted to wake you up. You were having the nightmare again. About the kid, I think."
"Oh."
"I'm sorry you had to see that, Chase."
"Yeah."
"It must have been terrible to see."
I was sweating, but it was cold sweat and I wanted to vomit. There was just the darkness. And Gillian next to me in her flannel nightgown.
"I said a prayer tonight, Chase."
"How come?"
"That you wouldn't go through with it." Silence. "I know it's on your mind."
"It could work out for us. A lot of money. Going somewhere and buying a farm."
We were silent for a long time.
"Annie saw me praying-I mean, I was down on my knees with my hands folded, just like I was in church- and she asked me what I was praying for, and I told her that I was praying for Pop, that Pop would always do the right thing."
The miners got paid on Fridays. On Friday morning the bank always got extra cash for payroll. Today was Friday. Lundgren and Mars would hit the bank today sometime.
"You hear me, Chase? About my praying?"
"You know I love you and Annie."
"It'll come to no good, Chase. Men like Reeves just go on and on. I hate to say this, but sometimes evil is more powerful than good. I don't understand why God would let that be, but He does."
Just the darkness, and Gillian next to me…
I wanted to be content and peaceful. I really did. But I just kept thinking of how easy it would be to take that money from Lundgren and Mars.
I started coughing hard, the way I'd been doing lately. She held me tight, as if she could make my illness go away. Sometimes she was so sweet I didn't know what to do with myself. Because I wasn't sweet at all.
"Chase, I want you to go see the doc tomorrow. I mean it. No more excuses."
I didn't say anything.
I lay back.
The sweat was cold on me. I was shivering.
"Chase. There's something that needs saying."
I didn't say anything.
"You listening, Chase?"
"Uh-huh."
"Chase, if you go through with this, I'll take Annie and leave. I swear."
I wanted to cry-just plain goddamn bawl-and I wasn't even sure why.
"I love you, Gillian."
But then I went and ruined it all by coughing so hard I had to throw my legs over the side of the bed and just sit there hacking. Maybe Gillian was right. Maybe I needed to see the doc.
When I finally laid back down again, Gillian had rolled over to face the wall.
"Honey? Gillian?"
But she wasn't speaking anymore.
Both of us knew what was going to happen, and there wasn't much to be said now.
"You're going to do it, Chase," she said after a time. And I drew her to me and held her. And I could smell her warm tears as I kissed her cheek. "I know you are, Chase. I know you are."
15
I got up early, before the ice on the creek had melted off, put on street clothes and went into town. My bones ached but I tried not to notice. The sounds of roosters and waking dogs filled the chill air. The sky was a perfect blue and the fallen leaves were bright as copper pennies at the bottom of a clear stream. The fever had waned. I felt pretty good.
I went directly to the restaurant, ordered breakfast and took up my place by the window. I wanted to keep a careful eye on the street. I knew what was going to happen this morning.
Reeves arrived first, riding a big chestnut. In his black suit and white Stetson he was trying, as usual, to impress everybody, including himself.
He dismounted at the livery, left his horse off and then came back up the street to the bank. Ordinarily, like most of the merchants, he stopped in here for coffee before the business day started.
But today he took a key from his vest pocket and walked around to the alley on the west side of the bank, and then vanished inside.
I had more coffee and rolled a cigarette and listened reluctantly as a waitress told me about a terrible incident next county over where a two-year-old had crawled into a pig pen where two boars promptly ripped him apart and then ate him. She had a sure way of getting your day off to a happy start.
The stagecoach came in twenty minutes later, a dusty, creaking Concord with a bearded Jehu and two guards up top bearing Winchesters. If you hadn't already guessed that they were transporting money, the two men with the rifles certainly gave you a big hint.
The Concord stopped right in front of the bank.
The front door opened and Reeves came out. He looked dramatic with a fancy silver pistol in his right hand and his eyes scanning the tops of the buildings on the other side of the street.
The two guards jumped down. One hefted a long canvas bag and went inside. The Jehu had taken one of the Winchesters and was watching the street carefully. Reeves stood right where he was, looking vigilant for all the townspeople to see.
It took three minutes and it was very slick. They'd all obviously done this many times. At this point, anybody who tried to take the money sack would likely be outgunned.
Then the bank door closed, Reeves inside, and the two guards jumped back up top and the Jehu took the reins and snapped them against the backs of the animals, and the stagecoach pulled out.
The waitress with the dead baby story came back and gave me more coffee. She was young and chubby but with a certain insolent eroticism in the eyes, and a smile that made her seem more complicated than she probably was.
"You ever see so much money?" she said and nodded across the street. "They make that delivery every week, and every time I see it, I think of what I could do with just one of them bags of money."
"Buy yourself a house?"
"A house, hell. I'd take off for Chicago and New York and I'd have me the best time a farm girl ever had herself."
There was a certain anger in her tone that told me at least a little bit about how she'd been raised, and how she was treated in a town like this. If she had the money, she was going to tell a whole lot of people to kiss her ample ass. I understood her, but that didn't mean I liked her much. A hard woman is meaner any day than a hard man. Maybe I didn't like her because she was too much like me.