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Strangler lifted up a ring rope and stepped under it onto the steps. As we backed down to let him pass, he picked up his sweatshirt. “You ought not to have come back with them around.”

“You need to run,” Jane said. “They were bound to find you, and now they have.”

She pointed. Timmy was standing at the back of the crowd, which was beginning to break up.

“Me and him got to talk,” Strangler said, and headed in that direction. But Timmy just turned and walked away briskly.

“I think he doesn’t want to shoot you in this crowd,” Jane said. “But I don’t think he’s giving up.”

Strangler started across the lot carrying his sweatshirt. We followed.

“Go home, kids,” he said.

“Ain’t got no home,” Tony said.

“Then go away.”

“Why don’t you run?” Jane said.

“ ’Cause I probably deserve what I’m going to get.”

“Why? You gave the money back,” she said.

We had crossed the lot now, and we could see Strangler’s trailer. Bad Tiger was sitting on the steps smiling at us. I suppose we should have broke and ran right then, but we didn’t. Like ducks, we followed Strangler to his trailer. Just before we got to the steps, Bad Tiger stood up, reached inside his coat, pulled out a gun, and held it to his side.

“Howdy, Strangler,” Bad Tiger said.

“Just get it over with,” Strangler said. “Kids ain’t got nothing to do with it.”

“Sure they do,” said a voice behind us. “We’re all old friends.”

I turned and there was Timmy. He had his coat thrown back and his hand was across his chest, resting on the butt of his gun in its shoulder holster.

Timmy said, “I always wanted to try you, Strangler.”

“No you don’t,” Strangler said. “You did, you wouldn’t have your hand on that gun.”

Timmy’s face fell.

Bad Tiger turned and opened the door to Strangler’s trailer, said, “Come on in. It’s your place. You’ll like it fine. For a moment.”

Strangler went up the steps and inside, tossed the sweatshirt on the floor. We followed, Timmy behind us.

When we were in the trailer, Timmy shut the door.

The place was a wreck. Clothes thrown about, drawers open.

Bad Tiger said, “Cozy.”

“I tell you, the kids ain’t got nothing to do with nothing,” Strangler said.

“Say they don’t,” Bad Tiger said. “They come to warn you. They did that, didn’t they?”

“Yeah, what a coincidence,” Timmy said. “Us here, and you three kiddies here. I’d call that a happy coincidence.”

“You should have just gone on when I told you,” Strangler said to us.

“You know,” said Jane, “you’re right.”

“Yeah,” Bad Tiger said, “when you’re right, you’re right. But, here’s the thing, Strangler. We want the money.”

“I haven’t got it.”

“The crippled kid?” Bad Tiger said. “Tell me, for your own sake, she’s still crippled. That you didn’t spend the money on that.”

“There is no crippled kid.”

Bad Tiger let that idea roam around inside his head.

“Saying you made that up?” Bad Tiger said.

“I just wanted to have a good reason to do something I shouldn’t have. I was tired of this life. Then, after I done it, I thought this life wasn’t so bad after all. I made that story up because I didn’t want to just be a common thief, like you two. I mailed the money back.”

Timmy laughed. It was the kind of laugh that was solid enough and sharp enough you could have whittled wood with it. “You are one big liar, Strangler,” he said.

“Not about the money,” he said.

Bad Tiger moved quickly and brought the gun barrel down on the side of Strangler’s head. Strangler staggered back a step and turned his head sideways. When he looked back at Bad Tiger, there was blood running down the side of his face. He grinned. There was a look in his eyes akin to the look he gave the man that had hit him below the belt. I saw Bad Tiger’s eyes shift a little when he saw that look. He didn’t like it. He stepped back.

Strangler said, “My ole granny can hit harder than that, and she’s got a bad arm.”

“Yeah,” Bad Tiger said, “well, let’s see how a bullet in your gut goes. See how big a bite that is. No, tell you what. I’m going to start with the kids first. I’ll take shorty there, and then you don’t talk, I got to do one of the others. The girl, I’m going to shoot her several times. I really don’t like her.”

“Get in line,” Jane said.

“You just don’t learn, do you,” Bad Tiger said. He raised the gun and pointed it at Jane.

Strangler said, “All right, now. I’ll give you the money.”

Everything went still and silent for a long moment.

“That’s the way I figured,” Timmy said. “I knew you had that money. Mailed it back, my butt.”

“I got it, all right.”

“So you didn’t mail it back?” Jane said.

“No,” Strangler said.

“Way you lie,” Jane said, “you and me should team up.”

Strangler laughed a little.

“Okay,” Bad Tiger said. “You’ve had your chuckle, now show us the money.”

Strangler moved over to a trunk on the floor and started to open it.

“Hold it,” Bad Tiger said. “I done looked there. We threw this place earlier. If we found the money, we might have just left you.”

“No we wouldn’t have,” Timmy said.

“You got to know where to look, and how,” Strangler said.

“It could have been four ways,” Bad Tiger said, “but you had to get cute. And Buddy, he had to get shot. You messed things up.”

“Not for you two,” Strangler said. “I give it to you now, you only have to split it two ways.”

“Sure it’s in there?” Timmy said.

“Yeah,” Strangler said.

“All of you, get over there by the chest,” Bad Tiger said.

“Yeah, that way, we start shooting, you’ll be grouped up nice,” Timmy said.

We went over and stood by the trunk, near Strangler.

Strangler opened the trunk and took out a small barbell and a few metal weights, placed them on the floor beside the trunk.

He turned and looked at Bad Tiger. “I’m going to have to have a pocketknife, something like that.”

Bad Tiger reached his free hand into his pocket and took out a pocketknife and tossed it to Strangler. Strangler caught it, opened it. He bent down and reached into the trunk, caught the bottom edge with the knife, and wiggled the blade until the bottom came up.

It was a false bottom. The trunk was actually several inches deeper. There were bills in it. Lots of them. They were laid out in rows.

“I thought I was the liar,” Jane said. “You got the touch. You told me your mama robbed the bank, not you, I might have believed you.”

“I didn’t spend a dollar,” Strangler said.

Bad Tiger came closer and said to us, “While y’all are sorting your consciences, back over there a ways.”

We moved. That put our backs against the wall.

“That’s nice,” Bad Tiger said, looking inside the trunk. “But is that all of it?”

“There’s some in the bedroom,” Strangler said.

“I looked in there,” Bad Tiger said.

“You looked in here,” Strangler said. “Now, split it up, shoot me, whatever, but let the kids go.”

“Oh yeah,” Bad Tiger said, turning slightly, looking at Timmy. “There ain’t actually going to be no two-way split.”

He shot Timmy in the chest. The sound of the shot in the trailer made my ears ring like a telephone. Outside, though, with all the carnival racket going on, it wouldn’t have sounded like much, if it was heard at all.

Timmy moved slightly but didn’t drop. He just stood there. He looked at Bad Tiger like maybe it was all a joke. The bullet had gone right through him and slammed into the wall. He tried to shoot his gun, but it was suddenly too heavy for him to hold. It fell out of his hand and he went to one knee.