The sun was flexing its muscles as Will walked out into the arid land, dropping a bottle here, standing a line of three there, throwing a couple out as far as his arm could hurl them, and dropping others randomly until the sack was empty.
Will already knew that the action of his new Winchester was as smooth as the workings of the best regulator clock and that the snick as he worked the lever indicated perfect lubrication. Nevertheless, he levered and dry-fired a few times for the simple joy of using a well-made tool. He loaded the rifle.
Will eased himself down onto the sand in the sit/fire position and fit the butt to his shoulder. The first round he fired spurted grit into the air a couple inches to the left of his intended bottle. The buckskin snapped his head toward Will, eyes wide, but settled down quickly. He’d heard gunfire before. Will used the tip of his sheath knife to adjust the tiny setscrew and fired again. The bottle exploded, spewing bits and shards of glass, glinting like diamonds high into the sky. He blew two bottles apart without removing the butt from his shoulder: the action of flicking the lever was smooth and sure, and his index finger barely moved from the trigger.
He needed the remaining bottles for practice with his Colt. He took some long shots with the rifle, spurting chunks of pulp out of a cholla about seventy-five yards away. With his last two rounds he reached out farther—at least a hundred and twenty-five yards—to a rock he could barely see and punched it twice, the slugs ricocheting into the vastness with a sharp whine. Will held the barrel of the rifle against his cheek: it was warm but far from hot. “Hell of a weapon,” he said aloud, smiling. “I can trim the hair off a flea’s nuts at half a mile with this baby.”
Will stood and meandered off from his sit/fire site, very conscious of the stiffness of his new drawers against his legs. The leather of his holster was warm and slightly oily feeling from the neat’s-foot oil he’d rubbed into it, his gun belt, and the piece of latigo he’d used to tie the holster to his thigh. The oiliness would dissipate quickly, leaving the leather smooth and supple.
The bone grips of his Colt .45 fit his hand as easily and naturally as the hands of two lovers as they meet. He crouched slightly and drew a dozen or more times, until the process began to feel as effortless as it needed to. He knew he’d lost a little speed, and that a speck of time could kill him. He wiped sweat from his forehead with his sleeve, walked over to the buckskin, drank a couple sips from his canteen, and poured the rest into his Stetson for the horse.
He worked on his draw an hour without firing a shot, breaking only to build and smoke a cigarette. When a good bit of his confidence had returned he slid a half dozen rounds into the pistol’s cylinder. His first draw and fire brought a curse from him: he’d missed the bottle by four inches. He dropped the pistol back into his holster, let it settle itself, and tried again. He missed by three inches.
“Shit,” he said disgustedly, “I can creep up on it a inch at a time, but there ain’t a lot of gunmen who’ll give me the time.”
Will put perhaps twenty rounds through his Colt before he made a good, solid hit. Grinning, he took out two more bottles, reloaded, and blasted his final targets into smithereens. He fired until all he could hear was a buzzing in his ears and his right hand was scored and scraped by blowback. An unlucky rattler chose the wrong time to slide out from a small group of rocks. Will decapitated the snake with a single shot. He stood, pistol hanging at his side, sweat stinging his eyes, and watched as the snake’s mouth on the raggedly severed head opened and snapped shut several times, as if it were attacking an enemy. Amber-colored venom dripped from the sizable fangs.
Time had passed unnoticed. Will was surprised to see the sun beginning to touch the horizon to the west. He loaded and holstered his Colt, slid his rifle into its sheath, removed the hobbles from the buckskin, and rode back to Dry Creek, the image of a cold beer floating in his mind. The horse, too, was anxious to get back to the stable where water, hay, and grain awaited him. Will had to rein him in several times—it was still too damned hot to run a horse unless it was absolutely necessary. He held his mount to a walk the last half mile into town.
Lucas, finished with his day’s work when Will rode in, was sitting on a hay bale with an empty beer bucket next to him. “Damn, boy,” he called out, “I’m hungry ’nuff to eat my saddle an’ thirsty ’nuff to drink the damn Pecos dry!”
“Well, I’ll tell you what,” Will said with a grin. “Lemme brush out this good horse an’ look to his feed an’ I’ll show you how to eat a steak and drink some beer.”
“I put fresh water, grain, an’ a flake of hay in his stall, Will. All you gotta do is run a brush over him an’ we’re on our way.”
Twenty minutes later the two men were seated at a rickety table on equally rickety chairs in the saloon, each with a schooner in hand and another full one waiting to be imbibed.
“So—how’d the shootin’ go, Will?”
“Piss-poor at first, but then it all started comin’ back to me. Some more practice will help.”
Lucas finished off his first beer and picked up his second. “Was you . . . I dunno . . . like a hired gun, ’long with rustlin’?”
Will laughed. “Hell, no. I ain’t a gunfighter, Lucas. I robbed me a couple banks an’ two, three stage coaches, but I give all that up to move cattle. Only thing I was ever caught for was them cattle—that’s why I only drew four years in Folsom.”
“They didn’t tack nothin’ on for killin’ that con?”
“Jus’ the floggin’. The man was bad news—waitin’ to be strung up for rape an’ murder. I saved the prison some money, I guess.”
“You shoulda got a medal ’stead of a beatin’, then.”
“That’s how I see it,” Will laughed. He finished his second beer. “Seems to me it’s your turn to git your ass over to the bar. I’m damn near dyin’ of thirst here.”
Lucas began to stand and then sat back down, his eyes focused over Will’s shoulder. Will turned in his chair. A fat man in a dude suit with a watch and chain and polished boots stood a few feet back from Will. His face, as round as a muskmelon, was red, and his bulbous nose had the wandering veins of a heavy boozer. He wore a bowler hat that would have been as handy as teats on a shovel in the sun.
“Mr. William Lewis?” he asked, ignoring Lucas.
Will nodded without speaking.
“I’m Cyrus VanGelder,” the fat man said in a voice that was almost feminine. “I deal in land.”
“Good for you,” Will said. “But I don’t like bein’ disturbed when I’m talkin’ with a friend, and I got no land, anyhow.”
“Ahh, but you have,” VanGelder said. “All the land and property of the late Hiram Lewis, recently deceased, now belongs to you, my friend. I’m prepared to make a very generous off—”
Will moved a bit more in his chair, now facing VanGelder. His fist went out like a piston, burying itself in eight inches of flab at the land speculator’s waist. The fat man landed on his back on the floor and immediately curled into a flaccid ball, clutching his gut, gasping, his face now a pale white.
“You come near me again an’ I’ll show you what a real punch feels like, you fat vulture. That jus’ now wasn’t nothin’ but a little shove.” Will turned his chair back to the table, speaking over Lucas’s laughter. “Now ’bout that trip to the bar—unless you’re scared this lard bucket here’ll take after you, maybe boot you ’round a bit.”
“I’ll chance it,” Lucas said, “but I’m purely scared, Will.” He shoved his chair out and strolled to the bar. VanGelder managed to get himself up from the floor, still hunched over. “I won’t forget this,” he said, stepping clumsily toward the batwings.