The water was falling off the front coach and pouring over the top of us like a waterfall, making it difficult to see, but I could see Virgil well enough to see him nod Go!
20
In an instant, I swiveled back a step and kicked the door right under the brass lever, knocking the bandit on the other side backward. He raised his pistol, but I shot him first. Virgil shot a skinny bandit behind him who managed to clear leather with his pistol. Vince had just entered the rear door but was backing out. Dean was with another robber, five rows from the rear of the coach. He had another revolver and got off a shot as he backed up. The bullet pinged off the ceiling. Virgil’s shot hit Dean in the chest. The fourth bandit also got off a shot, but it hit the back of the seat just to my left, and I sent two shots to him and he fell back. Vince got his Hopkins & Allen pointing at me. He fired a shot that registered just above my head. Then he ducked back out the rear door before I could get a clear shot. Virgil shot just as Vince closed the door, and we could hear Vince yell, “Goddamn it! Goddamn it!”
The coach was full of blue smoke, and except for the cowering and stunned passengers, the car was now empty of gun hands.
A fearful freckle-faced woman clutched a preacher holding up a tattered Bible like it was a shield as Virgil and I moved down the aisle.
“I’m Marshal Virgil Cole; this is my deputy, Everett Hitch!”
“God bless you,” the preacher said as I followed Virgil. “God bless you!”
We moved swiftly down the aisle. An old fellow with a beard stood, offered his hand. “Much obliged, Marshal.”
“Sit down!” Virgil said. “Stay seated! Everybody stay seated!”
The old man promptly sat down.
“We got them on their heels,” I said. “They’re backing up.”
“They are,” Virgil said.
We stepped over Dean and the other robber’s body. I thought about what Virgil had said to Dean. Virgil was a man of his word. He kept his promise to everyone, including Dean. He gave Dean a chance to be counted, but Dean did not take it, and now he was dead.
When we got to the rear door, Virgil shifted to one side and I shifted to the other. Virgil edged his body over so he was not in front of the door and lowered himself to where he was sitting back on his heels. He opened the loading gate on his Colt and reloaded.
“If it weren’t for that telegram you received in Laredo,” I said, “we’d be riding through hill country, watching dancing girls in San Antonio, taking our leisurely time getting back to Appaloosa. Fact, though, we’ve wound up on a train, chasing some of the meanest no-goods we’ve ever come across.”
“It’s what we do, Everett,” Virgil said. “We’re lawmen.”
I opened the loading gate on my revolver and dumped the empty casings.
“Beside that fact,” Virgil said, “we got unsettled business with the lot of them.”
“That we do,” I said as I reloaded bullets back into the Colt’s chamber. “Some point, though, I ’spect you’ll be telling me about that damn telegram?”
Virgil didn’t say anything. He slowly cracked open the door.
21
I did not see what Virgil saw until he stood up and opened the door wider. Vince was nowhere in sight, and the door of the next coach was wide open. Even though the hard falling rain blurred our vision, there wasn’t anyone moving about. Virgil moved out, and I followed onto the platform. We took post on each side of the door of the next coach, and again we were under a deluge from the pouring rain. I peeked around the door and saw no gunmen. Toward the rear of the coach a woman was kneeling over a man lying in the aisle. I stepped in the car, followed by Virgil. We trained our pistols on everybody and nothing.
An older man sitting at the second-row aisle started shouting, “We’ve given you all our money, just leave us!”
Another passenger, a chubby man sitting across the aisle, held his hands in the air.
“Don’t hurt us,” he said. “Please!”
“We are not here to harm you,” Virgil said. “We’re here to protect you!”
Again, Virgil told the passengers who we were. A young fellow wearing spectacles pointed toward the rear door.
“One of them came running back through here! Bleedin’ like a stuck pig!”
“Where was he shot?” I asked.
“Side of his head! He had his hand over his ear! He yelled at the others to go back, and they ran out the back door!”
“How many others,” I asked.
“Two other men.”
The young fellow pointed back down the aisle to the woman kneeling over the man and spoke quietly: “They shot that lady’s husband ’bout a half-hour ago. He tried to put up a fight when they wanted his wife’s ring, and they shot him. She’s been sittin’ over him, talkin’ to him, but he ain’t alive.”
We moved down the aisle with our pistols pointed toward the rear door.
“Everybody just try and remain calm,” Virgil said.
When I got to the woman kneeling over her husband, she turned and looked at me. Her face was streaked with tears. I showed her the badge on my vest but kept my gun pointed toward the rear door.
“We are here to help,” I said.
The man she was leaning over was sure enough dead. His eyes were open. He had a bullet hole in his cheek, and behind his head, a puddle of blood pooled in the aisle floor. She looked to her husband.
“It’s going to be okay now, darling,” she said. “Law officers are here now to help us.”
I moved on toward the door. Lightning flashed again, and the coach’s interior brightened for a brief moment. I glanced back to Virgil. He reached out his hand to the woman kneeling over her husband.
“Be better if you took a seat, ma’am,” Virgil said.
The woman looked at Virgil as if he were something curious, unrecognizable. Then, in almost a moment of haste, she took his hand.
“There you go,” Virgil said. “Just stay seated, that’d be best.”
Virgil moved on.
“Everybody!” Virgil said. “Just stay in your seats!”
A tall gent wearing expensive but tattered clothes leaned out into the aisle. He pointed to the dead man and spoke to Virgil.
“This is my trade. Name’s G. W. Tisdale, mortician. I tried to console her, tried to let her know her husband was with God, but she has her own agenda,” he said. “Women often do.”
“Might need your services in a bit,” Virgil said. “Right now, stay seated, don’t do nothing.”
Virgil’s focus remained in the same direction his Colt was pointing, the rear door, as he moved next to me.
“Next car is the Pullman,” I said. “The governor’s car.”
“Yep,” Virgil said. “Providing him and his wife are still among us. No guarantee. No telling what to expect with Bloody Bob on board.”
“What do you want to do going in there,” I said. “How do we go about it?”
“Just gonna have to be quick,” Virgil said. “And shoot straight.”
“Won’t be our first time.”
“No,” Virgil said. “It won’t.”
Virgil positioned himself on the right of the door. I was on the left. I nudged behind the doorjamb, lowered myself to one knee, cracked opened the door, and what was in front of me was on one hand predictable but on the other unfortunate.
22
I stood up and swung the door open wider for Virgil to see what I saw. The back half of the train, from the first-class Pullman car to the caboose, had been disconnected and, along with the governor and his wife, was rapidly drifting away from us.