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“Yes, sir.”

“Do you think there’s a way for you to repair the handbrake on the downhill coach?” Virgil said.

“I can have a look underneath,” Whip said, “see if I can figure out what the situation is.”

“Good,” Virgil said. “What we need to do is leave this uphill car right where it is with the women and the law-abiding others and get the downhill coach disconnected, rolling freely and headed south on this downgrade.”

Whip gave Virgil a sharp nod.

“I’ll have a look,” Whip said.

Whip gathered up the lantern and the pinch bar and stepped off the platform.

“Need a hand?” I said.

“I’ll holler at ya if I do,” Whip said, and he was off.

I stepped into the coach, took out the matches the undertaker had stuffed in my coat pocket, and got one of the lamps burning. The passengers were, for the most part, wide-eyed and uneasy. Some of them were asking questions about what was going to happen, some were just talking to be talking, and some remained silent, but they were all unsettled and afraid.

Virgil moved past me, and I followed him as he walked slowly down the aisle.

“Everybody,” Virgil said. “Let me vow to you, right here where you are is the safest place you could be. So do me the good deed of remaining pleasant and unparticular.”

The chubby man offered us a cigar as we walked by.

“No, thanks,” I said.

“Don’t mind if I do,” Virgil said.

Virgil lit the cigar and, after he got it going good, thanked the fellow, and we walked out the back door. Virgil shared the same safety information with the passengers in the rear coach, and then we stepped out the door and onto the downhill platform.

Light was shining from underneath the downhill coach, where young Whip was already fussing with something. It sounded like he was trying to break some piece of metal away from another piece of metal.

Virgil and I stood on the platform under the coach overhang, watching the rain continue to fall.

“Hell of a ruckus we got ourselves in,” I said.

“Is,” Virgil said.

“Bad bunch we are dealing with.”

“Don’t get much worse,” Virgil said.

“Somebody,” I said. “The governor or his cronies had something somebody wanted.”

“That being money. Money somebody knew about, too,” Virgil said.

“We’ve killed a number of those somebodies,” I said.

“We have,” Virgil said.

“We’ve been up against a good number through the years, but nothing like this,” I said. “Lot of hombres all in one place.”

Virgil smoked his cigar for a bit. He held up three fingers.

“The two in the car we started out in and the getaway rider,” Virgil said.

“The two in the engine compartment,” I said.

Virgil added his thumb and little finger.

“Then the four that were holding the girls when we jumped to the platform of the first coach from the tender,” I said.

Virgil included four fingers from his other hand.

“The four in the next coach, including Dean,” I said.

Virgil added his tenth finger to his nine. I brought up three fingers.

“Thirteen.”

“We’re not done,” Virgil said.

“No, I know it,” I said. “We’re not.”

“Worst are yet to come, too,” Virgil said.

“They are,” I said. “We know for sure we got Vince and most likely Bloody Bob to contend with, or someone capable of his deeds.”

“I believe it is most assuredly him,” Virgil said.

“Counting those two,” I said, “I’d say there are at least five, could be six, maybe seven, more, depending on whether Dean was counting the other two getaway riders.”

Virgil nodded slowly as he puffed on his cigar.

29

Whip crawled up from under the front of the downhill coach. He looked up at Virgil and me standing on the platform. His face and hands were smudged with grease. He was holding the lamp in one hand and the brake chain in the other.

“I think I might be able to get this fixed,” Whip said.

“Might?” Virgil said.

“More than might,” Whip said. “I got the chain from the other car. And with this one here, I think I can piece the two together with this bolt.”

“What can we do to help?” I said.

“Hold this lamp for me, I reckon.”

I stepped off the platform and got the light from Whip. I held it up for him so he could see what he was doing as he ducked back under the platform.

Virgil was looking down from the platform over the rail. He blew out some cigar smoke. The smoke drifted into the light, showing the direction of the slanting rain.

I moved the lantern closer for Whip as he scooted back under the coach. Whip pulled and tugged on the chain connecting to the brakes and then called out, “Turn that wheel, take up the slack!”

I looked up at Virgil on the platform. He turned the wheel about a half-revolution.

“That’s good,” Whip said.

I watched as Whip pieced the two chains together with the bolt. After he nutted the bolt he looked over to me.

“Have him turn the wheel some more,” Whip said.

“Turn her some more there, Virgil,” I said.

Virgil turned the handbrake wheel, and the chain went taut.

“That’s it,” Whip called out. “There ya go!”

Whip crawled out from under the coach.

“So that’s it?” Virgil said. “This wheel brake will work?”

“It will,” Whip said. “The thing is, this track is good and downhill. You just don’t want to get going too fast.”

“You know this line pretty well, Whip?” Virgil said.

“I do,” Whip said. “Before I went to work in the terminal yard I worked section gangs on this rail, spikin’, keepin’ tracks straight, trees cut back, rocks cleared off, that sort of thing.”

“There towns nearby?” Virgil said.

“Got two way station depots near,” Whip said.

Whip lifted the cap off his head and scratched his scalp under his shaggy hair.

“That way there, up the Kiamichi a piece,” Whip said, pointing north with his cap, “is a place called Standley Station, ain’t much of a town. Post office, dry goods, switchyard, a bar hotel.”

Whip raised his hat up higher, pointing north.

“Yonder, farther that way, is a bigger town called Crystal Creek,” Whip said. “Another switchyard, bigger hotel, more people, more outfits. Next town after is Tall Water Falls; it’s bigger yet. Then there’s Division City, and that’s the division line on the track. Turntable and telegraph loop is there, and it’s like five, six blocks big.”

“You said this track is good and downhill,” Virgil said, “but it’s got to flatten out someplace between here and Texas.”

“Does,” Whip said. “Where we are right now, though, is the most downhill stretch of this whole track. You could roll like, oh, twenty, twenty-five miles or so, probably stop just before Half Moon Junction.”

“Junction?” Virgil said.

“Yes, sir. This line meets with the Denison and Washita Valley Railroad in Half Moon Junction. That’d be for sure the biggest stop on this run.”

“I remember seeing the half-moon painted on the water tower,” I said.

“Yes, sir,” Whip said, “that’s it.”

“Looked like a busy town,” I said.

“It’s busy, and it’s a pretty big place. It gets bigger all the time, with all of the mining goin’ on. Don’t know I’d necessarily call it a town, though. Oh, there are a number of hotels and plenty of businesses there, but overall it’s more of like a place written about in the Bible where God got mad. Mostly whorehouses and saloons with all the mining traffic from the D and WV and all... gets worse all the time.”