Virgil moved up on the west, and I was on the east. We stayed to the woods as we worked our way up the easement.
After about a hundred or so furlongs I could hear the Kiamichi to my right. It was a swift section of the river, and the moving water got louder as I kept walking. After a couple of hundred feet farther, a piece of the rapid river became visible and the water was crashing loud. I walked a bit farther and felt I was about to the place where Bob dropped off the coach platform.
I did not see any sign of Bob on or near the track. I kept walking, and the land I was walking on leveled out with the tracks. Still there was no sign of Bob. I figured by now I would see faint movement, ever so slight movement, and find Bob sprawled out on the track, dying.
I was sure I’d see that kind of movement I’d seen many times in the dark; movement with a little life left but waning, dying, like a wounded deer or Indian, or street gunman. On one hand, here in this life, but on the other, his life was slipping away, almost gone.
But Bob was nowhere to be seen. It started to rain hard again. The sound of the rushing river mixing with the rain made it hard for me to hear my footsteps. I stopped and turned around and turned around again, thinking I might see Bob, but saw nothing other than dark rain. I walked up and stepped over the east side rail and kept walking north. The railroad ties were slippery with the fresh rain on the oily timbers. I continued walking up the track. I looked over to see if I would see Virgil but saw nothing.
I kept walking, thinking I had to be past the spot where I would find Bob, when I stepped on something.
I stepped back quickly, not sure what I had stepped on. I looked down and could not see clearly, but I could tell it was Bob’s beaded buckskin satchel, the parfleche pouch Emma had mentioned, but there was no sign of Bob.
I picked up the pouch, and when I did I saw movement out of the corner of my right eye, toward the river. I stepped over the rail and moved toward the woods, toward the direction of the movement. I looked back to the west side, looking for Virgil, but I did not see him. I walked toward the tree line next to the river, and the sound of the white water got louder as I got closer. The trees were thick. I thought I saw movement again but was not sure. Knowing Bob still had his knife, it most assuredly would not be a smart move on my part to walk into the trees. I backed up toward the track, and within a moment I heard.
“Everett.”
I turned. It was Virgil coming down the track from the north. I walked toward him in the steady rain. He had his coat collar up and his hat snugged down low. Water was pouring off the brim.
“You see anything?” he said.
“I think he’s in those woods there by the creek, but I don’t know for sure. I found this.”
I handed Virgil the parfleche pouch.
“Not much inside. I felt some cartridges, a whetstone, I think some jerky.”
“As much as that goulash we ate in the Hungarian café at Dallas depot has worn off, I wouldn’t eat that jerky,” Virgil said. “Could be backstrap off his kinfolk.”
I was not able to make out the expression on Virgil’s face, but it was clear by his body language that he was not satisfied with the situation.
“We’re not going in those woods,” Virgil said.
Virgil stood and looked east toward the woods. He called out into the dark, rainy night.
“Bob Brandice! If you do not die in those woods, rest assured I will kill you!”
39
When we got back to the coach it was still raining hard, maybe even harder since we had left the place where we’d been looking for Bob. I was starting to feel the wet cold in my bones, and I know Virgil was feeling it, too. We had been waterlogged for hours, and I was hungry. I know Virgil was as hungry, too, but he would not say so. If food were an option or if dry and comfortable were an option, he’d cover the option, but there was no need to ponder the possibility of food or staying very dry. Thankfully, though, after we’d traveled for twenty minutes or so the rain started letting up, and we could see a piece of the moon.
“Looks like we might be leaving this rain behind.”
“Does,” Virgil said.
“Won’t bother me none.”
“That’s good,” Virgil said.
We coasted for a bit longer and came to a tight canopy of trees that sheltered us from the sprinkling rain. When we cleared the tunnel of trees we were rolling pretty fast and were clearly on a wide sweep to the west.
“This has got to be the turn Whip was talking about,” I said.
“Hold us up, Everett.”
“What?”
“Slow her up.”
I did as Virgil asked and turned the brake wheel, which made a low grinding noise as we slowed.
Virgil looked at me, cocked his head a bit.
“Smell that?”
I had not caught a whiff, but in the next second, I did.
“Smoke,” I said.
“Let’s stop.”
I stopped the coach, and Virgil stepped off the platform. He walked down the dark track a ways, then stopped and stood still.
“Been plenty of lightning,” I said. “Might be the woods struck up.”
“Might be.”
“Could be a homestead,” I said. “Or Indians.”
The rails in front of us turned and disappeared behind a wall of thick woods.
“Let me walk a bit,” Virgil said. “Just follow me.”
Virgil started walking down the track. I turned the brake wheel, freeing the coach, and very slowly began to roll. After maybe a hundred yards we entered into a tall rocky hillside that had been dynamited for the rails. Virgil was hard to see clearly in the darkness. He was walking about seventy-five feet in front of the coach, and when he got to the edge of the rocky hillside, he held up his arms, motioning for me to stop. I turned the wheel, and the coach started slowing. Virgil remained standing on the track, looking downhill as the coach came to a stop square in the middle of the dynamited hillside. I foot-latched the brake, stepped off the platform, and started down the track toward Virgil. As I got closer, I saw what he saw.
A quarter of a mile down the track was the fire. It was hard to tell exactly what was burning, but whatever it was, rain or no rain, it was burning and the flames were high. In the distance behind the fire and off toward the west a ways, there was a faint glow.
“Half Moon Junction,” I said.
Virgil turned and looked back at me as I walked up.
“Maybe you can tell me for certain,” Virgil said, “but this dead hand here is Woodfin, ain’t it? One of Bragg’s top gun hands. We had a run-in or two with him, did we not?”
I was fixed on the fire and the sight of the town, and I had not noticed the man lying directly in front of Virgil, between the rails.
I looked at the big bearded man with the white shirt covered in blood, and he was for certain who Virgil thought he was.
“That’s him. That’s Woodfin. Vince and him were Bragg’s two backup bulls,” I said. “Lying between the rails like this, he’s obviously not one we shot.”
“No, he ain’t,” Virgil said.
I leaned down a little closer, and when I did I could see under Woodfin’s beard his throat was sliced open across his jawline, from ear to ear.
“Throat cut,” I said.
“Handiwork of Bloody Bob, no doubt,” Virgil said.
“Good of him to do some stall mucking.”
“Is,” Virgil said. “Reckon him and Woodfin had a misunderstanding.”
“Wonder what the outcome of an argument would have been?”
I looked back to Virgil. His attention was now on the distant flames ahead of us.