Caleb walked around to stand between Doc and the fence. Looking straight into the dentist’s eyes like that made Doc seem younger somehow. His cheeks were sunken as always, but his blue eyes still had a spark that was as bright, or brighter, than anyone else in their early twenties.
“Didn’t you ever learn the finer points of gun safety?” Doc asked in his normal, droll manner.
“I never knew Charlie had a partner, Doc, and that doesn’t sit right with me, since I’ve made it my business to know such things.”
“Don’t feel too badly. I doubt I would have known myself if I hadn’t had a few bad nights dealing faro at the St. Charles. I’d just gotten my layout, and Charlie was kind enough to let me start in on a busy night. After the house lost one too many hands, I was approached by a rather somber gentleman who didn’t have too many kind words for me.”
“Do you know who he was?”
Doc shook his head. “Only that he showed a bit too much interest in Charlie’s affairs to be anything but a partner or his father. Since his age doesn’t fit the latter, my money would have to go to the former.”
“What did he tell you?”
“That I could either become a better dealer or I’d have to repay my losses out of my own pocket. I told him what I thought of that in none too many words, and he promptly threatened to eviscerate me with my newly purchased Will & Finck shears.”
“Card-trimming shears, Doc?” Caleb asked with a grin. “You should know better than that.”
“They came with the rest of the layout. Anyhow. I assured him my dealing would improve, and I haven’t seen him since.”
“He must have put a fright into you.”
“Hardly,” Doc replied as he drew his pistol and fired three shots in quick succession, causing three more bottles to pop. “I intended on improving without being so rudely commanded.”
“Well that doesn’t help answer my original question.”
“And what was that again?”
“Why you handed over one hell of a bargaining chip to a man in desperate need of money? My money!”
Doc smiled and extended his arm. After using the pistol to nudge Caleb to one side, Doc sighted down the barrel and then let his arm drop to his side. “Do you know the root of all evil?”
“Yeah. Money.”
“No. The love of money is the root of all evil, and there seems to be plenty of roots squirming around just beneath the surface here.”
Caleb’s frustration was becoming difficult to contain. “I’ve got a saloon to maintain, Doc. I can’t afford to have someone coming after it that’s got some real ammunition to use against me. If things get too bad, I might just find myself broke or dangling from a noose before I know what went wrong.”
“Now you’re just working yourself into a tizzy.”
“That’s easy enough for you to say. You’re not the one with his head on the block. You’re the one that handed the ammunition to them Deagles in the first place.”
Doc wasn’t shaken by Caleb’s accusations in the least. Instead, he seemed to be chewing on something in the back of his mind, which soon brought a smile to his face. “You recall those roots I was mentioning before?”
“Huh? Oh, yeah. I guess.” The more he stood there, the more Caleb realized it was useless to try and steer Doc’s mind anywhere it didn’t want to go.
Holding his Colt at arm’s length, Doc sighted down the barrel but didn’t pull the trigger. “With all these folks scrambling so desperately for their money, we might be able to treat ourselves to our own nice little payday.”
“We?”
“Yes. As in, you and I.”
“All I want is to get my saloon out of harm’s way.”
“Is it?” Doc asked.
The suddenness of that question took Caleb by surprise. “Why else would I be going through all this trouble? Why else would I come here to talk to you?”
“Maybe it’s because you know we can help one another.”
“All right. Since you’ll just tell me anyway, I’ll bite. How can we help each other?”
“By sinking a few roots of our own,” Doc replied with a crafty smile.
“I’m more worried about staying alive and in business.”
“Yeah, you’re too worried,” Doc said as he pulled his trigger.
Caleb didn’t flinch at the gunshot. Instead, he felt the hackles rising along the back of his neck. “What the hell’s that supposed to mean?”
When Doc opened the cylinder of his Colt this time, he did it with a snap of his wrist and dumped the spent shells quickly. “You spend your life worrying too much about the worst, and you miss out on everything else. Believe me, Caleb,” he added while reloading the pistol. “I know all about that.” Snapping the pistol shut, he added, “Take how you found me as an example. That took something else than just being worried.”
Caleb laughed and said, “Oh, well I asked around a bit. That’s all.”
“It would take more than just asking, I hope.”
“Well, I talked to Dr. Seegar and then had a chat with a man at the Dallas County Bank. Once I made him think I might put some money in your pockets to pay your rent, he was more than willing to lend a hand.”
“Very enterprising,” Doc said with a nod. “That’s the spirit I’m talking about. Between the two of us, we have no need of fussing about with things like pennies for profits every month and sweet-talking customers just so they can remember us the next time they feel a thirst or a pain in their mouth. There’s plenty more out there besides just that. Haven’t you ever thought about that?”
“Sure I have, but there comes a time when a man has to think about little things like settling down or running a business.”
Doc flipped the pistol around his finger with a flourish. “And why is that?”
“Because . . . that’s just the way things go!”
But Doc was still staring at Caleb, spinning the pistol as though the weapon was just something to keep his finger busy. “You know who you sound like?”
“No, but I’ll bet you’re gonna tell me.”
“You sound like me, right before I got fed up and started doing what made me happy rather than what I set myself up for when I didn’t know any better.”
“Running my saloon makes me plenty happy. I’d just like to keep it open instead of having it taken away by some dumb-shit miner.”
Doc shook his head. “That’s not it. If you were just worried about that saloon, that’s where you’d be right now. I may not be a businessman, but I know that you have to have angry drunks spitting threats at you on a daily basis. It just comes along with the territory.”
“Yeah, it does. But that’s not—”
Doc cut in after quickly raising his hand. “”It seems to me that you’re more upset at the very notion that these loudmouths have the power to step in and make such a mess out of the quaint little garden you planted for yourself.”
“Jesus, you’ve been drinking again. That explains all this chatter.”
Spinning the pistol once more, Doc dropped it into his holster and turned to stand toe-to-toe with Caleb. “Sure I have, but I’ve also been thinking about things. Some of us may look the part more than others, but we’re all dying. Either one of us could get trampled by a runaway bull, get struck by lightning, or perish from any one of a long list of things that folks can die from. Does that mean we need to sit in a cramped little office and just wait for it to happen?”
Hearing those last few words practically slapped Caleb across the face. “What did you say?”
“You heard me. I sat in a smelly office yanking rotten teeth from people’s heads. Hell, I went to school for it! How absurd is that? But I feel more alive when I’m out there doing what makes me happy than when I’m keeping my mouth shut and doing what I’m told. We may not have crossed paths too many times just yet, but I can see that same thing buzzing around inside of you. Am I wrong?”