Part 11 (1/2)

Moving more quickly than anyone expected, Madison struck down the bartender's shotgun and leaped over the bar. Before the man could collect himself, Madison rendered him helpless with a powerful blow to the throat. About the time several men in the saloon produced guns they shouldn't have had, they found themselves facing an irate Madison Randolph with a loaded shotgun pointed into their midst.

The hands relaxed.

”Now let's get a few things straight,” Madison said, panting slightly from his exertion. ”I didn't start this fight. I don't even know these men. I didn't kill anybody. I don't even own a gun.”

”For an unarmed man, you sure can cause a mortal lot of trouble.” The unexpected voice came from the doorway of the saloon. It was Marshal ”Wild Bill” Hickok. Hickok walked forward until he came to the two men on the floor. Reed was stirring. Pike wasn't. ”You expect me to believe you outfought Reed and wrestled Pike to the ground, overpowered Ben, and held a lynch mob at bay, all without a weapon?''

”He did, Marshal. I saw it,” Amos insisted. ”It was just like he said. Reed started the trouble.”

”Can any of you say different?” the marshal asked.

”We didn't pay no attention until they started fighting,” one man said, ”but we sure saw him jump Pike and shoot him dead.”

”Pike shot himself with his own gun,” Madison said. ”I only took this shotgun to keep from dancing at the end of a rope.”

”I guess you'll have to come with me until I sort this out,” Hickok said.

”Certainly,” Madison said. He laid down the shotgun, making sure to place it beyond the bartender's reach. Rather than force his way though the crowd at either end of the bar, he vaulted it once again, landing practically at Hickok's side.

”A nimble sort, aren't you?”

Madison picked up his coat, dusted it off, and put it on. ”I'll be old and stiff soon enough,” he said.

”True. Well, come along. I got a card game to finish. I can't be standing here jawing all night.”

”You just going to let him go?” someone asked.

”Seems to me like these Randolphs can do anything they want,” said another.

Hickok turned back to the mob. ”I'm putting him in jail. But he ain't going to stay there long unless you can show me cause.” He turned his back on the angry men and walked out into the street. ”All I need now is for Monty to come galloping into town,” he complained to Madison as they crossed the street, ”shouting at the top of his lungs like the crazy fool he is.”

”He won't come on my account.”

”It won't matter why he comes. He'll be trouble when he gets here.”

But it did matter to Madison. It mattered a lot.

Madison sat up in his cell when he heard the jail door open and someone come in. He looked at his watch. Twenty-eight minutes had pa.s.sed. He didn't know how rapidly news traveled in Kansas, but he figured that was pretty quick considering it was the middle of the night. They would have had to wake George, get him out of bed, and give him time to dress.

And he knew it would be George who had come. At least he cared. Hen had turned his back when Hickok brought Madison in. He hadn't looked at him or spoken to him since.

He wondered if Fern would come.

Merciful G.o.d! He wanted to see Fern, that fire-breathing, pants-wearing, Randolph-hating rebel against everything soft and alluring in the female s.e.x. He had to be out of his mind. Wanting to see Fern was like sticking his head into a lion's mouth. People might admire his courage, but they wouldn't think much of his intelligence.

There must be something attractive about her, something you like. You can't get her out of your mind.

There was, and it wasn't merely her body, though he couldn't get that out of his mind either. Both of them were fighting battles neither could win, battles they didn't even want to win. Yet they had to fight, or they would lose everything. He hadn't known how important that bond washe'd barely just recognized ituntil she'd destroyed it by getting Reed and Pike to attack him. There could be no other reason for him to be set upon by strangers. She wanted him out of town and they worked for her fatherthe connection seemed obvious to him. He wondered if she'd paid them. The thought was enough to set his blood boiling.

How could he have been so mistaken in her character?

There was nothing to do now but put her out of his mind. It wouldn't be too difficult to overcome the physical attraction, he'd done that before, but the feeling of having found a kindred spirit wasn't going to be so easy to banish.

Even if she hadn't pulled such a despicable trick, he wouldn't have wanted her to see him now, not looking as he did. He needed a bath and a change of clothes. He looked like somebody from Kansas. Oddly enough, his being in jail didn't bother him in the least, though it was bound to upset George.

”You got here faster than I expected,” Madison said when George came to a halt outside the cell. The tone of his voice was slightly caustic.

”You got yourself thrown in jail just to see how fast I could get out of bed?”

”No, but I knew you would come.”

”You've upset Rose.”

”I'm sorry about Rose.”

”But you're not sorry about me?”

”Should I be?”

”Why did you come back, Madison?”

Madison gripped the bars in his hands. ”Don't you mean to ask Why did you leave?” he growled. ”That's the question you want answered.”

”I know why you left.”

”No, you don't,” Madison answered, savagely angry. ”I thought you would. I thought you of all people would understand, but you don't have the vaguest idea.”

”Then tell me.”

”Why?” Madison said, stepping back from the bars. ”I left. That's all that matters.”

”I'd like to think that your coming back is all that matters.”

Good old George. Just when you thought you could get really mad at him, he cut the ground out from under you. He was too d.a.m.ned stiff and full of p.r.i.c.kles to like, but he loved you so much you ended up forgiving him no matter what he said.

”I was dying just as surely as Ma was dying, but n.o.body could see it. n.o.body understood. n.o.body cared.”

”The twins needed you.”

The twins needed him! That was a laugh. The twins never needed anybody, especially him. But how could George understand that? All he could see was two fourteen-year-olds left to run a ranch on their own. He would never understand that they were better suited to the job at twelve than he had been at twenty. Or was now at twenty-six.

”You ask Hen if he wanted me there,” Madison said. ”I know I'm not easy to like, but I tried to do my part. I got to know every miserable inch of that ranch. If you dropped me anywhere within ten miles of the house, I could be home inside an hour. But no matter what I did, it wasn't good enough for them. Monty even told me to stay home with the babies and leave the real work to them.”

”Monty doesn't mean half of what he says.”

”He sounded just like Pa,” Madison continued, recollection strong in him now. ”Why can't you be like George or Frank or Joe's boys? Pa used to say. Why do you have to embarra.s.s me by spending all your time with your nose in a book or trying to show everybody how smart you are? Do you know Pa told me he had the money to pay for my schooling? He thought I was getting too big for my britches, so he decided to let the school send me home. He figured the disgrace of being kicked out would bring me down a peg.”

It had been the most searing experience of his life. He could still feel the humiliation, the rage that clouded his brain for weeks after he returned home. His mother never blamed or chided him. Worse, she pleaded with him to try to understand his father, to strive to be the kind of son he wanted.

George was the only reason he hadn't run away right then. But now he realized that for George no selfish consideration came before duty.