mlle meme (
mllememe) wrote in
bakerstreet2021-06-24 03:03 pm
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He saw that hope in him, hope of watching his son grow up while he and Abigail grew old and died of natural causes, not shot to hell and buried someplace they couldn't visit. Barring anyone getting sick or suffering a stupid injury, they'd all see the year out and into a new century, something that boggled his mind.
But therein lay the problem. Eventually everyone would...
He sighed and knocked his head lightly against the wall. He needed to think more short term and stop thinking about the possibility that he'd become something like MacDougall when everyone here was dead and gone.
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Not that he knew anything about overthink. Nothing at all. It wasn't like he spent much of his waking time in his own head.
Though eventually something came to him. He'd been meaning to ask since before the man left, but he didn't feel it was prudent, or any of his business, but now he was curious.
"So what's it between you and Charles?"
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He took another drag on his cigarette, looking at John, maybe a little too sharply at that. He played it off, "What you mean between me and Charles?" he asked "Mean the whole tent sharin' thing?" he shrugged again. "Ain't nothin, just like the quiet of him when my head is buzzin' uncomfortably."
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"Okay, Arthur." Those two words were heavy with implication, but he wasn't going to pry. Again, it was none of his business.
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The night wind shifted and he could smell the peach orchards. He snuffed out his cigarette in a tin can he kept his butts in, and breathed deep the evening scents. Along with the peaches he could also smell a rabbit a few yards away and the fainter scent of deer, probably grazing in the tree line.
For all the worries this new ability had brought, the perks had opened up his world like never before.
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As he walked across the house to join Abigail in bed, he hoped Arthur would take his advice. This restless shit was doing Arthur no favors.
we can jump if you want to
He watched the night for awhile before lighting his lantern and taking his advice with some writing and sketching.
Arthur must have dozed off at some point again because he was startled awake by the crow of the rooster. He got up, dressed, and went into the kitchen to see if there was any coffee left.
Sounds fantastic!
Fall was setting in quickly, the aspens and crabapple trees that lined the property took up their vibrant yellows and oranges to replace the lush green. The last of the peaches had been picked and canned, or baked into desserts which were sold in the general store in town, and the new pack of horses were finally settled enough that they didn't rear our kick when they were approached.
As far as Dutch could see, from the easy rhythm that the ranch have to life, things were going well. The women found work, the men took to tending the property, and he oversaw it all, while lending a hand when it was necessary. He was the one who kept track of the money as always, setting aside much of it in an account under his name. He found it ironic that not too long ago, banks were for robbing, not for saving, but he figured it was safer than stashing it all under his floorboards.
Dutch and Hosea were back to being close as ever, bosom pals which were more relaxed than John had seen them since the gang started growing. Dutch's restlessness didn't disappear entirely, but he was going to see this through at least for a year, he decided.
Then one day, he told everyone they'd be having supper all together, volunteering the Marston dining room as the place to hold the meeting. He also had John and Arthur haul in a long, large, curved piece of lumber that was clearly to go over as an arch to the entrance of the ranch.
When everyone was in, he started.
"First, I would like to propose a toast to the successful first two months of this new home for us all. We've all seen hell and hardship. All of us put our entire lives into this grand dream. A dream we made real with hard work, effort, and fearlessness. I'm so proud of you all. Each one of my sons, my girls, even little Jackie. You've done more than was asked, and put in more than your share, all of you, and we have founded a fine home.
"Now is the time we must choose a name for our little slice of heaven. Now, were it up to me, I'd be namin' it Pennsylvania's Pride, but luckily for all of us, it ain't up to me. I want you all to share your ideas, and I know you all got 'em, to name this colossal chunk of land."
Then he raised a glass. "To home!" Which got a chorus of the same from the group.
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They had all the livestock they'd initially wanted, and duties were divided well amongst them to take care of them all. Bill was gone but Lenny and Pearson remained as promised.
A couple weeks after his leaving, a letter arrived from Charles. He spoke of the Wapiti, their situation with the government quickly going downhill despite all efforts to keep the peace. They were being starved and supplies diverted or halted for whatever damned reason, leaving many sick and hungry. He even mentioned he'd met Evelyn Miller-Dutch's poetic hero-who was helping aid the chief and his son. Times like this he noted he wished some of the gang were there to help but knew even with them there, was only so much they could do. Unfortunately his own time with them would remain, possibly until the spring when the tribe could move further north, into Canada. If they could move sooner, then perhaps he'd see the gang again before the first snow, but it was difficult to say.
He'd not seen Mrs. Adler yet though at the time of his letter he had heard a woman fitting her description was in Valentine and intended on visiting to see if he could get in touch with her. He still spotted Pinkertons here and there but it seemed their numbers had dwindled, at least where he was situated. Charles noted he'd write again as soon as he could.
Arthur, like John, kept himself busy, though for different reasons. Less for the sake of it and more to keep his mind off certain things. Since moving into the house with the Marstons, his sleep issues had subsided quite a lot, perhaps in part to having a roof over his head or John's occasional peek in on him. But in any case, he was doing better in that regard, though he did miss Charles, for reasons he'd never say aloud. With construction all completed, he spent a good deal of time with Kieran, training the new horses, learning their personalities and setting up a ledger of sorts to figure out which-both their original stock and the new mustangs-would pair well together come spring. Arthur and John made a trek back to Pocatello and managed to get two handsome stallion drafts, expensive but they were well behaved and had good breeding in them which meant their drafts would in turn do well.
The gang was about half the size it once was, but they still filled the Marston's dining room to bursting. As they drank and ate, chatter erupted about what they should call the place. Arthur gave John a knowing look as they'd often laughed about it all but now they were serious. One name that stuck with them during those discussions didn't sound so bad at all, and so, he decided to voice it.
"John and I thought about the name Locksley Ranch, after Robin of Locksley." Arthur said to Dutch, hoping he didn't need to clarify why. Their original intent, to help the needy and screw the law much like Robin Hood did, was the foundation of the gang and seemed fitting to be called something akin to it.
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"Locksley Ranch," he repeated, then nodded, slowly at first as he thought it over, then with a definitive nod, he agreed. "That is precisely the kind of name we been needin', to get back to what we're all about. Good job, gentlemen."
It was official from that point on. The sign that had been brought in was carved with the names of the proprietors of the land on the back, each member of their family allowed to chip their names in, then the name of the ranch itself was penciled in by Hosea, whose hand was steady and writing impeccable. The rest of it, the carving and painting, was handled by Lenny and Karen the next day.
That was the morning that John went to town and was loading up hay and grain into the wagon when he heard something that made a prickling chill of nerves run up his spine. He overheard that a new gang had come rolling into the area. The O... Oh somethings, a rowdy, horrible bunch of roadside bandits and train robbers, that had been living southeast of there for a while.
"Fuck me," he whispered to himself, and rode back to the ranch. When he returned, he tasked Kieran to unload the wagon and went to find Arthur first, planning to take this to Dutch next.
He got the older man's attention with a sharp, "Arthur." He walked up to him and nodded towards Dutch and Hosea's cabin. "Bad news."
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He chased her about, playing with her as her mother looked on, grazing not far away, Tilly looking on too and laughing as Arthur slid on a patch of mud but kept his balance before keeping after the filly.
He came to a stop at John's sharp tone. At the look, he knew it was serious so he let Tilly handle putting their youngest member away while he went up to the younger man. "What's goin' on?" he asked
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He was pretty sure there'd be hellfire anyway, but he didn't express that, save for a grim scowl on his face. He stopped halfway between the stables and Dutch's cabin, and looked over his shoulder at the road. "Should we check it out before we tell 'im? Would save us a hell of a lot of trouble if we know for a fact Colm ain't around and it's just his lackeys."
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He looked to the cabin then shook his head, "We go find out first if its O'Driscolls for sure, no use." he said and they headed to the stables to get mounted up, telling Kieran that if anyone asked, they were looking into a possible gang moving in nearby, and nothing more.
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He really didn't like where this was headed. Did these sonsofbitches come west to find them? And if they did, what did that say about Mrs. Adler? Was she not far behind? He knew that if she was alive, there was no way that she'd let these slimy bastards get away. Was Colm aware that they were up here? If Colm knew, how far would the Pinkertons be behind them?
Paranoia crept into his bones, and John's shoulders tightened like they hadn't been in months.
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Felt like it'd been awhile since they had to drag in the old way of doing things, but like riding horse after a long break, once you got on you knew how to do it again.
He let John lead the way, keeping his weapons holstered in the event they met anyone from town on the road who knew them. Couldn't look like bandits themselves.
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Home wasn't going to be ruined by the likes of Colm and his funny little band of trash. He wouldn't have it.
Though Arthur's words did, in their way, comfort him. "Easy as ever," he sarcastically remarked, picking up the pace of Peggy's trot to a gallop once they cleared the town. "They said they was down this way, doin' what they do." And, even putting aside the bitter blood between their gang and the O'Driscolls, John found their band far sloppier, far more reckless than anyone in their gang, past or present. Even Bill had more decorum and presence of mind than these madmen.
It didn't take very long until John slowed Peggy down to a standstill, seeing a stopped coach before them in the distance on the road and heard a gunshot. He reached over and pulled out his binoculars, getting a better view.
Flashes of green in the clothes gave them away. "That's them all right. Whaddya think? Let 'em break off from the coach n'catch 'em on their ways back to camp?"
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They'd worked so hard, every one of them, and he'd sacrificed everything. He'd not have it all go to shit because of these bastards.
He spotted the coach and took out his own binoculars to have a look. Unfortunately their fears had been realized. It was O'Driscolls for sure.
"Yea let's get'em when they head back to wherever they've holed up." he agreed, putting his lens away. "Remember to leave one alive though, have to confirm whether Colm is up here too and what the hell they're up to."
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Once the O'Driscolls broke off from the coach, they all went the same direction, like idiots might. They really weren't thinking they'd get caught if they stuck together like that? Whatever, it wasn't time to analyze the amateur moves of the other gang, it was time to take them out. "The one on the palomino lives," He said to Arthur, flipping the snap of his holster open as he spurred Peggy into motion again. The horse was fast, far faster than Old Boy could be. Of course, she was absolutely no Edelweiss or Count, but she could haul.
Pulling his revolver out, he quickly made calculations for angle, speed, wind, and distance, faster than he ever did when he was hunting. There was a strange distinction, a cognitive dissonance between hunting and killing in his mind. It was natural for John to slip back into a killer's mindset, to be able to line up several shots before taking them. As he focused on his heartbeat, he fired, two of the five men got shot in their backs as he and Arthur rode up on them.
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How far they'd all come.
He took out his rifle, waited for John to call it, and took the shot. A third man, still reeling from the gunshots into his buddies, was struck off his horse and was dead before he hit the ground. A second shot rang out and Arthur hit the remaining target in the shoulder, then again in the side. His horse dragged him by the stirrups for several yards before getting caught in the brush.
Arthur went after him, made sure he was dead before they took off after the O'Driscoll they wanted taken alive. He holstered his rifle and took out his lasso, a moment of Deja vu coming over him as he recalled doing this with Kieran oh so long ago, only this guy was older and no horse caretaker.
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There was a desire to loot the bastards' bodies, a kneejerk thought that always came with gunning someone down. It was what he was taught to do, what he was told he had to do, to survive. Survival mode had kicked in about the time he heard the people in town talking about the rival gang, and wasn't about to stop until they saw this through.
Once they flanked the O'Driscoll, John's malicious tone rang out. "C'MERE, WE JUST WANNA HAVE A LITTLE TALK." It was obvious from his shout that there was no desire to just talk.
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When they got within range, Arthur let his rope fly and he snagged the man around the waist and yanked. The man let out a yelp as he was pulled off his horse and they all came to a stop. Arthur hopped down and hogtied the bastard in practiced motions.
"We get'em all?" he asked John, looking around, spotting the palomino slowing down some yards ahead, the other horses scattered about "We need to round those up" he said. Horses loaded with gear would draw suspicion. Before, they'd be content with letting them go without issue but they couldn't alert the town at all that there was another gang in the area right under their nose.
He then hauled the O'Driscoll up and propped him against the foot of a tree. "Alright, talk. What the hell are O'Driscolls doing way up here? Is Colm still alive?"
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The O'Driscoll, a man about Arthur's age, glared daggers up at Arthur, then a look of recognition came over his face. "They said you was dead! That you was hung!" But more to the point - and he got to it - he growled, "We was scoutin' up this way on account of we heard there was good pickin's, easy marks! Colm ain't up here, I swear!"
"Swear all you like," John said, on his way past to round up one horse which had escaped in this direction, then shouted behind him as he galloped past, "We know you're lyin'!"
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He listened intently, glancing at John when he rode by but focus was on the man, trying to figure out if he was lying. Might be...
"Where's Colm then? What's he up to?" he asked
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He wasn't very good at this whole telling the truth thing.
John managed to have two horses rounded up, lashed them to a tree, then went after the other two which had bolted the opposite direction. It'd take a little bit, but he was more than happy to do something other than sit on his hands. These horses were fine specimens, too. There was one that John had only seen the kind just once before, a cracker horse, used by cowboys in the southeast. The stallion was a deep chestnut brown with a blond mane and tail, pretty as a picture. The other three were standardbreds.
"Damn, ain't you a pretty one," he said as he rounded the big boy up, and trotted him over with the rest. "We're glad to have ya, friend."
The fourth, however, was nowhere to be found. That was a shame. Well, one loose horse was better than four. Now it came time to move the bodies off the road. John decided hell, waste nothing had always been the method, and went through the dead men's pockets, taking out the money, taking off the rings. All of it would be coming home with them, along with the contents of the horse's saddlebags.
It was a mess, but it kept him busy.
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"The more you lie, the more pain you'll be in." he warned, then drew his pistol and held it to the man's balls. "Or I can just start shootin' them jewels and let you bleed out for the wolves to find."
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Chaos!
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I didn't get a gd email! hi!
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