table. He took the gun from his belt and put it back in the drawer and closed the drawer. Then he shuffled the cards and began to put down a new layout.

They ran into each other having breakfast in the same cafe in Benson. Wyatt had finished some mining business and Johnny Ringo was finished with whatever business Johnny Ringo had. Now, full of coffee and bacon and fried sourdough, they were riding south together toward Tombstone.

The horses were allowed to drink their fill before they left Benson, and now in the hard, dry heat they were allowed to find their own pace. Wyatt was riding the same still-sound blue roan gelding he’d ridden north to Wichita from the buffalo fields. Ringo was on a gray horse with the flared nostrils and smallish head that hinted at Arabian ancestry.

“There’s a lot of bad feelin’ building,” Ringo said. “Curley Bill don’t like how you boys jumped him when Fred White got shot.”

“Don’t know why he would,” Wyatt said.

The road was dry, and the horses kicked up dust with every step. On either side the desert vegetation seemed fossilized in the heat.

“Ike Clanton’s been snarling and spitting like a wet bobcat since Virgil took up for Denny McCann.”

“I think Virgil was takin’ up for the law, John,” Wyatt said.

“Prob’ly,” Ringo said. “But it got Ike a split lip, and he ain’t too good at seeing the differences among things.”

“That’s pretty much Ike’s problem,” Wyatt said.

He edged the blue roan left a bit with his right knee, to keep him from nosing Ringo’s mare.

“Ike’s pretty cinched in with Behan,” Ringo said.

“Uh-huh.”

“And so is Curley Bill,” Ringo said.

“Uh-huh.”

“And Behan’s mad as hell at you.”

“I expect he is,” Wyatt said.

“Hope that girl’s worth it,” Ringo said.

“Miss Marcus,” Wyatt said.

Ringo grinned. He was mostly an easy-tempered man, Wyatt thought. And even when he wasn’t, he kept steady.

“Miss Marcus,” Ringo said.

He was slimmer than Wyatt and not as tall, and he had a kind of gracefulness about him. Like a bullfighter. Wyatt had seen bullfights in Mexico. He hadn’t liked them much, but he’d admired how quick and smooth the matadors were. Johnny Ringo reminded him of a matador. Everything was easy and graceful and much quicker than you thought it would be.

“She’s worth it,” Wyatt said.

The road went uphill, and the horses slowed. Ringo rode easily, relaxed in the saddle, his hands resting quietly on the pommel. He looked as if he could sleep on the horse if he had no one to talk with.

“I ride with Curley Bill,” Ringo said.

“I know.”

“Can’t say I got much use for Ike. Seems to be mostly gut wind and mouth.”

“That’s Ike,” Wyatt said.

“Got nothing against you Earps, either,” Ringo said. “You’re looking out for yourselves like the rest of us.”

“We are,” Wyatt said.

“And none of you is a back shooter.”

“Nope.”

“Which is more than I can say for Ike,” Ringo said.

“I know.”

“But Curley Bill and me…” Ringo thought a moment how he wanted to say it. “We look out for each other.”

“Like me and my brothers,” Wyatt said.

“Just like that,” Ringo said. “So if there’s trouble, and there will be if it’s up to Behan…” Again Ringo paused, turning over what he’d say. “If there’s trouble I got no choice,” he said. “I’m with Bill.”

“Can’t be helped,” Wyatt said.

“No,” Ringo said. “It can’t.”

The sky was cloudless. The horses walked quietly beside each other, heads half down, hooves muffled in the soft, dry dirt of the trail. In the desert heat, sweat evaporated from the riders almost the instant that it formed.

“Wish it could,” Ringo said.

Wyatt said nothing.

When Johnny Behan came to arrest Doc Holliday he came with six deputies, three with shotguns. Behan found Holliday at the bar of the Crystal Palace. It was the day after the Fourth, and Doc was nursing a hangover like most of Tombstone, including a sulky Big-Nose Katie Elder, who was also sporting a darkening bruise on her left cheekbone. She sat at a table across the room, not speaking to Doc. The deputies came in from the Fifth Street door and formed a ring around Holliday.

Behan stepped through the ring and said, “Doc, I have a warrant for your arrest.”

Doc turned his back against the bar. He rested his elbows on the bar, a glass of whiskey in one hand, and stared at Behan.

“Fuck you,” Doc said.

“There’s an affidavit says you held up the Benson stage and killed Bud Philpot.”

“Bullshit,” Doc said.

Behan was watching his hands. Doc wouldn’t stand a chance if he jerked on six men with their guns drawn, but Doc was crazy drunk and Behan knew it. They all knew it. Doc drank some whiskey.

“Warrant said you got to appear before the justice of the peace promptly.”

“Whose affidavit is it?” Doc said.

The way Holliday was standing, his coat was open and Behan could see the butt of Doc’s revolver. If he did decide to jerk on them, he might be quick enough to kill one of them before they cut him down. It would probably be Behan. Behan knew that, and so did the deputies.

“Big-Nose Kate’s,” Behan said.

Two bright spots of color appeared on Holliday’s gray face. Behan found himself wishing that one of the Earps were there. They were the only friends Holliday had, and they had a calming influence on him. Maybe he should have let Virgil arrest him. The crime hadn’t happened in Tombstone. It had happened outside the town in Behan’s county and it was Behan’s arrest, and everybody would have known it if he went to Virgil.

“That clap nest? She says I killed Bud Philpot? And you come for me with a fucking warrant because Big- Nose Whore says I did it?”

“You done it, Doc, you goddamned well know you done it.”

Kate had come from her table and stood behind the ring of deputies. She was swaying slightly, and her

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