Authors Note:
I've had this idea in my head for a while and I figured why not try to write it out. I grew up watching Bonanza with my grandparents every time I'd go over there. They always had twenty or thirty of them recorded on their TiVo. On top of that William Johnstone books are my absolute favorite so I figured I'd give it a try.
If violence isn't your thing, or you're just looking for a stroker story, this one isn't for you, but I hope you give it a try anyways :)
*************
I wasn't getting out of this one. Guess I pushed my luck too far one too many times. I guess it could be worse though, I'm not a good man, so the world won't hurt from my absence, and I'm not leaving a wife and kids behind. I had to laugh out loud when I thought about what my headstone would say, if I got a headstone at all.
"Here lies Jack Margrave, a bad man. A thief and a killer. We are better off with him in this hole," or something along those lines.
They wouldn't be wrong if that's what they chose to write. The year was eighteen eighty-three, and I was one of the last true 'outlaws' still roaming around. The world didn't have much use for us anymore, not that it ever had much to begin with. I didn't kill for the fun of it. I only killed when I had to, usually in self defense. I didn't rob just anyone, never the common man. Yes I was a bad man, but I guess I could have been worse.
I rode with the 'Ten Guns' gang, though there were either more or less than ten people at a time, but I guess the name just stuck. The gang was all I'd ever known, being sort of adopted into it when I was thirteen after my parents were killed by a renegade Indian that left the reservation in hopes of making a name for himself.
The gang was my family. It was all I had. I'd gladly die for any one of them, but as the years wore on there were less and less of us, down to just nine guns these days, with a few women and a camp cook trailing along too.
We needed money and we needed to get the hell out of Texas. We'd definitely overstayed our welcome, and it seemed like half the state was after us, so Johnny Walker (not THAT Johnny Walker, though he did claim relation, not that it was true), the leader of the gang, came up with one last job for us to pull before we pulled out of the state and headed wherever he had in mind next.
The plan was always to do the job, split up, and meet at the predetermined location, though if shit really went wrong, the plan was always to just get clear and lay low, then once the heat wore off we'd either seek each other out if it wasn't that bad, or move on and start a new life if there wasn't going to be a gang to come back to.
The women and cook knew this plan too, and they were never in any danger. They traveled with us since they had nowhere else to go, but their names stayed clean. We were just a big family. They cooked, cleaned, and looked after us while we did the dirty work and funded our life. If everything went bad, they'd just move on like nothing happened, leaving letters posted to a 'William Clark Corrigan' at whatever post office was in the town they were closest to at the time so we could link up with them when it was clear.
This job looked like it was going to be a scatter and get the hell gone one. I wasn't sad that I was about to die, I was sad that the gang, my family, and everything I ever knew was about to cease to exist because somehow everything went wrong. How the hell were we supposed to know that there were six soldiers on travel orders who just happened to be in the bank when we rolled in?
It was a good plan. Jonny always had good plans. I guess that's why we were able to operate as long as we had. Unfortunately, that plan had gone to shit once the soldiers were discovered, since I was now hiding behind a barrel of flour in an alley behind the general store, burning through my ammo faster than I could reload my revolvers.
Clay, Preacher, Pardeen, and Wilkins were all cut down instantly. I was shot trying to get to my horse so I had to duck down an alley. Tom and Jonny managed to get to their horses, and Lee was with Kyle trying to shoot their way to the other end of town.
I was alone and they were closing in on me. I wasn't upset with those who could get out. The plan had hit the 'gone to shit' stage and everyone knew we had to scatter, especially with four men lying dead in the bank. We didn't have a chance. I really hoped they could make it out, and I resolved to put up one hell of a fight as to give them as much time to get clear as I could.
**
~Three weeks earlier~
"The hell are we gonna do Johnny?" I asked as I took a pull from the bottle of whisky he'd offered me.
It was just the two of us in his tent at camp then. Other than Clay, I was the longest tenured member of the gang, so that usually meant I was a part of the planning.
"Well we sure as shit can't stay here much longer," he said thoughtfully. "Local law is onto us."
"The entire state of Texas is onto us," I laughed, passing him back the bottle. "Where are we gonna go next? And when?"
"I've got Clay in town right now scouting the bank. He's the only one who's kept his nose clean since we've been here, and there aren't any dodgers out on him in this part of the world. He should be able to get us the info we need, then we hit it hard and ride harder. I'm thinking north."
"Hey hey it's not my fault I had to kill that kid!" I said defensively, "he drew on me."
He wasn't really a kid. He was nineteen or so and recognized me, so deciding he wanted to make a name for himself he drew on me. He wanted to be the one to take down the famous Jackson Margrave.
Yea, I was a famous gunslinger, well, not too famous anyhow. I doubt they knew my name back east or up north of here. The fastest this side of the Mississippi though, of that I was sure. But as I said, Johnny was smart, so I was only really known for the gunslinging part, not many of my criminal accolades really made it public. There were a few low reward dodgers out on me, but those were from Kansas and Missouri for all but petty crimes, and I hadn't been there in almost five years so I figured I was safe from those.
"I know, I know," Johnny said with a grin. He was about forty years old. More of a father to me than a gang leader in my humble opinion, but my father wasn't much to write about either so I'm not sure that's saying much. "Way I see it, we're gonna hit the bank in about three weeks, and we don't have the supplies to last us that long, so we gotta get that sorted out before we start worrying about the big one."
"Is it really going to be the big one?" I asked skeptically, "it's a small town bank. Do we think it's gonna have enough in it to get us clean from here and support us while we lie low? The last one sure as hell didn't. That's why we're in this mess Johnny."