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"What Do You Mean, You Know What Cards You Dealt Me?!"

12/11/1880

I.

He had been watching the adjoining poker games first with amusement and then with increasing uneasiness. Trouble was brewing like a storm cloud getting darker.

Johnny Packard had been growing sanguine with a square meal tucked under his belt. He sopped up the last of the ham gravy with a crust of bread to finish it. Most of his meals were miserable affairs out on the plains. Meat was rabbits or prairie hens that he shot or trout he caught from a stream, with some dried beans boiled in water or plain hard biscuits and near-coffee.

I could get used to this genuine cooking from a kitchen, done by a woman who knows her art, he thought. Only twenty, Johnny at first seemed a harmless runt. Not more than five feet four and barely one hundred and forty pounds at best, he was a slimy wiry young man. The thatch of dark red hair hung down over a sullen bony face with green eyes that never stopped moving.

Physically, there was nothing about him that seemed daunting at first. Not even the twin .45 Peacemakers in matched holsters at his hips were anything unusual in this region. Despite the railroad coming through twenty miles south, the town of White Blaze, Montana was still raw and mostly lawless. On a bitter December night like this, with the wind screaming like a banshee, being warm and dry was a great comfort.

The real menace in that saloon lay in the hatband of the black Stetson hanging by its cord down Johnny's back. Tucked beneath that beaded band was a strange coin of red metal marked with esoteric symbols which modern Humans did not know. Few had ever learned the secret of the Brimstone Kid and lived.

Sitting at his table in the back corner of the HORN OF PLENTY saloon, Johnny pushed his plate aside, settled back and sipped his whiskey. There were a dozen men drinking at the bar, trading jokes with the cackling girls who worked the rooms upstairs or grumbling complaints about their jobs. Nothing alarming there. He had been observing the card games going on while the piano player worked a medley of Stephen Foster songs to death. One of the games seemed harmless enough, two old miner-types muttering as they studied their grimy cards while a white-bearded pal sat and kibitzed. They were playing for pennies a point and had long since lost score.

No, it was the other two tables, seperated by twenty feet, that worried him.
Each game had three locals playing, ranchhands in rough well-worn clothing or townsfolk slightly better dressed but still simple working men. At each table sat a stranger, dominating the games.

At the game going on earest to Johnny sat a tall, quite handsome man with a strong jawline and crisp curly black hair. He was wearing a long frock coat and a frilled white shirt with a string tie. The effect waa impressive but not overdone, he was not so flashy as to cause immmediate suspicion. He was clean-shaven and kept a studious expression at all times. With a slight sigh, he placed his cards face down and waited for the other players.

"I'm out," said one cowhand. "This is gettin' too big a bite for me to chaw."

"Me, too. I'd have trouble playing high card wins! What about you, Hank?"

The final man at the table took a moment to chew on a soggy cigar butt that had gone out long ago. "I do believe we should show what we hold, sir." He spread his cards out on the table next to the loose stack of bills and silver dollars. "Three of a kind. Six of diamonds, clubs and spades. Mr Wander?"

The well-dressed man slowly laid down his hand where everyone could see it. "Only a flush. Five diamonds but not in any sequence. Still, I reckon it comes out on top."

Two of the men made disgusted noises and shoved their chairs back as they rose. The final player spoke with a quiet anger, "It 'pears to me you have enjoyed remarkable luck this evening, sir."

The man known as Wander started raking in his winnnings. "Luck always plays a part, that goes without saying. Still, if I may give some observations. When you receive a card you like, you hold your cards closer to you. When you are holding a disappointing hand, you let your cards droop until they can nearly be seen. This is a common beginner's tell."

"Is that so?" growled the man, sitting up straighter.

"I'm afraid it is." Wander shoved the coins and paper money into his coat pockets and picked up his derby hat from the empty chair next to him. "It's well said that a real player should never smarten up a chump, if you pardon the expression, but my advice would be to watch that habit the next time you engage in this game."

From where he had been sitting, Johnny Packard had clearly heard the whole exchange. He watched the ranchhand remain seated, not giving any sign of protest. Johnny relaxed slightly. He had been half expecting trouble.

Then he heard the outraged bellow from the other table, "Whaddaya MEAN, you know what you dealt me?! What the hell kinda thing is that to say?"

"A mere slip of the tongue, I assure you," replied a nasal voice with an accent from way back East. "I meant to say, I know what smelt here. My unfortunate lunch of chicken salad with a dab too much relish in the mayonnaise has resurfaced from the nether regions."

"That's not what I heard!" roared the voice. "Yuh goddamn snake, raise yore arms, I'm a-gonna search you and if I find some extra cards, you will not have time to beg! This is Oxheart Wooley you are dealing with."

the rest of the story )
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"The Blade Which Drinks Life"

4/26-4/29/1880

I.

Grimy and exhausted from days in the saddle, Johnny Packard rode slowly down the wide dusty street of Dogleg, Arizona. It was early on an April morning, crisp and clear. Johnny surveyed the town as he passed through on his black horse Terror. Not imposing at all, with no more than a dozen buildings flanking each other on the main street, Dogleg looked as if it had never been an exciting place. There was only one saloon and boarding house, with THE PLUGGED NICKEL painted on a board over its porch. There was a general store called MUIR'S, a stable and leather goods store, a combination post office and sheriff's house, a backsmith's shop and a church that stood alone far down the way.

This boring aspect suited the Brimstone Kid fine. Excitement was the last thing he wanted. There was still dried blood on his clothes that he could not scrub out and the stink of gunpowder clung to him. Just over twenty-one, Johnny was a slightly built redheaded man five feet four inches tall and barely one hundred and fifty pounds. He had on well-worn boots, black Levis and a black denim vest over a red flannel shirt. Strapped low on each leg was a Colt 45 Peacemaker that had seen a lot of use.

Ominous as those guns were, the real danger to the town was tucked inside the beaded hatband of the black Stetson pushed back on that sweaty red hair. Inside that band was a coin minted from an odd reddish metal, marked with arcane symbols no living man could read. It was that Darthan token which was his curse and which made him the Brimstone Kid.

He had to take care of his horse first. That was a rule no self-respecting cowboy would break. Since he had some money on him from the two weeks he had spent fixing up Old Man Hannigan's ranch including replacing most of the fenceposts, Johnny decided to make as fresh a start as he could. He brought Terror to a halt by the open doors of the stable where a watering trough stood. As the black stallion lowered his head and drank, the Kid uncinched his saddle and tugged it off. The saddlebags and bedroll followed. Johnny placed them carefully against the wall of the stable, then went inside.

The owner of the place was Lem Kearney, a middle-aged man with a limp and a shaggy grey beard. He seemed chatty enough. When he came out and saw Terror, the man had nothing but praise for such a magnificent specimen. They discussed terms. After Johnny paid him for the next two days, Kearney fetched a stiff brush and some cloths and began rubbing Terror down. Despite his usual distrust of strangers, the big horse seemed immediately comfortable with Kearney and submitted to being curried.

Leaving his saddle and some gear inside the door, Johnny said goodbye to Terror with some gentle stroking of the black hide and then trudged across the street with his saddlebags over one shoulder. He entered the saloon and promptly downed a shot of whiskey which he followed with gulps from a bottle of German mineral water.

Exhaling sharply, Johnny started to socialize with the proprietor. This was a heavy blondish woman named Bella, hitting sixty and comfortable with it, and she immediately claimed Johnny as her forlorn pet to care for. She told him he looked like Hell and Damnation, and he had to agree.

Johnny paid for a room for the next two days and asked if a bath was available. Clapping her hands, Bella summoned a pretty young Mexican girl and barked out orders in Spanish. As the girl sped to her chore, Bella said, "Chiquita will bring the iron tub into your room now. In about ten minutes or so, I promise she'll be fillin' that bucket with hot soapy water fer you."

"Ma'am, I am much obliged," Johnny said. He was holding his hat in both hands. "Nothing sounds more rewarding to me just now."

Bella escorted him to a room right at the top of the stairs behind the bar. It was big enough, not fancy, but clean and airy with an open window. There was a four-poster bed and a dresser, a commode in a cabinet and a full-length mirror on the inside of the door. As Bella had promised, the Mexican girl had tugged in an ornate steel bathtub that stood on four legs. Even as the Kid unbuckled his gunbelt and hung it on the bed's headboard, Chiquita bustled back in with a bucket of steamy water which she gleefully dumped in the tub.

"She'll fetch two more and then you can be left alone to soak," Bella said. "At noon, we start serving meals. Plain honest food, usually steak or pork chops, boiled potatoes and greens but it's all fresh and cooked proper."

The Brimstone Kid bowed his head politely. Johnny looked even younger than he was, being clean-shaven and with sharp features. The deepset green eyes had lost some of the bitter suspicion they usually held. "It was sheer Providence that led me here, ma'am."

As the girl returned with more sudsy water, Bella laughed heartily. "Them words is music to my ears, Mr Packard. Come down when you want to fill yer belly."

Two hours later, scrubbed and refreshed after a nap, wearing his spare shirt and socks, Johnny was finishing the big china plate of beef stew with drop biscuits and having a glass of beer. He felt as if the filthy young saddle tramp who had ridden into Dogleg was someone else. As Chiquita took away his plate, she left a dish with a thick slab of apple cobbler on it and Johnny devoured it almost with one bite. Most of his meals were tough and tasteless affairs of flapjacks made with water, dried beans boiled in a tin mug, or the occasional jackrabbit he shot or fish he infrequently caught when a stream was in the area. He was grateful for this day.

Leaving a half dollar on the table, waving to Bella over behind the bar, the Kid stepped out into a noonday sun. He needed to check on Terror, then he planned to return to his room and maybe read that dime novel he had purchased in El Paso. It featured Tom Pinto, "the Scourge of the Great Plains," and Johnny wondered how much the story would be like the real Tom Pinto he had met.

As he tugged the Stetson down firmly on his head, he could feel the Darthan token in the band was cold and inert. Good. He needed some peaceful times.

A few days dozing in this town would suit him fine. Then Johnny saw a couple riding slowly up the street on matching chestnut horses. A tiny woman with gold hair and a big bruiser of a man with shoulders wider than most doorways. When they spotted him, the man and woman started riding his way. Johnny knew he didn't have to go looking for trouble, it was always eager to find him.

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