The sails of the ship fluttered like so many giant birds as they were reefed ready for coming into harbor.
Jed Herne hunched his shoulders against the cold and pulled the hat down over his face. He leaned back against the wall at the end of the dock, keeping well clear of the other people who also waited for their relatives and friends newly returned from Europe.
Soon the ship was close enough for him to pick out the name written about the prow, to see the slight figure of a girl straining over the deck rail as though she could scarcely wait for the ship to dock.
Herne glanced upwards as thick flakes of snow began suddenly to tumble down from out of the gray sky. He looked at the pale, searching face of the girl.
Winter had come.
And so had Becky.
“Cold as damned charity!”
“Colder’n a grizzly’s asshole!”
The third man in the group added nothing to the conversation. Unsurprisingly, because he was a mute, his tongue having been ripped from his mouth in a bitter waterfront brawl some eight years back,
They stood a few paces behind Jedediah Herne, watching the docking of the big sailing-ship. Occasionally one of them would gob into the iron-gray waters of the Hudson River or point at one of the little oyster boats that darted in between the berthing vessel and the wharves. An unsavory trio and obviously up to no good.
Herne had noticed them, as he noticed everything that went on around him. In a couple of months he would be celebrating his fortieth birthday. Most of his life he had spent with a gun on his hip, and the knowledge that he had the ability to use it fast and deadly. You didn’t even live to be twenty if you didn’t learn early to watch everything going on.
Few gunmen lived to be thirty.
Jed didn’t know anyone else who’d got as close to forty as he had.
Then again, Jed Herne — Herne the Hunter — was someone very special.
The girl on the deck waved down to him, and he waved back, the movement lifting the tails of his coat, revealing the heavy leather belt.
“Money-belt,” hissed one of the trio of wharf rats, pointing to it. His two comrades nodded their agreement, and looked more carefully at the man in front of them.
Graying hair, under the hat. Westerner, they guessed, grinning inwardly as they thought how easy it was going to be to take the rube for what he’d got. Tall and broad. Couple of inches over six feet, and something around the two hundred pound mark.
That was what they saw.
They didn’t see the Colt with the polished grips, settling snug in the greased holster, tied to the top of the right thigh. Nor did they see the honed bayonet, a memento of the Civil War.
“Take him after she’s docked. On the way out. Looks like all he’s waitin’ for’s that little girl with the white face up yonder.”
It was going to be so easy.
There were three of them to one of him.
All of them had knives, and wicked little leather pouches filled with lead shot that could sink into a man’s skull as gentle as winking.
They relaxed, drawing up the collars of their jackets against the pattering bolts of hail which were hissing off the Hudson, and waited.
Having noted their presence, Jed chose to ignore them and concentrated once more on the girl. On Becky.
It was nearly two years since the night that had changed his life and left him with sole responsibility for the young girl. She’d been fourteen then. A solitary child with a stubborn jaw and deep-set, serious eyes. Living with her parents, Rachel and Bill Yates, on the spread right next to the one outside Tucson where Jed lived with his young wife, Louise.
Friday, March 20th, 1879.
That had been the date. After that night Jed had lost his wife, and Rebecca Yates had lost her mother. With the passing of Louise, Jed also lost the only person who had been able to check his killing progress. A progress that he had known would finally end with a bullet in the back and a dusty plot on Boot Hill. Marrying Louise had changed all that. The Colt had been wrapped in an oiled cloth and stashed away in a drawer. The fifty-five Sharps rifle had been hung on the wall.
Then it was over.
Disappeared in a welter of blood and screaming violence. The killings had only begun with Louise and Rachel Yates. Soon after that, Becky’s father had ridden that one-way path.
After the men who had wrecked his life were all cleansed from the earth, Jed started looking around him.
Seeing the young girl who depended on him for her education. For everything. He had sent her to Europe to be educated away from the slaughter that followed him across America. Financing her fancy schooling by killing men. Too many men.
Now she was coming home again, presenting him with a whole set of problems. Where to live? How to live?
And there was another problem. One that Jed Herne only ever set his mind to in the waking hours of the early morning, when the body sweats and thoughts rove freely. Becky was now sixteen. Just the age that Louise had been when she had married the infamous Herne the Hunter. And Becky was just as pretty ...
Life was going to be hard.
Damned hard.
It took a little over an hour to get the girl through the formalities. There was the usual delay over documentation, and the light was beginning to fade across the murky expanse of the Hudson when Jed Herne finally saw the slight figure coming off the ship, resting her hand on the rail of the gangplank. Halfway down she stopped, and he thought that she was going to fall, but she paused and recovered. He guessed that she must be suffering from the rigors of the long sea crossing.
Becky had never been the strongest of girls, liable to catch a cold on the least excuse. He well remembered the winter evenings on their homestead near Tucson when Becky would come and sit with Louise, their heads close together while they giggled over some joke. He would be resting, with maybe a book open on his lap. Another habit that he had caught from his young wife. There had been the bursts of coughing that had sometimes been severe enough to make Becky weep, her eyes starting from her head with the strain, while Louise had taken her hand to try and comfort her.
But the weather in Europe must have been kinder than the winters in Arizona.
“Jed!”
“Becky!”
There was fog rolling in off the East River shore, slowly, slowly covering the city. Masking the filth that lay all about their feet on the dock, softening the harsh lines of the wet warehouse roofs. Dulling the stench of the Hudson that rolled by a few yards from where they met.
Her face was hidden in a poke bonnet of dark blue, and Jed wasn’t able to see her. But she had grown taller, and there was more than the suggestion of a womanish figure blooming where there had once been only the gawky bones of a coltish girl.
“Oh, Jed, I’m so ...” and she started to cough, so that he reached out for her, wanting to swing her up in his arms and hold her to him, but knowing that she was too tall and grown for that.
He clasped her, and was hard put to suppress a gasp of shock and dismay at her lightness. It was like holding a frail little bird to him, and he could feel her heart pounding through the thick layers of cloak that enveloped her.
“Becky!”
“I’ll... Oh, my goodness ... It’s this goshdarned fog that bites so ...”
He held her to him, not wanting to squeeze her too hard in case he crushed her brittle ribs that he could feel against his chest. Waiting for the paroxysm to pass so that he could lead her from the deserted wharf and into a cab and to the warmth of the hotel.
Few folks made the trip across the Atlantic at that time of year unless they had to, and already the officials had made their way off. Leaving the dock to Jed and Becky. And behind them, dim shadows against the gray darkness, skulked the three wharf rats.
Waiting.
“Becky. I’m real pleased to see you again. We got loads to talk about.”
Now that she was here, Jed felt strangely cold towards her. A distant formality seemed to have his body in its grip, so that he found himself making polite conversation, as if they had just been introduced at a Boston social.
Still she coughed, her chest heaving, clinging to him. In the evening cold he held her hand, unable to understand how her fingers could be so thin, like reeds, the nails rimmed with blue. She turned her face up to look at him, and he was unable to stop his jaw gaping at the sight.
The round face of the young girl was gone forever. She had been pretty before. Now she was beautiful. But it was a strange, burning beauty. Her cheeks were pale, almost white, with two spots of hectic red heightening her cheekbones. The eyes glowed with a desperate intensity, like pits of fire glimpsed at a great distance.
“I’m ill, Jed.”
“You’ll get well again, Becky. It must have been the journey over. By God, but I recall being sick as a dyin’ dog on a raft on the Colorado, never mind crossin’ all that way across the sea.”
She shook her head, ringlets of dark hair blowing from under the fringe of her bonnet.
“No. I’ve had this cough ever since last spring. Most times it’s gone in the summer, but it kind of lingered on. Now it’s worse, and sometimes when I start to cough, it’s like I can’t stop.”
She was near tears, and Jedediah decided that she must be tired. The sooner they got out of the cold and damp of the wharf the better.
Slowly, with his arm close about her, Becky began to walk along the shadow of the line of towering buildings, aware of the slapping of the river at her side, the rough boards creaking beneath her feet.
“I’m so glad to be home again, Jed. It wasn’t that awful, but I did miss you terribly. And this cough and cold seemed as if they would go on forever.” She squeezed his arm in her hand. “I feel so much better already, Jed. Much, much better.”
Despite the biting wind, Becky had pulled the front of her cloak open, and Jed saw the dying red light of the New York evening flashing on the pendant that Louise had given the girl. Only a small trinket, but it had been the property of his wife’s grandparents. It was filigree silver, with a heart of tiny rubies set at its centre.
He was glad to see that she still wore it. Apart from a host of memories, that pendant was about the only thing he had with which to recall Louise. It wasn’t a lot to bring back the three best years of his life.
“Come on. Not far to go. Sweet Jesus, Becky, but that wind is keener than a Comanche skinning knife.”
Together after the year apart, Jed Herne and Becky Yates walked in the solitary darkness towards the gates of the wharf. Their linked shadows followed them.
A few paces behind them, closing quickly, came three more shadows.
Very close.