While Johnny and April were taking in the wonders of the Old World and the authorities of Europe, Cornelius Ragland was taking the waters in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and writing The Tragedy of Joan of Arc, for which he hoped to be remembered. He spent an hour each morning parboiling himself in mineral water with steam pouring off it, then returned to his hotel room for a light breakfast in bed and spent the day filling sheets of foolscap, using his tray for a desk and stopping frequently to consult the thick research books stacked on the nightstand, all of them bloated with narrow rectangles of paper marking particular passages for review. In the afternoon he took tea only, saving his delicate appetite for supper in the hotel’s excellent restaurant. He had a preference for poached salmon or boiled beef with steamed vegetables and bread pudding for dessert. Then to sleep. It was a most virtuous existence among surroundings sinfully decadent.
Cornelius was the son of a postmaster in Baltimore and had passed a civil service examination to clerk in the same post office before his health forced him to seek a position in the gentler climate of Missouri. He was asthmatic and suffered from chronic exhaustion, which a Baltimore physician had misdiagnosed as consumption, which had exempted him from the draft. A more cosmopolitan practitioner in St. Louis had corrected the record and recommended Hot Springs. However, accommodations were dear in that popular place for recuperation and recreation, and at the rate he’d managed to put money aside from his salary as private secretary to Peter Argyle, manager of the St. Louis branch of the Gateway Bank & Trust of St. Louis, Kansas City, and Denver, he’d calculated that it would take him five years to afford to stay there one week. Thanks to his association with the Prairie Rose Repertory Company, he had a suite for the season in the best hotel in town.
He was, he confessed to himself, a naïf, and still a bit shocked at how easily he’d been corrupted; but a perceptive observer of his companions and especially himself. He assigned whatever skills he had as a writer to that source. Johnny Vermillion held him in thrall. The disgracefully immoral young man from Chicago possessed many of the qualities Cornelius admired, and which he incorporated into the heroes of the plays he cribbed from the work of superior writers: charm, comeliness, audacity, athletic grace, elegant manners, and the sort of personality that drew men to him as well as women. These things gave him confidence Cornelius would never have, and the modicum of arrogance that was shared by most leaders of men. There was no telling how high he might have risen in politics had he followed his father’s example.
A conscience he had not; and this, too, was a source of envy for a young man who was burdened with rather more than his share. He had witnessed far too much perfidy in banking to feel any sympathy toward the institutions from which the Prairie Rose stole, but that wisdom did nothing more than modify his own feelings of guilt. In the world that had come into being since the War of the Rebellion, he considered it more of an affliction than a virtue, and cursed himself as a weakling.
Much of Johnny had made its way into Cornelius’ villains as well, although he doubted the man who had inspired them recognized himself there. It was a revelation how many traits knights and brigands had in common, at least when they were practicing their chivalry and treachery in front of painted canvas.
Cornelius could not be Johnny, as much as he tried to be, through the characters he employed in his plays. Failing that, he found it enough to be near him, and to consider him his friend. He had no others. The head of the company treated him with more warmth and regard than any man he’d known before, beginning with his stern, disappointed father. He praised Cornelius’ writing, gave him courage and patient advice when his turn came to commit robbery—armed robbery, more terrible and exhilarating than his one experiment in the pleasures of the flesh, with a prostitute who’d accosted him on the levee in St. Louis—and in all things celebrated him as an equal.
Cornelius Ragland loved Johnny Vermillion.
His feelings toward the others were more ambivalent.
Mme. Elizabeth Mort-Davies intimidated him with her mannish height, large hands, and top-lofty ways, but on stage was a versatile character actress whose range permitted him to embroider heavily upon Dickens’ grim dowagers, Shakespeare’s dithering nurses, Dumas père’s fawning duchesses, and the long chain of sculls, dames, palm readers, hags, fishwives, nannies, landladies, daubs, frumps, flounces, and queen mothers who rattled and clanked through the distaff side of the British and American theater, to say nothing of the hordes of androgynous sailors, footmen, grave diggers, friars, churls, and sergeants at arms for which her statuesque build and husky contralto suited her. She could also, in a pinch, as when April Clay’s less celebrated talents were wanted elsewhere (in seldom-traveled towns where a female of any description might pass as the Jersey Lily), play the heroine for one brief scene staged artfully; or more convincingly, the romantic lead. Still, he preferred to keep his distance, and to channel whatever suggestions he felt appropriate during rehearsals through Johnny, who proved a patient and persuasive director. The man’s abilities appeared to be without limit.
Cornelius held Major Evelyn Davies in genial contempt, but found him the perfect blithering foil for Johnny’s urbane swashbucklers, as clever at parlor banter as they were at swordplay and fisticuffs. When the time came to announce the ambassador from the Court of St. James, or the father of the bride, or the bishop who’d made one trip too many to the chamber where the sacramental wine was stored, the fat fellow with the preposterous white handlebars knew no peer. He was also an unscrupulous part-padder and stealer of scenes, and without Lizzie close at hand to still his unpredictable impulses, tended to boast about things best kept inside the company, at a level intended for the back row of the balcony. He made Cornelius exceedingly nervous, both as a playwright and as an accomplice to numerous felonies, each punishable by many years at hard labor. He enjoyed the Major’s outlandish stories about the London stage (which he may or may not have experienced at firsthand), but was contented to leave his keeping to Johnny and the inestimable Madame.
April Clay was not so easily summed up by language; and language was all he had.
In the lexicon of melodrama, she seemed to be equal parts guileless maiden and scheming harpy—although a more passive and sweet-natured she-beast would have been difficult to find in the history of theater. She seldom raised her voice, never uttered so much as a mild oath, and apart from that tense hour outside Salt Lake City when Lizzie was thought to have been captured and their own freedom was in question, the playwright had never seen her more than mildly upset. She did not insist, she did not assert, yet there were times when she appeared to be leading the Prairie Rose, and not Johnny. Sex, of course, was the instrument, but there were no secrets in the close society of a company touring the primitive reaches of the frontier, with its shared dressing rooms and tight hotel quarters often separated by no more than two thicknesses of wallpaper, and Cornelius was certain the two were not intimate. But a woman whose merry glance could make a man’s heart miss a step, and whose touch on his arm when he reached up to retrieve her train case from an overhead rack could turn his knees to water, could enslave him without unpinning her hat.
He was writing St. Joan with her in mind, and it would be one like no other. He could picture her neither listening to any voice outside her own nor succumbing to any flames not of her kindling. In Philadelphia, the authorities would shut down the opening-night performance before the end of the first act; in Wichita, where such Joans were Saturday-night staples in every saloon and bawdy house, the play might run six weeks.
It wouldn’t, of course. With a sigh, Cornelius Ragland remembered that his was no ordinary repertory company, and that its concept of theater was more sophisticated than most county sheriffs and committees of public vigilance were prepared to embrace.
He sipped his tea, which had grown cold, and trimmed his pen, which had caked. Just thinking about Johnny, the Davieses, and April made one feel as if he’d been creating vivid characters for hours, when in fact he hadn’t touched nib to paper.
The editor of the Eureka Daily News had a talent for caricature, and had enlivened his column on last night’s presentation of The Diplomat Deposes with an amusing and accurate pen-and-ink sketch of the fictive elder statesman, resembling a tulip bulb wearing a silk hat, and the erect and somewhat equine object of his passion. At the moment, copies of the sketch torn from the paper were clutched in the hands of Wendell Zick, city marshal, and three of his deputies as they watched passengers board the Northern Pacific bound for San Francisco. They were eager to interview Major and Mme. Mort-Davies in connection with a number of silver snuffboxes, gold toothpicks, and a fine buffalo coat reported missing from the theater cloakroom, and the matter of an unpaid hotel bill.
Traffic was heavy, with the loggers down from the hills to shake off the effects of the long winter hibernation in the hellholes of Barbary with their accumulated pay, and the Russians remaining from old Fort Ross hurrying to meet relatives for Easter services in the Orthodox church, and all of them impatient to get away from the mud and one another. Several times, Zick and his men had had to lunge to pull likely candidates out of the stream and compare their faces to the features in the illustration. None of those thus delayed took the inconvenience with good grace, and the press of those coming up behind led to collisions, harsh words in a number of languages, and the intervention of officers to prevent fistfights and possibly a knifing or gunplay. Zick himself swore a German oath when a tall Russian in a fur hat and full beard ran over the marshal’s instep with a wicker bath-chair bearing an old woman piled with rugs and wound to her white hair with scarves, a carpetbag in her lap. The couple continued on its way without pausing until a pair of porters stepped down from a car to help hoist woman and wheelchair aboard. Eureka, a rough place when Zick first came to it, but open and friendly, had since the completion of the spur to San Francisco turned as sullen as any of the Gomorrahs in the East.
As the train pulled out, the marshal sought his men, only to find them with empty hands and shaking heads, and stepped back to study the passenger windows fluttering past, but none of the profiles he glimpsed there drew a close enough resemblance to the sketch to warrant sending a wire to the next stop. He tore up the scrap of newsprint and walked off the platform, trailing the pieces like Hansel and Gretel in the wicked forest.
The Northern picked up speed coming down the coast and leveled out at forty with a long blast on its whistle, a catcall to those left behind in Eureka. The Russian couple sat in facing seats; the porters had removed the bath-chair to the baggage car on the assurance that the old woman could manage the trip to and from the water closet with a cane and the assistance of her companion. Major Evelyn Davies snatched off his white wig and scratched his bald head with a furious, motoring movement like a dog.
Elizabeth Mort-Davies blew exasperatedly through the mass of llama hair covering her face and leaned forward to take the wig and tug it back down to the Major’s ears. “Wells, Fargo pays porters for information. If they suspect anything they’ll have us held in Frisco and wire back to Eureka if nothing comes of it, and something might. Don’t forget Sioux Falls.”
“You might at least have given me one without fleas.”
“You might have foregone oysters in garlic sauce the last time you wore these whiskers.”
At about the time Johnny Vermillion and April Clay were crossing to France and Major and Mme. Mort-Davies were riding the rails in disguise to San Francisco, the Ace-in-the-Hole Gang was in the middle of its worst run of luck since three of its more colorfully named members died under violent and ignominious circumstances, clearing Black Jack Brixton’s path toward its leadership.
In a vainglorious moment during the robbery of the Pioneers Bank in Table Rock, Wyoming Territory, the president of that institution scooped a Schofield revolver from the belly drawer of his rolltop desk and shot Tom Riddle high in the chest. The rest of the gang responded characteristically, perforating the president with lead, but Tom did not benefit. Shock and loss of blood tipped him out of his saddle a mile outside town and they were forced to retreat to a cave to patch his wound and give him rest. By morning he was feverish and jabbering more than usual; it was clear he needed medical attention to survive. Brixton and Breed were in favor of finishing him off and skedaddling, but Ed and Charlie Kettleman voted to fetch a doctor, and Mysterious Bob broke the tie by throwing in with the brothers, possibly because he suspected his own habitual silence would become oppressive without Tom’s garrulity to balance it. Internal tension had broken up more successful criminal associations than the Pinkertons and the U.S. marshals combined.
They sent Charlie. He’d proven himself capable of recovering the money from the Salt Lake City debacle, even if he’d lacked the foresight to drive home the lesson by killing the woman he’d found in possession. He went without protest. Brixton was still simmering over Charlie’s failure to secure the woman’s silence in Denver, and when it came to insubordination he’d been known to override the will of the majority with a bullet.
Leading his horse down Table Rock’s main street to avoid spooking the recently robbed residents, squinting at signs in search of “M.D.,” Charlie caught a bit of luck when a pudgy, gray-haired man in a rumpled suit stepped out the front door of a private house carrying a small satchel just as the bandit was passing. The man paused to touch his hat to a woman standing just inside the doorway, who addressed him as “Dr. Edwin.”
Charlie waited while the man set his satchel on the seat of a worn buggy in front of the house, then when he turned to untie the equally worn-looking horse that was hitched to it, tethered his own mount to the back of the buggy, stepped up behind him, and stuck the muzzle of his captured Colt against the man’s ribs.
“You drive, Doc. I got a new one for your rounds.”
Edwin put up a squawk, said he wasn’t the doctor for him, to which Charlie replied it wasn’t for him, and put an end to the palaver by thumbing back the Colt’s hammer. Edwin climbed onto the driver’s seat without another word and they rode out of town with the big revolver in Charlie’s lap pointing at the driver.
In the cave, where the atmosphere was thick thanks to Ed having mistakenly tossed a Douglas fir branch onto the fire and filling the place with noxious smoke (and his companions with homicidal intent), Dr. Edwin goggled at the sight of Tom stretched on his bedroll, babbling in his stained bandages torn from a canvas bank sack. “What is it you wish me to do?”
“Do? Dig out the slug, for chrissake!” Brixton looked more disconcerting than usual with his bandanna tied over his nose and mouth to prevent asphyxiation. He’d taken the precaution of soaking it in Old Gideon and was inebriating himself further with each breath he drew. Needless to say, he was an unpleasant drunk.
When Edwin remained hesitant, Breed tore the satchel from his hand and dumped it out onto the cave floor to facilitate. Instead of instruments and bottles, books spilled into a pile, with Volume Five of Gibbon perched on top.
During interrogation, it developed that Edwin was a doctor of philosophy, retained by the woman of the house Charlie had seen him leaving to tutor her fourteen-year-old son in the history of Western civilization. More smoke ensued of the burnt-powder variety, and Erastus Edwin, professor emeritus of the University of Maryland, claimed his own footnote in history as the only Roman scholar to lose his life at the hands of frontier bandits.
Brixton’s fury having spent itself on the unfortunate pedant, Charlie took his punishment in the form of a fresh horse and a third trip to Table Rock to correct his error. This time, he broke into the office of Benjamin Ruddock, M.D., at the top of a flight of stairs slanting up the outside wall of a harness shop, and finding it unoccupied spent his time while waiting for the proprietor’s return satisfying himself as to the medical nature of the equipment and spelling out the script on a framed diploma on the wall above the examining table. When after forty-five minutes the door opened, he threw down on the rat-faced individual who came in carrying a cylindrical case and explained his errand. Dr. Ruddock shrugged and turned to precede him out the door.
“Hold on! Let’s have a look in that there bag first. If it’s full of books I’ll plug you right here and save the trip.”
Ruddock unlatched the case, spread it open, and held it out for Charlie’s inspection. While the desperado peered at the probes, forceps, rolls of gauze, and corked containers arranged neatly inside, the doctor swept a two-pound medical dictionary off a shelf, knocked him senseless, tied him with bandages, and went for the county sheriff, whose office stood next door to the harness shop. Ruddock, as it happened, had just returned from an identical abduction to tend to a member of the Turkey Creek Outfit, who’d lost three fingers blasting open a safe in the mail car of the Santa Fe Railroad outside Bitter Creek two days before; he’d been hot, tired, trail-sore, and in no humor for another enforced house call so soon after the first.
Ironically, Tom Riddle survived. Breed, impatient over the delay, used his big Bowie to extract the bullet, not caring overmuch whether the surgery was fatal so long as it freed them to ride, and Tom’s miner’s constitution did the rest. When he was strong enough to sit a horse, Ed and Mysterious Bob took him to his sister’s pig farm in Nebraska to complete his recovery and returned to help Brixton and Breed separate Charlie from the jail in Table Rock. This they managed to do while the sheriff was at supper, leaving an inexperienced deputy in charge. So pleased was the gang by this unaccustomed stroke of good fortune that it satisfied itself with binding and gagging the deputy and locking him in Tom’s former cell instead of shooting him. (Ungratefully, the Table Rock Merchants Association added a hundred dollars a head to the reward for Ace-in-the-Hole’s capture or destruction. The late president of the Pioneers Bank was a popular member of its poker circle.)
When Tom rejoined the gang, he had an anthology of new stories to tell, including a fanciful version of how he’d come by his wound despite the evidence of his listeners’ own eyes, and an involved anecdote about his efforts to teach simple arithmetic to one of his sister’s hogs. The others were grateful for the fresh material, and happy to be hearing something other than Bob’s deadly quiet and their own stale thoughts. For a solid week, their “Shut up, Tom” lacked conviction.
But Charlie Kettleman was never the same after Table Rock. The blow from the medical dictionary had addled him, and during his occasional lucid moments he insisted that a bunch of those long words had leaked into his brain through the crack in his skull, tangling with his thoughts and making them come out incomprehensible and impossible to pronounce. This ruined him for horse trading; brother Ed was forced to increase his own skills twofold to keep the others from dwelling on the wisdom that Charlie had lost his usefulness and ought to be expelled.
Black Jack Brixton’s theory about this latest setback was simpler than Charlie’s. He was superstitious, it must be remembered, and had formed the conclusion that Ace-in-the-Hole’s sour string had begun with its first encounter with the Prairie Rose Repertory Company, and would continue until they closed the curtain on its final performance.