Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Parson Sam Blane in HOPE (Episode 6)

XVIII.

Amos glanced over at Marshal Watson again. “Marshal, it’s time to roll out of the sack.”

Amos lifted the cup of coffee to his lips and sipped the liquid. Over the rim of the cup, he kept his gaze on the Marshal. He looked for the steady rising and falling of the blanket for evidence that the man was breathing. Nothing living was ever that still.

He slowly reached down and placed the tin cup on the ground. “Marshal?”

When he stood up, he drew in a cautious breath and exhaled with resignation. He had waited long enough so that he had satisfied his sense of courtesy and respect. If the Marshal was asleep, Amos knew he had earned the right to awaken him. If the Marshal was not asleep the time had come to find out.

He stepped around the fire and circled the Marshal at a distance. He now could see the Marshal’s face. It held no expression and the man’s eyes were closed. Reluctantly, Amos took a step closer. Almost in a whisper, he said, “Marshal?”

Closer still. No rising and falling of the blanket. No movement at all. Amos crouched and watched the Marshal for another few moments. Finally, he reached out and placed his hand on the Marshal’s shoulder and gave him a gentle shake. “Marshal?”

When the Marshal did not stir, Amos placed two of his fingers on the Marshal’s neck seeking a pulse. He felt none. He withdrew his hand. For another few moments he remained crouched by the Marshal’s side. Then he slowly lowered himself and sat on the ground with his arms extended and supported by his knees. After a moment, he closed his eyes and lowered his head.

When he raised his head, his cheeks were wet with tears.

He placed a hand on the ground and stood up.

Over the next hour, he broke camp, saddled the horses and strapped the Marshal’s body over the Marshal’s horse. Then he mounted up.

He was about to turn his horse when something shiny reflected a ray of sun from the valley below. He looked down and saw several riders. Five men on horseback. One man slumped to the side in the saddle and continually held his hand on his waist. The men rode in a loose trail formation and the last rider led a pack horse.

Amos watched them for several minutes. Those riders were the ones who had caused so much death and destruction in the town he had always known as quiet and peaceful. Now the town would never be quite the same.

He gently nudged the horse with his heels. “Come on, boy. Let’s go home. They’re somebody else’s problem now.”

XIX.

Julie had just finished dressing when a gentle knock came at the door. “Who is it?”

“It’s me, Amie, Miss Weber.”

Julie walked to the door and opened it. She looked down at the little girl and smiled.

“Mommy sent me to ask you how many eggs and how many flapjacks you want for breakfast.”

“Oh my. Eggs and flapjacks. Doesn’t that sound delicious.”

“They’re real good, ma’am. And we use real maple syrup.”

“Well, you tell your mommy, I’d like one egg and one flapjack please.”

“Okay. One of each. Oh! How would you like your egg cooked?”

“I’ll take it over-easy.”

“Okay, Miss Weber.” The little girl turned on her heel and ran to the staircase and scurried down the steps.

When Julie entered the dining room, the other boarders were already seated at the table. Yesterday, during her first breakfast at the boarding house, she had become acquainted with each one.

Tim Sweeny sat across from her. He was a lad slightly younger than she. Sweeny’s complexion was extremely fair and his cheeks always appeared flush, as if he had just finished rubbing them. Sweeny was a clerk at Hazlett’s General Store.

Next was Gus Schmidt, a balding man in his mid-forties whose most prominent feature was his potbelly. Julie had heard he was a skilled carpenter.

Zeke Borland was the oldest among the boarders, perhaps in his middle sixties. Although he was officially retired from the insurance sales business, he sometimes still tried to sell life insurance to qualified prospects.

Then there was Mrs. Pemberton, a widow of about ten years and an active member of the church. She seemed to delight in extolling the virtues of the late Mr. Pemberton who had made his living as a cobbler. But among her faults was the tendency to gossip.

Finally, Leo Moretti tended bar at the Alamo Saloon. He was a man of about fifty years of age with a head of thick gray hair. Moretti was a quiet man, preferring to listen rather than to talk, which suited him nicely to the business of tending bar where customers regularly expressed their troubles to a hopefully sympathetic ear.

Julie was pouring herself coffee when Andy entered from the kitchen carrying a couple of plates of food. He placed the first plate in front of Borland and the other in front of Mrs. Pemberton. On his next trip, he placed a plate in front of Moretti and one in front of Schmidt. Finally, he brought a plate for Sweeny and one for Julie.

“What are you planning to do today?” Sweeny asked from across the table. He sat erect in his chair and sipped coffee. His cheeks appeared on fire as the sunlight beamed through the window and reflected off his face.

“Oh, I have a lot of work to do to get ready for school. This morning I’ll be working on lesson plans. I believe in thorough preparation before I walk into the classroom each day. Then this afternoon Charli Benton is going to show me the schoolhouse.”

Borland leaned back in his chair. “What I’ve found most important in life is knowing human nature. Look at me. I’ve been a successful salesman for most of my life. Now I’m retired on a comfortable income. I’ve done all that by studying human nature, the kind of thing you can’t put in books.”

Julie shifted in her seat. She told herself to wait before responding to what she interpreted as an attack on formal education.

“Seems to me,” Borland continued, “a person could have all the book-learning in the world and never become a success if he didn’t know human nature.”

“I don’t know about that,” Schmidt said. He scooted away from the table to make room for his potbelly which bulged from the several flapjacks he had eaten. “In my line of work of building things it’s practical experience that counts. You learn by watching someone who already knows how to do it. You study the way he performs the task and you do it day after day. Most things people do have a set of steps that you gotta do in order. Get one step out of order and you might ruin the whole project. I don’t see much use for knowing human nature when it comes to building a house, for example. A person who can build a house is probably worth more than someone who can sell a life insurance policy. So, I say it’s experience that counts.”

Borland raised his eyebrows. “Now wait just a minute! I agree that the know-how to build a house is important, but let me tell you just how important life insurance is—”

“Gentlemen,” Mrs. Pemberton interrupted. “Let’s not argue. I’m sure everyone will agree that both knowing human nature and having experience are important. Funny thing is, my husband, God rest his soul, always used to say, ‘It’s not what you know; it’s who you know.’”

“Yeah,” Borland said in a softer tone in deference to Mrs. Pemberton, “but Gus said building houses is more important than selling life insurance.”

Mrs. Pemberton nodded, “Yes but I’m sure he didn’t mean one is more important than the other. Both are important to a civilized society.”

“No,” Schmidt said, “I did mean it. Who can deny that building a house is more important than selling life insurance?”

“You see!” Borland snapped. “He said it again!”

Sweeny held up a fair hand. “Let’s allow the school teacher to tell us which of the two, either knowing human nature or having practical experience, is more important.”

Julie looked up at Sweeny and rolled her eyes. “Thank you, Tim, but you’re asking me to give an opinion that would offend either Mr. Borland or Mr. Schmidt.”

Sweeny pressed his lips together. He glanced at the two men. Both were glaring at him.

Mrs. Pemberton leaned forward and looked down the table at Julie. “I think we should drop the whole subject, don’t you, Julie?”

“We could do that, Mrs. Pemberton. But I haven’t heard anyone mention how important formal education is.”

“Well, why don’t you tell us, Missy?” Borland said.

Julie was about to speak when Moretti looked up. “It seems to me that a good education, next to faith in God, is just about everything.”

As one, the boarders turned their heads toward Moretti. All were surprised that the quiet man had chosen to speak.

“I don’t claim to be an expert,” Moretti continued, “but ever since I moved out West after the war, I’ve seen a lot of change. I’ve seen Abilene grow from a one-horse town to a thriving community. I was here when they laid the track for the railroad and I watched the first steam engine roll into town. I’ve seen the cattle drives come and go. I’ve seen the town change from a wild free-for-all to one that’s trying to shed its history of violence and immorality. I don’t see any reason for the change to stop.”

“So, what’s your point, barkeep?” Borland snorted.

“It seems to me that to look at the future of the West we must look at the present time in the East. One day the West will become civilized.”

Borland exhaled heavily from exasperation. “For a fella who don’t talk much you’re using a lot of words to say a whole lot of nothing about formal education.”

“You mean you haven’t caught on yet, Zeke? The point is who is going to build the West into that civilized society? It’s going to be the youngsters of today. Those who know how to read and write and cipher are going to be tomorrow’s leaders.”

“Here, here!” Julie blurted.

“Miss Weber,” Moretti continued, “I think we all owe teachers a debt of gratitude. Those of your students who make the right formal education their top priority give themselves the best possible chance of success.”

With the last few words Moretti humbly bowed his head so all anyone saw was his thick gray hair.

“Well!” Borland retorted. “That’s quite a speech from a common bartender. The question is what does such a man know of success? Seems to me that to speak of success with any authority a person must first be successful!”

“It sounds to me, Zeke,” Schmidt spoke up, “that you believe the only way a person can be successful is if he sells insurance for a living. Either that or you enjoy putting others down so you can feel superior.”

Borland’s eyes widened and then narrowed on the balding man with the potbelly. “You watch how you speak to me, Mister!”

Mrs. Pemberton raised her hand then slowly lowered it until it rested on the table. “Now, gentlemen—”

The tension in the room vanished when the boarders noticed Faye standing in the doorway leading to the kitchen. She slowly looked from one boarder to the next. “People, I have children here and I would appreciate your remembering that. I will not have squabbling during meals. I can hear your bickering all the way into the kitchen!”

No one said a word.

“Now, if you’re finished, I’d appreciate if you would get up from the table so I can clear the dishes.”

XX.

The afternoon sun over Abilene had hidden its face behind gathering storm clouds. The wind had not yet swept into town as it would by evening but, still, the atmosphere moved as a single unstoppable wave from the southwest.

Julie opened the screen door and walked out onto the porch. Faye, sitting in the rocking chair, looked up when she heard the familiar squeak of the door. “Hello, my dear.”

“Good afternoon, Faye. Looks like we’re in for rain.”

“Yes, it’s that time of year when the weather seesaws between spring and summer. Would you like some tea? I made a fresh pitcher-full and I always bring extra glasses with me onto the porch.”

“Thank you. Tea sounds good.”

“Come and sit.”

Julie sat down at the table in a chair opposite Faye as the woman poured tea for her.

“This is my best part of the day. Just an hour or two of rest before starting the evening meal.”

“Faye, I apologize for what happened at breakfast this morning. There’s simply no excuse for our behavior. I’m sorry that we upset you, and that we set such a bad example for Andy and Amie.”

“That’s alright, Julie. I know it wasn’t intentional.”

“I’m very happy with the room, and you feed your boarders like we are royalty. You must be very tired by the end of the day.”

“Actually, no, my dear. I enjoy the work. And the income not only provides for my guests but provides security for me and the children. I feel most fortunate that everything worked out as well as it did.”

“Worked out?”

“Oh, of course, you don’t know. Less than a year ago, I lost my husband. He was murdered.”

“My goodness! I’m so sorry.”

“It was quite a bad time. But a fine gentleman, Parson Sam Blane, split the reward money with me. That money along with what I got from selling the farm gave me enough to buy this place and have it fixed up a bit.”

“The reward money?”

“A couple of saddle tramps killed my husband. Sam shot one in self-defense and turned the other over to Marshal Hickok. There was a fair amount of reward money for each one of them. Sam said he felt it only right that I should have half the money. Then he turned around and gave most of what was left to the church. The elders added Sam’s contribution to what they had on hand to begin construction of a new church building.”

“My! The Parson sounds like a generous man.”

“He’s a wonderful man, Julie.”

Something in Faye’s tone made Julie turn her head and look at Faye. “Sounds like you have feelings for Parson Blane.”

“Oh, I don’t know how he feels. But to be honest I’ve always felt I have a lot to offer.”

Julie glanced at the Bible sitting on the table. She remembered the conversation she had had with Faye on the day she arrived at the boarding house. “Faye, is that why you read the Bible…because the man you love is a preacher?”

“He told me once he could never be with a woman who wasn’t a Christian.”

“I see. Faye, can I be honest with you?”

“Yes, of course, my dear.”

“No one can become a believer for the purpose of pleasing someone else. Faith in God is personal―just between you and Him―and it must be genuine. You told me you were struggling with your faith. I’m guessing your motivation to be a Christian is based on your desire to have a relationship with Parson Blane. If I’m wrong please say so.”

Faye averted her gaze down and away. “I never thought about it that way.”

“Faye, may I say something else? But I don’t want to offend you in any way.”

“Yes, of course, my dear, please be frank.”

“A right relationship with Christ is more important than any relationship you can have with a man. If you sense a yearning within you, it is for Christ. Once that is fulfilled the other things will be added. Go on without it being fulfilled and it won’t matter whether you have a relationship with Parson Blane or any other man. You will still feel the yearning.”

Faye did not look up.

“Hey there!” The voice came from the vicinity of the front gate.

Julie turned and saw Charli Benton leading two saddled horses. One animal was a bay, the other a beautiful palomino.

Faye glanced up at Charli Benton and the horses. “Go ahead, my dear.” She turned to Julie who had stood up. “I think you just got yourself a horse.”

“Oh, it couldn’t be!”

“Run along and try not to be late for dinner.”

Julie rushed to the edge of the porch steps. “Yes, of course…‛late for dinner.’”

Faye chuckled.

XXI.

“Ever since Ma died, my old man ain’t been good for much. But one thing we do on the ranch is raise good horseflesh. Which one ya want?”

“Oh, Charli. I’m overwhelmed! Which of the two is yours?”

“I didn’t bring mine. Mine could outrun either of these two by a mile. But he’s kinda got a wild streak too that I like. These two are a different breed. Sturdy, strong and intelligent, but gentle nature. I trained them both so they know what to do and they’re quick about it. So which one ya want?”

“Charli, I don’t think I could afford to buy a horse right now.”

“Heck, Julie. You’re not buying one. I’m giving ya one!”

“Oh Charli. It’s too much.”

“It ain’t nothin’ of the sort. All ya gotta do is promise to take care of it. We’ll keep it at the ranch for ya when ya ain’t got it in the corral out back of the boarding house. Now will ya please pick one? I’m gettin’ tired of standing here.”

Julie stepped back and viewed the two animals. Could she really bring herself to accept such an overwhelming gift? The bay, of course, was a beautiful animal. But Julie simply could not take her eyes off the palomino. “It’s this one, Charli.” She stepped forward and rubbed the horse’s neck. She felt tears come to her eyes.

“Well that’s the one I figgered you’d pick, being a city-slicker and all. I’d never be caught dead on a horse so flashy. On the trail they could see ya comin’ a mile away.”

Julie laughed. “Oh, Charli!”

“What? It’s true!”

“My dear, I wouldn’t care if they could see me coming from a hundred miles away!” Julie turned square to Charli and placed her hands on the girl’s shoulders. “How can I ever thank you enough? I promise you. I will take good care of—” Julie took a step back. “What’s her name? Is it a ‘her’?”

“Yes, Julie, it’s a mare. The bay’s a gelding. As a rule we don’t name our horses. If you want a name for her, you’ll have to pick one.”

“Oh, let’s see. It will have to be a very special name. How about: Amazing Grace?”

“That’s an odd name for a horse.”

“We could call her Grace, for short.”

“Well, it’s your horse. You can call her whatever you want.”

“Then Grace it is! Charli, will you teach me all about her?”

“Sure, Julie, I’ll teach ya everything, a little at a time. When I get done with ya, you’ll be the best horsewoman in the county. Next to me, of course.”

“Thank you, Charli. Thank you very, very much.” Julie drew in a deep breath and exhaled. Then she turned back to Grace. “Okay, now I do know that one gets on from the left side.”

“Aw man. This is gonna be tougher than I thought. Well, at least, you’re wearing britches and not a dress!”

XXII.

When Julie opened the door to the school building and stepped inside, she stood silent for several moments. The dingy room smelled of mold and rotten wood. Everything was covered with a thick layer of dust. The outside light struggled to shine through filthy, yellow windows. The student desks were old and some were broken. The blackboard was faded and cracked. There was not a single book on the shelves.

She walked to the small teacher’s desk at the front of the room and sat down. Charli followed her and sat on the desk itself.

Julie cupped her face in her hands and began to cry.

Charli scooted off the desk and stood up. “What’s wrong?”

“Oh, Charli. Look at it.”

“At what?”

“At this room!”

“What’s the matter with it?”

“It’s a shambles. How do people expect children to study and learn in such filth and disrepair?”

Charli looked around the room as if looking through new eyes. “Well, I guess it could stand some cleanin’. And ya kinda gotta be careful not to step in the holes in the floor. Other than that…what?”

“I’ll never be ready to start the school on Monday.”

“Why, heck, Julie. We got the whole weekend to clean it up.”

“We could work on this place for a month and it still wouldn’t be ready.”

“A month!”

“Oh, don’t worry, Charli. If you’re willing to help, I suppose we could wash the place down. That might take care of the smell. But fixing the floor and replacing the blackboard and repairing the desks. How are we going to do that?”

Charli thought for a moment. “Well, ya know, there’s a lot of people working on the new church building. A couple of right-fine carpenters, too. They might be willing to fix up the floor and hammer some nails into the broken desks.”

“That would be good for a start. But I have a meeting with Mayor Little. He’s the president of the school board and the one who hired me. Maybe he’ll help us.”

“I doubt it.”

“Why?”

“You’ll see.”

TO BE CONTINUED

Parson Sam Blane in HOPE (Episode 5)

XIV.

The last man in the posse heard only the gurgling of the water as his horse reached the middle of the stream. He did not see the puff of smoke from the rifle barrel rise as a tiny cloud from a low sturdy branch on one of many trees along the bank.

What happened in an instant played in his mind slowly and without comprehension of the fatal reality. At first, the high-pitched whirring sound was an irritation. His mind finally asked, ‘What is that?’ He had never heard such a sound and it was quickly growing closer and louder.

He had just glanced up when he heard a thud and felt pressure in his chest like someone poking him with a finger. When he looked down he saw his shirt torn open and covered with blood. Even now the dark red fluid spouted forth like a fountain. Something strange and white and jagged stuck out of his chest. As the day quickly turned to night, his last thought was that he was looking at part of his own breastbone.

The first man in the posse turned his head when the sound of the shot tumbled across the stream basin. Looking back he saw the man who had been shot fall off his horse into the water. Then he felt something bite him in the back of the neck. Another rumble roared across the stream. As he fell off the horse, he grabbed his throat with both hands until everything within him went limp.

Already Marshal Watson and Amos had drawn their rifles from the scabbards and had leapt to the ground. Placing a knee on the ground, Marshal Watson raised his rifle and fired again and again at the puffs of smoke from the trees on the opposite bank.

When the middle man in the posse heard the rifle fire and saw the leader splash into the water, he yanked on the reins in an effort to turn his horse. The horse reared suddenly and the man barely hung on. As the horse splashed down on all four hooves, the man pulled hard on the left rein to turn the horse’s head. Simultaneously, he felt a bullet penetrate his thigh and he screamed in terror.

Feeling spurs dug deep into his hide, the horse struggled against the current to reverse direction. Then suddenly the reins went limp and with the sound of another rifle shot he felt the weight of the man slide off the saddle.

As Marshal Watson fired in rapid succession at the trees across the stream, from the corner of his eye he watched the men of the posse fall one by one into the water until none was left in the saddle. In the span of less than a minute, the men in the stream had been slaughtered.

A shot rang out from the opposite bank and Marshal Watson saw a spatter of mud fly up in front of him. He took careful aim at the lingering puff of smoke from a tree on the far bank and fired. Then he quickly jacked the lever and pulled the trigger again. The hammer fell with a metallic click. He was out of ammunition.

In anger, he threw the rifle onto the ground and stood up. He yelled as loudly as he could, “Come on, you scoundrels!” He pointed at his nose. “Right here!”

Amos shouted, “Marshal, get down!”

Marshal Watson continued to stand defiantly.

Slowly, the sound of the rushing water crept into Marshal Watson’s consciousness. One minute, five of his men were there; the next minute they were dead and gone. Another minute passed. Then another. He began to realize the last shot had already been fired.

XV.

Marshal Watson pulled up the reins and the horse came to a halt. He dismounted and studied the ground. Then he crouched and placed a finger into the imprint of a horseshoe.

The sun had dipped below the horizon and only dim reflected rays lit the western sky. Marshal Watson stood up and glanced at Amos who sat in the saddle, his arms crossed and resting on the saddle horn.

“They’re still traveling north. I’d guess they’re a couple of hours ahead of us if they haven’t stopped for the night.”

Amos nodded. “What do you want to do?”

Marshal Watson slowly looked around. The light was fading rapidly. “We’d better set up camp.”

“Okay, Marshal.” Amos sat up in the saddle and began to dismount.

“Wait a minute, Amos.” The Marshal stood silently for a moment. “When I was a kid I used to go to a place near here. Would you mind if we rode a little further? I’d like to make camp there tonight.”

“Sure, Marshal. Whatever you say.”

Marshal Watson mounted his horse and led off. Amos followed. After a while, they began ascending a ridge. “Amos, at the top there’s a small grassy area that will make a good campsite. In the morning, we’ll have a beautiful view of the valley floor. I spent many nights up there when I was a youngster. I’ve always considered it a special place.”

“Sounds good to me, Marshal.”

At the top of the ridge, the two rode through a stand of trees. The night had come alive with the peculiar sounds of insects calling for mates. An owl hooted. The temperature had dropped a few degrees and a soft breeze caressed their faces. Before long, they came to the open grassy area.

Amos looked up at the night sky. He had never seen so many stars, each trying to out-twinkle the other. “This is a great place, Marshal!”

“This trail is the only way in, so I think we’ll be safe up here. Let’s gather some wood and make camp.”

An hour later, both men were sitting on their bedrolls near the fire. They had stripped the horses and had staked them in the grass between themselves and the tree line. The horses would alert them if anything approached, be it man or beast.

When coffee was ready, Amos stood up and poured a cup for the Marshal and one for himself. Marshal Watson had just finished cleaning his Winchester. He was loading it when Amos handed him the cup. “Thanks, Amos.”

“Careful, Marshal. It’s hot.”

When Marshal Watson had finished loading the rifle, he jacked a shell into the chamber. After gently lowering the hammer, he placed the rifle on a separate blanket within easy reach. He picked up the cup and sipped. “That’s good coffee, Amos.”

When Amos did not reply, the Marshal glanced up. Amos was reading a book. “Whatcha readin’?”

“It’s the Bible, Marshal.”

“Oh.” The Marshal took another sip of coffee and looked up at the countless stars against an endless sky of black velvet. “I guess if there is a God, he must be pretty smart and pretty big, if he made all that.”

Amos glanced over. He saw the Marshal gazing up at the sky and he looked up too. “I find it quite humbling. Don’t you?”

“Tell you the truth, Amos, I’ve never thought about it much. In my line of work, seems like I’m always seeing bad people causing bad things to happen.” He glanced down. “Like today, for example. Five good men murdered in cold blood. I don’t know how a God who is supposed to be good could let that happen.”

“That’s easy, Marshal: holy God; sinful man.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean, when God created us, he gave us free will. Right from the beginning, we’ve been misusing that free will…each person trying to be his own god.”

“Seems like God made a mistake then, handing out all that free will.”

Amos chuckled. “No, Marshal. God is not at fault for the way we misuse our free will. We are to blame for our mistakes. God is love. He is pure and holy…and perfect. He gave us free will because he wanted a loving relationship with people who could truly love him back. He doesn’t force us to love him.”

“Seems like it would be a lot better if he did.”

Amos was silent for a moment. “I know you’re not married, Marshal. In fact, I’ve never seen you courting anyone. Seems like you always keep to yourself. You ever love a woman?”

“Me?” Marshal Watson glanced at the flickering yellow and blue flames. “I was in love once.”

“Did she love you back?”

After a moment, Marshal Watson nodded. “Yes, she loved me back.”

“Now, do you see? What kind of love would it have been had you somehow forced her to love you back?”

“I guess you’re right, Amos. It wouldn’t have been love at all.”

“That’s the way God is. He loves you and me with a love bigger than that sky up there. And he wants us to love him back. But we must do it with our free will. Otherwise it isn’t love at all.”

Marshal Watson raised the cup to his lips and sipped the coffee. After a few moments, he glanced up. Amos had returned to reading. “But how can you love something you can’t see?”

Amos placed a finger between the pages and closed the Bible. “That girl you loved…do you still love her?”

Marshal Watson nodded. “I’ll love her till the day I die.”

“What happened to her, Marshal?”

“I was young, Amos. I left my home town to make my way in the world. But it wasn’t my plan to leave her. I was going to go back for her…and I did. But too much time had passed. She had married another man.”

“But you still love her?”

“Yes.”

“You don’t see her anymore, yet you still love her. That’s because your love for her is in your heart. That’s the way it is with God. We carry our love for him in the heart. It’s just as real as the love you have for that girl. Except there’s one difference.”

“What’s that?”

“God will never let you down.”

“Oh…she wasn’t to blame, Amos. It was my fault. It was me who let her down…though I sure never meant to.”

“Whoever’s fault it was, Marshal, the point is your relationship ended. How can you trust something that doesn’t last? That’s the problem with everything in this world. Nothing and no one lasts forever. That’s the difference between a personal relationship with Jesus Christ and a relationship with anything created.”

“Are you saying not to have relationships with people because the relationships will not last?”

“No, I’m saying to start with the right relationship to God; that is, adhere to, trust in, and rely on the truth of his Word. Your personal relationship with Jesus Christ will last forever. Then you can have the right relationships with others, loving and serving them while they are present and appreciating God for the gift of having known them when they are gone.”

Marshal Watson glanced up. “Amos, let me be honest with you. I’ve never felt like I’m a good enough person to have a relationship with God.”

“No one is good enough, Marshal.”

“Well, how do you get it then?”

“It’s a gift.”

“A gift?”

“Yes. You see, God loves us already. He loves us with perfect love. It’s so valuable it can’t be earned, or bought, or bargained for. So, to receive it you must accept it as a gift.”

Marshal Watson furrowed his brow.

Amos looked over. “That’s what I meant when I said it is ‘humbling.’ It’s like how you feel when someone gives you a gift. You didn’t earn it and there’s nothing you can repay. You just have to accept it and that makes you feel humble. At least, it does me anyway.”

“I think I know what you mean. I had a sheriff a while back give me that Winchester. I couldn’t believe he would do such a thing. He handed it to me and said it was a gift. I said I couldn’t take it, but he told me he wanted me to have it. I said I would only take it if he’d let me pay for it, but he said no. When I took it into my hands, I felt I had been given something I didn’t deserve.”

“Humble.”

“Yeah, I felt…humble.”

Marshal Watson was silent for several minutes. Amos returned to reading, turning slightly to better catch the light from the fire, which was slowly burning out.

“I always thought if there is a God that good people go to heaven and bad people go to hell.”

Amos closed the Bible and set it on the blanket next to him. The light had grown too dim for reading. “Man cannot save himself. Only God can save us. That’s because we can’t be good enough or do enough good things to pay the penalty for our sins.”

“The penalty for our sins?”

“Yes. The penalty for our sins is death and damnation.”

“Is that what the Bible says?”

“Yes, it is. But the good news is that God has already paid the penalty for everyone’s sins by sending his only Son, Jesus Christ, to die on the cross.”

“Does that mean everyone is going to heaven?”

“Everyone who receives Christ as his personal Lord and Savior, yes.”

“But those who don’t?”

“Well, let’s put it this way. If you had rejected the rifle as a gift from that sheriff, would you have it now?”

“No.”

“That’s right. Same with those who reject Jesus Christ. They don’t have the gift of salvation.”

“So that’s why some go to hell.”

“Yes. You see, someone has to pay the penalty. You can pay it, or you can accept Jesus’ payment on your behalf.”

“If it’s that easy, seems like everyone would accept what Jesus did to pay for our sins.”

“Ah, but remember how we misuse our free will? We try to be our own god.”

“Yeah, I guess I’ve been doing that.”

“We all start out that way, Marshal. Think of how a baby must be taught to share. Each person worships himself, so to speak. But we sure miss out on a lot when we do. And without Christ as our Lord and Savior, we wind up in hell, paying the penalty for the wrong we’ve done.”

“Yeah, but how do you know all that is true? Sounds like a fairy tale.”

“When you are willing to accept the gift of salvation…I mean, truly ready to turn from your sins and turn instead to God, God will give you the faith to accept the truth. Then it becomes personal. Until then, it does sound foolish…especially to the so-called wise.”

“I don’t know, Amos. I think I’m a lost cause. I’ve always been the way I am. I’m too old to change now…and like I said, I’ve done too many bad things in my life.”

“God has more forgiveness than you have sins, Marshal. And the Bible says, ‘Today is the day of salvation.’ It’s only too late after you die. Then you begin paying that penalty we were talking about.”

“You’re talking about going to hell again, aren’t you.”

“Yes, I am. Just like it would violate your sense of justice to let those outlaws go free; God, who is perfect justice, will exact punishment. And it lasts forever.”

“So that’s why Jesus died? To pay the penalty for me?”

“That’s right, Marshal. Believe that, and God gives you new life that restores the relationship Mankind had with God in the very beginning. And now it’s a personal relationship between you and Him. Once he’s truly your Father, you will naturally want to please him by being as good as you can be. In that situation, you’re not trying to save yourself by being good, because you’re already saved. Instead you’re being good because you love and appreciate God as the perfect Father he is to you. That’s the difference between Christianity and every other religion. All other religions and all philosophies devised by men teach that you must do something, like being good, to be saved.

“Also, when you are saved the Holy Spirit takes up residence in your heart. Jesus called the Holy Spirit the ‘Comforter.’ The Holy Spirit not only provides solace, he guides the believer into all truth. It’s hard to do evil when the Holy Spirit is always exerting subtle, but divine, pressure to obey God’s Word.”

“But men wrote the Bible, Amos, not God.”

“Men wrote it down, but God is the author. God inspired men to write it down because we can understand what other men say. God wanted us to have a written record of his laws and promises. But he also made sure the men didn’t make any mistakes when they wrote down his Word. That way we can trust it.”

“So everything in the Bible is true?”

“Absolutely. His Word has the power to save the lost and it comforts those who already believe. His Spirit is alive in the passages of the Bible.”

“So that’s why you read it so much?”

“Here. Let me show you. Hand me that stick you were using earlier for the fire.”

Marshal Watson handed the stick to Amos.

Amos stuck the stick into the fire and stirred up the coals. The flames blazed up with a whoosh. “That’s what reading the Bible does, Marshal. It stokes the fire of faith inside our hearts and it reminds us how much God loves us.”

Marshal Watson was silent for several minutes.

“I don’t know, Amos. I think the church is full of a bunch of hypocrites.”

“Why are you worried about what’s in the hearts of others? Where you’re concerned, God looks only at what is in your heart. The individual Christian knows he is a believer. And the Lord knows those who are his. As for hypocrites in church, seems like the best place they could be. There’s always the chance that good Gospel preachin’ will rub off on them.”

Marshal Watson smiled. “Well, it’s something to think about. Thanks for explaining it.”

“My pleasure, Marshal.”

The two fell silent for several minutes. The glow of hot coals reflected off their faces as each man was absorbed in his own thoughts. Marshal Watson lifted the coffee cup to his lips. The cup was empty. “I think I’m gonna turn in. We’ve got a big day tomorrow.”

Marshal Watson lay back on the bedroll. For a long time he stared at the night sky. Then he pulled the blanket up to his chin, rolled onto his side, and closed his eyes.

XVI.

Amos felt someone vigorously shake him. Startled, he opened his eyes.

“Amos…Amos! I want to accept Jesus!”

Amos drew in a long breath. Then he sat up. The sky was still dark and the fire had completely burned out. Still, the starlight allowed Amos to see Marshal Watson clearly.

“I want the new life, Amos. What do I do?”

“You’re telling me, Marshal. What you do is tell God.”

Marshal Watson sat back. “That’s all there is to it?”

“That’s all you have to do. God will do the rest.”

“But I’ve never talked to God before!”

“That’s okay, Marshal. Do the best you can. It’s not so much the words. It’s what’s in your heart.” Amos leaned back on his elbow, rubbed his face, and yawned.

“Amos, will you help me?”

Amos sat up. “Sure, Marshal, I’ll help. Let’s bow our heads. Now repeat after me: Heavenly Father, I am sorry for all my sins. Forgive me and wash me clean. I accept your Son, Jesus Christ, as my Lord and Savior, and I believe in my heart that you raised him from the dead. Thank you, Father, that you have saved me. Amen.”

XVII.

Brighter than a sparkling diamond, the first beam of light rose above the horizon and seemed to momentarily sit on the line where the land meets the sky. Then the second and third beams popped above the horizon, followed by four more, then sixteen, then two hundred and fifty-six, and so forth.

After a few minutes, Amos felt the slightest warmth touch his cheek. The black of the inside of his eyelids began to turn red. He opened his eyes and lay still for several moments. He heard a horse cropping grass and birds chirping in the trees beyond.

He sat up and raked his fingers through his hair. Then he turned and glanced at Marshal Watson who was still asleep.

Amos turned over onto his hands and knees and then sat back on his legs. He took the coffee pot from the fireplace and poured it out. Then he filled the pot with water from his canteen and added fresh coffee grounds.

He started a fire with dry kindling and small dead branches. Before long the coffee was boiling happily over the flames.

He stood up and stretched. Then he walked over and checked on the horses. He talked softly and patted each of them affectionately on the neck.

The sun had become a burning globe, playing peek-a-boo through the stand of trees. He walked back to the fire and checked the coffee. Just a bit longer.

He rolled up his blankets and tied them to the back of his saddle that lay a few paces from the fire.

Amos recalled the night before and the long talk he had had with the Marshal. Then he remembered that the Marshal had awakened him in the middle of the night. Amos closed his eyes and said a special “thank you” to his heavenly Father who long ago had made his whole life worth living. Now, at last, the Marshal too would experience the Lord’s joy and peace.

He knelt down and poured himself a cup of the freshly-brewed coffee. Gingerly, he sipped the hot liquid. There was nothing quite like the first sip of good coffee early in the morning.

“Marshal, you plan on sleeping all day?”

TO BE CONTINUED

Parson Sam Blane in HOPE (Episode 4)

X.

The youthful Gary Blanchard felt his heart sink. Instantly, he knew the man sticking the gun in his back could only want one thing: the bank’s money. Also he surmised that what was in front of him, the fire at the livery stable, was cunningly connected to what was behind him, the gun in his back.

As Blanchard began to raise his arms in a gesture of surrender, a gravelly voice behind him said, “Keep your arms down. Turn and walk inside.”

When he turned, he saw the man with the gun. The man wore an evil smile that revealed yellow teeth in a crooked mouth nestled within thick black facial hair. Another man, six-shooter in hand, stood alongside the first.

Blanchard thought quickly. Mr. Drake, the bank president, was in the back office with the door closed. Blanchard also thought of the pistol kept on a shelf below the teller’s window. But he would have little chance to catch the thieves off-guard. He concluded his best course of action was to cooperate fully, to sacrifice the bank’s money, and to hope for the best.

After the trio entered the bank, the thieves forced Blanchard to lead the way into the area behind the teller windows where the safe was located.

“Open it,” the first thief said.

“I don’t know the combination.”

Meanwhile the second thief had already located the cash drawer at the teller’s window and was removing the loot.

Unbeknownst to all three men, Ken Drake, the bank president, had already received an urgent knock at the back door. Deputy Vince Evans had rushed in to inform Drake of the raging fire at the livery stable.

Deputy Evans watched impatiently as Drake scurried about the office in preparation to lock up the bank.

When the numerous details in his office had been attended to, with key ring in hand, Drake rushed out of the office to inform Blanchard of the bank’s closing.

The thief at the cash drawer had just stuffed the money into his vest pocket when the office door opened suddenly. Startled, the thief pointed and fired. Drake doubled over and with a loud groan fell to the floor.

Deputy Evans did not hesitate. He drew his weapon and rushed to a point where he had line-of-sight on the thief through the doorway. The shot from his pistol unerringly found its mark, and the thief crashed back against the counter.

The thief behind Blanchard dove onto the floor and aimed his pistol through the doorway from where the shot had come. When he fired, Blanchard saw flame spew from the gun barrel and he heard the Deputy’s shriek of death.

Catapulted by a surge of adrenaline, Blanchard raced for the pistol beneath the teller’s window. He grabbed the weapon and fired at the thief on the floor. Then everything went blank!

Two more thieves had entered the bank and the bullet from one thief’s gun had penetrated the back of Blanchard’s head.

On a day that had begun with such seeming promise, the youthful Gary Blanchard had met a sudden ignominious death.

XI.

Frank Stayton[1] was horrified. Two of his sons lay on the floor of the bank. “Check on them. Quick!”

Travis, Frank Stayton’s eldest son, hurried around the counter. Zack, who had been shot by Blanchard, lay on the floor, moaning.

Travis grabbed the other son, Jarrett, who lay on his face near the teller window. When Travis rolled him over, he knew his brother was dead. He looked up at Frank Stayton who had followed him around the counter.

“Jarrett’s dead, Pa.

“Pick him up and carry him out front. I’ll tend to Zack.”

When Frank Stayton bent over Zack, the boy was holding his side tightly with both hands. “Come on, son. Let’s get you out of here.” He grabbed the boy by the arm and helped him to his feet.

The two made their way out of the bank. With the help of Emmett, who had been guarding the horses, Travis had draped and tied Jarrett’s body over Jarrett’s horse. Frank Stayton helped Zack to his horse and steadied him as the boy crawled onto the saddle. “Can you ride?”

“I think so.”

“Good. Let’s go!”

A woman stood in the street near the bank entrance. She had been watching the livery burn when she heard the shots from inside the bank. Shortly afterwards, she saw the Staytons exit the building. One man was dead and another was wounded. Realizing she was witnessing a bank robbery, she screamed, “Hey! Stop!”

Emmett yelled, “Shut up, lady!”

In panic she began running toward the livery where the townspeople had formed a bucket brigade in an effort to extinguish the fire. “The bank’s been robbed!” She waved her arms in the air. “The bank’s been robbed!”

Emmett drew his gun and took careful aim. The bullet ripped through the woman’s back at an angle just below the left shoulder blade and pierced her heart. She spun half around and collapsed to the ground.

“Let’s go!” Emmett yelled. He stepped into the stirrup and mounted his horse. Already Frank Stayton and the wounded Zack had spurred their horses and were riding in the opposite direction of the fire. Travis was close behind, leading Jarrett’s horse with the dead man strapped across the saddle.

Emmett spurred his horse and the animal bolted. Looking over his shoulder, he saw a few men running toward the woman lying in the street. Twisting in the saddle, he fired several shots. One man went down. Then he turned forward and spurred the animal again. “That’ll hold ‘em.”

XII.

Little Joey was the youngest of the Stayton brothers. He was a lanky young man of fourteen. His dark brown eyes were set deep in an angular face that had been darkly tanned by the sun. The faintest moustache appeared above his upper lip, and a thin tuft of hair clung to his dimpled chin.

The cool water of the stream felt good under the late morning sun. Already he had rekindled the fire from the night before. He had also put on coffee and a pot of beans. Then he had left his boots on the bank and had rolled up his pants. Now, as the boy waded to and fro in the shallows, he complained aloud, “I’m old enough to go along when Pa robs some hick-town bank. I don’t know why I’m always the one stuck with tending camp. I ought to run away like Gil did.”

Thinking of his older brother, Gil, Little Joey crouched and drew the six-shooter from his holster. He fired at a rock sticking out of the water near the bank. He smirked when he saw a chunk of the rock fly off and fine debris explode into the air. The sound of the shot and the ricochet off the rock sent thunderous vibrations echoing back and forth between the trees that bordered the stream.

Little Joey had never known Gil very well, and the lack of a close relationship was a source of sadness. Gil left home when Little Joey was still a youngster but Little Joey often heard his Pa and his brothers talk of Gil’s reputation as a gunfighter.

Gil visited the family at their ranch near El Paso when Pearl Stayton, the boys’ mother, had become ill and died. After the funeral, Gil left again and soon the family lost track of his whereabouts. Periodically, the family heard rumors that Gil had killed another man. Once, the news came from Santa Fe. A while later, from Denver. No one was ever sure where Gil Stayton would turn up next.

During Gil’s visit to the ranch, Little Joey begged his brother to demonstrate his prowess with a six-shooter. Gil had set up a few tin cans on a fence rail. Even as a youngster, Little Joey knew he was seeing something satanic when Gil drew and fired. Almost simultaneously, the cans leapt from the rail and the blasts of the individual shots were indistinguishable. When Gil had re-holstered his gun, he turned to Little Joey and said, “Tin cans don’t shoot back. That’s the difference between shooting cans and facing down another man.” He winked. “Better to shoot ‘em in the back.”

After his mother died, Little Joey noticed a significant change in his father. Frank Stayton had become listless and extremely depressed. When he stopped working on the ranch, Little Joey’s brothers quickly lost interest too. Before long, the ranch fell into disrepair from neglect.

When the need for money grew intolerable, Pa and a few of his brothers robbed a bank. From then on, the family was always in trouble with the law.

Shortly after that first bank robbery, the family abandoned the ranch. They began wandering as nomads, using their wits to live off the land and to “outsmart people with more money.” Frequent crossings of the Mexican border kept them from capture by the law. Some people called what the Staytons did stealing, but Little Joey knew it was simply a matter of survival. And if a few people got killed, well, they probably deserved it. But he did not waste time thinking about those things.

When his Pa received news of the deaths of Wade and Clem, the entire clan mounted up and began riding north. They were after someone called Parson Sam Blane in Abilene, Kansas.

Little Joey knew the importance of paying back crimes against the family. He had learned the lesson when his brother, Toby, had been killed by a man driving a wagon. Shortly afterwards, Emmett had slit the man’s throat and had received praise from his Pa and brothers. Little Joey knew that, one day, he would make Pa and his brothers proud of him. Then they would praise him too!

The pack horse whinnied. Little Joey turned and looked in the direction of the town. In the distance, he saw riders. That would be Pa and his brothers.

He stepped out of the water and sat down and pulled on his boots. By the time he stood up, the riders had drawn closer and he could see them clearly. Something was wrong. A body was draped over one of the horses!

Within a few minutes, the men rode into camp on heavily lathered animals. Little Joey took the reins of the horses as the men dismounted. Now he could see it was Jarrett who had been killed.

After dismounting, Frank Stayton hurried to the side of Zack’s horse and helped the slumping boy from the saddle.

Little Joey watched as his father sat Zack at the base of a tree and leaned him against the trunk. “What happened?”

No one answered.

Little Joey turned and looked at Jarrett’s lifeless body. Horror struck him when he saw Jarrett’s wide staring eyes, glazed over with the milky slime of death.

Travis came up behind him. “Cool down the horses then let them drink.” He brushed past the lad and untied Jarrett’s body. Then he pulled Jarrett’s legs. When the body slid off the saddle, Travis caught Jarrett under the arms and lowered him to the ground. Noticing Little Joey had not moved, Travis glanced up and saw the alarm in the boy’s eyes. “Get going!”

Little Joey turned and began walking the horses. After he let the horses drink, he tied them to a couple of trees. Then he sat down at the campfire. Emmett was thoroughly engrossed in a pan of beans and Travis sat cross-legged, sipping coffee from a tin cup.

When Frank Stayton walked over and sat down, Travis asked, “How is Zack?”

“Only a flesh wound but he’s lost some blood. He won’t be able to ride for a while.”

“We can’t stay here.” Emmett spoke with a mouthful of beans. “The fire we started at the livery will only hold that townsfolk a little longer.” As he talked, a half-eaten bean jetted out of his mouth and landed on the ground. “They’ll come after us. And we left an easy trail.” He scooped another heaping spoonful of beans into his mouth.

“Little Joey,” Frank Stayton said, “shimmy up that there tree and set yourself on that big branch.” He looked up at the branch as if pointing to it with his nose. “You keep watch for a posse. I don’t know how much time we got. We killed a couple of folks back there.”

“More than a couple,” Emmett said. A few beans spilled out of his mouth onto his beard. “I got me that loud-mouthed woman and maybe a fella. Caught him dead on the run from atop my horse.”

Frank Stayton poured himself coffee. “Zack said he got him the deputy that shot Jarrett. The townsfolk will form a posse and they’ll be comin’ as soon as they can.”

Travis threw a small wad of dollar bills on the ground in front of the group. “I took this off Jarrett’s body. It’s all him and Zack got from the bank.”

“How much is it?” Emmett asked.

“Twenty-five dollars.”

Frank Stayton picked up the money and stuffed it into his shirt pocket. “My boy was worth more than that.”

“What are we gonna do about Zack if he can’t ride?” Travis asked.

Emmett threw down an empty pan and leaned back with both hands on his stomach. “Zack’s gonna have to ride, that’s all.” He stood up. “We best get to burying Jarrett.”

Frank Stayton looked up. “No, we’re not burying him here in plain sight. I don’t want no chance of the posse diggin’ him up.”

“We can’t take him with us. He’ll slow us down.”

“I said not here!”

Emmett sat back down. “Okay Pa. You’re the boss. You don’t have to git so riled up about it.”

“Just sit there and shut up!”

After several minutes, Frank Stayton leaned forward and tossed the remaining coffee in his cup onto the fire. “Here’s what we’ll do.” He picked up a stick and began drawing on the ground. When he was done, he stood up and rubbed out the drawing with the sole of his boot. “Let’s get movin’.”

They had just broken camp when Little Joey sat up on the branch. “Here they come!”

Frank Stayton looked up. “How many?”

“Five, six…seven of them!”

“Okay, let’s go!”

XIII.

Under any other circumstances, Marshal Bill Watson would not have been leading the posse. His gray hair peeked from beneath his hat and heavy lines creased his face. He felt the pain of arthritis in his back with every stride of the horse.

In about a month, he had planned to turn over his duties as Marshal to Deputy Vince Evans. But now his deputy was dead. Marshal Watson was left as the town’s only lawman, and the responsibility for catching the outlaws had fallen squarely on his shoulders. Even so, he knew his health was failing.

Although he had told no one, within the past week he had experienced what he knew could only have been a heart attack. The pressure in his arm and chest had seized him suddenly, and for a long moment he could hardly breathe. Then, as abruptly as it had begun, the physical anguish left him. But the solemn warning had remained.

When he and the posse arrived at the stream, he saw the remains of the Stayton camp. He dismounted along with several others.

He carefully studied the tracks and everything about the site. “They spent the night here and must have started for town at first light. There’s blood over by that tree, so one of them is wounded. They entered the stream here.” He turned to a man in the group. “Amos, head over to the other side and see if there are tracks where they rode out. If not, we’ll have to split up and try to pick up their trail either up or down stream.”

Amos mounted his horse and crossed the swollen stream. In the middle, the water rose almost to his saddle. When he rode up onto the opposite bank, he clearly saw the tracks of the Staytons’ horses.

He waved to the Marshal and then pointed at the tracks.

Marshal Watson ordered, “Okay, they crossed over. Mount up.”

The crossing was slow-going. When they finally reached the other side, Marshal Watson followed the tracks, leading the men west at a fast gallop. They paralleled the stream for about a quarter mile. Then the tracks turned, showing the Staytons had entered the stream again.

Pulling up at the edge of the water, Marshal Watson slowly scanned the opposite bank. His mind was on the possibility of an ambush. If the posse were caught in the open while crossing the stream, they would have little chance to escape. “Amos, see if they crossed all the way over.”

Again, Amos crossed the stream and found the tracks. When he waved to the Marshal, one of the men yelled, “Okay, let’s go.”

Marshall Watson held up his hand. “Wait a minute. I don’t like this. We’ll cross over one at a time. I’ll go first.”

One of the men whined, “We’re wasting time, Marshal.”

Marshal Watson led his horse into the water. “Let’s do it my way.”

When everyone had crossed the stream, one of the men complained, “Marshal, we’re letting them get away! We should have crossed together. Look at the time we lost!”

Marshal Watson did not reply. He turned his horse and began following the Staytons’ tracks. The others fell in behind. After another quarter mile the tracks turned, showing the Staytons once again had entered the stream.

Now Marshal Watson was extremely apprehensive. What were the outlaws up to? He called to Amos. “Cross over and check for their tracks.”

A man in the posse shouted, “We ain’t got time for this, Marshal! We know those outlaws keep crossing the stream to slow us down. Each time they cross they gain ground on us. We’re never going to catch them before dark!” He turned to the others, “Come on. Let’s go!”

Several of the men spurred their horses and began crossing the stream.

“You men stop!” Marshal Watson ordered.

The men, however, continued to ride.

Amos and another man stayed with the Marshal and watched the men cross. When the men had safely crossed the stream they waved and pointed at the tracks. The other man turned to the Marshal. “They’re right, Marshal. If we’re ever going to catch them, we have to cross together. Otherwise we lose too much time.” He spurred his horse and headed across the stream.

Marshal Watson watched the man cross the stream. “I’ve completely lost control.”

“You still got me, Marshal,” Amos said. “I’m with you all the way.”

Marshal Watson glanced at Amos. “Thanks.” His lips curled in a quick smile. “Okay. Let’s cross over.”

Once they arrived on the opposite bank, both men spurred their horses. Riding at full speed Marshal Watson and Amos had almost caught up to the others when the Staytons’ tracks turned again. Marshal Watson watched as the posse did not hesitate at all. As a group, they rushed into the stream.

Marshal Watson and Amos pulled up and stopped on the water’s edge. Watching the riders, bunched up in the middle of the stream, Marshal Watson grumbled, “You fools!”

TO BE CONTINUED

Stayton Clan Profile

1 – Frank Stayton: The patriarch and the meanest of the clan. He is committed to retribution for the death of any of his sons:

“The loss of a son creates a hole in my heart that can only be filled by the knowledge that I repaid the injustice with the death of the perpetrator.”

2 – Travis Stayton: Eldest son and Frank’s right-hand man. His job revolves around the care of the clan. He frequently gives orders to the other sons, who varyingly begrudge or freely assent to, but in all cases carry out, the orders. Travis is a bit cautious contrasted against the general nature of a ruthless, sometimes reckless, clan, which believes itself invulnerable. Of all the sons, he is the only one from whom Frank Stayton will sometimes allow debate and to whom, in rare cases, he may defer.

3 – Emmett Stayton: Emmett is the enforcer of the clan, ensuring that the other sons stay in line. He’s short and stocky, but he is the most capable physically. He is also the most ruthless of the sons.

4 – Gil Stayton: A renowned professional gunfighter who normally travels alone. He is the best of the clan with weapons. He is the fastest draw of not only the clan but of most men in the west. He travels extensively and only rarely takes part in clan business.

5 – Jarrett Stayton: Killed during the bank robbery in Denton, TX.

6 – Miles Stayton: Appears later in story.

7 – Zack Stayton: Wounded during the bank robbery in Denton, TX.

8 – Little Joey Stayton: Youngest of the Stayton boys.

9 – Wade Caldwell: Executed by hanging after conviction at trial.

10 – Clem Caldwell: Killed by Blane in self-defense.

11 – Toby Stayton: Killed in a wagon accident.

12 – Al Stayton: Killed for the reward money by Royce Lee, a bounty hunter.



[1] Stayton Clan Profile is included at end of this entry.