the last. Had another chap lined up but heâs out sick, or so he says. Yankee I know. So itâs just the two of us. Should be three at least but thereâs nothing I can do. We drive to a safe crossing near Indian land. You and I stick with the trucks all the way to just outside Plattsburgh. Itâs a long way âround and not normally how things are done but everyoneâs shorthanded so this is how it has to be. Iâve got us a room at the Republic. Tomorrow we come back on the noon train. Do you have papers?â
âMilitia. My library card.â
Jack laughed. âGood.â
He got up and went to the wardrobe, opened it and took out a hatbox.
âArtillery,â he said.
He put the box on the bed and lifted out two revolvers and a case of shells. Now I saw why the ridiculous lock was on the door. Jack handed over a Webley Mark IV. Itâd been awhile since Iâd handled one. I hefted it, broke it open, spun the cylinder, and looked down the barrel.
âWhereâs the head?â
âDown the hall,â Jack said. âIâm going to change.â
He took a dark coat out of the wardrobe. With composure, I retreated and groped along an unlit passageway to the W.C. with knees no worse from quaking. Firearms. Revolvers are tools built for use. Pick one up and carry it around and you will pull its trigger, sure as shooting.
Carefully I micturated in the filthy lavatory without touching the surroundings. My fastidious medical training had augmented and grounded an abhorrence of uncleanliness; my sterile urine was probably the cleanest substance in the room.
I returned to find Jack knotting a new tie. While he whistled I loaded the Webley and sat down. We drank more ale, smoked tobacco, and let the world burn itself out. My mind sharpened to a whetted blade with clarity and insight. Previously unrecognized associations aligned themselves into an organized pattern. The potential danger ahead was evaluated and rationalized. I felt excitement at action after such sloth. The empty summer gone, autumn quickening. I wasnât going to leave on a train, not yet. This city, this city which had harried me from den to den, scoured by hounds, this city would see me turn and rue its hunt. Iâd show my teeth. Money would lend an ease, command. Laura. I will have her, or no one will. I picked up the weapon while Jack hummed that tune and loaded his. What was the song? He checked his wristwatch and snapped his fingers.
âTime.â
WE PREPARED OURSELVES. Another sniff of the powder. My gun in my belt for now, under my suitcoat. Out and downstairs, back on the pavement, and over to the canal.
âIf weâre separated,â Jack said, âtry the bar at the Dominion quarter past nine every night for a week. Iâll either be there or Iâll leave you a message. Iâm Pete, youâre Sam. No soap after a week, well...â
âNothing to fear. This is good. Thanks, Jack.â
I meant it. Once again heâd dropped out of the sky and got me moving.
âYou bet. Here they come.â
Jack shone an electric torch on and off thrice. Headlamps coming towards us along the slough dipped the same number of times. Our convoy. The lead truck slowed. Jack motioned me to the tail. We shook hands.
âSee you at the Hotel Republic.â he said.
âLive free or die,â I went.
I climbed into the cab of the third truck. The driver was a big brute, unwashed and unshaven.
âEvening.â
He grunted.
A freight pulled by as we set off. One of the boxcars had Santa FeâPacific stencilled on its side, a long way from home. I cracked my knuckles, a bad habit ill-befitting any prospective surgeon. Number it amongst the traits ensuring my unsuitability for a reputable profession. Our truck pulled ahead of the engine and we parallelled it on Commissioners. The driver shifted up, accelerated, shifted again, braked a little. The truck swayed. We turned