had managed to pull himself up, leaning back against the sacks packed three feet high off the floor, blinking the blood out of his eyes, tasting more blood on his tongue and lips. His vision had cleared somewhat, enough that he could see Waco standing over him, could see the barrel aimed at his chest.
âYou heard that, didnât you?â Waco asked.
âI heard,â Borden answered.
âI donât tolerate liars. So who do I kill? You? Or do I dispatch Ted Dunegan to kill one of the Katyâs passengers?â
Borden turned his head and spit out blood. âThis is the Number Four, but thereâs no payroll.â
âMy man in Texas . . . he knows things.â
Bordenâs head bobbed. Even that hurt. He cringed, tried to shake off the pain, and smiled. âHe set you up, Danny. The payroll. We put it on the Flyer.â
âThe Flyer!â Dunegan cried out, followed by some curses, and a fist slamming against the express carâs wall. âWaco . . . you told me to let that train go by.â
Borden laughedâuntil Waco kicked him in the chest, knocking him to his side.
Waco walked back and forth, knocking over packages, kicking boxes, cursing, screaming, shouting out that heâd ride to Texas and personally kill Mr. Percy Frick.
Borden tried to catch his breath. He pulled himself back to a seated position, smiling with satisfaction at the irate, almost insane, outlaw. He saw this young kidâmust have been Ted Duneganâclimb into the car, and begin opening letters, packages. To Bordenâs right, the big Indian Waco had called Tonk was doing the same.
Moments later, Waco had calmed down. âWhat are you doinâ?â
âSeeinâ if thereâs anything valuable in this mail,â said the young outlaw, a blond-headed, pockmarked kid with peach fuzz for a mustache. He found a check, folded it, and stuck it inside his vest pocket.
âHow much did we get off the passengers and crew?â Waco asked.
Peach Fuzz, Mr. Ted Dunegan of Bluejacket, shrugged. âNot forty thousand dollars. Not by a long shot.â
Waco cursed again. âPercy Frickâs a dead man.â He knelt to pick up the purse of coins he had tossed out of the safe. He pulled on the string, tugged it open, and cursed again. âNickels.â He glowered at Borden. âWho puts nickels in a safe?â
Borden didnât answer. He saw the Greener leaning against the handle of a McCormickâs reaper in the back of the coach, and saw the legs of the big Indian. Heard him opening a box, and Bordenâs heart sank.
âWell, hereâs somethinâ.â
âMoney?â Waco looked up.
âBetter.â
Borden heard the metallic sound of a rifle being cocked.
âThatâs a sweet action.â The trigger pulled, snapping loudly.
Borden saw the Winchester â86 sailing across the room into Danny Wacoâs hands.
âA rifle?â Dunegan spit onto the floor. âIt ainât worth forty thousand dollars, is it?â
âShut up.â Waco had left his Winchester lying on the floor. He studied the rifle that had once belonged to Nels Who Smells, but was supposed to be going to James Mann in McAdam, Texas. Cocked it again, pulled the trigger, then flipped the gun around, staring down the barrel. âIâve seen caves smaller than this.â He grinned.
âYeah,â the Indian said. âHere.â
Waco shifted the big rifle, sticking it underneath his left armpit, and held up his hands like some ballist awaiting the throw of a baseball. Instead, he caught the box of shells the Indian had tossed, green paper with the image of a bullet in the center.
âFor Winchester Repeating Rifle, Model 1886,â Waco read and laughed. âFifty caliber, hundred grains of powder, and a four-hundred-fifty grain chunk of lead for a bullet.â
âThat would stop a train,â the Indian said.
âNo.â
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