Newton’s Law

05/28/13

Hobbs burst into the one-room cabin, slammed the door behind him, and leaned back against it, his eyes closed and his chest heaving. “Apaches,” he said. “Other side of the river. At least a dozen.”

Old Amos Bassett, who had already jumped to his feet, spit out half his biscuit and swallowed the rest whole. The third person in the room, a long-haired man named Jack Fountain, stood also, but a little more slowly: his wrists were handcuffed behind his back.

“Did they see you?” Amos sputtered.

“Don’t matter,” Hobbs said. “They saw our smoke.” He glanced around the interior of the cabin. It was an old line shack, dark and rundown and smelling like years of woodsmoke and unwashed cowboys. His gaze stopped on the rope-handled bucket, still empty, that he held in his right hand. He stared at it blankly for a second, then flung it into a corner. “Let’s get movin’. If we can make it to the woods and double back to the river . . .”

The old man was already gathering his gear. “What about the horses?”

“Leave ’em.” Hobbs took out his pistol, spun the cylinder, holstered it again. “We’ll have to go out the back window—”

“Give me a gun,” Jack Fountain said.

Both the others stared at him. “What?” Hobbs asked.

“You heard me. Take off these cuffs and give me a gun.”

Newton Hobbs regarded him a moment. “Let me explain something to you, Fountain. I’m the Law, he’s the tracker, you’re the prisoner. Prisoners don’t get guns.”

“Yeah, well, I ain’t no regular prisoner, Deputy. For one thing, I ain’t really been arrested yet, have I. And if that’s Red Shirt’s bunch out there”—Fountain nodded his shaggy head toward the closed door—“you’ll need all the help you can get.”

Before Hobbs could reply, Amos Bassett said, “He’s right, Newt. We’re just supposed to bring him in for questioning, you said so yourself.”

Hobbs turned to the old man. “So what are you saying, Amos? Give him a gun so he can kill us like he killed them two women in Hays?”

“I didn’t kill nobody,” Fountain snapped.

The old tracker swallowed and lowered his voice. “What if he’s tellin’ the truth, Newt? One of the Cado boys did say he saw him in Dodge at the time.”

All three men fell silent, thinking their own thoughts.

“Come on, Deputy,” Fountain said, half-turning and jingling his handcuff chains. “We’re wastin’ time.”

Still Hobbs hesitated. Finally he muttered, “God help us,” and nodded to the old man, who fished a key from his pocket and unlocked the cuffs. When that was done, Hobbs pulled a second pistol from his belt, flipped it over, and handed it to the prisoner. “Head for the window, I’m right behind you,” Hobbs said. He turned to grab some jerky and a canteen from the tabletop.

When he turned again, stuffing the jerky into his vest pocket, he froze.

Jack Fountain had taken two steps back, and was standing alone in the center of the room. The borrowed pistol was pointed straight at Newton Hobbs’s chest. Amos already had his hands high in the air, and was gawking at the gun as if hypnotized.

“What’s this?” Hobbs said.

Fountain cocked the pistol and studied both of them a moment. His lip had curled into a cold, bitter smile. “Let me explain something to you, Deputy,” he said. “You’re a dead man, he’s a dead man, I’m a free man. As of right now. And free men don’t get taken back to hang.

Hobbs nodded. “So you did kill ’em.”

“You bet I did. Enjoyed it, too.”

Old Amos suddenly spoke up, sounding hurt as well as scared: “But Sam Cado said you was in Dodge that day, with him…”

Fountain’s gaze flicked to Amos. “I’ll give you some advice, old man,” he said, still smiling. “Don’t believe everything you’re told.”

With that, he raised the revolver, aimed it at Hobbs’ head, and pulled the trigger.

The hollow CLICK sounded loud in the confined space of the cabin. For an instant Fountain just stood there, staring in disbelief. Before he could recover, Deputy Hobbs’s own gun was drawn and cocked and ready.

“Jack Fountain,” Hobbs said, “you are under arrest for the murders of Clara Garvey and Janie Sims. Amos, take his gun and cuff him again.”

The old man, who was every bit as stunned as the prisoner, blinked and nodded. While Hobbs held his pistol pointed at Fountain’s heart, Amos retrieved the empty revolver and with trembling hands snapped the cuffs into place.

In the silence that followed, Jack Fountain’s twisted grin returned. “Pretty cute, Deputy,” he admitted. “But you’re still dead men. Red Shirt and me go way back, but you and your tracker’ll be scalped and roasted by noontime.”

Amos Bassett swallowed again, and glanced over Hobbs’s shoulder at the closed door. “He’s right, Newt—it’s too late to run now. What about the Indians?”

Keeping his eyes on Fountain, Hobbs backed up until he was leaning against the doorframe. “Let me put it this way, Amos: So far he’s only been right about one thing.” Without looking, Hobbs hooked one of his spurs into the crack of the door behind him and kicked sideways. The door swung open again, to reveal a wide deserted clearing, a shallow river, and plains that stretched flat and empty all the way to the distant mountains.

“…Don’t believe everything you’re told,” Hobbs said.

~ fin ~

johnfloyd

John M. Floyd’s short fiction has appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery MagazineEllery Queen Mystery MagazineThe Strand MagazineMississippi NoirThe Saturday Evening Post, two editions of The Best American Mystery Stories, and many other publications. A former Air Force captain and IBM systems engineer, John is also an Edgar nominee, a three-time Derringer Award winner, and a recipient of the Short Mystery Fiction Society’s lifetime achievement award. His eighth book was released in April 2020.

As usual, a gem by a top-notch storyteller.
Barry Ergang
June 11, 2013
John, you are a pro and it shows. I really enjoyed this one.
Bruce Harris
June 01, 2013
Pretty dern tricky John. Glad to see you here!
Jim Wilsky
May 31, 2013
Nicely done ,John!
Chris Leek
May 30, 2013
nice twist!
Bill Baber
May 28, 2013

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