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“You Want to Finish Counting to Ten?” Said John Wayne… 3 Gunmen Challenged Him, Only 2 Walked Out

Mind if I sit? The man said, though he was already sitting, already comfortable, already certain of how this afternoon was going to go. John looked up then, slow, unhurried. The look of a man who’d been interrupted mid thought and wasn’t in any rush to pretend otherwise. Looks like you already did. A faint smile crossed the man’s face, there and gone.

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“Name’s Garrett Voss,” he said. “These two with me are Hale and Decker.” He nodded toward the men flanking him without looking at either one. “We’ve been riding 3 days looking for a man matching your particular description.” Stop  for a second, because you need to understand exactly what kind of moment this was.

In a town  this size, a stranger describing another stranger wasn’t curiosity, it was business. And business in that decade usually meant somebody had decided a man’s life was worth a number, and that number had already been agreed upon by people who’d never have to look him in the eye while collecting it. “That’s so,” John said.

“Description of fella about your size, dark hair going gray at the temples, rides alone mostly, has a habit of sitting with his back to a wall.” Voss leaned back, letting the silence stretch, watching for any reaction the way a man studies a hand of cards he’s already half certain he’s going to win. John set his glass down on the table, the sound small and deliberate in a room gone almost entirely silent.

Otis had backed up against the shelves behind the bar. Near the far wall, a woman in a blue dress gathered her things without a sound and slipped toward the side door. The kind of quiet exit a person learns once they’ve seen enough trouble to recognize its shape before it starts. “You’ve got a particular man in mind,” John said, “or just describing half the territory and seeing who answers?” Voss’s smile widened, but it still didn’t reach whatever sat behind his eyes.

“Man named Garson hired us. Says you crossed  him on a cattle deal near Prescott back in the spring. Says you took money that was his and left him holding paper not worth the ink it was written with.” John was quiet a moment, turning the glass slowly between two fingers. “I’ve crossed a lot of men in my time,” he said finally.

“Some of them deserved it.” Notice the way he said it, not denying, not confirming, just letting the man across from him sit with the uncertainty of it. Never give a man more information than he’s already brought with him. Let him do the work of believing whatever he wants to believe. Garson wants what’s his, Voss said, or he wants you.

He wasn’t particular about which, so long as one of the two ends up on my horse by sundown. The younger of the two men behind Voss, Hale, couldn’t have been more than 23, shifted his weight and let out a short laugh that didn’t carry much humor in it. Three of us, he said, one of you. Don’t seem like much of a math problem to me.

John looked at him the way a man looks at a child who said something foolish with complete confidence. Not unkind, just patient. Numbers, he said, aren’t always the part of the equation that matters. Remember this moment because it’s going to come back around before this story is finished.

Hale’s hand had drifted, just slightly, toward the grip of his revolver while he laughed. A small unconscious gesture most men in that room never noticed. John noticed. John noticed everything about the way a man’s hand moved when he was getting ready, even unconsciously, to use it. Voss held up a hand, a small gesture, and Hale’s fingers stilled.

Nobody’s reaching for anything yet, Voss said. >>  >> I like to give a man the chance to walk out his own door before anybody has to carry him out of it. Generous, John said. Practical, Voss corrected. Dead men don’t pay debts and don’t answer questions, either. Garson wants to know what happened to his money before anybody puts a man in the ground over it.

There, that was the thread worth pulling, though nobody in the room caught it yet. If Garson wanted answers, he’d have sent one man with a question, not three guns. Three guns meant somebody had already decided the answer before they’d ever ridden out of Prescott. Decker, the older one who’d said nothing since walking through the door, finally spoke, his voice low and rough like a man who trusted  it to carry weight when he used it.

You’ve got until I finish counting to 10, he said, to decide whether you’re walking out of here peaceful or whether this gets loud. A pattern interrupt because you need to picture this room from above for a moment. The door behind Voss and his men, the bar to the left where Otis stood frozen, the far wall where the woman in blue had slipped out, and John at the back one window behind him opening onto a narrow alley.

Every man who’d lived through trouble before was calculating angles without realizing it, >>  >> and one of John’s wasn’t a wall or a window at all, but a door he hadn’t taken his eyes off since he’d sat down. Before you start counting, John said, answer me something.  Decker’s jaw tightened slightly, but he gave a short nod.

This Garson, John said, he tell you himself what happened on that cattle deal, or did somebody tell him who told somebody else who eventually  told you? Voss’s expression shifted just barely. Does it matter? Matters plenty, John said. Difference between a man who’s owed something and a man who’s been told he’s owed something by somebody looking to settle a score that was never  his to settle.

Notice that the room had gone tense in a way that reached well past the three men at John’s table. Other patrons started easing back from the bar, finding reasons to drift near the door. The kind of instinctive retreat a room makes when everyone in it has individually decided something violent is about to happen.

Wait, because here’s what matters about the kind of man John Wayne actually was underneath all that calm. He wasn’t stalling out of fear, he was stalling because he wanted information, and a man talking is a man you can read. Garson told me himself, Voss said, his patience thinning.

Sat across from me in his own office and told me you cheated him out of $1,100 and left him holding a contract signed in a name that doesn’t exist. John nodded slowly like a man confirming something he’d already half suspected. And did he show you the contract? Silence. “Did he?” John repeated, quieter now, “Show you the contract, Mr.

Voss?” The silence stretched a half second too long, and that half second told John everything he needed to know. “He told me about it,” Voss said, his voice tighter now, “Didn’t need to show me. That’s not how this business  works.” “No,” John said quietly, “I expect it isn’t.” He leaned back, the movement of a man settling in rather than preparing to run.

“Way I see it, you’ve ridden 3 days on the word of a man who never once showed you a single piece of paper to back it up. That’s not a job, Mr. Voss. That’s a man using your gun to settle something he’s either too proud or too guilty to settle himself.  One claim, one contract nobody had seen, one man’s word standing in for all of it. That was the whole weight of 3 days riding, and John had just shown the room how little it actually held.

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