7

“Now let me get this straight,” hissed Andre, furiously. “I was up all night, worried about where you were, and you were off getting your ashes hauled with some bimbo?”

“It wasn’t exactly the sort of situation I could have backed out of.” Delaney protested, whispering so as not to wake Lucas, who was stretched out on the bed.

“Oh, really? What did she do, force you?”

“Come on, Andre, give me a break, for Christ’s sake! It would have looked a little strange for a cowboy fresh off the trail to turn down a proposition from a woman like that! Besides, I thought I might learn a thing or two.”

“Well. I hope she was a good teacher.” Andre said.

“That isn’t what I meant, dammit!”

“What’s going on?” Lucas mumbled from the bed. He sat up and rubbed his eyes, “Finn! What happened?”

“He was out getting laid, that’s what happened.” Andre said.

“What?” said Lucas.

“It wasn’t like that.” Delaney protested. He quickly brought Lucas up to date on what had occurred the previous night. “I knew you’d gone out with the posse.” he said, when he’d finished, “and I figured Andre would try to get some sleep. The Oriental Saloon is one of the big social centers in this town and I figured if anything unusual was going on, there was a chance that Becky knew about it. I’m sorry if I worried you, but I figured that if I didn’t make contact. Andre would realize I was following up a lead.”

“Oh, is that what you call it?” she asked, wryly.

“All right, never mind.” said Lucas. “The important thing is, did you find out anything?”

Delaney nodded, “Yeah. She knows a lot about what’s going on in this town. Mostly stuff that we already know, but a few things that we didn’t. Like about Ben Stone. I think he’s a ringer. And I’m pretty sure that he suspects me, too. He saw me pull a martial arts move on one of those guys during the fight and if he’s a pro, it must have tipped him off.”

“What did you learn from the girl?” asked Lucas.

“He’s apparently loaded. He’s always got a roll on him. He rents a room in Fly’s Boarding House, but he doesn’t seem to spend much time there. When he’s not gambling in the Occidental, or the Alhambra or the Oriental, nobody seems to know where the hell he goes. He simply disappears. Apparently, there’s been some talk in town that he might be in on some of the stage robberies, but he was always around somewhere in front of witnesses when they went down. That still doesn’t mean he’s not involved, though. And after those three Observers were killed, he seemed real interested in the investigation.”

“She told you about that?” said Andre. “About the Observers being killed?”

“Yeah.” said Delaney, faintly puzzled. “Why?”

“Because it seems no one else in town will talk about it,” Lucas said. “It’s as if it never happened. When I spoke to Wyatt Earp, he claimed he didn’t know anything about it, had never even heard of anyone named Summers. Billings or McEnery.”

“You’re kidding.” said Delaney, started.

“It’s as if somebody went around to everyone in town and told them not to talk about it,” Andre said. “They all act as if it simply never happened. As if those men had never even been here.”

“That doesn’t make any sense.” Delaney said, mystified. “The whole town?”

“Well, apparently not the Whole town,” Andre said. “since Becky spoke to you about it. But when we first got in, we spoke to the bartender here in the hotel, Andrew Mehan, and he talked about it. Later, when I asked him again, he denied he’d ever said anything and looked at me like I was drunk or something.”

“That’s weird” said Delaney. “What the hell is going on?”

“That’s what I’d like to know: said Lucas.

“You get a chance to make contact with Neilson on the posse?” Finn asked.

Lucas shook his head. “He acted as if he didn’t know me. I figure whoever’s behind all this, one or more of them were on the posse and Scott knew that he was being watched.”

“You figure it’s the Network?” asked Delaney.

“I don’t know.” Lucas replied. “If it is, there’s a good chance we might have been blown as soon as we got into town. We’re known to some of those people. But it could also be the S.O.G. One way or another, we’ll probably find out before too long, because someone’s bound to make a move against us.”

“What bothers me is why suddenly no one will talk about those murders.” Andre said. “Could it be possible that the Network is actually in control of this whole town?”

“I wouldn’t have thought so.” said Delaney. “But I can’t think of any other explanation.” He compressed his lips into a tight grimace. “I’ll bet that bastard. Darkness, knows. Only he’s not going to tell us anything until he’s good and ready. And then we won’t have any time to think about it. Son of a bitch just once. I’d like to get my hands on him..”

“I keep thinking that there’s something we’re not seeing.” Lucas said. “Something we’re not taking into account. So far, we’re just floundering around back here, waiting for something to happen. I don’t like it. I’ve got a real bad feeling about this whole thing.”

“We’re going to have to make contact with Neilson as soon as he gets back.” Delaney said. “He’s got to know something. Something must have happened between the time he clocked in with his report and the time we got here

“Obviously,” said Lucas. “Only what?”

“He’s apparently become involved with Jenny Reilly, who works at the saloon,” Delaney said. “From the way she spoke. it sounded pretty serious.”

“You apparently got yourself involved, as well.” said Andre.”I went to bed with Becky,” said Delaney. “I’m not ‘involved’ with her. This sounds different. The Montana Kid and Jenny Reilly seem to have become an item in this town. Did you have a chance to check out that other guy Neilson mentioned in his report? The gunsmith. Zeke Bailey?”

He’s dead.” said Lucas. “He was murdered at his home just outside of town by person or persons unknown. Shot with a. 45.”

“That’s interesting.” Delaney said. “You think he might have been killed to keep us from talking to him?”

“I don’t know what to think.” said Lucas. “I’m not even sure where to start.”

“I am,” said Delaney. “Ben Stone.”

There were things that went on in Hop Town that no one else in Tombstone knew about. The Chinese had a very closed community. There were a lot of them living in a relatively small space and the other residents of Tombstone tended to avoid the area. Not out of fear, but out of bigotry. They didn’t like being around them. They liked having them do their laundry, they liked having them perform menial jobs and hard labor in the mines and on the railroad, mainly because they worked cheaply, and they liked having them as cooks, so long as they didn’t cook that slop they ate themselves, but when it came to treating them as equals, that idea simply didn’t occur to anyone. They were, after all, the “heathen Chinese.” an inferior race altogether, with their own incomprehensible language, customs and beliefs. They were different and it was better if they just kept off to themselves.

The law in Tombstone did not overly concern itself with what went on down there in Hop Town. If they wanted to cook their funny-smelling food, and smoke their opium and gamble in their own establishments and chant and light their prayer sticks and have their own little internecine conflicts, so long as the trouble didn’t spill outside of Hop Town, nobody really gave a damn. After all, they had to live somewhere, didn’t they, and as long as they kept to themselves and didn’t cause any trouble and stayed out of the way, let them live any damn way they pleased. So Tombstone had its own little Chinese ghetto and, for Nikola’ Drakov, that had certain advantages.

With their superstitious beliefs in magic and mysticism, instilling fear in them had been pathetically easy. Intimidating the leaders of the community had posed no problem whatsoever. In effect, he now controlled an entire section of Tombstone and because of the close-knit, segregated nature of the Chinese community, no one in town even suspected it. It had. however, involved a certain element of risk.

For a time, it had been necessary for him to be visible in Tombstone as Nathan Drake. He had tried to keep that to a minimum, but it had been necessary in order to make his preparations. He had eliminated the threat of the Observers, but he had been concerned about the Network and the Special Operations Group. The unique nature of this time sector was such that none of those groups was as yet aware of the others, except that the Network had discovered Bailey’s secret, that he was a deserter from the Temporal Corps, a member of the Underground. Bailey had become careless and he had paid the price for it. Now he was dead. The situation was starting to develop rapidly. The temporal instability was increasing and Drakov wondered how long it would take for the Network, the S.O.G. and the T.I.A. agents to realize what was going on. With luck, by the time they put it all together, it would be too late.

He turned as the women came into the room. It was an elegant study. furnished comfortably in the best Victorian style, a room above the opium parlor. All the residents of Hop Town knew about it, no one else did. They knew that this was where the powerful sorcerer lived and they treated him with utmost, groveling respect whenever they came in contact with him. Otherwise, they gave him a wide berth.

“They’re here,” said Becky. “I spent the night with one of them. His name is Finn Delaney. He asked a lot of questions.”

Drakov smiled as he drew on his long pipe. “Excellent.”

And two more strangers have just arrived in town.” said Becky. “They’ve been asking a lot of questions, too. A man and his wife. The man’s name is Priest and he’s a writer from back East. His wife’s name is Andrea and she is his assistant, Priest went out with the posse looking for the stage robbers. His wife stayed in town, going into all the stores and asking questions.”

“Lucas Priest and Andre Cross.” said Drakov. “My old enemies. They’re not even bothering to use false names. That means they’re uncertain of the situation. They have devised a cover for themselves, but they’ve kept their real names, in an effort to draw out whoever might recognize those names. Which means that they suspect the Network. They undoubtedly have reinforcements waiting to clock in whenever they give the signal. Perfect. Only we’re not quite ready for that yet. We need to keep them off-balance for just a little while longer. Mr. Stone should serve that purpose admirably. Have you been able to direct their suspicions toward him?”

“I’ve spoken to Scott about him.” said Jenny. “I’ve told him that I had been with Stone and that he was very rough with me, that there is something very strange about him, something that frightens me. And that no one really knows anything about him, who he is or where he really came from.”

“Finn Delaney asked about him, as well.” said Becky. “He already seems to suspect him. I told him that Stone spends most of his time gambling in various saloons, but that when he isn’t gambling, no one seems to know where he goes. Stone acts mysterious and secretive.”

“Good.” said Drakov.”

“Very good, indeed.”

“What about Scott Neilson?” Jenny asked, hesitantly.

“You’ve established a relationship with him.” Drakov replied. “I want you to maintain it. Keep him off-balance, emotionally. He will draw the attention of the Network while the others will be preoccupied with Stone. They will suspect that Stone is a Network man, himself. Meanwhile, Stone will bring in his fellow S.O.G. agents to move against the T.I.A.” He chuckled. “That will accelerate the instability. Things are about to become quite interesting.”

“Will it be necessary for Scott to die?” asked Jenny, softly. Becky glanced at her, puzzled.

Drakov gave her a long, appraising look. “Are you becoming emotionally involved, Jennifer?”

Jenny looked down at the floor. “I… I think I’m in love with him.”

Drakov raised his eyebrows. “Really?”

It’s what I feel when I’m with him,” Jenny replied, unable to look her master in the eyes. “He is so kind and gentle, when he touches me, he… He makes me feel something that I’ve never felt with any other man.”

“Oh, I see.” said Drakov. “That is merely lust. A purely physiological response. Men of this time period, of most time periods for that matter, are not very sensitive to women’s emotional needs, which are much more bound up with the physical than male needs are. Neilson is apparently more perceptive. I suppose he has brought you to orgasm. It was probably your first. But that is only a physical sensation. Jennifer, A biological response.”

“But… but it feels so overwhelming,” Jenny said.

“Indeed, it does.” said Drakov. “But it is most emphatically not love. I know something of how you must feel. I made the same mistake myself once, many years ago, much to my regret. You were created from human genetic material. Jennifer, and so you are subject to the same procreative urges humans are. Those feelings can be very powerful and there is no reason why you should not enjoy them at every opportunity. In fact, the more frequently you indulge them, the quicker the novelty will wear off and you will find those feelings diminishing in intensity. Because it is merely sex. Love is something else, entirely.”

“How is it different?” Jenny asked.

“It arises from shared values and mutual respect.” said Drakov. “And your values and Neilson’s could never be the same, Jennifer. You are not human. If Neilson knew that, he could never respect you. He would, in fact, be furious at having been deceived. I have told you that if he suspected your true nature, he would kill you. The only reason he treats you as he does is because he does not know what you really are. And even believing you to be human, like himself, he wishes to manipulate you, to use you to help him on his mission. If he truly loved you, he would be honest with you.”

“I had not thought of it that way.” she replied, softly, still looking at the floor. “I was afraid you would he angry with me.”

“Why should I be angry with you?” Drakov asked “Have you failed me in any way? I created you. I gave you life. And it is I who care about you, enough to tell you the truth. I have no wish to see you hurt.”

Jenny nodded and swallowed hard, torn by conflicting emotions. “Thank you. I do not wish to disappoint you.”

“You won’t. Enjoy yourself with Neilson. Indulge those feelings and you will soon find they are not nearly so profound as you suspect. He uses you. Use him in return to explore the depths of your sensations. But don’t deceive yourself with thoughts of love. Love is for humans

All Scott wanted to do was sleep. The posse got back to town without catching the outlaws. Head, Leonard and Crane had led them on a merry chase throughout the countryside and they were never able to catch up with them. They had ridden so hard one of the horses died. They were tired, they were thirsty, they were sore, and they had simply given up. On their return, the Earps had received even more had news. Luther King, the prisoner they had taken back at the Redfield ranch, had managed to escape.

The whole thing was ludicrous. He had simply stepped out the back door of the jail while the deputy was engaged in selling his horse. Accusations were flying back and forth. The Earps were convinced that Behan and his deputies, being involved with the rustlers, had simply allowed him to escape. Which certainly seemed likely. Behan and his men were claiming that King had help, that Doc Holliday had been waiting behind the jail with two horses and had spirited King away.

Holliday, conveniently, had been out of town when the stage was robbed and the posse left. He was known to have been acquainted with one of the outlaws before, Bill Leonard, when the two men were in Las Vegas, New Mexico. On the strength of that association, Behan and others in his faction were claiming that Doc had been involved in the robbery and had helped King to escape. (Though no one explained how Holliday knew that King would have a chance to simply stroll out through the back door of the jail while the deputy’s back was turned, or why he hadn’t been locked up in the first place. Behan was even spreading rumors that Wyatt Earp and his brothers had been involved in the robbery, tipped off by

Morgan, who, in his capacity as a Wells Fargo guard, would know when silver shipments were going out. The town was becoming polarized, with the hostility between the factions rapidly growing worse.

Scott wished that Priest and the other, would show up. He couldn’t understand what was keeping them. He felt certain now that the Network was behind it all, but he couldn’t take them on all by himself. That would be crazy. He felt exposed and vulnerable. He felt the situation was completely out of his control.

There was a soft knock at his door. He quickly grabbed a gun from the holster rig he’d hung up on the bedpost.

“Who is it?”

“It’s Jenny. Scott. Can I come in?

He opened the door. She was alone. She saw the gun and her eyes grew wide.

“What’s that for?” she asked.

“I had to be sure you were alone.” said Scott.

“Who did you think might have been with me?”

“Well, I did make some enemies in this town.” he replied. “Man can’t be too careful.” He closed the door behind her and eased the hammer down on the Colt.

“Did you really think I’d be part of anything like that?”

“You might have had no choice, Jenny. Someone might have been holding a gun on you, or a knife.”

“That wouldn’t make any difference.” she said. “They’d have to kill me before I’d go along with doing anything to hurt you.” She suddenly started crying.

“Jenny! What’s wrong?”

“Hold me, Scott.”

He put his arms around her. She was trembling.

“What’s wrong, Jenny?” he asked, with concern. “What is it? What’s happened?”

“Everything’s wrong,” she sobbed. “I wish I were dead!”

“Jenny!” She was holding onto him as if for dear life. “What is it? Tell me! Is it something I’ve done?”

She shook her head. “No.” she said, quietly. “It isn’t anything you’ve done. It’s me.”

He took her over to the bed and sat down with her. He took her hands in his.

“Whatever it is, Jenny, you can tell me. I’ll understand.”

“I don’t think you would.” she said.

“Try me. At least give me a chance. If there’s anything I can do to help, you know I will.”

“I don’t think anyone can help me.” she replied, sniffling.

He kissed her “If I possibly can, I will. I love you, Jenny.”

“Oh, God,” she said, her voice barely audible. “How can you say that?”

“Because it’s true, I love you.”

She pulled away from him. “Scott… there are things about me… things you don’t know. And if you knew, you’d hate me.”

“I could never hate you, Jenny. I know what kind of life you’ve led. It makes no difference to me.”

“I wasn’t talking about that,” she said, not looking at him.”There are things, she bit her lower lip. “Oh. Scott, if you really knew the truth about me, you’d want to kill me.”

He stared at her, astonished. “How can you say that? That’s crazy! What could you possibly have done-”

“It isn’t anything I’ve done,” she said. “Well, yes, it is, but it’s also what I am. If you knew…” She got down on her knees before him and took his hands, holding them tightly. looking up at him with fear and confusion. “If I tell you the truth, I know I’ll lose you. You’ll hate me and you’ll want to kill me. but even if you do. I don’t care anymore. I just don’t want anything to happen to you. You have to leave. Scott. You have to leave Tombstone as quickly as you can and go back where you came from, before it’s too late!”

“Jenny, what are you talking about?”

“Scott… before I tell you… kiss me. Please, kiss me one last time.”

“Jenny…

“Just do it. Scott. Please.”

He kissed her. She clung to him with desperation and he could taste the saltiness of her tears.

“Oh, God, I love you, Scott,” she said. “I don’t care if it’s not possible. I know I love you. I’ve never felt this way about anyone before.”

“I love you too, Jen,” he replied, bewildered

She shook her head and placed her forefinger up against his lips. “Maybe you think you do.” she said. “But you can’t You mustn’t.”

“Why?”

She stared at him with fear in her eyes. “Because…” she swallowed hard and took a deep breath. “Because I’m not human. Scott.”

“What?”

I’m not a real woman. I only look like one. And. God help me, somehow I feel like one, too, but I’m not a human being. I wasn’t born. I was created. The Master made me in a laboratory.”

Scott simply stared at her, speechless with astonishment.

“I know he’s your enemy, she continued, “I know who you really are. I know you’re from the future. I know why you’re here. And no matter what you do to me. you will go back. Please, you must go back before it’s too late!”

Suddenly, comprehension dawned. “My God.” said Scott. He felt as if he’d been punched in the stomach. “You’re one of Drakov’s hominoids.”

She nodded, staring at him, her face streaked with tears, her eyes wide with fear.

“He said love is only for humans,” she whispered, “and that what I feel toward you isn’t really love, and that you couldn’t possible love me if you knew what I really was. An imitation of a human being. He said you’d kill me, but I don’t care! I don’t want to live like this! It hurts! It hurts too much. If I can’t be human, then I just don’t want to be!”

“Jesus Christ.” said Scott. He reached out for her and she cringed. “That bastard. That lousy bastard. What’s he done to you?”

He put his arms around her and she became very still, as if afraid to move, afraid to breathe.

“You poor girl.” he said, stroking her long blonde hair. His own eyes were misty. “Jesus, it must have been awful for you.”

“I… I don’t understand…” she said in a small frightened voice.

Scott held her away from him, so he could look into her eyes. “He had you believing you weren’t human?”

She stared at him with incomprehension.

“Oh. Jenny, you don’t even realize what you are,” he said. “How much do you really know about Nikolai Drakov?”

She shook her head, dazed, still unable to believe he wasn’t furious with her, that he wasn’t striking out at her.

“He’s insane. Jenny. He’s brilliant, a genius, but he’s a madman and a criminal. God knows, maybe he even believes that the hominoids aren’t human. It would certainly fit with his insane megalomania. The thought that he’s created an entirely new species, that he’s some sort of God…”

“What are you saying?” she whispered.

“Jenny, the first hominoids that Nikolai Drakov created were androids. They weren’t really human, but crude imitations. They weren’t really capable of independent thought, or of human feelings and emotions. But later, Drakov resorted to genetic engineering to create clones in a laboratory…” He trailed off as he watched her. “God, you don’t understand the first thing about what I’m saying, do you?”

She shook her head.

He stared up at the ceiling. “How on earth can I explain it to you? You don’t know the first thing about science…”

“I understand a little about science.” she said, in a small voice, still confused by his lack of a violent reaction, which was what she had expected.

“Well, genetic engineering is a science,” Scott told her. “What Drakov did was to… to give birth to humans in a laboratory without the benefit of parents. What I mean is, there were parents, human parents from whom Drakov obtained the raw material, but the hominoids-he still called them that, even though they were different from the first ones-were born without the necessity of a man and a woman having sex. The eggs were fertilized in a laboratory and the fetuses came to term in artificial wombs…”

He saw that he was losing her again and he felt exasperated. There had to be some way that he could make her understand.

“What I’m trying to say. Jenny, is this, Even though you were never born in the normal way, even though you never had a father or a mother, you are still a human being. Drakov lied to you. He wasn’t really your creator, he… he was more like a midwife. It’s much too complicated for me to explain to you, but you have to believe one thing. You are as human as I am.”

She shook her head, slowly. “Is it possible?” she whispered.

He grabbed her by the arm. “That’s human flesh. Jenny.” He put his hand on her breast. “That’s a human heart beating in there.” He kissed her. “Those are human lips.” he said, softly. “I couldn’t love you if you were not human. And I do love you.”

She gave a small cry and clutched at him, burying her head against his chest as her small body was wracked with sobs. He held her tightly, stroking her hair and kissing the top of her head. Meanwhile, his mind was racing. Drakov, here! Then it wasn’t the Network or the S.O.G. Or perhaps the Network was here, as well. Or maybe the S.O.G. He was no longer sure of anything except two things. One was that with Drakov here in this time sector, the threat was even greater than he had imagined. And the other was that he was deeply in love with this poor, tortured girl.

He couldn’t begin to imagine what her existence must have been like. Cloned in a laboratory, she had been raised to believe she wasn’t human, but some sort of clever simulacrum. It was simply monstrous. Unlike other hominoids that Neilson had encountered, she had not been artificially mutated into some sort of frightening creature, her mind had not been destroyed, her personality-severely damaged though it was-had been left more or less intact. Only she had grown up believing that she was some sort of an inferior creature and that Nikolai Drakov was her “master.” her god, to whom she owed unquestioning obedience. Except that he had triggered feelings in her that had been powerful enough to upset a lifetime of conditioning.

Apparently, she had been told that if he found out “what she really was,” he’d kill her. And yet, she had disobeyed her master. Convinced that he would kill her if she told him the truth, she had told him anyway. Because she loved him. At that moment. Neilson would have died for her

She needed help. It would probably take years of therapy to overcome all the damage that had been done to her. But before he could even think of that, he first had to make sure that he could get her away from Drakov. And that Drakov would be stopped. Only he wasn’t sure if he could do it alone.

If he kept her from going back to him, wherever he was, Drakov would realize what must have happened and it would force his hand. But he could not bear the thought of having her go back to him. Obviously, Drakov had placed her in Tombstone, in the saloon, so that she would be in a position to report to him. Which meant be had to know about him. Scott was torn. He didn’t know what to do.

Where the hell were Priest, Cross and Delaney”

Lucas Priest came over to the table in the hotel dining room where Neilson was eating his dinner and sat down.

“Mind if I join you, Kid?” he said.

“Looks like you just did, mister.”

“I’d like to introduce myself. The name’s Priest, Lucas Priest I’m a writer and, from what I hear, you’re somebody worth writing about.” He lowered his voice and said. “We have to talk.”

“Go ahead and talk. Mr. Priest. I’m listenin’.”

“I’m writing some articles about the West for a magazine back in New York and I believe you’re someone my readers would be very interested to know about.” He lowered his voice again. “Why the hell haven’t you made contact? Are you being watched?”

Neilson put down his fork and frowned. “Beg pardon?”

“I hear you re mighty fast with a six-shooter,” Lucas said. “I’d like to ask you some questions, if you don’t mind.” Then lowered his voice once more. “Are you under surveillance?”

“No, sir, I ain’t no surveyor. Don’t know anything about it.”

Lucas stared at him. “What the hell’s the matter with you, Neilson?” he whispered.

Neilson frowned. “I say somethin’ wrong?”

“Lower your voice, for Christ’s sake!”

Neilson’s eyes narrowed, but he complied with the request.

“Why?” he asked, softly.

Lucas frowned. “Scott, are you all right?”

Neilson regarded him with puzzlement. “I’m just fine, mister. But I seem to be a mite confused. We met before?”

Lucas didn’t say anything. He was completely taken aback. He looked at Neilson and saw no recognition in his face. None whatsoever.

“You don’t know me?” he asked, gazing at him intently.

“If we met before, Mr. Priest, I’m real sorry, but I don’t seem to recall. Where was it that we met each other?”

“You don’t remember London?”

“London? London. England?” Neilson shook his head. “I ain’t never been there. mister. I grew up in Montana Territory Spent most of my life there. Ain’t never been to England. Ain’t never even been east of the Mississippi. I’d say you’ve got me confused with someone else, only you seem to know my name. You got somethin mixed up, that’s for sure, only I don’t know what it is. I’ve never seen you before in my life. Leastwise, I don’t believe so.”

Lucas was speechless.

“You okay, mister?” Neilson asked. “You been drinkin’?”

“The name Forrester mean anything to you?” asked Lucas, uncertainly.

Neilson shook his head “Can’t say as it does.”

“What about Cross? Delaney? Steiger?”

“Don’t know any of those people,” Neilson said, with a frown. “What’s this all about!”

“How long have you been in Tombstone?”

“Only a few days. Why?”

“Were you injured in any way? A knock on the head or something?”

Neilson shook his head. He seemed thoroughly confused. “Mister. I don’t know what you’re talkin’ about”

Lucas sat back in his chair, stunned. “Never mind,” he said… I guess I thought you were someone else.”

“Someone else named Neilson?”

“I guess that must be it. I knew someone else with the same name and I thought you were him.”

“Oh. I see. I take it there was a resemblance?”

“Yes. A truly remarkable resemblance. You could he his twin brother.”

“No foolin’? You mean there’s somebody in London. England who looks like me and has got the same name?”

“Yes. Hell of a coincidence, isn’t it?”

“Well. I’ll be damned. I guess that explains it. Tell you the truth. Mister. for a minute there. I thought you might be drunk or off your head or somethin’.”

“I was thinking the same thing about you,” said Lucas.

Neilson grinned. “Well, ain’t that somethin’? Somebody who looks like me and has the same name, too! And you say you met him in England?”

‘Yes, that’s right. He was a soldier.”

“I’ll be, No wonder you seemed all mixed-up. You thought I was him.”

I was certain of it.”

“If that don’t beat all. I’d sure like to meet this fella. But I don’t know as I’ll ever get to England. Sure is a long way off. This other Neilson, he a shootist, too?”

“Yes, he is. A remarkably good one.”

“Is that right? Boy, ain’t that somethin’?”

“Yes, it’s an amazing coincidence.” said Lucas. “Astonishing, in fact.”

“I guess it is, at that. I never heard of such a thing.”

“You ever hear of three men named Summers, McEnery and Billings’?” Lucas asked.

Neilson chuckled. “Hell, this other fella must really look a lot like me,” he said. “You still don’t believe it, do you? I’m tellin’ you, mister, I ain’t him. I never heard of those people. They’re friends of his. I take it.”

“Fellow soldiers,” Lucas said.

Neilson shook his head “Well. I ain’t never been a soldier. You got my word on that. And I don’t know any of those folks you mentioned.”

“Well. I’m sorry I bothered you.” said Lucas. “I was sure that you were him.”

“No trouble.” Neilson said. “It sure has been interestin’. You still want to ask me those questions?”

“Perhaps another time.” said Lucas, getting up from the table. “This whole thing took me so much by surprise. I can’t remember a single thing that I was going to say.”

Neilson smiled. “Well. I’ll be around, you want to talk some more. And maybe you can tell me some more about this other fella. I sure am mighty curious.”

“Yeah, maybe we can have a drink later.” Lucas said.

“Anytime.”

They shook hands and Lucas went back up to his room. Delaney had left, but Andre was still there, stretched out on the bed and getting some rest.

“You get a chance to talk to Scott’?” she asked, sitting up as he came in. Then she saw the expression on his face. “What is it? What’s wrong?”

Lucas shook his head, looking dazed. “We’re in a lot of trouble.” he said.

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