Taz and Kodak
Montana Sky
By:
Rick Beck
(© 2019 by the author)
Editor:
Jerry
The author retains all rights. No reproductions are allowed without the author's
consent. Comments are appreciated at...
beck@tickiestories.us
Chapter 13
Courthouse Showdown
Breakfast at the ranch was a treat, with a
variety of choices the boys didn't get on the mesa. The general was dressed in
jeans and a white shirt and tie to appear more respectable in court. Taz wore
his jeans and a button up plaid shirt, not needing to look good for the city
elders who were expressing an interest in the local rustling.
Everyone in and around town had something to do with the cattle industry if they
were permanent residents. Land and cattle furnished the local economy with cash.
There was no small uproar about the White Brotherhood having a presence in the
county. Seen as something untoward, the elders had a stake in seeing to it the
rustlers were convicted. What started as lawbreaking ended with a community
priority.
"General, is anyone going armed?" Taz asked, across his third cup of coffee.
"No, it's only an arraignment. You think we need to go armed? There shouldn't be
trouble today."
"No, there shouldn't be, but I got me this tickle, General. I used to get the
same tickle on the back of my neck about the time Charlie hit us out on patrol.
I'd feel a mite better if someone was armed."
"I know better than to question someone's tickle," Gen. Walker said.
The general stood on the back porch and called the wranglers to gather around.
"Rowdy, I want two jeeps. Two riflemen in each jeep. Open up the armory and let
each of the riflemen pick a weapon. When we go into court, the two jeeps will
follow five minutes after we leave. Keep your distance. Park a jeep behind the
bank. Park a jeep behind the General Mercantile. Once you're there, put a
lookout on top of both those buildings. I want to keep an eye on the courthouse.
"Leave the weapons in the jeep unless you need to use them. We should only be
there a half-hour to an hour, but I'd rather be safe than sorry. Those guys have
robbed us once."
"Yes, sir," the men agreed.
"Kendall, get a .45 and bring mine. The rest of you hang around the bunkhouse,
until we get back and sound the all-clear."
Gen. Walker wasn't given to flights of fancy. He hadn't been in combat since his
youth, but he'd been a witness to war most of his life. You stayed prepared just
in case. You never let yourself get caught with your pants down. Taz's warning
reminded him that it was the innocent looking circumstances that could turn
deadly.
The drive into town was without incident; both Kendall and Gen. Walker had .45's
strapped to their hips. Kodak sat in the general's jeep with his camera at the
ready, photographing Taz and the general as they went through the front door of
the courthouse.
Inside the courthouse the sheriff's deputy tried to disarm the general before he
entered the courtroom. The sheriff came along in time to intercede, having his
own worries about the prisoners.
"I've got no evidence anything is going to happen. I've got no evidence
something isn't going to happen. Rumor has it, there's going to be an attempted
jailbreak. I've got everyone armed at the jail."
"I've got a few men outside. We had our suspicions about how long Jones senior
will let you hold onto Jones junior."
"Having you watch my back helps, General. I tried to recruit some deputies. No
takers. State Police have been alerted and I've asked for assistance to hold
onto these birds. My four deputies are armed inside the courthouse. I'll make
sure they know you men are watching the outside."
"Keeping the peace is my life's work, Sheriff. We'll try to keep those boys in
your jail until you make other arrangements."
"Yeah, well, they aren't in my jail. The judge insisted they be in the
courtroom. They're sitting in the hallway behind the courtroom with two of my
deputies."
"It wouldn't take a military genius to overpower your deputies."
Once in the courtroom, the proceedings moved fast. The deputies marched the
prisoners into a holding area. The action didn't take long to develop. Meeker
made a motion for bond. The judge promptly denied bond. Meeker stood to raise an
objection. It was the last thing attorney Meeker ever did. One of the first
shots knocked him down with a bullet in his chest.
Weapons appeared as men moved from the observers section toward the prisoners. A
deputy took cover behind a desk, the judge objected, an exchange of gunfire had
everyone diving for cover. Two more deputies tried to regain control of the
prisoners but a barrage of gunfire forced them into retreat.
After the door at the back of the courtroom opened, people were scurrying to
safety, Kendall held the door open for the general and Taz. With his .45 at the
ready, he wasn't about to fire into a courtroom in chaos. Kendall backed out,
covering the strategic withdrawal of his commander.
"We can't let these guys get out of here with those prisoners. We need to secure
the outside of the courthouse somehow. I can't be sure how many men they've got
in here, but if I made a move like this, I'd have everyone backing my play,"
Gen. Walker said as they hurried toward the stairs.
The general had seen four gunmen in the courtroom, but there was fire coming
from the street and on the first floor. The general knew his men outside were
already engaged.
"General, they're going to have hostages," Kendall said as the three of them
rushed down the steps.
"They've got hostages," Gen. Walker said.
As they hit the bottom stair and turned toward the exit, two gunmen appeared at
the far end of the hallway, opening fire. The general dodged into the first door
they passed with Taz and then Kodak close behind him. The office was empty, and
a door to the street at the side of the building stood open.
*****
Once Taz, the general, and Kendall
disappeared into the courthouse, Kodak went over to the General Mercantile to
pick out some sweets for Tazerski. He picked out some unusual cloth for window
curtains and he picked up a bundle of things for Kathleen.
It took fifteen minutes in the store, which made it a few minutes after nine,
when he was paying the clerk. The hearing began at nine and he was told it
wouldn't take long. He heard the gunshots as he stepped outside. Setting the bag
down just inside the door, he checked his camera.
There were four men with rifles on the far corner of the courthouse to his
right. They were exchanging fire with the cowboy on the roof across the street
and someone on the roof above him was also firing at the gunmen.
When other cowboys came running with assault rifles in hand, Kodak captured it
on film, using the supports for the overhang outside the Mercantile for cover.
As the cowboys fired from the street and the roof, the gunmen reluctantly went
into the courthouse. Merchants and customers came tentatively out of their
shops.
There was a man from the barbershop draped in the protective covering for his
shirt. Half his face had shave cream on it and the other half didn't. The barber
had a razor in his hand and they both leaned around the overhang supports to see
what was going on. Kodak clicked pictures of them and other people, who came out
of the stores.
Once the gunmen disappeared, the cowboys split and two set up a position on one
side of Main Street in front of the courthouse and two on the other. Kodak could
see they had all the exits covered in the front and the only exit in the back
opened directly across from the sheriff's office.
Rowdy had taken control of the street, yelling orders at the other men. In a few
minutes the street was back to normal. Kodak had been exposed to firefights in
Vietnam and this was child's play compared to that. His heart didn't race and he
didn't sweat as he went about shooting pictures.
Gen. Walker, with Taz beside him, exited on the left side of the courthouse.
Kendall brought up the rear, checking behind him before leaving the building.
"We're coming over," Gen. Walker yelled to his men. "Cover us."
His riflemen fired a couple of bursts so the general and Taz could cross the
street safely. The general stood beside Rowdy, making a count of their
adversaries.
"How many do you count?" the general asked.
"Four outside. Four inside on the ground floor. Those two groups arrived
separately. We engaged the first four and ran them inside. The four over there
now came just before you came out," Rowdy said.
"There were four gunmen I saw in the courtroom. They'll no doubt arm the
rustlers. That gives them nine armed men with maybe ten hostages. We can't let
them out of the courthouse."
"They've got us badly outnumbered," the general said, considering his options.
"They're armed to the teeth but can't shoot worth a shit," Rowdy said.
"Okay, I'm taking your jeep, Rowdy. You stay put. If you need to retreat from
here, go ahead, but the two alleys offer a strategic advantage. I'll bring back
reinforcements. It's going to be an hour before we can mount a counter-attack.
Can you give me an hour?"
Rowdy spit a wad of tobacco into the street.
"Stop talking. Get moving, General. We got the high ground. I ain't letting them
go nowhere."
"Here's my .45. That'll buy you a little time. Carry on. Come on, Taz; we need
to move," the general said, leading the way to the jeep.
Turning onto Main Street, Kodak stepped out of the shadows. Taz wanted to stop
for him, but Kodak pointed at his camera, waving for them to keep going. Taz
knew Kodak was in his element and he'd faced far worse next to him in Vietnam.
*****
The general handed out rifles to a dozen
cowboys, who had stayed put that morning. There would be four addition vehicles,
four men per vehicle returning to town with them.
After arming each of the men with an M-16, the general kicked a crate down at
Taz's feet.
"Here's your weapon, soldier," he said.
"Damn right," Taz said, as he removed the top of the crate to retrieve his B.A.R.
He hadn't seen the big rifle since his breakdown, during the tour of the States,
where the B.A.R. was a prop he took on stage with him. In Vietnam the B.A.R. was
the difference between life and death for many a man, including both Taz &
Kodak. It felt good to have it back in his hands.
*****
The general and his small detachment were
back in 50 minutes and came down the top of the two alleys where Rowdy Kendall,
Boyd, and four cowboys, with the help of the sheriff and two deputies, kept the
outlaws inside the courthouse.
Setting up a crossfire from the two alleys that ran behind the businesses on
Main Street, they kept the situation under control. The opposition's amateur
soldiers were confused by the unknown amount of firepower they faced.
Several of the bad guys with rifles, using the two second floor front windows,
tried to put enough fire into the alleys to gain an advantage from above, but
the angle was severe, making the effectiveness of the gunfire minimal.
The general directed half his force into each of the two alleys.
"Remember, they've got hostages. If someone comes out of there and they aren't
firing at you, don't fire at them. We don't want to be killing any townies," the
general told his men.
The general took Taz through the bank to Main Street, where Kodak was
photographing the men firing out of the windows at the alleys.
"Nice day," Taz said.
"Nice rifle. Big. What's a guy like you doing in a place like this?" Kodak asked
in his flippant way.
"I'm the guy with the big... gun. You got a long lens for that thing?"
"In the general's jeep," Kodak said.
"Go get that lens, and you stay farther away to shoot your pictures," Taz
ordered.
"Yes, sir," Kodak said, heading for the jeep.
"See those two windows?" the general asked.
"Hard to miss with all those guys shooting from them."
"I'm going to tell Boyd to draw their fire over to this alley. Can you cross
over and go out the back of the Mercantile and tell Rowdy to draw their fire as
soon as Boyd does? It'll get those boys focused on the alleys. Once you're done,
meet me at the front of the Mercantile. I'll give you the rest of the plan then.
The general moved back into the bank and Taz peeked out to make sure the coast
was clear, dashing toward the front of the Mercantile.
Taz kept his eyes on the doorway of the Mercantile as he dashed across the
street. A few feet from the sidewalk he felt a stinging impact on his side. Once
he was safely out of the line of fire, he looked down at the B.A.R. The stock
had been split in two by a bullet. He had wood splinters in his hand where he
held the rifle against his side. The bullet it hadn't hit him. He checked for
blood and found none.
"I'll be a son-of-a-bitch," he said, expressing his surprise.
Taz ducked into the Mercantile for repairs. The man behind the counter peeked up
just enough for Taz to see his eyes.
"I'm one of the good guys. Duct tape?"
The merchant pointed at a shelf. Taz grabbed a roll of tape, wrapping the
splintered stock. Yanking the splinters out of his hand, he wrapped the tape
around the wound.
"Thanks. Bill the general's account for the tape," Taz said, rushing out the
back door to alert Rowdy to the plan.
Taz came back through the Mercantile to meet the general a couple of minutes
later.
"You get those sons-of-bitches and I'll keep you in tape, son," the man said as
Taz passed the counter and went to the front door.
Kneeling beside the general, Kodak clicked pictures.
Taz started out of the doorway and bullets hit down the wall on either side of
the door, breaking the store windows. Taz leaned more carefully out of the
doorway.
"General, someone's making a getaway at the side of the courthouse," Kodak said,
taking a series of pictures as men piled into a waiting car.
"Shit, time to get this show on the road. How'd they get out of there? I thought
the sheriff had the first floor covered. If they don't fire on my men, they're
going to escape."
Gen. Walker stood, dashing across the street toward Taz. He got within a couple
of feet of the sidewalk before a bullet knocked him down.
Taz dropped the B.A.R., leaning forward with his arm extended, pulling the
general to safety. Both of them ending up on the floor just inside the
Mercantile.
"General, you got a hole in you," Taz said, seeing the blood on his shirt.
"Damn it," the general said, looking at his side and feeling the pain. "Look,
Jones and the rustlers are getting away as we speak. I've got myself in a bind.
My men are pinned down in the alleys and the men in those windows are becoming
better shots. I need you to take them out of there. Did you tell Rowdy the
plan?"
"Yes, sir," Taz said.
"Once they draw their fire, can you step out in the street with your rifle and
clear those windows out? I don't want heroics. There's eight of them now. They
should all be returning fire toward the alleys. I figure you'll have ten seconds
before they realize they're taking fire from the front. I don't want eleven
seconds, Taz. Ten seconds, five on each window, and you get your ass back in
here or I'll come out there and drag you back in here. Can you do it?"
Taz peeked out at the street and the front of the courthouse where the shooting
had become more fierce.
"I'd rather not, ...but sure, I can do it. I'll take them out for you."
"What's wrong with your hand?" the general asked, noticing the tape when Taz
cradled his rifle, preparing to make his move.
"Splitters," Taz said.
Taz listened, peeking out one more time to see the men in the courthouse
dedicating their fire toward the two alleys where Gen. Walker's men were drawing
the fire so Taz could go to work. He listened to the increased gunfire go on for
a minute more.
Moving out across the sidewalk, he took two steps into the street, where he
faced the windows in question. Jerking up the barrel of the B.A.R., he opened
fire on the window to his right first.
"One, two, three, four, five," he counted before turning his fire on the window
directly in front of him. "Six, seven, eight, nine, ten."
Glass shattered, wood splintered into shards from the force of the automatic
weapon's fire, dangling over the outlaw's heads, just before the windows were
empty of gunmen and fire from the courthouse ceased. The crossfire from the
alleys continued for another minute before the street went silent.
Once Taz did as much damage as he could, he stepped out of the line of fire.
This confined all the fighting to the ground floor and the general's men
controlled the street.
Sam Jones and his kid were gone, which pleased no one, but what could have been
a disaster ended in a whimper.
Kodak smiled across at Taz, after taking a couple dozen pictures of him in
action. Seeing him move out into the street alarmed him, but before he knew what
was going on, Taz was standing back in the doorway safe and sound. Kodak had a
camera full of pictures to prove it really happened. It seemed like old times,
when he photographed Taz in Vietnam, while he took it to Charlie.
Samuel Jones, his son, and the rustlers were on their way back to the White
Brotherhood compound. There was no way for the general to get anyone in the way
of their escape. Most of the ammunition was spent and that left them in
vulnerable. The bad guys knew where they were going, and the general began to
plan to seal off the WB compound until reinforcements arrived from elsewhere.
Once the courthouse was taken back, the body count gave the good guys an
advantage. The courtroom folks didn't do so well, with Meeker dead and the judge
and a deputy wounded. The judge was still objecting, gavel in hand, when he was
loaded into the ambulance.
Taz didn't want anything to do with the doctor and charged a bottle of alcohol
to the general, after taking the duct tape off his hand, he doused it in alcohol
as Kodak cringed. Taz put the alcohol in his shirt pocket.
"Where'd you get the rifle, Taz?" Kodak asked.
"The general had it in the armory. How 'bout that? Like an old friend. Needs a
little work though. It got shot."
"You always stand out in the middle of the street to get shot at?"
"No, only when that's what needs doing. Sure convinced them to get out of those
windows," Taz said proudly.
He'd done his job, and getting them out of the window ended the siege, with the
general the only one of his men seriously wounded.
"Nothing like jungle warfare," Kodak said with a smirk.
"It's all the same. Bad guys getting shot and me doing the shooting."
"How's your hand?"
"Just some splinters. Ruined the Browning's stock. That pissed me off."
The State Police arrived on the scene before the general's detachment withdrew.
They pieced together what happened, with the sheriff giving a rundown on what
went on inside the courthouse, and Rowdy provided details of what went on
outside.
*****
The compound wasn't very interesting to
Gen. Walker, but he'd put his men on guard on the hill across from the gate. He
wanted the people inside to know they'd escaped the courthouse but they weren't
out of Montana yet. This didn't take much energy and the guys inside had put a
bullet in him, which made it personal.
Several of Kodak's pictures featured Samuel Jones. Once compared to pictures of
him in his youth by the sheriff, it was obvious. Both the FBI and Montana law
enforcement wanted copies of the pictures for their files.
While Dr. Westphalia poked, prodded, and patched the general, he laid it out to
Rowdy.
"Jones had to know once he sprung his kid his compound wasn't a good idea. Why
would they go back there? They hadn't expected resistance. He pulled off the
great escape without a plan if someone objected."
"Sheriff," Gen. Walker said, as the sheriff came in with his arm in a sling.
"You know he might be smarter than I think. Jones could have switched vehicles.
They could be long gone. Jones expected to take the courthouse with no trouble.
He knew you'd have a couple of deputies on duty. Jones didn't know you'd
identified his son. With Meeker dead, not a victim of poor shooting, I suspect,
no one could tie father to son or the rustling to the WB. They make a getaway
and start over in another state and no one is the wiser if junior lays low."
"You've given this a lot of thought. The only piece of luck I got was having a
man with his own army a few miles out of town. We'd be burying a lot of innocent
people if not for you, General."
"I do believe in community service, Sheriff. I don't aim to get shot doing my
civic duty however."
"General," the police officer said. "I can patrol the Interstate to stop them if
they get that far, but I won't have any reinforcements until some time tomorrow.
If you keep an eye on the compound until then, I'd sure be grateful. Keep the
sheriff informed."
"Hey, Doc, a little easy on that padding," the general complained.
"You need to be in a hospital. Both of you," the doctor said, including the
sheriff. "I'm going to do my job right. You hush."
"Yes, sir," the general said, regretting letting Kathleen call the doctor.
"We'll keep an eye on them. I've got some radio equipment I can give the sheriff
so we can communicate. Other than that, I'm not getting my men shot at any more
if I can help it."
To be continued...
Posted: 04/10/2020