
Episode
#7 Bullock Returns to the Camp
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(Seth and Charlie are
riding into a fort. Seth spots McCall’s
horse.)
Seth: That’s what McCall was ridin’
Utter: All right.
(Several men are
sitting at a campfire, Seth and Charlie approach)
Utter: Evenin’.
Cowboy: Evenin’ back
Seth: Lookit that paint, Charlie.
Utter: I seen it.
Seth: I had a half-breed just like that.
Utter: Fond of ‘er, makes me miserable just reminiscing on it.
Seth: Do you know the owner?
Utter: If he’d sell the horse is what he really wants to know.
Cowboy: Well I don’t know if he’d sell, but the fuckin’ jerk’s in that bunkhouse
Seth: Thank you.
Utter: Evenin’.
(The two walk into the
bunkhouse to the sound of chatter. Seth
glances around, finally spots Jack McCall slumped over a table.)
Seth: Jack McCall.
(McCall raises his
head.)
Jack: (drunk) I’m done. I don’ wanna play no more..
(McCall puts his head
back down on the table.)
Seth: (loudly) Bein’ a loud-mouthed cunt, (People in the bunkhouse start backing up), I guess sometime since he’s been here this fella who don’t wanna play no more probably spoke of killin’ Wild Bill Hickok. (McCall raises his head again.)…well, we’re Bill Hickok’s friends.
(The room
empties, Seth and Charlie advance on
McCall. Seth pulls his gun, cocks it,
and aims at McCall. McCall closes his eyes.)
Seth: I’m Seth Bullock
Utter: I’m Charlie Utter.
Seth: And if you got your head blown off, sitting here with your back turned, that’d be as fair a play as you gave him.

(Seth hits him on the
head with the gun butt and knocks him out.
McCall falls to the floor.)
( McCall is draped
over a horse, his hands being tied by Seth.
The cowboy walks by.)
Cowboy: Guess you wanna soften him up some before you make your offer?
( Charlie and Seth
leaving with McCall.)
Seth: My plan is to take him to Yankton for
trial. If you’ve got a different idea,
go right ahead.
Utter: Naw. Let’s take the cocksucker to Yankton.
(The men ride off)
(Inside the Gem. Dan is cleaning tables, Miles and Flora in
the background)
Dan: Naw, I don’t know of a Henry Anderson in camp, but that don’t mean there ain’t.
Miles: This was took of him in the Union Army – he’d be twelve years older now. (Flora walks toward Dan holding the picture) Could you let her hold it.
Flora: It’s had so much showin’ it’s pretty near fallin’ apart (She backs into Dan, he looks down at her) Here.. Third from the middle.
(Dan puts his hand
atop Flora’s gently)
Dan: Right there?
Flora: Yeah.
Dan: Nah, that face don’t look familiar.
Flora: Thanks for lookin’
Dan: You’re definite he’s in these hills?
Miles: He wrote from Bismarck – said he’d send for us when he got set up.
Hoopple: I just gotta say, it’s no guarantee that your dad’s anywhere near this area, and there’s no fuckin’ joy in me tellin’ yuh that, but it’s the goddamn truth and the way human beings are.
Flora: He said he’d send for our mother and us…
Dan: Is yer momma here?
Flora: She passed.
Dan: Sorry. (Dan begins walking away.) Well, good luck.
Miles: D’you know of work for me?
Dan: No.
(Al’s walking down the stairs)
Al: She can get work right here.
Miles: No sir!
Flora: No, thank you.
(Al looks over Miles)
Al: Can you push a broom?
Miles: (nodding) And I can start now.
Al: Four bits a day. And I’d bet you’d like the first in advance.
Miles: If you wouldn’t mind
(Al turns, looks at
Dan, inclines his head toward the boy)
Al: Same for her – as regrets for me being such a ruffian.
(Dan hands out coins
to Miles, and then Flora)
Dan: Here y’go, honey.
(Flora turns to Al.)
Al: If I don’t fire him first, you can pick him up at ten.
Flora: (to Al) Thank you, sir (to Miles) I’ll wait for you, Miles.
Miles: Find a safe place to wait, y’hear?
(Flora leaves. Al glances over his shoulder at Jewel.)
Al: We teach a special sweepin’ technique here. Follow her lead.
(Miles looks puzzled.)
(Pest tent. Jane is tending to the sick. The Rev takes a cloth, dips it in water, and
puts it on Joey’s lips, and then his head.)
Rev: It’s all right, son, it’s all right. (He turns and looks at Jane, gets her attention.) Excuse me. (Jane gets up and walks over to the Rev.) I’m required to be at the graveyard. The widow Garret is laying her husband to rest.
Jane: I’d’a bet a month’s wages that burial woulda took place in New York City. If I had a fuckin’ paying job.
Rev: (glancing back at Joey) The wet cloth to his lips seems to give him some relief.
Jane: All right.
Rev: Thank you.
(Rev leaves. Jane goes over to the cloth, sees it
bloodied, walks away with it. She
passes Andy Cramed, who’s being looked over by the Doc.)
Jane: What do you think of my patient, Doc?
Doc: Well, he might wanna steer clear of his reflection awhile, but you’re symptom-free, yuh ain’t contagious no more and yuh can’t get reinfected, so –
Jane: Them as heals under my care stay fuckin’ healed.
Andy: Thanks, Doc.
Doc: I’ve got clothes for you back here. (Goes off in search of clothes.)
Andy: Hereafter, in calamity, I’ll be sure to call for Jane.
Jane: You gonna stick around the camp?
Andy: I believe I will for a while.
Jane: Good, cuz I’m gonna monitor your activities, find out what you do weighs so heavy on your fuckin’ conscience. When I first come on you in the woods, all’s you could say was “I apologize.” ( Doc returns with the clothes) Afore you exhibit your johnson, I’m gonna see to this fella. S’long. Good luck to ya.
Andy: Good luck to you.
Jane: All right.
Doc: You’re on your own for alterations.
Jane: Now, I’m gonna lay this cloth on your fuckin’ lips.

(Trixie looking out
the window with Sofia as Sol pulls up in his wagon.)
Trixie: There’s Mr. Star to collect us.
Alma: Mr. Star has been ever so attentive.
Trixie: (Trixie looks over, stroking Sophia’s hair.) Very considerate
Alma: To you.
(Trixie looks out the
window again. Al is pointedly watching
her from across the way, sipping out of a tin cup, Trixie is concerned.)
Trixie: When we leave the hotel, my boss’ll be watchin’.
Alma: (irreverent) Shall I reel and stagger? (Trixie looks hur.)
I – I know the risk lying to him has put you to – I’ve – I can’t imagine why I’d make it the subject of humor.
Trixie: (smiling) You’re feelin’ better.
(A knock at the
door. Alma goes to open it. Sol is standing in the doorway.)
Sol: Am I early?
Alma: Good morning, Mr. Star. I’ll be ready in just a moment.
Sol: I can have a cup of coffee downstairs –
Alma: No, not at all. Wait in here – with Trixie! (Alma leaves. To Trixie) I’ll just be a moment
(Alma watches Trixie
and Sol in the mirror, smiling.)
(On the street Sol, Alma, Trixie and Sofia leave the hotel. Al is watching from his window.)
Al: That widow ain’t high.
EB: Mebbe waiting till after the service.
Al: When she’d want to get good and fucking loaded is before the fucking service, against all the fucking carrying on. (Alma settles herself on the wagon next to Sol. Al turns to E.B.) What do you think?
EB: Makes sense.
Al: Meaning…what that whore’s been telling me the last ten fucking days about seeing the widow takin’ the dope and your own fuckin’ assurances – you verify that she’s loaded personally – are both fulla shit.
EB: I checked in on the woman daily. If I was fooled, perhaps I’ve chosen simplemindedness, Al, over realizing a certain friend has used me as an instrument of purposes he conceals –
Al: Say what you’re gonna say or prepare for eternal fucking silence.
EB: (agitated) I don’t believe you commissioned me to make an offer on the widow’s claim to keep the regulators off you, Al. I think someone found something out there you want.
Al: (aggrieved) Assume you ain’t been privy to the ins and outs of that matter, for the sake of fucking conversation, huh? Was - was I asleep, E.B., when you and me declared undying loyalty and full-faith mutual disclosure about every fucking detail of every fucking move we’re ever gonna fucking make together?
EB: You used me as a pawn, Al.
Al: And you fucked up the game, is the central fucking present issue. We agreed on $2000, you want a fucking percentage instead?
EB: Is that such an inconceivable proposition?
Al: Yeah, you got a percentage, E.B.
EB: (greedily) How big?
Al: Two percent of the first million, half a percent after.
EB: (happily) You want to feel a damp palm, Al, select either of these hands –
Al: Just get to the funeral, E.B., go to twenty if you have to. Just get that fucking claim.
EB: Twenty if I have to. My word.
(Bella Union, Flora’s
talking to Cy.)
Cy: What a handsome man. Wish I could tell you I recognize him.
Flora: Thank you anyway.
Cy: Your dad, I expect?
Flora: Yes.
Cy: You’ve reason to think he’s out here?
Flora: He wrote us from Bismarck he’d be prospecting the hills.
Cy: Us bein’…?
Flora: My brother – he just got work over here.
Cy: Good for him. (pause) So, it’s just … the two of you?
Flora: Our mother passed – why we come from Buffalo.
Cy: And you’re out here lookin’ for your dad?
Flora: Yes.
Cy: …Henry?
Flora: Yes.
(Eddie walks over.)
Cy: Out here looking for her father, Eddie. Her and her older brother. Got a photograph – I don’t -- I don’t recognize the likeness.
(Joanie comes down the
staircase.)
Eddie: No.
Cy: Henry…Anderson.
Flora: Yes.
(Eddie looks at the
photo again)
Eddie: Yeah, I don’t recognize him.
(Joanie walks over,
smiles.)
Cy: Well, what are you gonna do while your brother works?
Flora: Work too, while we’re lookin’ to set aside if we have to move on.
Cy: Yeah, if dad doesn’t turn up here, yeah. Well, what do you do?
Flora: Cook, clean, uh – sew. Sweep.
Cy: Uh huh. How quick do ya learn?
Flora: Guess I learn pretty quick.
(Cy looks to Joanie.)
Cy: Maestro.
(Joanie smiles.)
(At Brom’s funeral,
the coffin on the ground.)
Rev: We are strangers and sojourners. Mr. Garret’s burial place is a great distance from New York City, but his home is in his father’s house…
Sophia: (with Trixie, putting flowers on graves )
Ingrid…Marta…Mama…Papa
Rev: …and on the great day, his father will take him into it, as he will all who confess his son’s savior from wherever we may be put to rest. Our hymn is “A Mighty Fortress”
(Everyone sings. Trixie smiles at Sofia.)
Funeral Attendees: (singing) ♪A mighty fortress is our God…♪
(E.B. sees Seth and
Charlie riding up. He scurries to
Alma’s side as she’s singing.)
EB: My sympathies madam, (Alma stops singing and looks over at Farnum.), but my own requirements force me to ignore what’s seemly. I must decide where to place my capital. Might raising my offer to, say, $19,500, uh, prompt you to an immediate answer?
Alma: (Angry) No, Mister Farnum.
(E.B. begins to walk
away, stops, turns around. Seth
dismounts and looks up at Charlie, who hangs his head down.)
Utter: I’d as soon not see Bill now. I’ll see him some other time.
(Seth walks away,
strides toward the funeral. E.B. tries
again.)
EB: I will require a decision within 24 hours—
Alma: (interrupting) Please – stop speaking to me, Mr. Farnum.
(E.B. gives up and
walks away as Seth joins the funeral party.
Seth nods to Sol who responds in kind.
The Rev looks joyful and then confused, loses his train of thought. Alma resumes singing as Seth stands next to her.)

(Gem. Al counting money. Dan is hovering.)
Dan: I hope you ain’t gived up on that little runt of a girl, Al.
Al: Oh, do you worry for her, Dan? Wandering the muck of our thoroughfare, her tiny self all but swallowed up in horseshit? (Dan looks at Al, shakes his head, and goes off behind the bar. Al looks up and over at Miles.) Hey kid! C’mere!
Miles: Yes sir.
Al: Stand with us here a second.
(Al and Dan stand with
arms folded.)
Miles: What – what’re we doin’?
Al: Waiting. (Miles folds his arms over the broomstick. Waits. A man walks out of a whore’s room wiping his mouth.) And out the door he’ll go, and prompt as a Swiss fuckin’ timepiece, three big-titted whores will now emerge from behind that screen. He lines ‘em up at two foot intervals, smock tops down, and all but sprints past ‘em givin’ their titties a lick, and if he misses a titty, does not let himself retrace his steps.
Miles: No tellin’ me.
Al: Yeah. And then he goes on his way home, relieved for the day. What’s your name, it’s Miles, hmm?
Miles: Miles, yeah.
Al: Yeah. Strange, huh, Miles, but – something ya gotta know about specialists – they pay a premium, and they never cause fuckin’ trouble. Sometimes I imagine in my declining years runnin’ a small joint in Manchester, England, catering to specialists exclusive. And to let ‘em know they’re amongst their own, maybe I’ll operate from the corner, hanging upside down like a fuckin’ bat, hmm? (Al sees Farnum enter the Gem. Al slaps Dan on the arm.) Oh, we’re not such bad sorts here, huh Miles?
Miles: No, sir.
Al: So, do you wanna ask
your sister if she’d like to reconsider, hmm?
Miles: You don’t really mean that, Mr. Swearengen?
Al: Of course I don’t mean that– how dare you suggest I’d mean a thing like that, huh?
(Al walks over to
Farnum at the end of the bar.)
EB: I did my part – raised our offer to twenty and demanded an answer within the day.
Al: But what, you cocksucker?
EB: Complications have
ensued. Bullock’s come back. I expect she’ll want to take counsel with
him.
Al: (flatly) Tell the whore I wanna see her.
EB: And I trust this doesn’t alter our agreement.
Al: I trust you know two percent of nothin’s fuckin’ nothin’

(Seth and Alma at the
Grand Central dining room, serving themselves food)
Seth: That fella from Montana I knew to trust won’t be able to assay your claim.
Alma: I see.
Seth: I’ll engage someone local, and I’ll keep an eye on him.
Alma: As I’ve decided to stay in camp, Mr. Bullock, at least for the near term, I hope you’ll feel absolved of those responsibilities towards my interest that you undertook at Mr. Hickok’s request.
Seth: I’d prefer to see ‘em through.
Alma: They’re properly mine. I even feel marginally capable of shouldering them, and I certainly realize that you and Mr. Star have responsibilities of your own.
Seth: Are you firing me, Mrs. Garrett?
Alma: I’m – offering you – absolution.
Seth: Otherwise, I’m stayin’ on.
(Alma smiles and
nods. Seth pulls a chair out for her,
then seats himself. She looks up at
him.)
Alma: I’m so sorry you were hurt.
Seth: So – how hard are they comin’ at you to sell?
Alma: I could confide, that in an effort to blur my judgment, Mr. Swearengen engaged intermediaries to indulge me with opium, but that would entail acknowledging that I’ve had a weakness in that direction.
(Seth looks unaffected.) Uh – more appropriately, uh, I could add at the graveyard, Mr. Farnum raised his offer – seven thousand, five hundred dollars, presumably also on Mr. Swearengen’s instruction, and set a 24 hour limit to my reply.
Seth: Under the circumstances, I’d say that’s comin’ pretty hard.
Alma: Please forgive me for making you uncomfortable, Mr. Bullock. I had better manners before I began to abstain.
Seth: That’s all right. (pauses) Anyways, are you at risk for the smallpox?
Alma: I was inoculated in New York City. The child whose life you saved presumably has not been, but I assume she’s safer under my care than traveling in a covered wagon with strangers.
Seth: Anyways, I’ll line up the assayer.
Alma: Thank you.
(They keep looking at
each other.)
Seth: You are changed.
Alma: You seem to be, too.
(Hhardware store,
Sol’s talking to Trixie, who’s got Sofia in her arms.)
Sol: Our stock’s depleted, but we are offering a 100% discount on any item that catches your eye.
Trixie: I’ve got money.
Sol: Our special get-acquainted-with-those-we’d-like-to-get-acquainted-with sale…(Charlie walks in carrying hardware he’s hauled to Deadwood for the store.) Mr. Utter.
Utter: I brought these pickaxes for you to sell. There’s two sifters on that black out there.
Sol: Mighty grateful, sir.
Utter: (Utter looks around) You got this place just about built, don’t ya?
Sol: Savin’ the last master strokes for Seth.
(Utter turns, sees
Trixie, tips his hat.)
Utter: Uh, hello.
I didn’t see ya.
Trixie: Hello.
Utter: Hey – that’s that little girl, idn’t it?
Trixie: I’m takin’ care of her for Mrs. Garret.
Utter: Well, she favors you – she could be yours. (Trixie walks off to the back of the store.) I lost the receipts for my costs.
Sol: Maybe while you was busy saving my partner’s life.
Utter: (uncomfortable) Let me get these sifters for ya.
(Sol walks out after
Charlie, turns back to Trixie.)
Sol: See if you can make those accounts add up. (Trixie looks at the books, then back at Sol, smiles. He puts his hat on and heads out the door to Charlie, who’s getting the sifters off the horse.) I don’t know if you heard me inside, thankin’ you for helpin’ my friend.
Utter: I heard yuh. It’s all right.
Sol: I’m sorry you lost yours.
(Charlie chokes up a little)
Utter: All right. Thank you.
(E.B. walks up to
Charlie, who’s walking away.)
EB: Welcome back, Mr. Utter. We’ve had a mild increase in rates, but I do have a room available.
Utter: I’ll see.
(Farnum walks over to
the hardware store, Sol is standing outside.)
Sol: What do you want, Mr. Farnum?
EB: I have a message for Trixie. That’s lookin’ to that orphan child? She’s to see her longer-term employer.
Sol: I’ll tell her.
(E.B. steps closer to Sol.)
EB: (smarmy) You know who that is?
Sol: I know she works at the Gem.
EB: And even so, admit her to your trade at public hours. Congratulations, sir, on your advanced thinking. (shouting, to Trixie) Al wants you, Trixie. (to Sol) I’m a stickler for self-delivered messages.
(Bella Union, Flora
talking to Joanie.)
Flora: Our dad ain’t here – I know it. Even if my brother don’t. Maybe he never even tried to get here.
Joanie: Or maybe he did try to get here and couldn’t – maybe something
happened to him. There are so many ways it could be, Flora, there’s not much point deciding which it was.
Flora: He’d never think that, though. My brother.
Joanie: Must be how he needs to do.
Flora: (abruptly) I ain’t a virgin. If you wanna know that. I had a boyfriend in Buffalo.
Joanie: And was you upset? To have to leave him?
Flora: What do you think?
Joanie: I don’t know
Flora: I was upset, at the same time he was a stupid son of a bitch. And rough.
(Joanie pulls out a
handkerchief and gives it to Flora. )
Joanie: Here.
(Flora wipes her eyes
and nose.)
Flora: You can’t tell my brother about him. He’d make it back to Buffalo and shoot Louis in the head.
Joanie: All that way in defense of your virtue?
Flora: (hard) It’s more trouble than I ever took with it.
(Downstairs at the
Bella Union. Andy Cramed walks in. Eddie leans over to Cy.
Eddie: Cy.
(Cy walks over to Andy. Cy raises his arms.)
Cy: Lazarus risen. (smiles) Look at you, you son of a gun.
Andy: Hello Cy.
Eddie: Good to see you, Andy.
Andy: (making to shake Eddie’s hand) Don’t be afraid to shake with me, Eddie. I ain’t contagious no more.
Cy: Highly becoming outfit.
Andy: I’m here for my
belongings.
Cy: Well – they’re gone, Andy. Measures to stop the spread. (Andy looks down. He’s upset.) Ah, hell. The important thing is you’re well. I’ll front whatever you need. Let’s get somethin’ going, huh?
(Joanie walks down,
sees the men.)
Joanie: Andy…?
Andy: In the flesh, sweetheart. Which ain’t much to look at.
Joanie: You made it, Andy.
(Cy holds money out to Andy)
Andy: We ain’t gettin’ nothin’ going. All I come back for, Cy, was my things, and you tossed them too.
Cy: Why don’t you take this and get yourself out of that clown outfit? And once you’ve cooled off a little, think how you’da done different with somebody showed up in the shape you was in and my responsibilities to meet.
Andy: Better, then, to throw him in the woods to fuckin’ die?
Cy: Then don’t think about nuthin’, Andy. And go use the money for a whore and a toot and go join the fuckin’ circus. (Cy stuffs the money down Andy’s shirt, Andy walks out, Cy turns to Joanie.) Did you turn her out?
Joanie: Her brother’s gonna be a problem.
Cy: Fuck her brother. We’ll handle the brother if we have to kill the cocksucker. (He glances up.) That’s an interesting piece of strange.
(Cy walks off leaving
Eddie and Joanie to look at each other.
Eddie walks off)
(Al’s office, a knock
on the door, Trixie walks in.)
Al: Ain’t you a picture.
Trixie: What is it?
Al: Hmm?
(He gets up from the desk and walks over
to Trixie.) Am I – detaining you in some way? (Closes the door to his office) Am I fucking imposing? (He stands behind her.)

Trixie: Mrs. Garret’s to sit down with Bullock. I thought you’d want me over there.
Al: Ah, yeah, so you could give me a full and fair report, huh? But will the widow have her wits about her, Trixie, hmm, or will they be passing the opium pipe like heathens between ‘em, her and fucking Bullock, eh?
Trixie: What’re you pissed off for?
Al: (rubbing his temples) I ain’t pissed off, I’m in fucking wonderment. I’m waitin’ to be kept happy by the next fuckin’ fairy tale.
Trixie: (softly) Do you want me back at the hotel, or do you want to do somethin’ to me?
(Al walks over to
Trixie and grabs her crotch roughly.)
Al: Now why would I want you to go back there, hmm? Or rely on anything you said transpired after you lied about her taking the dope? Huhhhh?
(Al tightens his grip
on her crotch. Trixie’s in pain.)
Trixie: Her bein’ high. Wasn’t gonna have nuthin’ to do with whether or not she sold you that claim. And she wanted to get off the dope. And that little one needs someone to care for her, and maybe get her the fuck out of here, and I knew it wudn’t gonna be me. So you want me back over there and to tell you what they fucking decide – or do you wanna rip my fucking guts out?
(Al releases his
hand.)
Al: Get back there, quick. (Trixie makes to leave.) Don’t kid yourself, Trixie. Don’t get a mistaken idea.
(Trixie looks back and
then walks out.)
(Nuttall’s # 10
Saloon, Charlie walks in, takes off his hat.
Nuttall sees him - nervously touches his hat...)
Nuttall: Mr. Utter.
Utter: This where Bill got killed, huh?
(Nuttall nods
nervously, removes his hat, toys with
it.)
Nuttall: Uh. I’ll be sorry about that for as long as I live.
Utter: Can ya … tell me about it?
Nuttall: Yeah. It was about sunup, over at that Bella Union joint. Mr. Hickok plumb gutted McCall at draw. ‘N now here Mr. Hickok was, at poker again, say a couple hours of daylight left, ‘n in come that coward McCall. Walked up on him, ‘n shot him in the head.
Utter: (in wonderment) Bill never know when he come in.
Nuttall: Nope. Those of us that did, we didn’t have no inkling of what he intended. He just murdered him. Right where he sat.
Poker Dude: If I may sir. (We see him stand up and tap a chair.) This is here where Wild Bill was sitting when McCall entered from the front and approached the table, causing no apprehension because he had often frequented the game. Of a sudden, McCall produced a revolver, and shouting “Take that, damn you!” he fired, muzzle couldn’t’ve been three inches from Wild Bill’s head, and I’m told that Hickok fell dead immediately, but I won’t testify to it, because the bullet, after it passed through Wild Bill’s brain, struck me in my right wrist, and I lost several seconds to pain before regaining my senses. Sir – you have my word as eyewitness to the rest, and I suppose this wound is added proof, for the doctors they feared crippled me, in the hand I use to write, where I will take the murderer’s bullet to my grave.
(Utter shifts. Looks back up at Nuttall.)
Utter: Thanks.
(Utter leaves. Poker player slaps the bar with his hand.)
Poker Player: Aces over eights. As I
just now recall. (He seats himself again.) That is the hand that Wild Bill had.
Stapleton: Sure, sure.
(Upstairs at the Bella
Union with Joanie and Flora. Joanie is
fixing Flora’s hair.)
Joanie: You like how that falls?
Flora: Sure.
Joanie: Do you like it. Flora.
Flora: (deadpan) Why not.
(Joanie grabs Flora’s
face with her hand, turns her head so she’s looking at her.)
Joanie: I prefer you happy, honey. But if you can’t be, you need to pretend at it better than you’re doin’, or you’re gonna be hungry, and cold, and getting done to you for nothing outside, what you’d’ve made money to live on and save up besides, if you acted the part in here.
Flora: I thought I only had to act it with them that want to stick it in me.
Joanie: You never know who that might be, Flora. (Flora contorts her lips into a smile. Joanie lets go of her face.) There you go.
(Flora studies Joanie in the mirror)
Flora: I prefer you happy.
(Joanie looks at her,
saying nothing for a moment.)
Joanie: Or at least pretending better?
(And continues
arranging Flora’s attire.)
(Pest tent, Jane is
staring grimly at the ailing Joey. Doc
walks over to her.)
Jane: I think he’s dead, Doc.
(Doc nods, closes the
boy’s eyes.)
Doc:Could you tell the litter bearers not to make so much o’ getting this one outta here?
(Jane nods and leaves
as Rev enters.)
Rev: Has young Joey gone to dust.
Doc:Yeah.
(He backs off as the
rev approaches the body.)
Rev: As flesh must, to be restored by the Savior’s return. (Doc just watches the Rev, as Jane comes back into the tent to attend to Joey. The Rev turns back to the Doc.) Mr. Bullock is back among us, and also…(gesturing to Jane)…also Mr. Utter
Jane: Does Charlie know about Bill?
Rev: They were together, Mr. Bullock and he. They’d captured Jack McCall.
(Jane raises her fists
in triumph.)
Jane: I hope that’s only the beginning of what they fuckin’ did to’m.
Rev: They gave him over to the federal authorities.
Jane: Gave him over?!
Rev: Rendered unto Caesar.
Jane: (upset) Jesus Christ!
(The Rev gestures
shakily to his temple)
Rev: Mr. Bullock was struck by an Indian’s axe – marked like the first born of Adam and Eve.
Jane: (skeptical) Are you drunk?
(The Rev leans
forward, face close to Jane’s)
Rev: No.
(But then his face
contorts – another seizure is beginning.)
Jane: What the fuck is that?
(Jane reaches out
toward the Rev as the Doc begins maneuvering him to a sitting position.)
Doc: He’s all right. Reverend, all right, Reverend, all right, all right, Reverend. All right. (The Rev sits, still convulsing.) You’re all right Reverend. All right.
(The Rev slowly comes
back)
Rev: He marks us sinful, and forgiven by confession.
Doc: All right.
Rev: (almost gleeful) He has told us and shown us. He has told me.
(Doc is staring
intently at the Rev.)
Doc: All right. You listen to me now, Reverend. You are goddamn exhausted and you give yourself no respite. And your seizures may owe somethin’ to that, but it also wouldn’t surprise me if you had a lesion in your goddamn head…(Jane looks on, eyes filling)…and that’s what’s giving you the seizures and generating your chats with the goddamn divinity. No goddamn offense intended.
Rev: None taken, sir.
Doc: Now, get outta here and get yerself some rest.
Jane: Go on, Reverend. (Doc straightens up.) Doc’s tired too, only reason he’s talkin’ so fuckin’ harsh.
(The Rev mulls on this
for a moment, then looks up at Doc.)
Rev: Could not the lesion be the instrument of God’s instructive intention, doctor, if I am so afflicted?
Doc: Well, of course it could, his ways not bein’ ours and so forth. But could he not, Reverend, just once, you gettin’ outta here and gettin’ yerself some goddamn rest?
(The Rev looks
confused, as Jane and Doc help him up.
Rev exits the tent and Jane looks tearfully at Doc.)
(Outside in the
street, Flora walking with Terrence.)
Flora: You have to go now.
Terrance: We don’t have to do nothin’ – I’d pay the same price just to set with you.
Flora: My brother works in this place up here, Terrance, and he keeps a hard watch. If you want to stick it in me again tomorrow, you better let me go in there by myself.
Terrance: What time you gonna start?
Flora: Eleven, I guess I’ll be receiving around noon.
Terrance: All right, Flora, here’s – here’s a dollar anyway. You’re swell.
(Terrence leaves. She secures the money in her waistband.
Flora enters the Gem. Dan approaches,
smiling. He’s put on his best tie)
Dan: Evening – evening miss. You’re early.
Flora: Yes.
Dan: Do I guess no luck finding Dad?
Flora: No. No luck.
Dan: I knew you’d’a had a cheerier look on yer face if you had. Let me get you a place to set away from these rough sumbitche