It was a busy saloon in
Dodge. Ten or twelve hands were bellies
up to the bar. Near twice that many sat
at green topped tables. Some had been
there all day. None of the patrons
noticed the young boy enter until the barkeep yelled, "Get out a here kid!
Don't allow no
school kids in here."
All conversation stopped as
everyone looked at the youngster standing just inside the swinging doors. What they saw was a ten or twelve year old
boy, pink faced and skinny. His clothes
were about four sizes too big, even the hat that still sat on his head came
down below the top of his ears. When he
spoke, it was obvious he was forcing his voice to sound deep and grown‑up.
"You allow baby killers in
here, so why not allow little kids."
The room got even quieter. Everyone
could see the kid was wearing a shooting iron.
The beefy bartender walked down
the bar, closer to the door. He stopped
where a sawed off shotgun was kept under the bar. "What'd you say kid?" He certainly didn't expect to have to shoot a
twelve-year-old brat, but that was where he always stood when he didn't
understand what was going on.
"Last June, three varmints
rode on my pa's ranch. They killed my
folks, murdered by baby brother, then raped my
fourteen year old sister."
One of the men at the far end of
the bar quietly backed up a few steps then moved to the back wall. The youngster turned away from the bartender
to face the man at the rear.
"Before she died, my sister said the skinny one had a sailor's
tattoo on his¼"
Before the boy could finish his
story, the man in the rear started his draw.
He never cleared leather. A
bullet in the head stopped him in mid‑draw. Everyone in the room could see the blue
anchor tattooed on his right arm. He
dropped without a sound.
By the time the bartender could
bring his hidden weapon into play, the kid had his colt holstered. As the boy sat in a chair nearby he said
"Someone go get the town marshal.
Tell him Joey Mackenzie just killed a man."
It turned out that the marshal
knew of the Mackenzie Murders. He'd read
the wanted poster Sheriff Tanner sent out.
"But I don't recall there bein' an older boy mentioned." They were now both standing in the marshal's
office. When the young lad removed his
oversized hat, the marshal plopped in a chair and whispered "Oh,
shit." Hair tumbled to the middle
of the youngster's back. The boys in the
saloon had been gabbing about the young gunfighter's speed when he had left
with his prisoner. The marshal wondered
what that crowd would say if the knew the youngster was a girl. He decided right then that as it was
self-defense, he'd keep this little tidbit to himself.
Josie asked the marshal not to
betray her secret. She also asked that
the stolen money Billy Joe had on him be sent to her bank. Although the marshal
said that would take a Judge's okay, it would be best for all concerned if she
left town soon. It was agreed the
marshal would handle the details, and try to keep the rumors down.
Josie curled her long hair back
on her head and placed her hat over it.
Suddenly she was again Joey, the boy men down
the street were calling 'The Kid Gunfighter'.
Josephine Anne Mackenzie had
gotten revenge on the first of the three men who had destroyed her family. This hadn't been her first killing, but it
was the first she'd set out to kill.