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“What if I was wrong about them?” she asked.

Matt stopped and looked directly into her eyes. “Do you think you were?”

“No. Maybe. I don’t know.” She jumped as she heard a man yell something about “calling the law.”

Suddenly, as they stood there on the sidewalk along the streets of Deadwood, two men were yelling at each other and aiming guns. For a brief moment, Laurie wanted to get involved, to protect… one of them. In that split second, she wasn’t sure which one to help, but she was trying to figure it out. One of them was dressed in a suit and tall hat, and the other wore a brown fringed leather jacket, dirty trousers, and a battered cowboy hat. A blink later, she realized that this was a sort of theater. These were actors, reenacting some of Deadwood’s Wild West history.

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“Wild Bill wasn’t killed in the street,” Matt muttered.

“What?” Fen asked.

“I don’t think that guy’s supposed to be Wild Bill. He might be the most famous person here, but he wasn’t the only gunslinger,” Laurie said.

She and Matt had both stepped forward to watch the show.

“Seriously? We’re going to stand here? I’m bored.” Fen stepped between her and Matt.

Laurie stepped closer to her cousin. He had always been a little bit of a jerk when she paid attention to anyone other than him. Her mom had told her that she only encouraged him to do it more by giving in, but someone had to encourage Fen, and in her family, the only two people who had in years were her and her dad. “Come on, Fen. I think it would’ve been cool to live here then. You don’t?” she teased. “I thought you were a Brekke.”

He was quiet for a minute while they watched the two men face off in their pretend fight. “Maybe a little cool, but these are just people pretending.”

It was hard to tell which one they should be cheering for. She watched as the man in the suit drew his gun and the man in the cowboy hat drew his and twirled it around so fast it looked like a magic trick. She hadn’t been paying attention to what they were saying, so she still had no idea which one was the one they were to cheer for. It would be easier—in plays and real life—if things were as simple as good guys and bad guys, heroes and villains, but right and wrong weren’t always clear. She glanced up at Fen. What was clear was that her cousin was going to be a hero. She’d been right about him.

“Bet there were Brekkes here then, and”—Fen glanced at Matt—“Thorsens arresting them for every little thing.”

Matt shrugged.

“Be nice,” Laurie chastised Fen. “Not all Thorsens are the same, just like not all Brekkes are. Matt was running from the cops with us, and you jumped in to fight with him.”

Both boys shrugged, and both looked uncomfortable.

Matt’s interest in the pretend gunslingers seemed to vanish. “We should eat, and then figure out how to convince the twins to join us,” he said.

“And find somewhere to sleep tonight,” Fen added. “We don’t have sleeping bags, and unless you want to break into a hotel room, we don’t have rooms anywhere.”

They started walking down Main Street, looking for a place to eat. To be safe, they stopped in a tourist shop and bought a hat, which Matt wore pulled down low. After their run-in with the police in Lead, a little extra precaution was in order. With their police situation and their age, getting anywhere comfortable to sleep wasn’t likely. Trying to steal some sleeping bags wasn’t a great idea, either. They’d left theirs hidden back at Mount Rushmore, first in order not to attract attention at the monument, and then they couldn’t bring them on the bus. Laurie sighed. The thought of sleeping on the cold ground again was far from appealing, but she knew hotels didn’t rent rooms to kids, and she wasn’t sure they should spend their little bit of money on a hotel room even if they could get someone to rent it for them.

Her family members usually had pretty good luck with cons; she felt strangely proud now that she knew about her ancestry: her family’s con and luck skills were because of Loki. In a way, her mom was right: she was just like her dad. But maybe that wasn’t a bad thing, despite the way it sounded when her mom said it. Admittedly, her mom said it after there had been a call from the principal’s office, but sometimes Laurie thought that her mother forgot the good things about her father. Being lucky—or clever—wasn’t all bad.

“Maybe the twins would let us stay at their house,” Laurie suggested, thinking about the possibility of convincing them through a mix of luck and tricks.

Fen laughed. “They don’t even want to talk to us, and you think they’re going to invite us to their house?”

“Maybe,” she hedged. If it was just Fen, she’d tell him why she thought so, but she suspected that even though they were all friends of a sort, Matt still wasn’t going to be too much in favor of trickery.

“I hate to agree with Fen, but he’s right on this one. They ran off pretty fast.” Matt paused. “When we brought up gifts, they spooked.”

“Are we sure that they’re on ourside?” Fen asked. He rubbed his hands on his face like he was trying to wake up, and his words all sort of started to tumble out. “I mean, how much of the myth stuff is supposed to be what happens? If I could switch, they could, too. Could they be on the snake’s side? And also, aren’t people going to notice a big monster snake and do something about it? I get that in whenever it was, big snakes were probably hard to kill so call in the gods, but today, there are tanks, bombs, and all sorts of stuff.”

Laurie didn’t say anything beyond, “Fen has a point… or points, or whatever. He’s right. We don’t know what we’re doing or where to go.” She paused and then said, “And I’m tired and hungry.”

Fen’s burst of frustration seemed to vanish. “We’ll eat. We’ll figure it out.”

He gently bumped his shoulder into hers.

Matt was silent as they walked. He stayed that way while they ate at a little diner. Then, as they left the diner, he looked at Laurie and casually asked, “Which way are the twins?”

Without thinking, she pointed to the left.

Fen and Matt both grinned at her, and once she realized what she’d done, she smiled, too. “I canfind them,” she said. “It is them, and I can find them.”

“We can do this,” Matt said. “The three of us, and then we’ll convince the others. We’re a good team.”

Laurie half expected Fen to flinch away at Matt’s words, but he just looked at her and said, “Lead on.”

They walked away from the tourist-filled, casino-filled heart of Deadwood to the streets they’d skirted on the way from Mount Moriah to downtown. She didn’t speak and neither did the boys as she followed the instinct that told her where the twins were—until she realized that they were headed back to the cemetery. That was weird.

Matt must’ve figured out the same thing, because he was frowning.

“Wait, maybe I’m wrong.” She glanced at the boys. “I was so sure this feeling was leading us to them.”

“Maybe the people we needed are still in the cemetery, and we just missed them,” Matt suggested helpfully.

The frustration and fear that she was leading them on another long, pointless walk made her let out a small scream of frustration.

Fen squeezed her hand. “It’s cool.”

“Not really.” She closed her eyes and tried to concentrate. The same sensation was there, urging her, telling her which way to go. She turned away from the cemetery, but the directions remained unchanged.

She shook her head. “I don’t know. Maybe they went back there, or maybe it is someone else we’re supposed to be looking for.”

With the boys behind her, she continued walking, but the trail ended a few moments later—not at Mount Moriah, but on Madison Street. She felt the end so strongly that it was as if she could see a trail dead-ending on the ground. The house in front of her was a sprawling mess. It looked like the owners had bought several houses on the street, demolished them all, and constructed one of those garish oversized houses that screamed “more money than we need.” Laurie gestured toward the house and said, “I think they’re inside there.”