Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, The (2007) Movie Script
He was growing into middle age...
...and was living then in a bungalow
on Woodland Avenue.
He installed himself
in a rocking chair...
...and smoked a cigar down
in the evenings...
...as his wife wiped her pink hands
on an apron...
...and reported happily
on their two children.
His children knew his legs...
...the sting of his mustache
against their cheeks.
They didn't know how their father made
his living or why they so often moved.
They didn't even know
their father's name.
He was listed in the city directory
as Thomas Howard.
And he went
everywhere unrecognized...
...and lunched with Kansas City
shopkeepers and merchants...
...calling himself a cattleman
or a commodities investor...
...someone rich and leisured
who had the common touch.
He had two incompletely healed
bullet holes in his chest...
...and another in his thigh.
He was missing the nub
of his left middle finger...
...and was cautious,
lest that mutilation be seen.
He also had a condition that was
referred to as "granulated eyelids"...
...and it caused him
to blink more than usual...
...as if he found creation
slightly more than he could accept.
Rooms seemed hotter
when he was in them.
Rains fell straighter.
Clocks slowed.
Sounds were amplified.
He considered himself
a Southern loyalist and guerrilla...
...in a Civil War that never ended.
He regretted neither his robberies,
nor the 17 murders that he laid claim to.
He had seen another summer under
in Kansas City, Missouri...
...and on September 5th
in the year 1881...
...he was 34 years old.
You just... You just slide them things
right in there, right in your sleeve...
...and then, when you get ready,
you just shake it out.
Like that, right there. You shake it out.
Mary Todd Lincoln, tyrant's wife, fall
into hysterics when the moon was full.
President's men would tie her up
with hay-baling wire...
...keep her from ripping
her husband's ears off.
You never heard word one about the wife of
the Confederacy's Jefferson Davis, did you?
- I didn't.
- No, you didn't.
He did his duty by her.
- Oh, my God, I'm speaking to children.
- No, I get it, I get it, I get it.
The president of the Confederacy discerned
his wife's needs and satisfied them...
...with the utmost skill
and the utmost courtesy.
- Charley, you spit all over my boot.
- Sorry. Sorry, sorry, Jesse.
- Here, get it off.
- I'll wipe it... I'll wipe it off.
But Abraham Lincoln probably
sent his wife on a shopping expedition.
- A three-act play.
- With money stole from us.
Chow!
I think insanity run on both sides
of that Lincoln family.
You're right about that.
The river... You jump in the river.
- Chow!
- Don't be shy now, Dick.
- One more piece of meat.
- When you diddle a lot...
There's a good piece of bacon fat
in there for him.
Excuse me.
I see I've traipsed right on in
and interrupted you.
Who are you, then?
Bob Ford.
Charley's brother?
Yeah.
I was lying when I said
I just happened down here.
I've been looking for you. I feel lousy
I didn't say so at the outset.
Folks take me for a nincompoop...
...on account of the shabby first impression
I make, whereas I think of myself...
...as being just a rung down
from the James brothers.
I was hoping if I ran into you
aside from those peckerwoods...
...I could show you how special I am.
I honestly believe I'm destined
for great things, Mr. James.
I got qualities that don't come shining
through right at the outset.
You give me a chance, I'll get
the job done. I guarantee you that.
Hey, Dick, is it true you diddled a squaw?
Come on, you can tell me. I've always
wanted to lay down with a redskin.
Well, Charley...
...there's a feeling that comes over you...
...getting inside a woman whose hands
has scalped a congregation.
There's this thunderous sound
that comes from their cooch...
...on account of the fact that
they birth a child standing upright...
...like a wild animal.
- What's it sound like?
Whatever a thunderous cooch sounds like
there, Charley. I don't know.
No.
They got a noisy quim
on account of the fact that...
...they use their cunnis as a saddlebag
to carry sundries across the plains.
Come on, what'd it really feel like?
Did it feel good?
Come on, fess up, now.
I like you, Charley.
I like you too, Charley.
Well...
You're not so special, Mr. Ford.
You're just like any other tyro
who's prinked himself up for an escapade.
Hoping to be a gunslinger
like them nickel books are about.
You may as well quench your mind of it...
...because you don't have
the ingredients, son.
Well, I'm sorry to hear
you feel that way...
...as I put such stock
in your opinions.
As for me being a gunslinger, I've just got
this one granddaddy Paterson Colt...
...and a borrowed belt to stick it in.
But I also got an appetite
for greater things.
I hoped by joining up with you, it'd put me
that much closer to getting them.
Well, what am I supposed to say to that?
Let me be your sidekick tonight.
Sidekick?
So you can examine my grit
and intelligence.
I don't know what it is about you...
...but the more you talk,
the more you give me the willies.
Now, I don't believe I want you anywhere
within earshot this evening, okay?
You understand?
- Well, I'm sorry...
- Why don't you just get now? Scat.
All right.
I was with a girl once, wasn't a squaw.
But she was pretty.
She had yellow hair like a...
Oh, like something.
Like hair bobbed from a ray of sunlight?
Yeah. Yeah, like that.
Boy, you... You talk good.
You can hide things in vocabulary.
Maybe you and me could write her a note,
send it by post?
See, all you gotta do, Ed...
...is predict her needs
and beat her to the punch.
Well, this girl, she has a real specific job.
- Specific?
- We was only together once.
She...
She was afraid of lightning,
and she came up under the wagon and...
...just cuddled right up to me.
She give me a kind price too.
Well, I'll be. That is specific.
Yeah, sure,
she'd been with other people...
...but the kind of things she said to me...
...people just don't say
unless they really mean it.
My love said she would marry only me
And Jove himself could not make her care.
For what women say to lovers, you'll agree
One writes on running water or on air.
My God, that's good.
Let's write her that.
No.
Poetry don't work on whores.
How do you do?
Am I too late
to wish you a happy birthday?
How'd you know?
You'd be surprised
at what I got stored away.
I'm an authority on the James boys.
Is you?
Well... Well, your brother Frank and I,
we just had a real nice visit.
Just chit-chatting about this and that,
right over there.
And must've been a hundred subjects
entertained...
Good Lord, you know
what this stew needs?
Dumplings?
Noodles.
You eat yourself some noodle stew
and your clock'll tick all night.
You ever see that woman up in Fayette?
Suck noodles up her nose.
- In Fayette?
- I don't believe I have.
You never heard of her, huh?
You got canals up there
you never dreamed of.
I don't like to harp on a subject...
I don't care who comes with me.
Never have.
That's why they call me gregarious.
I hear you and young Stovepipe here
had a real nice visit.
Your boys have got about a acre
of lumber to haul, dingus.
You better goose them down yonder.
The James Gang committed over 25 bank,
train and stagecoach robberies...
...from 1867 to 1881.
But except for Frank and Jesse James...
...all the original members
were now either dead or in prison.
- mine eye
All my soul and all my every part
And for this sin, there is no remedy
It is so grounded inward in my heart.
So for their last robbery at Blue Cut...
...the brothers recruited a gang
of petty thieves and country rubes...
...culled from the local hillsides.
Right on schedule, Buck!
Snuff those lanterns!
Look at those fools. They're gonna trip
and shoot each other into females.
I bet you I could find them husbands
if they do.
Fan out!
Hold your fire!
- Watch him!
- Going down.
Hold your fire, you idiots!
Hold your fire!
Let me in.
Buck! Boys!
Buck, this way!
Do you think that lock will hold?
No, I don't.
Let's go, let's go.
Let's not get clever, nor courageous,
any of you.
Hey there, boys!
These are all for me?
Looks like Christmas morning in here.
Hey, friend.
You mind if I have a peek around?
This shit. Nope.
Nope.
You got anything good here?
It could be.
Open that safe.
Do it!
- You didn't have to bop him.
- Yeah, he did. They needed convincing.
They got their company rules,
I got my mean streak...
...and that's how
we get things done around here.
- Get on over here and attend to this thing.
- Come on, go.
Hold your fire, you idiots!
Dig deeper.
- Come on!
- Give me your money.
- And you, stand up.
- Let's see your hands.
What have you got?
Speak English.
Money. Money. You understand that?
Give me your money!
There's some receipts.
I got fives.
Jesse. Jesse.
Don't look good.
There ain't no 100,000 dollars
in here, Dick.
Get down on your knees.
Why?
Well, you ought to pray.
I'm gonna kill you.
Get at!
You're gonna have to make me.
All right.
Don't shoot him! No, don't shoot him.
Don't tell me what I can
and cannot do, Ed.
Round them up!
Chicago newspaper publishers made
a great deal of the Blue Cut train robbery...
...alleging that in no state
but Missouri...
...would the James brothers be tolerated
for 12 years.
Hey.
Can you keep a secret?
It depends on what you're concealing.
You afraid of the dark?
No.
You superstitious?
I put... I put an acorn in the window
to keep the lightning out.
Kid, you must've crept up on cat's paws.
I'll wager that's the first and last time
you'll ever be caught off-guard.
How old are you?
Twenty.
Except, well, I guess I won't
really be 20 till...
Till January, so...
I'm 19.
Yeah, you feel older than that, though,
don't you?
Yeah, I do.
Hey, Frank, you...
You think the sheriff's out already?
- More than likely.
- Yeah.
I had a real fine time tonight.
- You think so?
- Yup. Yeah.
Hey, I wasn't just flapping my lips
about my kid brother and me.
What I figured was if you and Jesse could
gauge our courage and our daring...
...you might just make us
your regular sidekicks.
Your courage and your daring.
I about heard all I want to about sidekicks.
You sound like your damn brother.
Yeah. Well, I'll be square with you,
it's Bob who put me up to it. He's...
He's got plans for the James boys
I can't even get the hang of.
- They're that complicated.
- Yeah?
Well, you can just
get shed of that idea.
Because after tonight,
there'll be no more shenanigans.
You can jot that down in your little diary.
September 7th, 1881, the James Gang
robbed one last train at Blue Cut...
...and gave up their nightriding for good.
Wait.
Well, how are you gonna
make your living?
Maybe I'll sell shoes.
I can't believe I woke up this morning...
...wondering if my daddy
would loan me his overcoat...
...and here it is just past midnight...
...I've already robbed a railroad train
and I'm sitting in a rocking chair...
...chatting with none other
than Jesse James.
Yeah, it's a wonderful world.
What's this?
Oh, yeah.
I was real agitated this morning, so I was
wondering if I would know you or Frank...
...tell you all apart, and so I had
this clipping that described you both.
Want me to read it?
Go on.
Well... I gotta find it. Hold on.
Here. Here.
"Jesse James, the youngest, has a face
as smooth and innocent as a schoolgirl.
The blue eyes, very clear and penetrating,
are never at rest.
His form is tall and graceful
and capable of great endurance...
...and great effort.
Jesse is lighthearted, reckless,
and devil-may-care.
- There's always a smile on his lips..."
- All right, all right, all right.
Well, yeah, then it just... Frank, Frank,
Frank. That's nothing. And then...
You know what I got
right next to my bed?
Is The Train Robbers, or, A Story
of the James Boys by R.W. Stevens.
I mean, many's the night I stayed up...
...with my eyes open
and my mouth open...
...just reading about your escapades
in the Wide Awake Library.
They're all lies, you know.
Yeah, of course they are.
You don't have to keep smoking that
if it's making you bungey.
Alexander Franklin James
would be in Baltimore...
...when he would read of
the assassination of Jesse James.
He had spurned his younger brother
for being peculiar and temperamental.
But once he perceived
that he would never see Jesse again...
...Frank would be wrought-up,
perplexed, despondent.
My brother and me are hardly
on speaking terms these days.
Well, I wasn't gonna mention it.
Are you scared?
No, I'm just surprised a little.
They ain't as succulent as I like,
the devil to clean...
...but if a man skins them
and fries them in garlic and oil...
...mercy, them's good eating.
Well, I never been that hungry.
I give them names.
Such as?
Such as enemies.
I give them names of enemies.
Go tell Wood and Charley
to get their gatherings together.
All right.
Me too?
You can stay.
All right.
Hey.
- What do you want, peckerwood?
- Nothing.
Except to say Jesse wants
you two to gather your parts...
...get on your horses
and get out of town.
And me to stick around.
Well, whoa, I'm his cousin...
...I'll have you know.
My mama's his daddy's sister.
Is that how they described it to you,
Wood?
You better watch your tongue,
young sapling.
Why is it me who's gotta rattle his hocks
out of town and not you, Bunny?
Put your horns away.
If I know Jess...
...there's some real nasty
sad-suzie work's gotta be done...
...and Bob's the ninny that has to do it.
Oh, yeah, I'm sure that's it, Charley.
You only met him 12 hours ago.
He doesn't even know your name.
Wood! You tell your daddy
I'll be in Kentucky in October.
We can hunt some birds together.
All right.
So how come it's Bob who gets to stay?
Bob's gonna move my gear to a house
down the street.
See?
- I don't mind.
- Yeah, well.
Sounds like an adventure.
They moved to 1017 Troost Avenue
at night...
...so that the neighborhood couldn't get
a good look at them or their belongings.
Then Bob thought Jesse
would give him eight hours' sleep...
...and a daydreaming goodbye.
But with a second day
in the Thomas Howard house...
...Bob thought he might never go...
...but might be brought in
as a good-natured cousin to the boy...
...and a gentleman helper to Zee.
He went everywhere with Jesse.
They made trips
to the Topeka Exchange Saloon...
...where Jesse could spend nearly
...and still complain about feeling tipsy.
Bob would rarely vouchsafe his opinions
as they talked.
If spoken to, he would fidget and grin.
If Jesse palavered with another person,
Bob secretaried their dialogue...
...getting each inflection,
reading every gesture and tic...
...as if he wanted to compose
a biography of the outlaw...
...or as if he were preparing
an impersonation.
Go away.
Used to be couldn't no one sneak up
on Jesse James.
Now you think otherwise?
I ain't never seen you without your guns,
neither.
I can't figure it out.
Do you wanna be like me...
...or do you wanna be me?
I'm just making fun, is all.
Bob was sent away cordially
the next day...
...with a goodbye from Jesse...
...but nothing from Zee
beyond what good manners demanded.
It was 40 miles to his sister's farm
from Kansas City.
And it was well into the afternoon
by the time he arrived there.
Mrs. Martha Bolton rented
the Harbison farm in 1879...
...just after becoming a widow.
And she made a good income
by giving rooms and meals...
...to her brothers Charley, Wilbur and Bob,
and to members of the James Gang...
...who would appear
whenever they needed seclusion.
Dick! You're gonna make her sick!
She's gonna upchuck
if you don't watch out!
Wood Hite had been spurned by Martha
in his affections...
...and his attempt to switch his pursuit
to her daughter...
...was being thwarted by Dick Liddil.
Wait a second, you assured me
that you were not ticklish.
Howdy!
What's going on, now?
What's going on...?
- Howdy!
- Were you fibbing about that?
- No.
- Not at all.
You're not supposed to peek, Dick.
Well, you're just so pretty
I can't help myself.
- You need to be warning him about that.
- Howdy.
Worry about the field instead,
might be able to worry about the work...
Howdy!
- Finally home.
- I'm so glad, Bob.
I'm in that room too, Bob.
Don't mess with my things.
All right, Grandpa.
"July 9th. Diligence, tact,
and a keen sense of responsibility...
...capacity for detail are your dominant
traits. Your sense of duty's strong."
How long you been there?
Just now arrived. Did I miss much?
Not unless you never seen a man
wash his dirty carcass before.
Boy, you got a big old pecker
for being such a little squirrel.
That what you come here to see, Dick?
No.
Your brother said that Jesse
kept you in Kansas City some extra days.
What was the reason?
Well, I'm not at liberty to say exactly.
Let me ask you this. Did Jesse mention
that me and Cummins were in cahoots?
Is that so?
Oh, dear. I went on and said too much,
have I?
Well, who else is partners with you two?
See, he'll cut our throats if he finds out.
You don't know him like I do.
You do Jesse dirt,
you connive behind his back...
...boy, he'll come after you
with a cleaver.
So, what are you two cahoots
cooking up?
Don't know that I should say.
I'm not gonna wheedle
the dang news from you.
How about we'll leave it a mystery...
...and then we won't neither one of us
regret our little chat?
Can you hand me that six-gun there, Bob?
If you so much as mention my name
to Jesse...
...boy, I'll find out about it.
You had better believe that.
And I'll look you up.
I'll knock on your door,
and I will be as mad as a hornet.
I will be hot.
You be careful with that iron, Dick.
You know where I stand on these matters
and that's all there is to it.
Me and you can be as friendly as pigs
from now on.
I'm Bunny Ford, stick your hands
up in the air!
Mister.
Oh, you have some nerve.
We were just reading about the James boys
among the Mexicans.
What's this? This ain't Jesse.
- You don't know that.
- He would've never wore no mustache.
Never was anywheres near a cannon.
Let me see that picture.
Boy, I can't even calculate
what I'm looking at.
- Give me that.
- Ever since he was a child...
...Bob's collected whatsoever he could find
about the James brothers.
Yeah, got himself a little museum
in his room.
Next time you come snooping around,
you better strap on a shooting iron!
Well, you can see how scared I am.
You too, Wood Hite. Cross me again,
I'll put a bullet through your head!
Boy, you...
Son, you better recollect
who my cousin is...
...because you've seemed to misremembered
that Jesse loves me like the Good Book.
Now, you may play it like you're
a dangerous person in the grocery store...
...but don't misremember
who you be accounting to...
...if I so much get my feelings hurt.
- I don't care!
Do I have to yell "suwee"?
Why don't we make up,
be pleasant for once?
Why don't we pass the evening
like pleasant human beings?
I like your nickel suit, cowboy.
You see something?
Just a bird.
The month of October came...
...and Jesse began seeing
Pinkerton operatives in every floor walker...
...street sweeper, and common man
poking about in a store.
On the morning of the 11 th,
he would wake his wife...
...with the Scripture pertaining to
the Holy Family's flight into Egypt.
Overnight, the Thomas Howard clan
vanished from Kansas City.
Shortly thereafter,
four of the Blue Cut train robbers...
...were arrested in shacks near Glendale.
How Jesse could have known
remains a mystery.
Theirs was a wandering existence.
Men who choose to be outlaws...
...cannot afford to remain in one place
for very long.
- Well, goodness. Maybe I'll change my mind.
- Let's go. Let's go. Let's go.
- Martha.
- Buck up, man.
Wood and Dick would bicker
across the entire state of Kentucky...
...until they made Russellville, home
of Major George Hite, Wood's father...
...and uncle to Frank and Jesse James.
You stay away from this one.
She's my daddy's wife.
You got it?
Did you cook this, ma'am?
I've got a nigger woman.
How's that?
Dick asked if I cooked this.
Did you?
No.
She knew what he was like
when she married him.
I guess we're the night owls, you and I.
I'm glad.
How come?
You're interesting to look at.
You have a real pleasant disposition.
And I don't know, you sort of
make me feel warm all over.
You know, I'm what they call a...
An inamorato.
Well, I knew
there had to be a name for it.
You and the Hites
don't get along too well...
...if I'm to trust Wood and his version
of the situation.
We hate each other like poison,
if you wanna know the truth.
Most of the Hites wouldn't spit on me
if I was on fire.
They say that when a woman's on fire...
...you're supposed to roll her around on
the ground and cover her with your body.
Well, you are a naughty tease.
Isn't it about bedtime?
Well, I'll just kiss those dainty nubbins.
Good night.
Would you stop?
Boy, I believe I drank too much coffee.
I gotta go visit the privy
something terrible.
This is embarrassing.
Now, you go ahead and do your duty.
I don't mind.
I've sort of got stage fright with
a strange man in the commode with me.
I ain't strange.
I'm built just like the rest of them.
You look awful pretty.
Do I?
I haven't never in my life seen
such well-shaped limbs.
Is Wood awake?
It's just me.
And I bet you thought I was a lady.
Well, you ain't much of a housekeeper,
are you?
You didn't just happen by.
Why not?
Go on and take a load off your feet.
You ought to get yourself a wife.
Yeah.
I suppose.
I was gonna ask Martha. Charley's sister.
I was gonna ask her
if she could imagine it.
But I guess Wood has plans of his own.
And there's always Dick Liddil
getting in the way.
I'll give it some thought, though.
Your crops come in?
No, I don't got much.
Just a garden patch and a pasture.
I was sick at planting time.
So...
Ed, how you feeling now?
Why?
You're acting queer.
Well, you and me ain't been
just real good friends lately.
That's not your fault,
you understand that.
You hear talk, though.
Talk?
People tell you things.
Why don't you give me an example?
Jim Cummins come by here.
Jim Cummins.
Oh, and Jim says:
"You know them boys
that got caught in the Blue Cut deal?"
Well, Jim says he got word...
...that you're planning to kill them.
Why would I do that?
That's just talk probably.
Jim Cummins. He say anything else?
Nope. No, that was it, basically.
That still don't explain why you're scared.
Well, I'm in the same situation, you see.
I was terrified I saw you ride up.
- I just happened by, Ed.
- Suppose you heard gossip, though.
Suppose you heard Jim Cummins
come by, you might have thought...
...that we were planning to capture you
or get that reward, and that ain't true.
But you might have suspected it.
Haven't heard a lick of gossip lately.
I got 600 dollars stashed away.
I don't need no governor's reward.
Well, it's the principle too.
Well...
- I'm glad I stopped by.
- Oh, me too.
What do you say
if we were to go for a ride?
We can go into town. I'll buy you dinner.
Then I'll be on my way.
Okay.
You ready to go for a ride?
We going to your place?
You seen Ed Miller lately?
Nobody has.
Must have gone off to California.
I'd still like to know where we're going.
If you were going to see Jim Cummins,
wouldn't you follow this road?
I guess so.
Howdy.
Oh, are you friends of my pa's?
We're friends of Jim Cummins.
Well, it so happens
he's been gone since August.
And never said where he gone to.
- I'm Matt Collins.
- Albert Ford.
Very happy to meet you.
- Dick Turpin.
- Pleased to make your acquaintance.
I don't know where he is!
Leave me alone!
Shut your mouth!
You shut your mouth!
- You shut your mouth.
- I don't know where he is!
- I don't know!
- Get in there.
Shut up.
- I don't know where he is!
- Shut up.
- I don't know!
- Shut up.
- Jesus.
- Shut up.
Jesse, he's just a kid.
He knows where his uncle Jim is and
that's gonna make him old soon enough.
- Maybe he doesn't know.
- He knows!
You need to ask and ask sometimes.
Sometimes a child don't remember so much
at first. But it'll come back to him.
My goodness, she's about to rip off,
sweetie.
Just a little more here to get her started.
Then I think I can rip her off
like a page from a book.
Jesus, he can't even talk.
Where's Jim?
Where's Jim?
Where's Jim? Where's Jim?
Where's Jim? Where's Jim? Where's Jim?
- Where's Jim?
- Quit it!
You bastard! I don't know where he is!
You won't believe me!
You never even gave me a chance!
You kept my... You kept my mouth shut!
I never know where Jim is or
when he comes! So leave me alone.
Get off me, you son of a bitch!
I'm worn out.
I can't. No, see...
My mind's all tangled anyway.
Little deals like this
just make me feel dirty.
Are you all right, Jesse?
Jesse was sick...
...with rheums, and aches
and lung congestions.
Insomnia stained
his eye sockets like soot.
He read auguries in
the snarled intestines of chickens...
...or the blow of cat hair
released to the wind.
And the omens promised bad luck,
which moated and dungeoned him.
How come it's you
that's gotta do all the chores?
Charley and Bob pay extry to Martha
so that they don't have to.
It still don't seem fair.
Martha.
Well, look what the cat dragged in.
You come from Kentucky?
Why do you have your head in a hole,
Martha?
Wood and Dick had a shooting scrape
a few months ago.
Cover the kettle, Ida.
And what did you and Dick
get in a scrape about?
Well, he tampered
with my daddy's wife...
...while a pork chop
burned on the skillet...
...so I shot at him.
Ida! Do not stick your thumb
in the cream when you skim it.
His chicanery and his philandering ways...
...has instigated such malice.
He's a yellow snake in the grass
and he can't be trusted, Martha.
Dick told me a complete other version
of that affray.
Wood Hite's downstairs.
You mean he's here?
Yeah, he come in late last night.
Hey, simmer down!
Don't get into a fracas up there, you boys!
I've got breakfast almost ready.
He's still sucking air.
But I think he's a goner.
Maybe y'all better come wish him well
on his journey.
Wood?
You were a good fellow, Wood.
Oh, I sure hope you're not
in frightful pain, Wood.
I'd get you something to drink,
but I'm afraid you'd just choke on it.
Little Ida's gonna miss you.
So is the rest of the family.
Well, one thing's settled.
Can't take him into Richmond.
Why not?
Well, one, sheriff'll put Bob in jail.
And two, Jesse'll find out his cousin
Wood's been shot in our house...
...and then that'll be the end
of each and every one of us.
"And in one merciless, violent thrust
broke in...
...and carried all before him,
and scented and brewed...
...reeking with blood of my virginity...
...up to its utmost length in my body."
He ain't disappeared,
if that's what you were hoping.
What chapter you on?
She's met some Algerian corsair
down at Gibraltar.
Got herself all agitated.
How's that leg?
Full of torment, Bob. Thanks for asking.
Blessed are the poor in spirit...
...for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are them that mourn,
for they shall be comforted.
Blessed are the...
Meek.
Blessed are the meek.
- Is it him?
- Yeah.
Why is he here? Does he know
about Wood, do you think?
I don't know. All I know is
he don't miss very much.
- What should I say about you if he asks?
- Tell him I'm in K.C. with Mattie.
He was buffalo hunting.
He was thrilled to meet yours truly.
Yeah, over there in Europe there's only
two Americans they know for certain...
...Mark Twain and Jesse James.
- Why, it's the kid.
- How's everything?
- I never take off my gun belts.
- Yeah?
Good thinking.
Well, Charley, did you hurt your leg?
Yeah, I slipped...
I slipped off the roof...
...and I smacked down into a snow bank
like a ton of stupidness.
One second I'm screaming,
"Whoa, Nelly!"
Next second, poof,
I'm neck-deep in snow.
Well, whatever possessed you
to climb a roof in December?
There was a k... A kite. What am I saying?
There was a cat.
A cat. It was on the roof
and I went after him.
It was a tomcat yowling
and what all, and I slipped.
I thought maybe your club foot
was gaining on you.
Oh, yeah.
Dick went to Kansas City to be
with his wife. He was here for a bit.
Hey, here's a cute story, Jess.
Bobby was what, 11 or 12...
...and you were by far
his most admired personage.
He couldn't get enough.
It was "Jesse this" and "Jesse that"
and "Jesse this" from sunrise to sunset.
Fascinating.
No, there's more. This is cute.
We're at supper and Bob asks,
"You know what size boot Jesse wears?"
- Charley, Jesse doesn't wanna hear this.
- Shush, now, Bob, let me tell it.
Bob says... He says, "You know
what size boot Jesse wears?"
He says, "Six and a half." He says,
"Ain't that a big enough boot...
...for a man 5'8"tall?"
I decided to josh him a little, you know,
he being my kid brother and everything.
So I said, "He doesn't have toes is why."
That's a really stupid story.
"He was dangling his feet off a culvert
and a catfish nibbled his toes off."
Bob taxed himself trying to picture it.
That'd be a good joke if it was funny.
Isn't that a cute story, Jess?
Give me some more conversations, Bob.
I got one. This one's about as crackerjack...
It's the one about your...
Let Bob tell it.
All right.
I don't even know
what you're talking about.
About how you and Jesse
have so much in common.
Go on, Bob.
Yeah, come on, Bob.
Tell us a story.
- Nope. No.
- Come on, entertain Jesse. He's here.
Come on.
Well, if you'll pardon my saying so,
I guess...
...it is interesting the many ways
you and I overlap and whatnot.
I mean, you begin with our daddies.
Your daddy was a pastor
at the New Hope Baptist Church...
...and my daddy was a pastor
at the church in Excelsior Springs.
You're the youngest of three James boys,
and I'm the youngest of five Ford boys.
Between Charley and me,
there's another brother, Wilbur...
...with six letters in his name.
And between Frank and you, is another
brother Robert, also with six letters.
And my Christian name
is Robert, of course.
You have blue eyes, I have blue eyes.
You're 5'8"tall, I'm 5'8" tall.
Me, I must have had a list as long as
your nightshirt when I was 12, but...
...I seem to have lost some curiosities
over the years.
Ain't he something?
Did I ever tell you the story about
that scalawag, George Shepherd?
Shepherd's one of
Quantrill's lieutenants.
He give me a story much like Bob's
what bring him to mind.
Going on about how much
we had in common, and so on...
...so he could get in the gang.
How could I have known
he had a grudge against me?
How could I have known
he was lying to get on my good side?
I said, "George, come on aboard.
Glad to have you."
George thought he was smart,
except he wasn't.
One morning, George rides into camp...
...and about 20 guns open up on him.
See, old George, he only had one eye. You
gotta have two eyes, you wanna get Jesse.
You ought not think of me
like you do George Shepherd.
You brought him to mind.
Well, it's not very flattering.
Sure is good eating, Martha.
Well, I'm so glad you enjoyed it.
How come George
had a grudge against you?
I said, how come George
had a grudge against you?
Well, you see, George had a nephew
he wanted me to protect during the war.
This nephew had 5000 dollars on him.
It just so happens he winds up killed
and someone swipes that money.
And when George is in prison,
someone whispers to him:
"It was Jesse James
slit the boy's throat."
It was just mean gossip, was it?
Bob's the expert. Let's put it to him.
Oh, dear, I made him cranky.
I'm not cranky. I just been
through this before is all.
Most people get around on making fun
of me. They don't ever let up.
Someone's getting awful fresh over there.
Woman, shut your face for once.
Don't want you to skip off
to your room and pout...
...without knowing why I come by
for this visit.
Why? So you could
tell us how sorry you are...
...you had to slap our cousin Albert around?
I come by...
...to ask if one of you two Fords...
...would care to ride with me
in a journey or two.
I guess we both agree
it ought to be Charley.
You've been acting sort of testy.
Have you seen Wood Hite lately?
No. Not at all.
I swear that stew
had some squirrel meat in it.
- Still arguing with you, is it?
- Yeah.
- You're Charles Ford?
- Yes, ma'am.
You've seen me once or twice before.
I got a letter from George Hite.
He hasn't seen hide nor hair of him.
And you say you haven't seen Wood?
No, I... I can't imagine where he could be.
Yeah?
You finished with your sleeping?
I could use a couple more hours
if it's no trouble.
Yeah.
I been holding a discussion with myself
over if I ought to tell you this or no.
My good side won out and...
Well, I wanna make a clean breast
of things.
Yeah, my mind's a little cobwebby
is the only drawback.
I could use a little...
A little more sleep.
You know I went to Kentucky?
Yeah.
I come back through Saline County and...
...I think to myself:
"Why not stop by and see Ed Miller?"
So I do.
Well, things are not to my satisfaction.
Ed's got himself all worked up
over something.
I can see that he's lying like a rug.
So I say to myself, "Enough's enough."
And I say to Ed, "Come on, Ed.
Let's go for a ride."
You understand what I'm saying?
Going for a ride is like...
Going for a ride
is like giving him what-for?
Exactly.
So...
...Ed and Jesse...
...they argue on the road.
Did you ever count the stars?
I can't ever get the same number.
They keep changing on me.
I don't even know what a star is exactly.
Well, your body knows.
It's your mind that forgot.
You go on ahead, partner.
I'll catch up with you.
It's okay.
It's okay, sweetheart. It's okay.
And when push came to shove...
...Jesse shot and killed him.
Jesse did.
You got it.
You...
So, you see, your...
Your cousin, he got off easy.
I was just playing with Albert.
Yeah, I made him squeal
once or twice myself.
I'm just not as thorough as you are.
You got a tale to swap with me now?
I don't get your meaning.
Seems to me, if you have something
to confess in exchange...
...it'd only be right...
...that you'd spit it out now.
I can't think of a single thing.
About Wood Hite, for example.
I'm not gonna... I been saying over and
over I can't figure out where he's gone.
Now, I'm not gonna change my story
just to have something to spit.
- Why was your brother so agitated?
- Which?
Bob.
That's just his way. He's antsy.
You know?
You go on back to sleep now.
You got me agitated now, you see?
Yeah, just ain't no peace
when old Jesse's around.
You ought to pity my poor wife.
Ed Miller was a good friend of mine.
He introduced me to you
at that one poker game.
I'm a little angry with you, if you
wanna know the God's honest truth.
You ought to pity me too.
As proof of his confederacy with
the James Gang, Bob told the authorities...
...that Dick Liddil was sleeping over
at the rented farmhouse...
...while his ruined leg mended.
And then, created a map
of the Harbison property...
...leaving out the creek where
Wood Hite's remains now moldered.
Right, you boys are cornered!
Come on out peaceably
and nobody'll get shot up!
Don't shoot!
Come on out and show yourself!
Hello.
We got him.
Give me that Colt, son.
- All right.
- Andrew James Liddil...
...I have a warrant here
for your arrest...
Snowstorms would move over Missouri
that Sunday, February 19th...
...shutting down commerce
for more than two days.
- Go, go, go.
- Are the papers here?
- He wanted to know if the papers are here.
- I don't care what he wants.
Yet this wouldn't prevent Robert Ford...
...from presenting himself
to Governor Crittenden...
...at the Craig Rifles Ball on Wednesday.
I deem it a great privilege
on this glorious occasion...
...to recognize publicly...
...the intelligent and effective assistance...
...that Captain Henry Craig has rendered
the state of Missouri and myself...
...in our joint quest
to rid Jackson County...
...of the James band.
The task that Captain Craig
has assumed...
...will require fearless courage,
extraordinary vigilance...
...and an unerring selection
of instrumentalities.
Well, I've gotten the signal from my wife
that enough is enough.
However, before I sit...
...I would like to ask you
to join me in a toast...
...to a great son
of the state of Missouri...
...my friend, Henry Craig.
- Here, here.
Yes.
Just let my attorney know.
Who is that? Who is it?
Get out of the way now.
You know, you're more goddamn trouble
than you're worth, Bob.
I was just gonna say hello.
No, you weren't gonna do that, Bob.
That's not why you're down here.
You think it's your goddamn coming-out.
You think you're the belle of the ball.
Now you get upstairs and try to keep your
identity secret, you silly little bastard.
The governor'll see you in good time.
Take him up, boys.
Bob would later be cross-examined
repeatedly...
...about the exact nature of the deal
he had made with the authorities.
And he was never consistent
in his recollections.
My wife's asleep in the other room,
so let's speak as quietly as we can.
So you're Dick Little.
Liddil.
I beg your pardon?
I spell it with two D's.
He's given us a full confession, governor.
Newspapers haven't caught onto it yet.
And you've guaranteed him
a conditional pardon...
...and amnesty for all the robberies
he's committed.
You Robert Ford?
How old are you?
Twenty.
You surrender to Sheriff Timberlake
as well?
No, no, governor. That's his brother,
Charley Ford, he's in the James Gang.
But little Bob here,
we got nothing on Bob.
He's just acting in capacity as a...
...private detective.
Jesse James sent me a telegram
last month...
...saying he'd kill me
if he had to wreck a train to do it.
He said once I got in his hands,
he'd cut my heart out...
...and eat it in strips like it was bacon.
I'll wreck his train first.
I'm sorry, Your Excellency.
I was thinking about something else.
Jesse James is nothing more
than a public outlaw...
...who made his reputation
by stealing whatever he wanted...
...killing whoever got in his way.
You'll hear some fools say he's getting back
at Republicans and Union men...
...for the wrongs his family suffered
during the war.
But his victims have scarcely been selected
with reference to their political views.
I'm saying his sins will soon find him out.
I'm saying his cup of iniquity is full.
I'm saying Jesse James
is a desperate case...
...and may require a desperate remedy.
Y'all got the right man for the job.
Come on. Come on, now.
Come on, now.
Have you ever considered suicide?
I can't say that I have. There's always
something else I wanted to do.
Or my predicaments changed,
or I saw my hardships from a different slant.
You know all what can happen.
It never seemed respectable.
I'll tell you one thing that's for certain.
You won't mind dying
once you've peeked over the other side.
You'll no more wanna go back
to your body than...
...you'd wanna spoon up your own puke.
Hey, since we're looking to rob banks...
...I was wondering if we could
add another fella to the gang...
...and sort of see if we couldn't
come out of our next job alive.
Bob wanted to know could he ride with us
next time we took on a savings bank or...
A savings bank or a...
A railroad.
Bob isn't much more than a boy
to most appearances.
But there's about two tons
of sand in him.
And he'll stand with a shooter
when that's what's called for.
And he's smart too.
He's about as intricate as they come.
You forget I already met the kid.
Hell, he surely thinks highly of you.
All of America thinks highly of me.
Still, not like you got two million names
to snatch out of a sock...
...whenever you need a third man.
I can see you trying to
wear me down on this.
That's my main intention.
Robberies would be conceived
but never carried out...
...in Nebraska, Colorado and Missouri.
During this time...
...Henry Craig enjoined Robert Ford to return
to Elias' Grocery Store in Richmond...
...and await instructions
from Sheriff James Timberlake.
All right, three cans...
...peaches. Two cans...
Two cans sifted peas.
One bottle...
...Mary's Morning Tonic, and a half...
Half a sack of flour.
I'll be right with you.
I haven't seen any sign of him.
Well, do you know where he's living?
No.
No?
Well, I can't guess how he does it...
...but he is always knowledgeable
about what's going on.
He's gonna know I've been here with you.
You ought to take that for granted.
And he will kill you if he gets the chance.
Are you willing to risk that?
Yes, I am.
I've been a nobody all my life.
I was the baby.
I was the one they made promises to
that they never kept.
And ever since I can remember it,
Jesse James has been as big as a tree.
I'm prepared for this, Jim...
...and I'm gonna accomplish it.
I know I won't get
but this one opportunity...
...and you can bet your life
I'm not gonna spoil it.
Well...
...wait for your chance.
Don't let yourself be found alone with him,
and do not...
...let him get behind you.
You been chosen.
Well, what do you mean?
Well, your brother said that
you might wanna join us.
But maybe you like this grocery store
more than you said you did.
- So you missed me?
- Oh, yeah.
I been crying myself to sleep every night.
Don't let him see us so much as wink.
He's suspicious as a damn coyote,
and he don't trust you one iota.
- Well, I guess that makes...
- Hey.
He already put away Ed Miller. He said so
like it was something piddly he'd done.
If we're ever alone for more than a minute,
I'd like a chance to talk to you further.
They gave me ten days.
For what?
For arresting him.
You and me, huh?
It's gonna happen one way or another,
Charley. It's gonna happen.
So it might as well be us
who get rich on it.
- Bob, he's our friend.
- He murdered Ed Miller.
And he's gonna murder Liddil and Cummins
if the chance ever comes.
It seems to me Jesse's riding from
man to man, saying goodbye to the gang.
So your friendship could put you
under the pansies.
I'll grind it fine in my mind, Bob. I can't
go any further than that right now.
You'll come around.
You think it's all made up, don't you?
You think it's all yarns
and newspaper stories.
He's just a human being.
From now on, you two
won't go anywhere without me.
From now on, you'll ask for my permission!
From now on, you'll ask to be excused!
Charley, take them horses
around the barn. Bob, you go on inside.
- Hello, Mary.
- Hi.
Look at this rotten parsnip
I found in the compost heap.
You never mentioned Bob would be here.
Maybe he was saving it
as a pleasant surprise.
Got two cousins for company now.
How it's gonna be is...
...we'll leave next Monday afternoon
and ride down to Platte City.
How far is that from Kansas City?
Platte City's 30 miles south.
You and me and Charley'll
sleep in the woods overnight...
...and we'll strike the Wells Bank
sometime before the court recesses.
What time will that be exactly?
Well, you don't need to know that.
You know, I'm real comfortable
with your brother.
Hell, he's ugly as sin,
he smells like a skunk...
...and he's so ignorant
he couldn't drive nails in the snow...
...but he's sort of easy to be around.
I can't say the same for you, Bob.
Well, I'm sorry to hear you say that.
You know how it is when you're
with your girlfriend and the moon's out...
...and you know she wants to be kissed,
even though she never said so?
Yeah.
Well, you're giving me signs
that grieve my soul...
...and make me wonder...
...maybe your mind's
been changed about me.
Well, what do you want me to do?
Swear my good faith on the Bible?
You two having a spat?
I was getting ready to be angry.
Sit over here closer, kid.
Come on.
Charley, you'll stay with the animals.
Me and the kid...
...will walk into that bank
just before noon.
Bob will move that cashier...
...away from the shotgun
that's under the counter...
...and I'll creep up behind that cashier...
...and I'll cock his head back like so.
And I'll say:
"How come an off-scouring
like you is still sucking air...
...when so many of mine
are in coffins?" I'll say:
"How did you get to reach 20
without leaking out all over your clothes?"
And if I don't like his attitude,
I will slit that phildoodle so deep...
...he will flop on the floor like a fish.
My God, what just happened?
Boy, I could hear your gears grinding...
...hear your little motor wondering,
"My gosh, what's next?
What's happening to me?"
You were precious to behold, Bob.
You were white as spit in a cotton field.
You got him. You got him.
You wanna know how that feels?
Unpleasant. I honestly can't recommend it.
The old Charley looked stricken!
I was. I was.
"This is plumb unexpected," old Charley
was thinking."That done ruined my day."
Hell. Hell.
Jesse slept with Bob
in the children's room that night.
And Bob remained awake.
He could see that there was a gun
on the nightstand.
He could imagine its cold nickel
inside his grip...
...its two-pound weight
reached out and aimed.
I need to go to the privy.
You think you do, but you don't.
You wait for grace, now.
- Thank you, Mama.
- Thank you, Zee. God, that looks good.
- Thank you, Zee.
- You're welcome.
Well, is this fit to eat or will it just do?
Woman's cooking's
always been a scandal.
Cut her meat and the whole table moves.
You want a biscuit?
You gonna have a biscuit?
Here's some butter.
Come on. Come on.
Oh, shoot.
And so it went,
Jesse was increasingly cavalier...
...merry, moody, fey...
...unpredictable.
He camouflaged his depressions
and derangements...
...with masquerades
of extreme cordiality, courtesy...
...and goodwill towards others.
But even as he jested,
or tickled his boy in the ribs...
...Jesse would look over at Bob
with melancholy eyes...
...as if the two were meshed
in an intimate communication.
Bob was certain that the man
had unriddled him...
...had seen through his reasons
for coming along...
...that Jesse could forecast each of
Bob's possible moves and inclinations...
...and was only acting the innocent...
...in order to lull Bob
into stupid tranquility and miscalculation.
How long you been studying me?
You're gonna break a lot of hearts.
How do you mean?
It's a present.
It's heavy.
Well, you gonna look inside?
It's April Fools' Day, you know.
It ain't no joke.
Oh, such extravagance.
Don't that nickel just shine, though?
It's more than I could hope for.
I figured that granddaddy Colt
may blow into fragments...
...next time you try
to squeeze the trigger.
Well, you might have something there.
Tom, supper's ready.
I'll be right there, sweetheart.
I might be too excited to eat.
You know what John Newman Edwards
once wrote about me?
He said I didn't trust
two men in 10,000...
...and even them I was cautious around.
Government's sort of run me ragged.
I'm going the long way around the barn
to say that...
...I been feeling cornered
and just plain ornery as of late...
...and I'd be pleased if you'd accept
that gun as my way of apologizing.
Heaven knows I'd be ornerier
if I were in your position.
No. No, I haven't been acting correctly.
Seems I hardly recognize myself
when I'm greased.
I go on journeys out of my body...
...and look at my red hands
and my mean face...
...and I wonder about that man
that's gone so wrong.
I've been becoming a problem to myself.
Well...
- I better wash my hands if supper's on.
- Yeah, go ahead.
The day before he died was Palm Sunday.
And Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Howard,
their two children...
...and their cousin Charles Johnson...
...strolled to the Second Presbyterian
Church to attend the 10:00 service.
Bob remained at the cottage...
...and slyly migrated from room to room.
He walked into the master bedroom...
...and inventoried the clothes
on the hangers and hooks.
He sipped from the water glass
on the vanity.
He smelled the talcum and lilacs
on Jesse's pillowcase.
His fingers skittered over his ribs...
...to construe the scars
where Jesse was twice shot.
He manufactured a middle finger
that was missing the top two knuckles.
He imagined himself at 34.
He imagined himself in a coffin.
He considered possibilities...
...and everything wonderful
that could come true.
He's not gonna kill us.
Yeah, he is.
Well, I'll stay awake so he can't.
You're imagining things.
Ain't gonna be no Platte City.
That's Jesse fooling with us.
Go to sleep, Charley.
Morning.
Charley.
Bob, how much did you want to eat?
I'm feeling sort of peculiar.
Why is it you're looking so interested?
You think it's intelligent
to go out like that...
...so all creation can see your guns?
Hi.
Come on, let's go see
what your mama's doing.
Timmy, get that door, would you?
- Well, you lost your shoe, sweetheart.
- Yeah, I did.
That's gonna be a problem.
They don't sell those one at a time.
We lost a shoe, Mama.
Will you put that up for Daddy,
would you?
- What you doing, you lose a shoe?
- Yeah.
It's only meant to go on top,
to complement.
Yeah, I know. Sometimes, I...
Bob, everything's getting cold!
- Where's Mary?
- She's outside, darling.
Mary?
What do you think goes on
in that noggin of his?
Nothing.
I was talking about his mind, not yours.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, I get it.
Well, hello now.
"The arrest and confession
of Dick Liddil."
You don't say so.
That's very strange.
Says here Dick surrendered
three weeks ago.
You must have been
right in the neighborhood.
Well, apparently, they kept it a secret.
If I get to Kansas City soon,
I'll ask somebody about it.
You two ready?
I will be, by noon.
There is a ship
She sails the sea
She's loaded deep
As deep can be
But not as deep
As the love I'm in
I know not if I sink or swim
The water is wide
I can't cross o'er
And neither have I wings to fly
Give me a boat
That can carry two
Both shall row
My love and I
For love is gentle
And love is kind
Sweetest flower
When first it's new
But love grows old
And waxes cold
And fades away
Like the morning dew
There is a ship
She sails the sea
I guess I'll take my guns off...
...for fear the neighbors might spy them.
Don't that picture look dusty?
What have...? What have you done?
Jesse.
Jesse?
Jesse? Jesse?
Jesse!
No!
No. Jess...
Come back. Oh, come back.
Oh, Jesse! No!
Oh, Bob. Have you done this?!
I swear to God I didn't.
It was an accident, Zee.
Come on. Pistol went off accidentally.
Put my name.
Why, what'd you do? I shot him.
You might wanna keep that.
Thank you all very much.
The resulting prints
sold for 2 dollars apiece...
...and were the models for the lithographed
covers on a number of magazines.
Soon a thousand strangers were making
spellbound pilgrimages to the cottage...
...or were venerating the iced remains
in Seidenfaden's cooling room.
The man who offered 30,000 dollars for
the body of President Garfield's assassin...
...sent a telegram to City Marshal
Enos Craig offering 50,000...
...for the body
of Jesse Woodson James...
...so that he could go around the country
with it...
...or at least sell it to P.T. Barnum
for his Greatest Show on Earth.
Another photograph was taken
of the renowned American bandit...
...nestled in his bed of ice.
And it was this shot that was most
available in sundries and apothecaries...
...to be viewed in a stereoscope
alongside the sphinx...
...the Taj Mahal,
and the catacombs of Rome.
Hello, here!
"The arrest and confession
of Dick Liddil."
Young man, I thought you told me
you didn't know Dick had surrendered.
You mean he did? I didn't know.
But I knew I had not fooled him.
And he knew, as well as I, in that moment
that I intended to bring him to justice.
But he would not kill me
in the presence of his wife and children.
And so he was smiling
to throw me off-guard.
Well, it's all right, anyway, Bob.
It was widely felt that
Bob possessed some acting talent...
...and Charley, not a jot.
That picture's awful dusty.
Charley was only expected
not to slouch or mutter...
...and to transport his sicknesses
to the alley before letting them go.
And that's...
...how I killed Jesse James.
By October of 1883, Bob Ford
could be identified correctly...
...by more citizens than could
the president of the United States.
He was as renowned at 20 as Jesse was
after 14 years of grand larceny.
You won't get your hooks into me.
That's right. That's right.
Sit next to your boyfriend. Jezebel.
Charley was increasingly superstitious...
...increasingly subject
to the advice of soothsayers...
...who promised to cure his miseries
with pipe smoke and poultices.
You been spending too much time
with Gypsies, Charley.
Shit.
The picture's awful dusty.
Something began to change
in Charley's stage portrayal of Jesse.
His gait seemed more practiced.
His voice was spookily similar
to the man's.
His newly suggested dialogue
was analogous...
...to a script Jesse might have originated.
He began to look at his younger brother
with spite...
...as if he suspected that
in some future performance...
...he might present himself
to a live cartridge in Robert Ford's gun.
Murderer!
Cur!
Coward!
You wanna investigate my courage?
Do you?
Find out! Find out!
Nobody.
Coward!
By his own approximation, Bob
assassinated Jesse James over 800 times.
He suspected no one in history
had ever so often or so publicly...
...recapitulated an act of betrayal.
Bob always challenged
the allegations of cowardice...
...but Charley seemed
to agree with them.
He spoke of Mrs. Zee James
as certain priests might the Madonna...
...and composed long soul-describing letters
to her...
...begging her forgiveness...
...none of which he mailed.
Charley Ford became all that his countrymen
wanted an assassin of Jesse James to be.
Jesse James was a man
Who killed many men
He robbed the Glendale train
And he stole from the rich
And he gave to the poor
He had a hand
And a heart and a brain
Well, Jesse had a wife
To mourn for his life
Three children
They were brave
But that dirty little coward
Who shot Mr. Howard
Has laid Jesse James in his grave
It was Robert Ford
That dirty little coward
I wonder how does he feel
For he ate at Jesse's bread
And he slept in Jesse's bed
And he laid poor Jesse in his grave
Well, Jesse had a wife
To mourn for his life
Three children
They were brave
But that dirty little coward
Who shot Mr. Howard
Has laid poor Jesse in his grave
I'm Robert Ford.
It was two children, not three.
Hey.
You get yourself home, son, okay?
Come on. Get out of here.
Get out of my place.
He thought, at his angriest...
...about visiting the kin
of Jesse's slaughtered victims:
Mrs. William Westfall in Plattsburg...
...the Wymore family in Clay County...
...perhaps even Mrs. Joseph Heywood
in Northfield, Minnesota.
He would go to their homes
and give his name as Robert Ford...
...the man who killed Jesse James.
He imagined they would
be grateful to him.
It was only with Dorothy Evans
that Bob spoke revealingly or plainly...
...and it was with her that he spoke of
things he didn't know he knew.
He told her that he had no real memory
of the shooting and its aftermath.
He could remember lifting the gun
that Jesse had given him...
...and then it was Good Friday and he was
reading about the funeral proceedings...
...as if they'd happened a long time ago.
Why did you kill him?
Well, he was gonna kill me.
So you were scared
and that's the only reason?
Yeah.
And the reward money.
Do you want me to change the subject?
You know what I expected?
Applause.
I was only 20 years old then.
I couldn't see how it would look to people.
I was surprised by what happened.
They didn't applaud.
He was ashamed of his boasting...
...his pretensions of courage
and ruthlessness.
He was sorry about his cold-bloodedness,
his dispassion...
...his inability to express
what he now believed was the case:
That he truly regretted killing Jesse...
...that he missed the man
as much as anybody...
...and wished his murder
hadn't been necessary.
Even as he circulated his saloon...
...he knew that the smiles disappeared
when he passed by.
He received so many menacing letters...
...that he could read them
without any reaction except curiosity.
He kept to his apartment all day,
flipping over playing cards...
...looking at his destiny
in every king and jack.
Edward O'Kelly came up from Bachelor
at 1 p.m. on the 8th.
He had no grand scheme, no strategy...
...no agreement with higher authorities...
...nothing beyond
a vague longing for glory...
...and a generalized wish
for revenge against Robert Ford.
- How'd it go last night?
- Not so bad.
The other one.
Edward O'Kelly would be ordered
to serve a life sentence...
...in the Colorado Penitentiary
for second-degree murder.
Over 7000 signatures
would eventually be gathered...
...on a petition asking for
O'Kelly's release...
...and in 1902, Governor James B. Orman
would pardon the man.
You shouldn't be wearing that stickpin
again there, Bob. Opals are unlucky.
My luck's not very good as it is. I don't
think an opal's gonna change that much.
I hear you.
There would be no eulogies for Bob...
...no photographs of his body
would be sold in sundries stores...
...no people would crowd the streets
in the rain to see his funeral cortege...
...no biographies would be written
about him...
...no children named after him.
No one would ever pay 25 cents
to stand in the rooms he grew up in.
Hello, Bob.
The shotgun would ignite,
and Ella Mae would scream...
...but Robert Ford would only lay
on the floor and look at the ceiling...
...the light going out of his eyes...
...before he could find the right words.
...and was living then in a bungalow
on Woodland Avenue.
He installed himself
in a rocking chair...
...and smoked a cigar down
in the evenings...
...as his wife wiped her pink hands
on an apron...
...and reported happily
on their two children.
His children knew his legs...
...the sting of his mustache
against their cheeks.
They didn't know how their father made
his living or why they so often moved.
They didn't even know
their father's name.
He was listed in the city directory
as Thomas Howard.
And he went
everywhere unrecognized...
...and lunched with Kansas City
shopkeepers and merchants...
...calling himself a cattleman
or a commodities investor...
...someone rich and leisured
who had the common touch.
He had two incompletely healed
bullet holes in his chest...
...and another in his thigh.
He was missing the nub
of his left middle finger...
...and was cautious,
lest that mutilation be seen.
He also had a condition that was
referred to as "granulated eyelids"...
...and it caused him
to blink more than usual...
...as if he found creation
slightly more than he could accept.
Rooms seemed hotter
when he was in them.
Rains fell straighter.
Clocks slowed.
Sounds were amplified.
He considered himself
a Southern loyalist and guerrilla...
...in a Civil War that never ended.
He regretted neither his robberies,
nor the 17 murders that he laid claim to.
He had seen another summer under
in Kansas City, Missouri...
...and on September 5th
in the year 1881...
...he was 34 years old.
You just... You just slide them things
right in there, right in your sleeve...
...and then, when you get ready,
you just shake it out.
Like that, right there. You shake it out.
Mary Todd Lincoln, tyrant's wife, fall
into hysterics when the moon was full.
President's men would tie her up
with hay-baling wire...
...keep her from ripping
her husband's ears off.
You never heard word one about the wife of
the Confederacy's Jefferson Davis, did you?
- I didn't.
- No, you didn't.
He did his duty by her.
- Oh, my God, I'm speaking to children.
- No, I get it, I get it, I get it.
The president of the Confederacy discerned
his wife's needs and satisfied them...
...with the utmost skill
and the utmost courtesy.
- Charley, you spit all over my boot.
- Sorry. Sorry, sorry, Jesse.
- Here, get it off.
- I'll wipe it... I'll wipe it off.
But Abraham Lincoln probably
sent his wife on a shopping expedition.
- A three-act play.
- With money stole from us.
Chow!
I think insanity run on both sides
of that Lincoln family.
You're right about that.
The river... You jump in the river.
- Chow!
- Don't be shy now, Dick.
- One more piece of meat.
- When you diddle a lot...
There's a good piece of bacon fat
in there for him.
Excuse me.
I see I've traipsed right on in
and interrupted you.
Who are you, then?
Bob Ford.
Charley's brother?
Yeah.
I was lying when I said
I just happened down here.
I've been looking for you. I feel lousy
I didn't say so at the outset.
Folks take me for a nincompoop...
...on account of the shabby first impression
I make, whereas I think of myself...
...as being just a rung down
from the James brothers.
I was hoping if I ran into you
aside from those peckerwoods...
...I could show you how special I am.
I honestly believe I'm destined
for great things, Mr. James.
I got qualities that don't come shining
through right at the outset.
You give me a chance, I'll get
the job done. I guarantee you that.
Hey, Dick, is it true you diddled a squaw?
Come on, you can tell me. I've always
wanted to lay down with a redskin.
Well, Charley...
...there's a feeling that comes over you...
...getting inside a woman whose hands
has scalped a congregation.
There's this thunderous sound
that comes from their cooch...
...on account of the fact that
they birth a child standing upright...
...like a wild animal.
- What's it sound like?
Whatever a thunderous cooch sounds like
there, Charley. I don't know.
No.
They got a noisy quim
on account of the fact that...
...they use their cunnis as a saddlebag
to carry sundries across the plains.
Come on, what'd it really feel like?
Did it feel good?
Come on, fess up, now.
I like you, Charley.
I like you too, Charley.
Well...
You're not so special, Mr. Ford.
You're just like any other tyro
who's prinked himself up for an escapade.
Hoping to be a gunslinger
like them nickel books are about.
You may as well quench your mind of it...
...because you don't have
the ingredients, son.
Well, I'm sorry to hear
you feel that way...
...as I put such stock
in your opinions.
As for me being a gunslinger, I've just got
this one granddaddy Paterson Colt...
...and a borrowed belt to stick it in.
But I also got an appetite
for greater things.
I hoped by joining up with you, it'd put me
that much closer to getting them.
Well, what am I supposed to say to that?
Let me be your sidekick tonight.
Sidekick?
So you can examine my grit
and intelligence.
I don't know what it is about you...
...but the more you talk,
the more you give me the willies.
Now, I don't believe I want you anywhere
within earshot this evening, okay?
You understand?
- Well, I'm sorry...
- Why don't you just get now? Scat.
All right.
I was with a girl once, wasn't a squaw.
But she was pretty.
She had yellow hair like a...
Oh, like something.
Like hair bobbed from a ray of sunlight?
Yeah. Yeah, like that.
Boy, you... You talk good.
You can hide things in vocabulary.
Maybe you and me could write her a note,
send it by post?
See, all you gotta do, Ed...
...is predict her needs
and beat her to the punch.
Well, this girl, she has a real specific job.
- Specific?
- We was only together once.
She...
She was afraid of lightning,
and she came up under the wagon and...
...just cuddled right up to me.
She give me a kind price too.
Well, I'll be. That is specific.
Yeah, sure,
she'd been with other people...
...but the kind of things she said to me...
...people just don't say
unless they really mean it.
My love said she would marry only me
And Jove himself could not make her care.
For what women say to lovers, you'll agree
One writes on running water or on air.
My God, that's good.
Let's write her that.
No.
Poetry don't work on whores.
How do you do?
Am I too late
to wish you a happy birthday?
How'd you know?
You'd be surprised
at what I got stored away.
I'm an authority on the James boys.
Is you?
Well... Well, your brother Frank and I,
we just had a real nice visit.
Just chit-chatting about this and that,
right over there.
And must've been a hundred subjects
entertained...
Good Lord, you know
what this stew needs?
Dumplings?
Noodles.
You eat yourself some noodle stew
and your clock'll tick all night.
You ever see that woman up in Fayette?
Suck noodles up her nose.
- In Fayette?
- I don't believe I have.
You never heard of her, huh?
You got canals up there
you never dreamed of.
I don't like to harp on a subject...
I don't care who comes with me.
Never have.
That's why they call me gregarious.
I hear you and young Stovepipe here
had a real nice visit.
Your boys have got about a acre
of lumber to haul, dingus.
You better goose them down yonder.
The James Gang committed over 25 bank,
train and stagecoach robberies...
...from 1867 to 1881.
But except for Frank and Jesse James...
...all the original members
were now either dead or in prison.
- mine eye
All my soul and all my every part
And for this sin, there is no remedy
It is so grounded inward in my heart.
So for their last robbery at Blue Cut...
...the brothers recruited a gang
of petty thieves and country rubes...
...culled from the local hillsides.
Right on schedule, Buck!
Snuff those lanterns!
Look at those fools. They're gonna trip
and shoot each other into females.
I bet you I could find them husbands
if they do.
Fan out!
Hold your fire!
- Watch him!
- Going down.
Hold your fire, you idiots!
Hold your fire!
Let me in.
Buck! Boys!
Buck, this way!
Do you think that lock will hold?
No, I don't.
Let's go, let's go.
Let's not get clever, nor courageous,
any of you.
Hey there, boys!
These are all for me?
Looks like Christmas morning in here.
Hey, friend.
You mind if I have a peek around?
This shit. Nope.
Nope.
You got anything good here?
It could be.
Open that safe.
Do it!
- You didn't have to bop him.
- Yeah, he did. They needed convincing.
They got their company rules,
I got my mean streak...
...and that's how
we get things done around here.
- Get on over here and attend to this thing.
- Come on, go.
Hold your fire, you idiots!
Dig deeper.
- Come on!
- Give me your money.
- And you, stand up.
- Let's see your hands.
What have you got?
Speak English.
Money. Money. You understand that?
Give me your money!
There's some receipts.
I got fives.
Jesse. Jesse.
Don't look good.
There ain't no 100,000 dollars
in here, Dick.
Get down on your knees.
Why?
Well, you ought to pray.
I'm gonna kill you.
Get at!
You're gonna have to make me.
All right.
Don't shoot him! No, don't shoot him.
Don't tell me what I can
and cannot do, Ed.
Round them up!
Chicago newspaper publishers made
a great deal of the Blue Cut train robbery...
...alleging that in no state
but Missouri...
...would the James brothers be tolerated
for 12 years.
Hey.
Can you keep a secret?
It depends on what you're concealing.
You afraid of the dark?
No.
You superstitious?
I put... I put an acorn in the window
to keep the lightning out.
Kid, you must've crept up on cat's paws.
I'll wager that's the first and last time
you'll ever be caught off-guard.
How old are you?
Twenty.
Except, well, I guess I won't
really be 20 till...
Till January, so...
I'm 19.
Yeah, you feel older than that, though,
don't you?
Yeah, I do.
Hey, Frank, you...
You think the sheriff's out already?
- More than likely.
- Yeah.
I had a real fine time tonight.
- You think so?
- Yup. Yeah.
Hey, I wasn't just flapping my lips
about my kid brother and me.
What I figured was if you and Jesse could
gauge our courage and our daring...
...you might just make us
your regular sidekicks.
Your courage and your daring.
I about heard all I want to about sidekicks.
You sound like your damn brother.
Yeah. Well, I'll be square with you,
it's Bob who put me up to it. He's...
He's got plans for the James boys
I can't even get the hang of.
- They're that complicated.
- Yeah?
Well, you can just
get shed of that idea.
Because after tonight,
there'll be no more shenanigans.
You can jot that down in your little diary.
September 7th, 1881, the James Gang
robbed one last train at Blue Cut...
...and gave up their nightriding for good.
Wait.
Well, how are you gonna
make your living?
Maybe I'll sell shoes.
I can't believe I woke up this morning...
...wondering if my daddy
would loan me his overcoat...
...and here it is just past midnight...
...I've already robbed a railroad train
and I'm sitting in a rocking chair...
...chatting with none other
than Jesse James.
Yeah, it's a wonderful world.
What's this?
Oh, yeah.
I was real agitated this morning, so I was
wondering if I would know you or Frank...
...tell you all apart, and so I had
this clipping that described you both.
Want me to read it?
Go on.
Well... I gotta find it. Hold on.
Here. Here.
"Jesse James, the youngest, has a face
as smooth and innocent as a schoolgirl.
The blue eyes, very clear and penetrating,
are never at rest.
His form is tall and graceful
and capable of great endurance...
...and great effort.
Jesse is lighthearted, reckless,
and devil-may-care.
- There's always a smile on his lips..."
- All right, all right, all right.
Well, yeah, then it just... Frank, Frank,
Frank. That's nothing. And then...
You know what I got
right next to my bed?
Is The Train Robbers, or, A Story
of the James Boys by R.W. Stevens.
I mean, many's the night I stayed up...
...with my eyes open
and my mouth open...
...just reading about your escapades
in the Wide Awake Library.
They're all lies, you know.
Yeah, of course they are.
You don't have to keep smoking that
if it's making you bungey.
Alexander Franklin James
would be in Baltimore...
...when he would read of
the assassination of Jesse James.
He had spurned his younger brother
for being peculiar and temperamental.
But once he perceived
that he would never see Jesse again...
...Frank would be wrought-up,
perplexed, despondent.
My brother and me are hardly
on speaking terms these days.
Well, I wasn't gonna mention it.
Are you scared?
No, I'm just surprised a little.
They ain't as succulent as I like,
the devil to clean...
...but if a man skins them
and fries them in garlic and oil...
...mercy, them's good eating.
Well, I never been that hungry.
I give them names.
Such as?
Such as enemies.
I give them names of enemies.
Go tell Wood and Charley
to get their gatherings together.
All right.
Me too?
You can stay.
All right.
Hey.
- What do you want, peckerwood?
- Nothing.
Except to say Jesse wants
you two to gather your parts...
...get on your horses
and get out of town.
And me to stick around.
Well, whoa, I'm his cousin...
...I'll have you know.
My mama's his daddy's sister.
Is that how they described it to you,
Wood?
You better watch your tongue,
young sapling.
Why is it me who's gotta rattle his hocks
out of town and not you, Bunny?
Put your horns away.
If I know Jess...
...there's some real nasty
sad-suzie work's gotta be done...
...and Bob's the ninny that has to do it.
Oh, yeah, I'm sure that's it, Charley.
You only met him 12 hours ago.
He doesn't even know your name.
Wood! You tell your daddy
I'll be in Kentucky in October.
We can hunt some birds together.
All right.
So how come it's Bob who gets to stay?
Bob's gonna move my gear to a house
down the street.
See?
- I don't mind.
- Yeah, well.
Sounds like an adventure.
They moved to 1017 Troost Avenue
at night...
...so that the neighborhood couldn't get
a good look at them or their belongings.
Then Bob thought Jesse
would give him eight hours' sleep...
...and a daydreaming goodbye.
But with a second day
in the Thomas Howard house...
...Bob thought he might never go...
...but might be brought in
as a good-natured cousin to the boy...
...and a gentleman helper to Zee.
He went everywhere with Jesse.
They made trips
to the Topeka Exchange Saloon...
...where Jesse could spend nearly
...and still complain about feeling tipsy.
Bob would rarely vouchsafe his opinions
as they talked.
If spoken to, he would fidget and grin.
If Jesse palavered with another person,
Bob secretaried their dialogue...
...getting each inflection,
reading every gesture and tic...
...as if he wanted to compose
a biography of the outlaw...
...or as if he were preparing
an impersonation.
Go away.
Used to be couldn't no one sneak up
on Jesse James.
Now you think otherwise?
I ain't never seen you without your guns,
neither.
I can't figure it out.
Do you wanna be like me...
...or do you wanna be me?
I'm just making fun, is all.
Bob was sent away cordially
the next day...
...with a goodbye from Jesse...
...but nothing from Zee
beyond what good manners demanded.
It was 40 miles to his sister's farm
from Kansas City.
And it was well into the afternoon
by the time he arrived there.
Mrs. Martha Bolton rented
the Harbison farm in 1879...
...just after becoming a widow.
And she made a good income
by giving rooms and meals...
...to her brothers Charley, Wilbur and Bob,
and to members of the James Gang...
...who would appear
whenever they needed seclusion.
Dick! You're gonna make her sick!
She's gonna upchuck
if you don't watch out!
Wood Hite had been spurned by Martha
in his affections...
...and his attempt to switch his pursuit
to her daughter...
...was being thwarted by Dick Liddil.
Wait a second, you assured me
that you were not ticklish.
Howdy!
What's going on, now?
What's going on...?
- Howdy!
- Were you fibbing about that?
- No.
- Not at all.
You're not supposed to peek, Dick.
Well, you're just so pretty
I can't help myself.
- You need to be warning him about that.
- Howdy.
Worry about the field instead,
might be able to worry about the work...
Howdy!
- Finally home.
- I'm so glad, Bob.
I'm in that room too, Bob.
Don't mess with my things.
All right, Grandpa.
"July 9th. Diligence, tact,
and a keen sense of responsibility...
...capacity for detail are your dominant
traits. Your sense of duty's strong."
How long you been there?
Just now arrived. Did I miss much?
Not unless you never seen a man
wash his dirty carcass before.
Boy, you got a big old pecker
for being such a little squirrel.
That what you come here to see, Dick?
No.
Your brother said that Jesse
kept you in Kansas City some extra days.
What was the reason?
Well, I'm not at liberty to say exactly.
Let me ask you this. Did Jesse mention
that me and Cummins were in cahoots?
Is that so?
Oh, dear. I went on and said too much,
have I?
Well, who else is partners with you two?
See, he'll cut our throats if he finds out.
You don't know him like I do.
You do Jesse dirt,
you connive behind his back...
...boy, he'll come after you
with a cleaver.
So, what are you two cahoots
cooking up?
Don't know that I should say.
I'm not gonna wheedle
the dang news from you.
How about we'll leave it a mystery...
...and then we won't neither one of us
regret our little chat?
Can you hand me that six-gun there, Bob?
If you so much as mention my name
to Jesse...
...boy, I'll find out about it.
You had better believe that.
And I'll look you up.
I'll knock on your door,
and I will be as mad as a hornet.
I will be hot.
You be careful with that iron, Dick.
You know where I stand on these matters
and that's all there is to it.
Me and you can be as friendly as pigs
from now on.
I'm Bunny Ford, stick your hands
up in the air!
Mister.
Oh, you have some nerve.
We were just reading about the James boys
among the Mexicans.
What's this? This ain't Jesse.
- You don't know that.
- He would've never wore no mustache.
Never was anywheres near a cannon.
Let me see that picture.
Boy, I can't even calculate
what I'm looking at.
- Give me that.
- Ever since he was a child...
...Bob's collected whatsoever he could find
about the James brothers.
Yeah, got himself a little museum
in his room.
Next time you come snooping around,
you better strap on a shooting iron!
Well, you can see how scared I am.
You too, Wood Hite. Cross me again,
I'll put a bullet through your head!
Boy, you...
Son, you better recollect
who my cousin is...
...because you've seemed to misremembered
that Jesse loves me like the Good Book.
Now, you may play it like you're
a dangerous person in the grocery store...
...but don't misremember
who you be accounting to...
...if I so much get my feelings hurt.
- I don't care!
Do I have to yell "suwee"?
Why don't we make up,
be pleasant for once?
Why don't we pass the evening
like pleasant human beings?
I like your nickel suit, cowboy.
You see something?
Just a bird.
The month of October came...
...and Jesse began seeing
Pinkerton operatives in every floor walker...
...street sweeper, and common man
poking about in a store.
On the morning of the 11 th,
he would wake his wife...
...with the Scripture pertaining to
the Holy Family's flight into Egypt.
Overnight, the Thomas Howard clan
vanished from Kansas City.
Shortly thereafter,
four of the Blue Cut train robbers...
...were arrested in shacks near Glendale.
How Jesse could have known
remains a mystery.
Theirs was a wandering existence.
Men who choose to be outlaws...
...cannot afford to remain in one place
for very long.
- Well, goodness. Maybe I'll change my mind.
- Let's go. Let's go. Let's go.
- Martha.
- Buck up, man.
Wood and Dick would bicker
across the entire state of Kentucky...
...until they made Russellville, home
of Major George Hite, Wood's father...
...and uncle to Frank and Jesse James.
You stay away from this one.
She's my daddy's wife.
You got it?
Did you cook this, ma'am?
I've got a nigger woman.
How's that?
Dick asked if I cooked this.
Did you?
No.
She knew what he was like
when she married him.
I guess we're the night owls, you and I.
I'm glad.
How come?
You're interesting to look at.
You have a real pleasant disposition.
And I don't know, you sort of
make me feel warm all over.
You know, I'm what they call a...
An inamorato.
Well, I knew
there had to be a name for it.
You and the Hites
don't get along too well...
...if I'm to trust Wood and his version
of the situation.
We hate each other like poison,
if you wanna know the truth.
Most of the Hites wouldn't spit on me
if I was on fire.
They say that when a woman's on fire...
...you're supposed to roll her around on
the ground and cover her with your body.
Well, you are a naughty tease.
Isn't it about bedtime?
Well, I'll just kiss those dainty nubbins.
Good night.
Would you stop?
Boy, I believe I drank too much coffee.
I gotta go visit the privy
something terrible.
This is embarrassing.
Now, you go ahead and do your duty.
I don't mind.
I've sort of got stage fright with
a strange man in the commode with me.
I ain't strange.
I'm built just like the rest of them.
You look awful pretty.
Do I?
I haven't never in my life seen
such well-shaped limbs.
Is Wood awake?
It's just me.
And I bet you thought I was a lady.
Well, you ain't much of a housekeeper,
are you?
You didn't just happen by.
Why not?
Go on and take a load off your feet.
You ought to get yourself a wife.
Yeah.
I suppose.
I was gonna ask Martha. Charley's sister.
I was gonna ask her
if she could imagine it.
But I guess Wood has plans of his own.
And there's always Dick Liddil
getting in the way.
I'll give it some thought, though.
Your crops come in?
No, I don't got much.
Just a garden patch and a pasture.
I was sick at planting time.
So...
Ed, how you feeling now?
Why?
You're acting queer.
Well, you and me ain't been
just real good friends lately.
That's not your fault,
you understand that.
You hear talk, though.
Talk?
People tell you things.
Why don't you give me an example?
Jim Cummins come by here.
Jim Cummins.
Oh, and Jim says:
"You know them boys
that got caught in the Blue Cut deal?"
Well, Jim says he got word...
...that you're planning to kill them.
Why would I do that?
That's just talk probably.
Jim Cummins. He say anything else?
Nope. No, that was it, basically.
That still don't explain why you're scared.
Well, I'm in the same situation, you see.
I was terrified I saw you ride up.
- I just happened by, Ed.
- Suppose you heard gossip, though.
Suppose you heard Jim Cummins
come by, you might have thought...
...that we were planning to capture you
or get that reward, and that ain't true.
But you might have suspected it.
Haven't heard a lick of gossip lately.
I got 600 dollars stashed away.
I don't need no governor's reward.
Well, it's the principle too.
Well...
- I'm glad I stopped by.
- Oh, me too.
What do you say
if we were to go for a ride?
We can go into town. I'll buy you dinner.
Then I'll be on my way.
Okay.
You ready to go for a ride?
We going to your place?
You seen Ed Miller lately?
Nobody has.
Must have gone off to California.
I'd still like to know where we're going.
If you were going to see Jim Cummins,
wouldn't you follow this road?
I guess so.
Howdy.
Oh, are you friends of my pa's?
We're friends of Jim Cummins.
Well, it so happens
he's been gone since August.
And never said where he gone to.
- I'm Matt Collins.
- Albert Ford.
Very happy to meet you.
- Dick Turpin.
- Pleased to make your acquaintance.
I don't know where he is!
Leave me alone!
Shut your mouth!
You shut your mouth!
- You shut your mouth.
- I don't know where he is!
- I don't know!
- Get in there.
Shut up.
- I don't know where he is!
- Shut up.
- I don't know!
- Shut up.
- Jesus.
- Shut up.
Jesse, he's just a kid.
He knows where his uncle Jim is and
that's gonna make him old soon enough.
- Maybe he doesn't know.
- He knows!
You need to ask and ask sometimes.
Sometimes a child don't remember so much
at first. But it'll come back to him.
My goodness, she's about to rip off,
sweetie.
Just a little more here to get her started.
Then I think I can rip her off
like a page from a book.
Jesus, he can't even talk.
Where's Jim?
Where's Jim?
Where's Jim? Where's Jim?
Where's Jim? Where's Jim? Where's Jim?
- Where's Jim?
- Quit it!
You bastard! I don't know where he is!
You won't believe me!
You never even gave me a chance!
You kept my... You kept my mouth shut!
I never know where Jim is or
when he comes! So leave me alone.
Get off me, you son of a bitch!
I'm worn out.
I can't. No, see...
My mind's all tangled anyway.
Little deals like this
just make me feel dirty.
Are you all right, Jesse?
Jesse was sick...
...with rheums, and aches
and lung congestions.
Insomnia stained
his eye sockets like soot.
He read auguries in
the snarled intestines of chickens...
...or the blow of cat hair
released to the wind.
And the omens promised bad luck,
which moated and dungeoned him.
How come it's you
that's gotta do all the chores?
Charley and Bob pay extry to Martha
so that they don't have to.
It still don't seem fair.
Martha.
Well, look what the cat dragged in.
You come from Kentucky?
Why do you have your head in a hole,
Martha?
Wood and Dick had a shooting scrape
a few months ago.
Cover the kettle, Ida.
And what did you and Dick
get in a scrape about?
Well, he tampered
with my daddy's wife...
...while a pork chop
burned on the skillet...
...so I shot at him.
Ida! Do not stick your thumb
in the cream when you skim it.
His chicanery and his philandering ways...
...has instigated such malice.
He's a yellow snake in the grass
and he can't be trusted, Martha.
Dick told me a complete other version
of that affray.
Wood Hite's downstairs.
You mean he's here?
Yeah, he come in late last night.
Hey, simmer down!
Don't get into a fracas up there, you boys!
I've got breakfast almost ready.
He's still sucking air.
But I think he's a goner.
Maybe y'all better come wish him well
on his journey.
Wood?
You were a good fellow, Wood.
Oh, I sure hope you're not
in frightful pain, Wood.
I'd get you something to drink,
but I'm afraid you'd just choke on it.
Little Ida's gonna miss you.
So is the rest of the family.
Well, one thing's settled.
Can't take him into Richmond.
Why not?
Well, one, sheriff'll put Bob in jail.
And two, Jesse'll find out his cousin
Wood's been shot in our house...
...and then that'll be the end
of each and every one of us.
"And in one merciless, violent thrust
broke in...
...and carried all before him,
and scented and brewed...
...reeking with blood of my virginity...
...up to its utmost length in my body."
He ain't disappeared,
if that's what you were hoping.
What chapter you on?
She's met some Algerian corsair
down at Gibraltar.
Got herself all agitated.
How's that leg?
Full of torment, Bob. Thanks for asking.
Blessed are the poor in spirit...
...for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are them that mourn,
for they shall be comforted.
Blessed are the...
Meek.
Blessed are the meek.
- Is it him?
- Yeah.
Why is he here? Does he know
about Wood, do you think?
I don't know. All I know is
he don't miss very much.
- What should I say about you if he asks?
- Tell him I'm in K.C. with Mattie.
He was buffalo hunting.
He was thrilled to meet yours truly.
Yeah, over there in Europe there's only
two Americans they know for certain...
...Mark Twain and Jesse James.
- Why, it's the kid.
- How's everything?
- I never take off my gun belts.
- Yeah?
Good thinking.
Well, Charley, did you hurt your leg?
Yeah, I slipped...
I slipped off the roof...
...and I smacked down into a snow bank
like a ton of stupidness.
One second I'm screaming,
"Whoa, Nelly!"
Next second, poof,
I'm neck-deep in snow.
Well, whatever possessed you
to climb a roof in December?
There was a k... A kite. What am I saying?
There was a cat.
A cat. It was on the roof
and I went after him.
It was a tomcat yowling
and what all, and I slipped.
I thought maybe your club foot
was gaining on you.
Oh, yeah.
Dick went to Kansas City to be
with his wife. He was here for a bit.
Hey, here's a cute story, Jess.
Bobby was what, 11 or 12...
...and you were by far
his most admired personage.
He couldn't get enough.
It was "Jesse this" and "Jesse that"
and "Jesse this" from sunrise to sunset.
Fascinating.
No, there's more. This is cute.
We're at supper and Bob asks,
"You know what size boot Jesse wears?"
- Charley, Jesse doesn't wanna hear this.
- Shush, now, Bob, let me tell it.
Bob says... He says, "You know
what size boot Jesse wears?"
He says, "Six and a half." He says,
"Ain't that a big enough boot...
...for a man 5'8"tall?"
I decided to josh him a little, you know,
he being my kid brother and everything.
So I said, "He doesn't have toes is why."
That's a really stupid story.
"He was dangling his feet off a culvert
and a catfish nibbled his toes off."
Bob taxed himself trying to picture it.
That'd be a good joke if it was funny.
Isn't that a cute story, Jess?
Give me some more conversations, Bob.
I got one. This one's about as crackerjack...
It's the one about your...
Let Bob tell it.
All right.
I don't even know
what you're talking about.
About how you and Jesse
have so much in common.
Go on, Bob.
Yeah, come on, Bob.
Tell us a story.
- Nope. No.
- Come on, entertain Jesse. He's here.
Come on.
Well, if you'll pardon my saying so,
I guess...
...it is interesting the many ways
you and I overlap and whatnot.
I mean, you begin with our daddies.
Your daddy was a pastor
at the New Hope Baptist Church...
...and my daddy was a pastor
at the church in Excelsior Springs.
You're the youngest of three James boys,
and I'm the youngest of five Ford boys.
Between Charley and me,
there's another brother, Wilbur...
...with six letters in his name.
And between Frank and you, is another
brother Robert, also with six letters.
And my Christian name
is Robert, of course.
You have blue eyes, I have blue eyes.
You're 5'8"tall, I'm 5'8" tall.
Me, I must have had a list as long as
your nightshirt when I was 12, but...
...I seem to have lost some curiosities
over the years.
Ain't he something?
Did I ever tell you the story about
that scalawag, George Shepherd?
Shepherd's one of
Quantrill's lieutenants.
He give me a story much like Bob's
what bring him to mind.
Going on about how much
we had in common, and so on...
...so he could get in the gang.
How could I have known
he had a grudge against me?
How could I have known
he was lying to get on my good side?
I said, "George, come on aboard.
Glad to have you."
George thought he was smart,
except he wasn't.
One morning, George rides into camp...
...and about 20 guns open up on him.
See, old George, he only had one eye. You
gotta have two eyes, you wanna get Jesse.
You ought not think of me
like you do George Shepherd.
You brought him to mind.
Well, it's not very flattering.
Sure is good eating, Martha.
Well, I'm so glad you enjoyed it.
How come George
had a grudge against you?
I said, how come George
had a grudge against you?
Well, you see, George had a nephew
he wanted me to protect during the war.
This nephew had 5000 dollars on him.
It just so happens he winds up killed
and someone swipes that money.
And when George is in prison,
someone whispers to him:
"It was Jesse James
slit the boy's throat."
It was just mean gossip, was it?
Bob's the expert. Let's put it to him.
Oh, dear, I made him cranky.
I'm not cranky. I just been
through this before is all.
Most people get around on making fun
of me. They don't ever let up.
Someone's getting awful fresh over there.
Woman, shut your face for once.
Don't want you to skip off
to your room and pout...
...without knowing why I come by
for this visit.
Why? So you could
tell us how sorry you are...
...you had to slap our cousin Albert around?
I come by...
...to ask if one of you two Fords...
...would care to ride with me
in a journey or two.
I guess we both agree
it ought to be Charley.
You've been acting sort of testy.
Have you seen Wood Hite lately?
No. Not at all.
I swear that stew
had some squirrel meat in it.
- Still arguing with you, is it?
- Yeah.
- You're Charles Ford?
- Yes, ma'am.
You've seen me once or twice before.
I got a letter from George Hite.
He hasn't seen hide nor hair of him.
And you say you haven't seen Wood?
No, I... I can't imagine where he could be.
Yeah?
You finished with your sleeping?
I could use a couple more hours
if it's no trouble.
Yeah.
I been holding a discussion with myself
over if I ought to tell you this or no.
My good side won out and...
Well, I wanna make a clean breast
of things.
Yeah, my mind's a little cobwebby
is the only drawback.
I could use a little...
A little more sleep.
You know I went to Kentucky?
Yeah.
I come back through Saline County and...
...I think to myself:
"Why not stop by and see Ed Miller?"
So I do.
Well, things are not to my satisfaction.
Ed's got himself all worked up
over something.
I can see that he's lying like a rug.
So I say to myself, "Enough's enough."
And I say to Ed, "Come on, Ed.
Let's go for a ride."
You understand what I'm saying?
Going for a ride is like...
Going for a ride
is like giving him what-for?
Exactly.
So...
...Ed and Jesse...
...they argue on the road.
Did you ever count the stars?
I can't ever get the same number.
They keep changing on me.
I don't even know what a star is exactly.
Well, your body knows.
It's your mind that forgot.
You go on ahead, partner.
I'll catch up with you.
It's okay.
It's okay, sweetheart. It's okay.
And when push came to shove...
...Jesse shot and killed him.
Jesse did.
You got it.
You...
So, you see, your...
Your cousin, he got off easy.
I was just playing with Albert.
Yeah, I made him squeal
once or twice myself.
I'm just not as thorough as you are.
You got a tale to swap with me now?
I don't get your meaning.
Seems to me, if you have something
to confess in exchange...
...it'd only be right...
...that you'd spit it out now.
I can't think of a single thing.
About Wood Hite, for example.
I'm not gonna... I been saying over and
over I can't figure out where he's gone.
Now, I'm not gonna change my story
just to have something to spit.
- Why was your brother so agitated?
- Which?
Bob.
That's just his way. He's antsy.
You know?
You go on back to sleep now.
You got me agitated now, you see?
Yeah, just ain't no peace
when old Jesse's around.
You ought to pity my poor wife.
Ed Miller was a good friend of mine.
He introduced me to you
at that one poker game.
I'm a little angry with you, if you
wanna know the God's honest truth.
You ought to pity me too.
As proof of his confederacy with
the James Gang, Bob told the authorities...
...that Dick Liddil was sleeping over
at the rented farmhouse...
...while his ruined leg mended.
And then, created a map
of the Harbison property...
...leaving out the creek where
Wood Hite's remains now moldered.
Right, you boys are cornered!
Come on out peaceably
and nobody'll get shot up!
Don't shoot!
Come on out and show yourself!
Hello.
We got him.
Give me that Colt, son.
- All right.
- Andrew James Liddil...
...I have a warrant here
for your arrest...
Snowstorms would move over Missouri
that Sunday, February 19th...
...shutting down commerce
for more than two days.
- Go, go, go.
- Are the papers here?
- He wanted to know if the papers are here.
- I don't care what he wants.
Yet this wouldn't prevent Robert Ford...
...from presenting himself
to Governor Crittenden...
...at the Craig Rifles Ball on Wednesday.
I deem it a great privilege
on this glorious occasion...
...to recognize publicly...
...the intelligent and effective assistance...
...that Captain Henry Craig has rendered
the state of Missouri and myself...
...in our joint quest
to rid Jackson County...
...of the James band.
The task that Captain Craig
has assumed...
...will require fearless courage,
extraordinary vigilance...
...and an unerring selection
of instrumentalities.
Well, I've gotten the signal from my wife
that enough is enough.
However, before I sit...
...I would like to ask you
to join me in a toast...
...to a great son
of the state of Missouri...
...my friend, Henry Craig.
- Here, here.
Yes.
Just let my attorney know.
Who is that? Who is it?
Get out of the way now.
You know, you're more goddamn trouble
than you're worth, Bob.
I was just gonna say hello.
No, you weren't gonna do that, Bob.
That's not why you're down here.
You think it's your goddamn coming-out.
You think you're the belle of the ball.
Now you get upstairs and try to keep your
identity secret, you silly little bastard.
The governor'll see you in good time.
Take him up, boys.
Bob would later be cross-examined
repeatedly...
...about the exact nature of the deal
he had made with the authorities.
And he was never consistent
in his recollections.
My wife's asleep in the other room,
so let's speak as quietly as we can.
So you're Dick Little.
Liddil.
I beg your pardon?
I spell it with two D's.
He's given us a full confession, governor.
Newspapers haven't caught onto it yet.
And you've guaranteed him
a conditional pardon...
...and amnesty for all the robberies
he's committed.
You Robert Ford?
How old are you?
Twenty.
You surrender to Sheriff Timberlake
as well?
No, no, governor. That's his brother,
Charley Ford, he's in the James Gang.
But little Bob here,
we got nothing on Bob.
He's just acting in capacity as a...
...private detective.
Jesse James sent me a telegram
last month...
...saying he'd kill me
if he had to wreck a train to do it.
He said once I got in his hands,
he'd cut my heart out...
...and eat it in strips like it was bacon.
I'll wreck his train first.
I'm sorry, Your Excellency.
I was thinking about something else.
Jesse James is nothing more
than a public outlaw...
...who made his reputation
by stealing whatever he wanted...
...killing whoever got in his way.
You'll hear some fools say he's getting back
at Republicans and Union men...
...for the wrongs his family suffered
during the war.
But his victims have scarcely been selected
with reference to their political views.
I'm saying his sins will soon find him out.
I'm saying his cup of iniquity is full.
I'm saying Jesse James
is a desperate case...
...and may require a desperate remedy.
Y'all got the right man for the job.
Come on. Come on, now.
Come on, now.
Have you ever considered suicide?
I can't say that I have. There's always
something else I wanted to do.
Or my predicaments changed,
or I saw my hardships from a different slant.
You know all what can happen.
It never seemed respectable.
I'll tell you one thing that's for certain.
You won't mind dying
once you've peeked over the other side.
You'll no more wanna go back
to your body than...
...you'd wanna spoon up your own puke.
Hey, since we're looking to rob banks...
...I was wondering if we could
add another fella to the gang...
...and sort of see if we couldn't
come out of our next job alive.
Bob wanted to know could he ride with us
next time we took on a savings bank or...
A savings bank or a...
A railroad.
Bob isn't much more than a boy
to most appearances.
But there's about two tons
of sand in him.
And he'll stand with a shooter
when that's what's called for.
And he's smart too.
He's about as intricate as they come.
You forget I already met the kid.
Hell, he surely thinks highly of you.
All of America thinks highly of me.
Still, not like you got two million names
to snatch out of a sock...
...whenever you need a third man.
I can see you trying to
wear me down on this.
That's my main intention.
Robberies would be conceived
but never carried out...
...in Nebraska, Colorado and Missouri.
During this time...
...Henry Craig enjoined Robert Ford to return
to Elias' Grocery Store in Richmond...
...and await instructions
from Sheriff James Timberlake.
All right, three cans...
...peaches. Two cans...
Two cans sifted peas.
One bottle...
...Mary's Morning Tonic, and a half...
Half a sack of flour.
I'll be right with you.
I haven't seen any sign of him.
Well, do you know where he's living?
No.
No?
Well, I can't guess how he does it...
...but he is always knowledgeable
about what's going on.
He's gonna know I've been here with you.
You ought to take that for granted.
And he will kill you if he gets the chance.
Are you willing to risk that?
Yes, I am.
I've been a nobody all my life.
I was the baby.
I was the one they made promises to
that they never kept.
And ever since I can remember it,
Jesse James has been as big as a tree.
I'm prepared for this, Jim...
...and I'm gonna accomplish it.
I know I won't get
but this one opportunity...
...and you can bet your life
I'm not gonna spoil it.
Well...
...wait for your chance.
Don't let yourself be found alone with him,
and do not...
...let him get behind you.
You been chosen.
Well, what do you mean?
Well, your brother said that
you might wanna join us.
But maybe you like this grocery store
more than you said you did.
- So you missed me?
- Oh, yeah.
I been crying myself to sleep every night.
Don't let him see us so much as wink.
He's suspicious as a damn coyote,
and he don't trust you one iota.
- Well, I guess that makes...
- Hey.
He already put away Ed Miller. He said so
like it was something piddly he'd done.
If we're ever alone for more than a minute,
I'd like a chance to talk to you further.
They gave me ten days.
For what?
For arresting him.
You and me, huh?
It's gonna happen one way or another,
Charley. It's gonna happen.
So it might as well be us
who get rich on it.
- Bob, he's our friend.
- He murdered Ed Miller.
And he's gonna murder Liddil and Cummins
if the chance ever comes.
It seems to me Jesse's riding from
man to man, saying goodbye to the gang.
So your friendship could put you
under the pansies.
I'll grind it fine in my mind, Bob. I can't
go any further than that right now.
You'll come around.
You think it's all made up, don't you?
You think it's all yarns
and newspaper stories.
He's just a human being.
From now on, you two
won't go anywhere without me.
From now on, you'll ask for my permission!
From now on, you'll ask to be excused!
Charley, take them horses
around the barn. Bob, you go on inside.
- Hello, Mary.
- Hi.
Look at this rotten parsnip
I found in the compost heap.
You never mentioned Bob would be here.
Maybe he was saving it
as a pleasant surprise.
Got two cousins for company now.
How it's gonna be is...
...we'll leave next Monday afternoon
and ride down to Platte City.
How far is that from Kansas City?
Platte City's 30 miles south.
You and me and Charley'll
sleep in the woods overnight...
...and we'll strike the Wells Bank
sometime before the court recesses.
What time will that be exactly?
Well, you don't need to know that.
You know, I'm real comfortable
with your brother.
Hell, he's ugly as sin,
he smells like a skunk...
...and he's so ignorant
he couldn't drive nails in the snow...
...but he's sort of easy to be around.
I can't say the same for you, Bob.
Well, I'm sorry to hear you say that.
You know how it is when you're
with your girlfriend and the moon's out...
...and you know she wants to be kissed,
even though she never said so?
Yeah.
Well, you're giving me signs
that grieve my soul...
...and make me wonder...
...maybe your mind's
been changed about me.
Well, what do you want me to do?
Swear my good faith on the Bible?
You two having a spat?
I was getting ready to be angry.
Sit over here closer, kid.
Come on.
Charley, you'll stay with the animals.
Me and the kid...
...will walk into that bank
just before noon.
Bob will move that cashier...
...away from the shotgun
that's under the counter...
...and I'll creep up behind that cashier...
...and I'll cock his head back like so.
And I'll say:
"How come an off-scouring
like you is still sucking air...
...when so many of mine
are in coffins?" I'll say:
"How did you get to reach 20
without leaking out all over your clothes?"
And if I don't like his attitude,
I will slit that phildoodle so deep...
...he will flop on the floor like a fish.
My God, what just happened?
Boy, I could hear your gears grinding...
...hear your little motor wondering,
"My gosh, what's next?
What's happening to me?"
You were precious to behold, Bob.
You were white as spit in a cotton field.
You got him. You got him.
You wanna know how that feels?
Unpleasant. I honestly can't recommend it.
The old Charley looked stricken!
I was. I was.
"This is plumb unexpected," old Charley
was thinking."That done ruined my day."
Hell. Hell.
Jesse slept with Bob
in the children's room that night.
And Bob remained awake.
He could see that there was a gun
on the nightstand.
He could imagine its cold nickel
inside his grip...
...its two-pound weight
reached out and aimed.
I need to go to the privy.
You think you do, but you don't.
You wait for grace, now.
- Thank you, Mama.
- Thank you, Zee. God, that looks good.
- Thank you, Zee.
- You're welcome.
Well, is this fit to eat or will it just do?
Woman's cooking's
always been a scandal.
Cut her meat and the whole table moves.
You want a biscuit?
You gonna have a biscuit?
Here's some butter.
Come on. Come on.
Oh, shoot.
And so it went,
Jesse was increasingly cavalier...
...merry, moody, fey...
...unpredictable.
He camouflaged his depressions
and derangements...
...with masquerades
of extreme cordiality, courtesy...
...and goodwill towards others.
But even as he jested,
or tickled his boy in the ribs...
...Jesse would look over at Bob
with melancholy eyes...
...as if the two were meshed
in an intimate communication.
Bob was certain that the man
had unriddled him...
...had seen through his reasons
for coming along...
...that Jesse could forecast each of
Bob's possible moves and inclinations...
...and was only acting the innocent...
...in order to lull Bob
into stupid tranquility and miscalculation.
How long you been studying me?
You're gonna break a lot of hearts.
How do you mean?
It's a present.
It's heavy.
Well, you gonna look inside?
It's April Fools' Day, you know.
It ain't no joke.
Oh, such extravagance.
Don't that nickel just shine, though?
It's more than I could hope for.
I figured that granddaddy Colt
may blow into fragments...
...next time you try
to squeeze the trigger.
Well, you might have something there.
Tom, supper's ready.
I'll be right there, sweetheart.
I might be too excited to eat.
You know what John Newman Edwards
once wrote about me?
He said I didn't trust
two men in 10,000...
...and even them I was cautious around.
Government's sort of run me ragged.
I'm going the long way around the barn
to say that...
...I been feeling cornered
and just plain ornery as of late...
...and I'd be pleased if you'd accept
that gun as my way of apologizing.
Heaven knows I'd be ornerier
if I were in your position.
No. No, I haven't been acting correctly.
Seems I hardly recognize myself
when I'm greased.
I go on journeys out of my body...
...and look at my red hands
and my mean face...
...and I wonder about that man
that's gone so wrong.
I've been becoming a problem to myself.
Well...
- I better wash my hands if supper's on.
- Yeah, go ahead.
The day before he died was Palm Sunday.
And Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Howard,
their two children...
...and their cousin Charles Johnson...
...strolled to the Second Presbyterian
Church to attend the 10:00 service.
Bob remained at the cottage...
...and slyly migrated from room to room.
He walked into the master bedroom...
...and inventoried the clothes
on the hangers and hooks.
He sipped from the water glass
on the vanity.
He smelled the talcum and lilacs
on Jesse's pillowcase.
His fingers skittered over his ribs...
...to construe the scars
where Jesse was twice shot.
He manufactured a middle finger
that was missing the top two knuckles.
He imagined himself at 34.
He imagined himself in a coffin.
He considered possibilities...
...and everything wonderful
that could come true.
He's not gonna kill us.
Yeah, he is.
Well, I'll stay awake so he can't.
You're imagining things.
Ain't gonna be no Platte City.
That's Jesse fooling with us.
Go to sleep, Charley.
Morning.
Charley.
Bob, how much did you want to eat?
I'm feeling sort of peculiar.
Why is it you're looking so interested?
You think it's intelligent
to go out like that...
...so all creation can see your guns?
Hi.
Come on, let's go see
what your mama's doing.
Timmy, get that door, would you?
- Well, you lost your shoe, sweetheart.
- Yeah, I did.
That's gonna be a problem.
They don't sell those one at a time.
We lost a shoe, Mama.
Will you put that up for Daddy,
would you?
- What you doing, you lose a shoe?
- Yeah.
It's only meant to go on top,
to complement.
Yeah, I know. Sometimes, I...
Bob, everything's getting cold!
- Where's Mary?
- She's outside, darling.
Mary?
What do you think goes on
in that noggin of his?
Nothing.
I was talking about his mind, not yours.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, I get it.
Well, hello now.
"The arrest and confession
of Dick Liddil."
You don't say so.
That's very strange.
Says here Dick surrendered
three weeks ago.
You must have been
right in the neighborhood.
Well, apparently, they kept it a secret.
If I get to Kansas City soon,
I'll ask somebody about it.
You two ready?
I will be, by noon.
There is a ship
She sails the sea
She's loaded deep
As deep can be
But not as deep
As the love I'm in
I know not if I sink or swim
The water is wide
I can't cross o'er
And neither have I wings to fly
Give me a boat
That can carry two
Both shall row
My love and I
For love is gentle
And love is kind
Sweetest flower
When first it's new
But love grows old
And waxes cold
And fades away
Like the morning dew
There is a ship
She sails the sea
I guess I'll take my guns off...
...for fear the neighbors might spy them.
Don't that picture look dusty?
What have...? What have you done?
Jesse.
Jesse?
Jesse? Jesse?
Jesse!
No!
No. Jess...
Come back. Oh, come back.
Oh, Jesse! No!
Oh, Bob. Have you done this?!
I swear to God I didn't.
It was an accident, Zee.
Come on. Pistol went off accidentally.
Put my name.
Why, what'd you do? I shot him.
You might wanna keep that.
Thank you all very much.
The resulting prints
sold for 2 dollars apiece...
...and were the models for the lithographed
covers on a number of magazines.
Soon a thousand strangers were making
spellbound pilgrimages to the cottage...
...or were venerating the iced remains
in Seidenfaden's cooling room.
The man who offered 30,000 dollars for
the body of President Garfield's assassin...
...sent a telegram to City Marshal
Enos Craig offering 50,000...
...for the body
of Jesse Woodson James...
...so that he could go around the country
with it...
...or at least sell it to P.T. Barnum
for his Greatest Show on Earth.
Another photograph was taken
of the renowned American bandit...
...nestled in his bed of ice.
And it was this shot that was most
available in sundries and apothecaries...
...to be viewed in a stereoscope
alongside the sphinx...
...the Taj Mahal,
and the catacombs of Rome.
Hello, here!
"The arrest and confession
of Dick Liddil."
Young man, I thought you told me
you didn't know Dick had surrendered.
You mean he did? I didn't know.
But I knew I had not fooled him.
And he knew, as well as I, in that moment
that I intended to bring him to justice.
But he would not kill me
in the presence of his wife and children.
And so he was smiling
to throw me off-guard.
Well, it's all right, anyway, Bob.
It was widely felt that
Bob possessed some acting talent...
...and Charley, not a jot.
That picture's awful dusty.
Charley was only expected
not to slouch or mutter...
...and to transport his sicknesses
to the alley before letting them go.
And that's...
...how I killed Jesse James.
By October of 1883, Bob Ford
could be identified correctly...
...by more citizens than could
the president of the United States.
He was as renowned at 20 as Jesse was
after 14 years of grand larceny.
You won't get your hooks into me.
That's right. That's right.
Sit next to your boyfriend. Jezebel.
Charley was increasingly superstitious...
...increasingly subject
to the advice of soothsayers...
...who promised to cure his miseries
with pipe smoke and poultices.
You been spending too much time
with Gypsies, Charley.
Shit.
The picture's awful dusty.
Something began to change
in Charley's stage portrayal of Jesse.
His gait seemed more practiced.
His voice was spookily similar
to the man's.
His newly suggested dialogue
was analogous...
...to a script Jesse might have originated.
He began to look at his younger brother
with spite...
...as if he suspected that
in some future performance...
...he might present himself
to a live cartridge in Robert Ford's gun.
Murderer!
Cur!
Coward!
You wanna investigate my courage?
Do you?
Find out! Find out!
Nobody.
Coward!
By his own approximation, Bob
assassinated Jesse James over 800 times.
He suspected no one in history
had ever so often or so publicly...
...recapitulated an act of betrayal.
Bob always challenged
the allegations of cowardice...
...but Charley seemed
to agree with them.
He spoke of Mrs. Zee James
as certain priests might the Madonna...
...and composed long soul-describing letters
to her...
...begging her forgiveness...
...none of which he mailed.
Charley Ford became all that his countrymen
wanted an assassin of Jesse James to be.
Jesse James was a man
Who killed many men
He robbed the Glendale train
And he stole from the rich
And he gave to the poor
He had a hand
And a heart and a brain
Well, Jesse had a wife
To mourn for his life
Three children
They were brave
But that dirty little coward
Who shot Mr. Howard
Has laid Jesse James in his grave
It was Robert Ford
That dirty little coward
I wonder how does he feel
For he ate at Jesse's bread
And he slept in Jesse's bed
And he laid poor Jesse in his grave
Well, Jesse had a wife
To mourn for his life
Three children
They were brave
But that dirty little coward
Who shot Mr. Howard
Has laid poor Jesse in his grave
I'm Robert Ford.
It was two children, not three.
Hey.
You get yourself home, son, okay?
Come on. Get out of here.
Get out of my place.
He thought, at his angriest...
...about visiting the kin
of Jesse's slaughtered victims:
Mrs. William Westfall in Plattsburg...
...the Wymore family in Clay County...
...perhaps even Mrs. Joseph Heywood
in Northfield, Minnesota.
He would go to their homes
and give his name as Robert Ford...
...the man who killed Jesse James.
He imagined they would
be grateful to him.
It was only with Dorothy Evans
that Bob spoke revealingly or plainly...
...and it was with her that he spoke of
things he didn't know he knew.
He told her that he had no real memory
of the shooting and its aftermath.
He could remember lifting the gun
that Jesse had given him...
...and then it was Good Friday and he was
reading about the funeral proceedings...
...as if they'd happened a long time ago.
Why did you kill him?
Well, he was gonna kill me.
So you were scared
and that's the only reason?
Yeah.
And the reward money.
Do you want me to change the subject?
You know what I expected?
Applause.
I was only 20 years old then.
I couldn't see how it would look to people.
I was surprised by what happened.
They didn't applaud.
He was ashamed of his boasting...
...his pretensions of courage
and ruthlessness.
He was sorry about his cold-bloodedness,
his dispassion...
...his inability to express
what he now believed was the case:
That he truly regretted killing Jesse...
...that he missed the man
as much as anybody...
...and wished his murder
hadn't been necessary.
Even as he circulated his saloon...
...he knew that the smiles disappeared
when he passed by.
He received so many menacing letters...
...that he could read them
without any reaction except curiosity.
He kept to his apartment all day,
flipping over playing cards...
...looking at his destiny
in every king and jack.
Edward O'Kelly came up from Bachelor
at 1 p.m. on the 8th.
He had no grand scheme, no strategy...
...no agreement with higher authorities...
...nothing beyond
a vague longing for glory...
...and a generalized wish
for revenge against Robert Ford.
- How'd it go last night?
- Not so bad.
The other one.
Edward O'Kelly would be ordered
to serve a life sentence...
...in the Colorado Penitentiary
for second-degree murder.
Over 7000 signatures
would eventually be gathered...
...on a petition asking for
O'Kelly's release...
...and in 1902, Governor James B. Orman
would pardon the man.
You shouldn't be wearing that stickpin
again there, Bob. Opals are unlucky.
My luck's not very good as it is. I don't
think an opal's gonna change that much.
I hear you.
There would be no eulogies for Bob...
...no photographs of his body
would be sold in sundries stores...
...no people would crowd the streets
in the rain to see his funeral cortege...
...no biographies would be written
about him...
...no children named after him.
No one would ever pay 25 cents
to stand in the rooms he grew up in.
Hello, Bob.
The shotgun would ignite,
and Ella Mae would scream...
...but Robert Ford would only lay
on the floor and look at the ceiling...
...the light going out of his eyes...
...before he could find the right words.