The ride out of town was surprisingly pleasant, despite the fact that Jayne hadn't said more than a couple of words. Although that could have been a contributing factor to the enjoyment, Mal still attempted to engage his gunhand.

"I surely like this time of year," he said, sitting easily in the saddle, letting the horse do all the work. "The leaves turning all red and gold, the clean air ..." He breathed in deeply. "Makes a man glad to be alive."

"Huh."

Mal had been sure that last comment would elicit something, even if it was along the lines of 'least someone is'. Still, it was worth one last try. "Jayne, you know there's a new thing doing the rounds. It's all the rage. 'Parrently even the high ups on Osiris are getting in on the act. 'Scalled 'conversation'."

"Ain't got nothing I wanna conversate about."

"No?" Mal spurred his horse forward so they were side by side. "How 'bout this Mallory?"

"What about her?"

"How come you went pale when Addie back there mentioned her?"

"Did not."

"Believe me, Jayne, I was on this side. And you did." He squinted into the sun, gauging the time. "She someone River needs to worry about?"

"River ain't worried. Mallory's ... just a girl."

"Indigo's girl?"

"Not that I was aware of."

"Jayne, talk to me. Else when we get back to Serenity I'll set Frey on you."

"Could be fun."

"Jayne ..."

A playful wind caught up a sheaf of leaves and made them dance, twirling them along the ground in a tarantella before dropping them exhausted back to the earth, and it took that long before the big man responded.

"She was a whore. Mallory, I mean."

Mal was surprised at the matter-of-factness in Jayne's tone. "You mean –"

"What I said. A working girl."

"At Addie's?"

"Nope. Least not at first. If'n that'd be the case she wouldn't have had the scars."

Mal's good humour dimmed. "She got beat up?"

"Off and on. Worked out of Vic Carroway's place, 'til I ... had a word."

No matter what Jayne had been, and still was to the rest of the 'verse, he'd always treated the women he bedded – if not with respect – then at least as human beings, something he'd never seen as atypical in his line of work.

Mal's eyebrow twitched. "Was he still alive when you'd done?"

"Well, let's just say it took him a while to walk straight again. And Mallory headed to Addie's with most of the cash she'd earned."

"Maybe River's right, and you are a good man."

"Nah. Mean bastard. When I first met yah, if you hadn't offered me full run o' the kitchen you'd be pushing up the weeds these past years."

"I think maybe I got the best end of the deal."

"You're still alive, ain't you?"

Odd thing was, Mal wasn't lying. It had taken a long while, he admitted, if only to himself, since there were times, particularly after the first hospital heist on Ariel, when he'd honestly thought he was going to space his merc, and more than a dozen times since. But something always stopped him, and for the rest of his life he was going to wonder what it had been.

"You made it sound like you were here for only a few days," he pointed out. "Except these folks seem to know you just a bit too much for that."

"Yeah, well …" Jayne didn't get embarrassed, but this was as close as made no difference. "Maybe it was only a week the second time. The first ... could've been more like six months." He stared into the distance. "I … er … I…" He mumbled something.

"What?"

The big man's head came around and he said, perhaps a little too loudly, "I broke my leg, okay?!"

Mal had to consciously stop himself from grinning. "You?" he still had to say. "Jayne Cobb?"

"Yeah, me, Jayne Cobb." The man himself sighed. "It can happen to anyone. And there weren't no fancy bone mender around, either, at least not for the likes of me."

Mal was still entertaining himself with the image of the big ex-mercenary beside him in a full leg cast and on crutches. Diyu, but he'd have been hell to live with. "How'd you do it?"

"I … fell off a horse."

That was it. Mal couldn't help himself, and he laughed out loud. "You …fell off a horse?"

"Your hearing going or something?" Jayne asked belligerently.

"Just not sure the words coming in my ears are the same as're leaving your mouth."

"They are. You wanna make something of it?"

Mal held a hand up in surrender. "No, no. Just … you fell off a horse?"

"Don't you be so high and mighty about it," Jayne growled. "Seeing as how you're a bullet magnet yourself."

"Not talking about me." Mal shook his head. "And how did this amazing happenstance occur?"

Jayne sighed. "Because I'm stupid."

For a change Mal didn't take the opening, instead merely saying, "Okay, now you've whetted my appetite, you'd better go on."

For a moment the big guy just glared at him, then sighed again. "First time, me and Indigo ... we found ourselves here. It was the end of the war, and ... hell, we just ended up in Cason's Point. Wasn't meant to be anything over and above a few days, waiting for a transport off this rock, but ... truth is we got drunk."

"You, Jayne?"

"Yeah. Me. Me and Indigo. Anyways, some fellers had been talking in the bar about how the Alliance had pulled out of the camp in the hills, and we decided to go take a look see. Just for something to do, you know?"

"I know."

"Then when we sobered we figured why not, since there wasn't much else to occupy us."

"Seems ... reasonable."

"And anyway, we thought maybe we'd see if they left anything worth selling behind." He chuckled. "Surprised we found the place, considering we were partaking of liquor all the way, but find it we did." Jayne lifted up in the saddle, half-turning, staring towards the horizon. "Not far from here, as it happens. Few miles." He sat back, shaking his head. "Like a gorram ghost town, it was. The buildings were all still there, but it'd been pretty much stripped."

"Folks ain't gonna let good building material go to waste."

Jayne continued as if Mal hadn't spoken. "'Cept me and Indigo stumbled on something worth more'n a turd." He grinned. "Stash of weapons. We never could decide if they'd been hidden deliberate, or just forgotten about, but they were pretty fancy. We collected what we could carry, hid the rest in a shallow cave, and headed back towards town."

"Jayne, you ever heard of a story getting to a point?" Mal asked.

"That was it. We were still mostly hungover, and ..." He shook his head. "Mal, you ever tell the others and I'll..."

"My lips are sealed."

"Well, I guess maybe I was more drunk'n I'd thought, and I wasn't looking where I was going, and ... well, to cut a long story short –"

"I wish you would."

"– I was in the air, and the ground was coming up awful fast. Horse got spooked by a snake, least that's what I figure it was considering what was caught up in the shoe after he'd finished stomping it. Anyway, next thing I knew I was staring up at the sky, wondering how come I couldn't breathe."

"Knocks the air outta you," Mal agreed, remembering a similar incident back on Shadow. At least he'd got up – eventually – unhurt apart from his pride.

"Hell, yeah." Jayne steered the horse around a patch of sodden earth. "Anyhows, I'm on the ground, and thinking it's my last moment, then I manage to get a lungful in. Then I tried to get up." He chuckled. "Can't say the pain was worse'n getting shot, but close. And I damn near passed out when I saw the bone sticking outta my leg, through my pants."

Mal winced in sympathy. "What happened?"

"I was lucky. The luck o'the Cobbs. And Indigo. When he stopped laughing – and believe me, that took a long while – he stopped the bleeding, managed to get me back on the horse and into town. Shit, considering the ribbing he gave me after that, I sometimes wonder if maybe I'd've been better off breaking my neck." He sighed again. "Anyways, Indigo stayed with me, since he figured I couldn't be relied on to take care o'myself, and I spent the next few months in Addie's back room, learning to walk again."

"So where does all this fit in with Vera, that ticket and the like?"

"Well, with me laid up like I was, Indigo had to do the donkey work. He brought the guns back in, few at a time, sold 'em where he could. Paid for the doc, the room ... everything."

"He sounds like a good friend."

"Yeah. Prob'ly the only one I ever had." Until Serenity was the unspoken addition.

"Go on."

"Anyway, it was after I was back on my feet we did like I said, decided to pawn the last guns and asked Harrison to keep the tickets. Next day we each took a different ship, and that was that."

"Except ..." Mal prompted.

"Huh?"

"There has to be more."

This time Jayne looked about as guilty as it was in his power to appear. "Sorta."

"Well, you can't just tell half a story."

Jayne stared down at the pommel of his saddle, then nodded slowly. "Guess maybe you should know. It'll only confirm how you always looked on me, but ... yeah."

Mal waited, and was about to urge the big man again, when he started speaking, this time quietly, evenly, as if it was painful to get it off his chest.

"Year before I joined your boat, I was back on Ithaca. Things weren't going so well, and I was down to my last brass nickel. Indigo was here ... always wondered if he came back regular, but never did ask. Anyway, the Tanners were putting a job together, and I leaped at the chance."

"The Tanners ... the fellers we just met?"

"Yeah. Them and their brother, Troy. Medea Tanner always kept 'em tied to her apron strings, doling out cash like it was rarer than rubies, and they were always looking to make some extra. And there are mines out in the badlands, and the miners got paid in cash, not credit." Now Jayne had got down to the nitty gritty, he seemed unable to stop. "Should'a been easy pickings, 'cept someone couldn't keep his mouth shut. We got there, got set up, waited all day in the gorram sun, then just as the payroll came past I got this feeling on the back of my neck like someone was staring down a scope at me. I hung back, maybe just half a second, but it was enough. Turns out the payroll was a trap, and half a platoon of Alliance purplebellies were inside, just waiting for us." He grunted. "I managed to get away, 'though most of the others didn't, and rode hell for leather for town."

"How come I got the notion there's more to it than that?"

Jayne shifted uncomfortably in the saddle. "Mal, it's ancient history."

"Not that ancient. And I figure we've got enough time."

Jayne sighed. "Fine. Just ... don't go telling the others, okay?"

"Why? What did you do?"

"What I said about someone telling the Feds ... I maybe wasn't as truthful as I could've been."

Realisation burst like a sunrise. "You mean it was you."

"Yeah."

Mal wondered why he was surprised. He'd known what Jayne was when he took the mercenary on, but maybe the fact that he'd changed coloured everything. "Best you finish, then."

Jayne nodded slowly. "Well, like I said, I was broke. Indigo tried to lend me some cash, give me a start again, but I ... I don't know why, Mal, but I said no. Maybe I was prideful, I don't know. He said I was crazy getting mixed up with the Tanners at all, but I knew it was gonna be a good pay day. 'Cept I was greedy."

"You sold 'em out."

"Seemed easy. The local Fed station was still manned then, and all I had to do was stroll in the evening before, give 'em the info and they gave me a wad of change. A'course, I told 'em the job was an hour later than was planned."

Mal wondered, not for the first time, if being psychic was catching, because he knew what was coming next. "You thought you could get your share of the take first."

"Yeah." He chuckled unexpectedly. "Only the Feds maybe didn't trust me."

"They set their own trap."

"Yeah."

Mal sighed. "Jayne, you know damn well you can't trust the Alliance."

"I know, Mal. Maybe it takes a long time to get into my skull." They both knew he was talking about Ariel.

"So what happened?"

"One of the fellers who got away must've reported back to the Tanners. I'm packin' my stuff fast as I can when they burst in. I managed to keep 'em occupied, tossed the oil lamp at 'em and jumped outta the window. Only there were four more outside."

"Difficult."

"Yeah. If Indigo hadn't been hanging around ..."

"Did they know? That you sold them out?"

"I don't think they knew for sure, but they didn't want to take any chances. And maybe they figured they could get me to talk."

A small number of buildings were coming into view, and Mal knew Jayne was likely to clam up as soon as he got off the horse. "I'm guessing the guy you burned was Brad Tanner."

"Yeah. You saw the scar. Wes 'pparently put him out 'fore he could go up like a candle."

"No wonder they hate you."

"Riv says time heals all wounds, 'cept I figure maybe she's wrong here." He took a deep breath, feeling the cold air filling his lungs. "Anyways, between us we managed to kill the others, and Indigo gave me their guns, put me on a transport and told me to not come back."

For the time it took them to reach the rough fence around the property Mal was silent, wondering again at the alterations that that been wrought in the man next to him. Truth was, if he hadn't changed, Mal was sure he'd probably have had to put a bullet in him himself. Finally he said, "Yeah, well, I guess it's all in the past."

If Jayne could have sighed any deeper it would probably have rattled the mountains. "Mal, I'd'a thought the same, but here we are."

Mal pulled up his horse. "Jayne, you say the word and we go. Right now. Turn around and head back to town. Hank'll have Serenity warmed over and we can be gone 'fore the sun goes down."

Jayne's chin dropped to his chest, and he seemed to be seriously considering the offer, then he shook his head. "Nah." He looked at his captain. "Indigo saved my life more times'n I wanna count. If I can't find out who killed him ... well, I weren't his friend."

"Okay." Mal kicked his heels gently into the flanks of his mount. "Then maybe we should be getting on with it."

"Yeah." Jayne spurred his horse into a walk. "And ... thanks, Mal."

"For what?"

"Just ... thanks."

"Yeah, well ..." Mal nodded forwards. "Looks like someone's home."

In front of them, at the door to the small farmhouse, a woman had come out to see who the visitors were, her arm above her head to shield her eyes from the watery autumn sunshine.

"Mallory," Jayne said quietly. "Mal, you wanna ..." He turned in the saddle to glance at his captain.

"You want me to stay outside?"

"For a while. It's been a long gorram time since I saw Mallory, and if she's on her own out here ..." The big man's voice died away.

"It's okay. I understand." Mal dismounted, tying his horse to the fencepost. "Shout if you want me."

Jayne almost smiled. "Yeah." Urging his horse towards the small farmhouse, he kept his hands well away from the weapons at his waist.

The woman had taken a step back, her hands clasped in front of her now, what looked like a tea towel pressed against her breasts. Then her expression changed. Her mouth opened, closed, then she finally managed to get out, "Jayne?"

He nodded, swinging his leg over the horse's head and dropping to the ground. "Hey, Mallory."

"It's been a long time."

"Could say that," Jayne said, chuckling a little as he studied her.

She was pretty much as he remembered, although her long blonde hair was caught up in a messy bun, a mass of loose curls around her ears. As he stepped forward, though, he could see fine lines at the corner of her eyes, and her figure was sleeker, less buxom than before. Still, it had been years, more'n a decade since they'd last spoken, and he was sure he'd changed too.

"What the diyu are you doing here?" she asked, her eyes narrowing.

"Aw, come on. You know why."

"He wouldn't want you here."

"Yeah, well, that ain't up to him. Not no more."

"And you're still an idiot."

He shrugged, a wry smile gracing his strong features. "Maybe I ain't changed as much as I thought." He looked past her into the dark rectangle of the doorway. "So ... you gonna make me stand out here? Or are you gonna be hospitable?"

"I don't think we've got anything to say to each other, do you?"

"You might not. But I got a few questions."

She glared at him, but he could see the moment she gave in. "Fine. I guess I could make you some coffee." She looked past him, towards Mal. "Your friend want to come in?"

"No. He'll stay outside."

"Long as you're sure."

"I'm sure."

"Come inside then."

Jayne glanced at Mal, who nodded faintly, then strode past her to the open doorway as if she might change her mind at any moment. Ducking his head slightly to get under the low lintel, his tracker's nose picked up the scent of washing soap, flowers, a hint of slightly stale perfume and a brief undertone of fresh bread.

She stepped inside after him, but left the door open.

"You can close it. I won't bite," Jayne said softly.

"Nope, I don't think I will."

"You don't trust me?"

"Not one little bit."

"I guess that's about right," he said ruefully.

She glared at him. "Jayne, it's been a hell of a long time. And you weren't exactly law abiding last time I saw you."

"No, I guess not. But I ain't gonna attack you."

"Don't take offence, but I'm not in the mood to take your word for it. And if the door's open least if you take it into your mind to try, your man out there'd stop you."

"You think?"

"He looks an honourable sort."

"Mallory, you ain't exactly the best judge of character," Jayne pointed out. "Look at Indigo. Look at me."

"Which is why I'm leaving the door open."

"Understood." He glanced around the small room. "Nice place."

"It's home."

"Have to say, girl, it ain't like I imagined."

"Yeah, well, times change."

He nodded, studying his surroundings now his eyes had adjusted. About the size of the kitchen on Serenity, this appeared to be the main living area. A big iron range dominated the back wall, a couple of high backed chairs either side, while an old table sat dead centre of the room, still holding the remains of a breakfast set for two. But what could have been something austere was livened by bright rugs on the wooden floor, and a chest of drawers against the right hand wall was covered with captures, small figurines and a jug of late summer flowers. Even the large stone sink under the front window had half a dozen small pots of herbs waiting for use on the sill.

"So ... what you been doing with yourself?" he asked, anything to fill the silence.

"Living. Just about."

"At least you got out of the business."

Her eyebrow arched. "Did I?"

"Hell of a long way for a feller to come if he wanted some female company, 'specially with Addie's still open in town. No offence, Mallory, but you ain't exactly in the first flush to be that much in demand."

She stared at him, then dissolved into laughter. "Gorram you, Jayne. Always did call a spade a spade."

"Never did see the need to be any different."

"No, I suppose you didn't." She backed up towards the sink. "But you're right. I got out. Truth is, I got married, Jayne."

"That's good," he said approvingly. "Who to?"

"Terry Malloy."

"Malloy. Malloy." His eyebrows drew together as he pondered the past. "I seem to recall a feller by that name worked in the livery stable."

"Yeah. That's him."

He couldn't resist taking a small dig. "So you're Mallory Malloy?"

"Now don't you start that, Jayne Cobb. I wasn't thinking on what name I was gonna end up with when I married him."

He acknowledged the truth of the matter by the slightest of shrugs. "Why did yah?"

"He asked." Mallory spoke simply, as if it was obvious.

"So he's ... what, out hunting?"

"Huh?"

Jayne nodded towards the table. "Two for breakfast?"

"Oh. No. That's my ..." She stopped. "Jayne, why are you here?"

"Indigo." Now it was his turn to sound like the answer was obvious.

"There's nothing to tell. I'm sure Addie gave you everything you needed."

Jayne wondered at the slight bitterness in her voice when she spoke of the older woman, but decided to ignore it, at least for the moment. "Not everything. Not why someone decided to shoot him in the back. Or who."

"Indigo ... upset a lot of folks over the years. He should never've come back to Cason's Point. Then there wouldn't have been a problem. But as to who shot him ... why should I know?"

"Because it ain't that big a place."

"And nobody talks."

"Addie did."

"And she sent you here." She laughed again, but this time it was a brittle sound like ice cracking. "That woman needs to keep her opinions to herself."

Jayne's eyebrows rose a hair. "You and her used to be friends."

"That was a long time ago as well." She busied herself stacking the plates and bowls on the table.

"Mallory ... I need to know what happened."

"I told you – I've got nothing to say." She carried them to the sink, dropping them into the water and ignoring the splash of suds onto her dress.

"I think there is. Addie said he'd been here. That morning."

She span on her heel to glare at him. "That's right. He was. All night. That what you wanted to hear?"

"I'm not your keeper –"

"No, you're not," she spat.

"But I thought we were friends too."

"Friends?" She pushed at her hair with the back of her hand as if to move it out of her face. "Friends? Jayne, you paid me to sleep with you."

He felt a flash of anger but held it in check. "I never heard you complain."

"Do you think I would've? I was a whore! Whores don't complain. They open their legs, hope it's over soon and say thank you after."

He growled, low in his throat, then saw her complexion pale. Closing his eyes briefly, he nodded slowly. "Yeah. You're right. I've got no call on you. I paid for everything I ever took." He reached into his pocket and withdrew two coins. "So here. Payment. You tell me what happened to Indigo."

"That's all you care about."

The laugh came out as a grunt. "Hell, Mallory, I wouldn't be on this forsaken planet otherwise."

She stared, then as if her strings were cut she dropped into one of the chairs at the table. "You're right." She shook her head. "You're right. You didn't belong here, and you left. And I shouldn't be angry at you, not when it's ..." Her voice faded away.

"When it's Indigo you're really mad at?"

She swallowed. "Maybe you ain't as stupid as you used to be."

"Nah. Pretty much the same." He sat down slowly opposite her. "So, you wanna tell me?"

"Indigo?"

"I figure there's more'n just him over the last twelve years, but ... let's start with him."

"It's what you paid for." She picked up the two coins, turning them over in her palm, rubbing them together as if they might magically procreate. Then she tossed them back to Jayne. "Keep 'em."

"Mallory ..."

"There's nothing to tell. Honestly. Indigo came out here once in a while when he was here, but that was it. Just being friends. And I don't know who shot him. I wasn't there."

"Don't you have any idea?"

"Sure. I could give you half a dozen names, but I'm guessing they've pretty much all occurred to you."

"Saw the Tanners in town."

"Yeah, well, that's two. Three if you count Medea."

"I'd kinda hoped she was dead," Jayne admitted.

"It's gonna take a lot to lay her six feet under." Mallory laughed. "And don't think I haven't pondered it."

"So she hasn't softened over the years?"

"Nope. If anything she's got worse."

"Is that possible?"

"Wouldn't've thought so, but she's so sharp and hard I'm surprised she hasn't cut herself to ribbons."

"You think she was behind Indigo's death?"

"I –" Whatever she was about to say was interrupted as Mal's voice carried through the open door.

"Uh, Jayne?"

"What?" the big man yelled back.

"I ... uh ... need some help here."

"Why?" Jayne called, but got no answer. He glanced at Mallory, who shrugged. Withholding the sigh he stood up and crossed to the threshold to look out, then chuckled out loud.

"It ain't funny, Jayne," Mal complained.

"You gotta admit, if it were the other way round you'd be pissing yourself laughing." He crossed his arms. "Just let me enjoy it for a while."

Mal was standing next to his horse with his back to the fence, hands up at shoulder level, staring down the barrel of a rifle. Held by a kid. "Jayne ..."

The ex-merc recognised the threatening tone, seeing the septic vat looming disgustingly large in his future, and said over his shoulder, "Mallory, I think you need to deal with this."

The boy, not more than ten or so, the weapon almost bigger than he was, glanced over towards the house. "Ma?" he called, his voice high, scared. "You okay?"

"It's okay, Josh." Mallory hurried outside.

"Only you left the door open."

"I know."

"And this feller's got a gun."

"Josh, honestly. Put the rifle down." She closed the distance to him, putting her hand on his shoulder.

"You sure?"

"I'm sure."

The boy, Josh, lowered the rifle, but his blue eyes never left Mal.

"Yours?" Jayne asked quietly.

"This is my son. Joshua." She looked proud, and Jayne felt a frisson of unease trickle down his spine.

"And ... uh ... how old is ..." He couldn't quite finish.

"Don't worry. He's not yours."

Josh shot the big man a glare so fiery Jayne was surprised he didn't burst into flames. "My dad's dead," the boy said. "Buried in the town cemetery."

Mal put his hands down. "Sorry, son."

The gaze turned on him instead. "Not your son."

"Nope, you're not. My boy's a mite younger than you, but he's protected his own Ma in the past."

The glare flickered. "He has?"

"That he has. His name's Ethan. Him and his sister ... we all live on my boat."

"You've got a ship?" The blue eyes had widened.

"She's called Serenity."

"What kind?"

"A Firefly."

"And you've got a crew?"

"Yeah. This big ape here's one of 'em." Mal smiled.

Josh giggled, stifling it quickly as it wasn't a manly thing to do.

Jayne couldn't help but be in awe. Mal had always been like this, able to talk with Core-bred and Rim folk alike, if the fancy took him. Still, seeing it work with a kid close up ...

"Josh, I need some water," Mallory said softly.

Her son dragged his attention away from the interesting stranger. "Ma?"

"Water."

"Ma, I think maybe I should stick around –"

"Joshua."

"Sorry, Ma." He ran to pick up a bucket from the stack by the front door, his gait slightly ungainly as if he'd put on a spurt of growth but still hadn't got his extra height under control. The rifle he propped carefully against the wall before heading down a beaten track past the house.

"His Pa?" Jayne asked quietly.

"Terry ... he got himself killed." Mallory brushed her hands down her dress.

"Except Terry wasn't his father."

Mallory glanced towards where Josh had disappeared. "A'course he was."

"Nah. Far as I recall, Terry was dark." He glanced at Mal. "Dark as Zoe," he added. "There's no way he'd've had a kid that pale. And those blue eyes ..."

Mal stirred uneasily. "Jayne, are you suggesting –"

"Not suggesting a gorram thing." Maybe, if he was older than he looked ... He looked at Mallory. "I ain't gonna hold anything against you if you found some man to keep you warm when your husband couldn't."

She shook her head, a strand of hair falling down to her shoulders. "It ain't like that."

"No?"

"I told you, he's not yours, Jayne. He's only nine. You do the math."

The math. Had to be the one subject he was crap at. Okay, maybe not the only, but ... Jayne, shut up and do the math, he berated himself, trying to concentrate. So ... Josh was nine, which meant even if his birthday was coming up to be ten next week then that meant ... that meant ...

Mal sighed. "Jayne, you were already on board Serenity by the time Josh was born."

"And the last time I saw Mallory was ..." He nodded, relieved at the same time as very slightly disappointed.

Mallory crossed her arms. "See?"

"Yeah." He gazed at her. "And when did you marry Terry?"

"Maybe you ain't as stupid as you look." Mallory shook her head. "I ain't nothing, Jayne. Just a whore. I was lucky Terry wanted me, otherwise I'd still be spreading 'em in some back room somewhere. But you know the funny thing? I think maybe he did love me. Oh, he thought it'd be fun to have a whore on tap, all the tricks he figured I knew, but I think he did love me. And Josh, too."

"'Cept Josh wasn't his."

"No. He knew I was already pregnant, but he still took us both on."

"And Josh's father? Wasn't he wanting his son?"

"Troy died."

For a second Jayne thought he'd misheard, then he blinked. "Troy Tanner? Troy Tanner's Josh's dad?"

Mallory blushed. "What if he was?"

"Was?" For a plain, straightforward man he was a damn good tracker, and this was like pouncing on a slightly bent grass stem. "Was, Mallory?"

The blush deepened until it flamed across her face. "Was. Yes. He's dead too."

"Another one."

"Jayne." Mal's voice was warning, but neither listened to him.

"How'd that happen?" Jayne asked.

"An accident." Mallory went to lean on the corral, staring at her reddened hands. "He went riding one day, didn't come back. His brothers went out to look, found him near the old Alliance camp. They said it looked like he was thrown from his horse, broke his neck."

"How long had you been with him?"

"I wasn't with him." She turned, her back against the crossbar. "Not the way you mean. He set me up in a room at Addie's, kept me just for himself. Shit, I wasn't going to complain. I actually had nights to myself, and he was ... he was okay." She rubbed at her face. "Better'n his brothers."

"That wouldn't be hard."

"I told him I was expecting just a week before he died."

Standing back, Mal let the conversation continue, not interfering. If anything, he was fascinated by Jayne's attitude. In a few short years the man had changed from a killer with no more sense of propriety or honour than the guns he carried, into someone who actually cared on occasion about other people. Not often, and it was mostly the work of a ninety pound woman who'd dug so deep below the surface that his shell could never heal over again, but just once in a while Mal could see the man Jayne would have become if he hadn't killed his father's murderer when he was fifteen.

"What did he say?" Jayne asked, surprisingly gently.

"He was pleased." She put her head back and stared into the cool blue sky. "Started talking about maybe we should get hitched. I told him, don't be stupid. His Ma would never allow it. She'd kill him before she'd ever let him get tied to a whore. He wasn't going to leave it alone, even told Medea."

"I bet she was pleased as punch."

"According to Troy he thought she was going to have a heart attack." She sighed then looked back at him. "Week later he died, and I was on my own again, knocked up and not knowing what the hell to do. When Terry asked me to marry him, it was like a lifeline."

"And Medea didn't try and take Josh off you?"

"I'd've killed her if she had." She stood straighter. "The truth is she doesn't want to know. When Terry died she paid for this place, but that's it. She made it more'n plain that it was on condition I never made a claim on the Tanner estate. She doesn't even talk to us when we meet on the street."

"And Josh thinks Terry was his Pa."

"He was my husband. And for all his faults he was good to Josh."

"He's gonna ask. One day. Ask how come he don't look like the pictures."

Her chin stuck out in the way he remembered. "I don't have any."

Jayne exhaled loudly. "Mallory, I know you won't believe me, but you should tell him. If Josh loved him he won't care if they're not blood."

Fire flashed in her eyes. "I think I know my son better than you, Jayne."

"Guess you do." He paused a second. "When did he die? Terry, I mean."

"Three years ago. Left us with nothing. We didn't have any choice but accept Medea's offer."

"How did it happen?"

"He ... got shot."

"Lot of that about."

"After a poker game. Someone thought he'd been cheating."

"Was he?"

"Probably. He thought he was better than he was." She took a hesitant step towards him. "Just ... don't tell Josh about Troy. It won't do him any good."

"Mallory ..." Jayne could see she was adamant about it, and ... well, it wasn't any of his affair, not really. "Sure. Won't say a word."

"Thanks." She nodded gratefully, then plastered a smile on her face as Josh came back around the corner.

"Got it, Ma," he said, struggling with a full pail of water.

"Good boy," she said absently. "Take it into the kitchen, will you?"

"Sure thing, Ma." He disappeared inside the house.

"You gotta get water from the well?" Jayne asked, surprised.

Mallory shrugged. "The pump went last week, and it's gonna cost more'n I've got to spare to fix right now."

"That ain't right."

"It's fine."

"No, it ain't." He walked towards her. "You know, the mechanic on our boat's pretty gorram good. Maybe I can ask her to come and take a look, maybe fix it for you."

Once again Mallory's face tightened up. "Jayne, none of this is to do with you. Me and Josh, we're getting along okay. You don't need to be involved. Go on back to your ship and don't think on us anymore."

His blue eyes hardened even as he chuckled. "Mallory, I wasn't thinking about you at all. Not until I found out about Indigo."

"And you've done what you think is your duty. That's shiny. Thanks. Now go."

"Mallory –"

"Shit, Jayne! I don't need you or your pity!"

The big man gazed at her, then nodded. "Yeah. You're right. I don't owe you a damn thing."

Mal stirred uneasily. "Jayne ..."

"Don't sweat it, Cap." Jayne shook his head. "I guess I was trying too hard. Just wanting to help a friend." He turned away, striding for his horse. "Why don't you ask Medea for some cashey-money to mend the pump? It ain't like she's not got some spare lying around."

"I'm not going cap in hand to that harpy," Mallory snapped back. "I don't want charity!"

"Oddly enough, I wasn't offering it." He swung up into the saddle. "Just a helping hand to someone I used to know." Digging his heels into his mount's sides, he pulled on the reins. "Bye, Mallory." He galloped through the gates, mud kicking up from the horse's hooves.

Mal was slower, taking his time, giving Mallory space to gather her wits. As he arranged the leather straps in his hands, feeling them sit naturally into grooves that had been worn when he was young, he looked over at her. "I'll ask Kaylee to stop by, see if she can't get that pump of yours going again."

"You don't have to do that." She smoothed her dress down over her thighs.

"I know. And if it smacks of charity, think of it as me not wanting Josh there to be carrying buckets of water in the dark." He nodded towards the young boy standing in the doorway before wheeling his horse around and following his ex-merc.

"Ma?" Josh ran out into the cold air to his mother, wrapping his arms around her.

Mallory glanced down into his face, seeing Troy's features staring back at her, then shook her head. "I don't know, bao bao," she admitted, holding him tightly. "I just don't know."

Up in the hills above, hidden among the scrubby bushes and leafless trees, light glinted from the sight of a high powered rifle, focussed unerringly on the small house.