Curate, connect, and discover
1,040 words Summary: Cowboy!Schlatt x original character. Dollie gets an unexpected guest in her saloon. A/N: Brain worms got me. 😔✊
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Divider: elleisdesigning
“Nobody seemed to know where John called home
He just drifted into town and stayed all alone
He didn't say much, he kinda quiet and shy
And if you spoke at all, he just said, "Hi" to Big John"
“Big Bad John” by Jimmy Dean
In the old town of Ghostridge, Georgia, nothing ever really happened for someone like Dollie Sheppard. She ran the town's saloon after her grandfather died. Most of her days were spent pouring drinks and dealing with the occasional rowdy drunkard. Folks passed through her saloon all the time telling stories about outlaws, shootouts, and menacing figures that haunted the West like ghosts. But in the quiet town of Ghostridge, Dollie didn’t witness any of that herself.
There was one outlaw in particular that Dollie heard the name of a lot: Jonathan Schlatt. Most folks called him “Big Bad John.” He was the kind of legend that made men shiver and women clutch their children a little tighter.
They say he comes into town dressed in all black, his gun visible at his side. Some even claim he’s killed several people, but no one ever says the same number - it’s always either two, five, or even thirty.
Dollie doesn’t believe in fairytales, and sure as hell doesn’t believe in ghost stories. Hell, she’s not sure “Big Bad John” even exists. Folks come into her saloon spouting phony make-believe over a glass of whiskey all the time.
That was, until he walked right into her saloon.
One moment, she’s standing behind the bar, polishing glasses while making small talk with Ol’ Charlie. The next, the doors to her saloon fly open and a man scrambles in, his eyes wide and full of terror.
“It’s him! It’s Big Bad John!” the man shouts.
Panic spread through the saloon like wildfire. Chairs scrape against the floor as men try to hide under tables. A few darted for the exit, practically tripping over themselves in their haste. The only ones who didn’t move were Dollie and Charlie.
Dollie scoffed, arms crossed over her chest. “Y’all really believe that nonsense?” she asks.
No one said a word.
Then, she heard it. Heavy boots against the wooden planks of the saloon floor. Slow. Deliberate. The kind of footsteps that belonged to a man who wasn’t in a rush, because he didn’t need to be.
Dollie lifted her gaze as the man entered her saloon.
He was tall, at least a foot taller than her, and built like a man who’d spent his years taming the land rather than letting it tame him. Dressed in dark jeans, a belt with a large silver buckle, and a maroon button-up beneath a black vest, he carried himself with the kind of ease that only came with experience. A long black leather coat hung from his shoulders, dust clinging to the edges like he’d ridden through hell and back to get here. A black cowboy hat cast a shadow over his face, but when he stepped fully into the light, Dollie caught sight of sharp brown eyes and neatly trimmed mutton chops.
Something about his demeanor makes Dollie freeze for a moment. Was this actually Big Bad John? He looked dangerous. But not in the way people had described. He wasn’t the monster they had painted in their stories - he was something else entirely.
She stood behind the bar, watching him closely as he made his way to the bar and sat down. He reaches for his hat, taking it off and setting it on the counter.
“What can I get for ya?” Dollie asks.
The man looks up at Dollie. She feels captivated by his good looks.
“Whiskey, neat,” he says.
“Coming right up,” she says, reaching for a glass and pouring the man a whiskey. She slides the glass across the counter to him. “There you are. Enjoy.” She smiles at him.
Dollie goes back to polishing glasses and speaking to Charlie. Slowly, the other saloon patrons go back to whatever they were doing before this mysterious cowboy entered the saloon.
“Can I get another?” The cowboy asks.
Dollie pours him another. “So, cowboy, where ya from?” she asks.
“All over,” he says.
Dollie nods, not pressing. “And your name?” she asks.
“That a habit of yours? Getting to know every man who walks through that door?”
Dollie looks him in the eye. “Just want to get to know who’s sitting in my saloon,” she says.
“Your saloon?” he asks. “You run this place?”
“Indeed, I do,” she says. “Now, are you going to tell me your name or what?”
He takes a long sip of his whiskey. “Jonathan Schlatt,” he says. “But most call me John.”
“Like Big Bad John?” Charlie pipes up.
John chuckles. “Yes, like Big Bad John - if that's what they're calling me,” he says.
“Well, welcome to my saloon,” Dollie says. “If you don’t mind me saying, you don’t seem so big and bad to me.”
John chuckles. “Is that so?”
“If I believed all the stories, I’d be shaking in my boots right now,” Dollie says. “But you’re just another man looking for a drink, huh?”
John lets out a low chuckle. “Maybe. Or maybe I’m just waiting for the right time to prove ‘em right.”
Dollie doesn’t flinch. “If you were going to prove ‘em right, I figured you would’ve done it by now.”
John smiles. “Smart lady.”
Charlie let out a laugh. “I like this one, Dollie. Seems like he’s got some sense.”
John tipped his glass toward the man. “I try.”
Dollie leaned forward, placing her elbows on the bar. “So, tell me, John. How does a man get a reputation like yours?”
John exhales. “People like to talk. Sometimes a story is better than the truth.”
She considers this. “I get that,” she says.
The three of them - Dollie, John, and Charlie - talk until Dollie closes the saloon. Charlie eventually heads out, but John stays.
“So, where can a man get a place to sleep around here?” he asks.
“Well, there is an inn down the road, but they may not let you in. Not too many folks like ‘Big Bad John’ around here,” she chuckles.
John chuckles as well. “I guess that’s true.”
The two are quiet for a moment before Dollie gets an idea.
“You know,” she says. “You could stay here. I live above the saloon. There’s a spare room.”
“That would be nice,” John says.
“Alright, follow me, then,” Dollie says before leading John upstairs.
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