In 1876, Horony moved to
Fort Griffin, Texas, where in 1877 she met
Doc Holliday at John Shanssey's Saloon, where Holliday was dealing cards. According to his cousin and biographer Karen Holliday Tanner, Holliday considered Horony to be his intellectual equal, while she appreciated his refined manners. By this time, Horony had earned the nickname "Big Nose Kate". Horony was tough, stubborn, and with a temper that matched Holliday's.
Move to Dodge City The couple's departure from Fort Griffin was dramatic. A card game between Holliday and a local bully by the name of Ed Bailey, lead to a confrontation where Bailey kept sneaking a look at the
discards, something that was prohibited by the rules of Western Poker. This violation could force the offending player to forfeit the pot. Holliday warned Bailey twice but was ignored. Bailey did it a third time, but this time Holliday raked in the pot without showing his hand nor saying a word. Bailey immediately brought his revolver out from under the table. Before Bailey could fire Holliday pulled a knife and slashed the man across the stomach, killing him. Holliday maintained he acted in self-defense and was arrested and incarcerated in a local hotel room, there being no jail in the town. The killing incited some townsfolk to form a vigilante group to seek revenge on Holliday. Horony came to Holliday's aid by setting fire to an old shed to distract the mob. With the townsfolk redirected to fight the fire, Horony confronted the Deputy guarding Holliday with a gun and she and Holliday escaped into the night. After hiding out that night they headed to Dodge City, Kansas on stolen horses, arriving the next morning at Deacon Cox's Boarding House. The two registered as Dr. and Mrs. J.H. Holliday. Holliday opened a dental practice by day but spent most of his time gambling and drinking. The two fought regularly and sometimes violently, but made up after fights despite the volatile relationship. According to Horony, the couple later married in Valdosta, Georgia. They traveled to Trinidad, Colorado, and then to Las Vegas, New Mexico, where they lived for about two years. Holliday worked as a dentist by day and ran a saloon on Center Street by night. Horony also occasionally worked at a dance hall in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Cochise County Cowboy Bill Leonard, a former
watchmaker from New York City, was one of three men implicated in the robbery, and he and Holliday had become good friends. When Horony and Holliday had a fight, County Sheriff
Johnny Behan and Milt Joyce, a county supervisor and owner of the Oriental Saloon, decided to exploit the situation. Both were members of the Tombstone
Ten Percent Ring. Behan and Joyce plied Horony with alcohol and suggested to her a way to get even with Holliday. She signed an affidavit implicating Holliday in the murders and attempted robbery. Judge
Wells Spicer issued an
arrest warrant for Holliday. The Earps found witnesses who could attest to Holliday's whereabouts elsewhere at the time of the murders. Horony said that Behan and Joyce had influenced her to sign a document she didn't understand. With the Cowboy plot revealed, Judge Spicer freed Holliday. The district attorney threw out the charges, labeling them "ridiculous". After Holliday was released, he gave Horony money and put her on the stage. Horony returned to Globe for a time, but she returned to Tombstone in October of that year.
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral In a 1939 letter to her niece Lillian Rafferty, Horony claimed that she was in the Tombstone area with Holliday during the days before the shootout. According to Horony, she was with Holliday in Tucson, Arizona when they attended the
San Augustin Feast and Fair in Levin Park during October 1881. On October 20, 1881,
Morgan Earp rode to Tucson to request Holliday's assistance with dealing with
Cochise County Cowboys who had threatened to kill the Earps. She wrote that Holliday asked her to remain in Tucson for her safety, but she refused, and traveled with Holliday and Earp. Horony reminisced in the letter about her stay with Holliday at
C.S. Fly's Boarding House which bordered the alley where the
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral took place. Clanton's head was bandaged afterward. Virgil Earp had disarmed him earlier that day and told Ike he would leave Ike's confiscated rifle and revolver at the Grand Hotel, which was favored by cowboys when they were in town. Ike testified afterward that he had tried to buy a new revolver at Spangenberger's gun and hardware store on 4th Street but the owner saw Ike's bandaged head and refused to sell him one. Clanton was unarmed at the time of the shootout later that afternoon. == After the O.K. Corral and later life ==