It rarely rains
here, but when it does the sky opens up over the mountains you see behind us
there. The downpour reaches like tendrils over the rock, and the clouds hang
low becoming cobwebs draped across the peaks. This is a forgotten place, tucked
like a macabre oasis in lonesome desert.
This is my home, but how I got here
is much more interesting.
To say that I had become
disenchanted with life would be an understatement. To describe how I felt would
be a tale already told by countless scoundrels, but one that is rarely
understood.
My days were filled with vicious
acts and I was surrounded by ill tempered men that would kill with little
provocation. I was a thief, a rustler and on more nights than I would like to
admit, I resorted to taking men’s lives as well.
At first these things were merely
methods by which survival was accomplished, or so I told myself. This was
necessary in order to deal with the darker days on which my conscious caught up
with my wandering mind. Contrary to popular belief most killers may be able to
justify their acts in the moment, but the images of the past live on in the
mind-in some cases more persistently than others.
For me it wasn’t one act that
forced me to face what I had become, it was their accumulation. I realized one day while staring into a campfire
that the evil in me had reached a level that was beyond justification. As my
campmates (other damned men like me lay sleeping) the fire told me a story
through its dancing embers.
Flickering waves of orange swirled
and through my drunkard’s stare I saw them recount what I had done. Faces began
to swirl in the fire, those that I had harmed. Gradually they changed, molding
themselves into others, upon which I had visited other crimes. There were no
angry faces as I bathed in that orange glow. To me they only looked meek, and I
thought I had reached my depths when my mind fell upon how cruel I was to take
advantage of them. By the end of all this, I was crouched, stupefied, likely
drooling. And I am thankful that none of the other men saw me in this state,
for it would’ve meant grave humiliation.
When the sun found us earlier than
we would’ve liked I made no mention of what I had been reminded of last night.
The men who didn’t care would’ve only shot me queer looks, and those that did
would tell me to not to partake in tonight’s share of the whiskey.
I felt different though. I had a
small shaving mirror that an uncle had given me but I couldn’t bring myself to
use it that morning. I feared that I might drag the razor across my own throat
at the sight of myself. It was as if the marrow had been steeped from my bones
and replaced with a tepid form of compunction. This unfamiliar inner chill had
taken hold of my heart with a cold palm and its icy fingers skittered towards
my brain.
I couldn’t even pretend to be
myself. All day on the trail I hung behind the others. I was never much of a
talker, and as such, my silence didn’t strike anyone in the party as unusual.
I thought about the people’s lives
I had taken, and in turn the lives that I had forever changed. I mourned for
them but I could only wonder what this revelation meant for me.
By the time the sun was done
beating down on us I had strayed from the bulk of the group by over a mile. As
the sun faded so did their silhouettes against the backdrop of the dusty
landscape. It was then that I knew what I’d do.
Mine had been a life of lawlessness
and thievery, immorality. It took many years for the guilt to catch up to me,
nesting irrevocably in my soul. I hadn’t had a change of heart; I was
experiencing a change of perspective. I
was going to go out on my terms and I was going to take some of these monsters
in arms I had once called friends with me.
I’ll set the record straight by
saying that I certainly wasn’t trying to do a few last good deeds to try and
buy my way into heaven. And beyond that even a religious dullard such as me
knew that assassinating men- even bad ones- wasn’t liable to scrawl a smile across
the face of God.
Night fell and we made camp about
20 miles south of Tucson. We’d be far enough away from town that the law
wouldn’t be able to interfere with my loosely laid plan.
There were seven of them and I knew
I needed to have the opportunity to perform two crucial tasks: hit and kill
every man with one shot, for I knew I would not have the chance to reload after
the dust had been kicked up. I had also realized I would have to take out one
of them silently without the use of a bullet.
Frank Harrison, the runt of the
group was first. I had seen him force himself on women, time after time during
raids within small towns and villages along the border. I had not assisted in
this travesty, but I had been silent. Now to me, these things were one in the
same.
I coaxed him away from camp telling
him I had a bottle of whiskey that I’d share with him on the sly. When Frank
neared a small clearing about a mile away from the camp, I was there standing
under the moonlight with a glass bottle that held only piss. I held it out and
when Frank’s hand reached forward, pulled it away, and I spoke to him.
“You won’t tell the others that I
been holdin’ out on em’?”
“Nah, not even. Mum’s the word,
just hand me some o’ that rye.”
He reached out again, and at the
same time I met him in a forward lunge. His right hand was busy grasping the
bottle, so my left hand locked onto that same wrist. My straight razor worked
in a quick arc slashing a ragged crimson smile across his throat. He belched
blood and fell forward, his body rolling away into the dark. I tossed the
piss-filled whiskey bottle towards where his body lay. I felt it a suitable
burial. With my blade deposited back into my breast pocket, I made my way back
to camp.
Five of the remaining men were
telling lies around the campfire, bragging about who was the most ruthless, or
who had committed superior acts of cruelty. There was one man missing. I looked
around, trying to see passed the gang’s immobile horses, gear and the smoky
glare from the group’s fire.
“Where’d Jimmy get off to?” I
asked.
The oldest man, who only went by
‘Murphy’ spoke up, “Went down the way to relieve himself I s’pse.” I saw an
image of Murphy from when we joined up. He had shot a Wells Fargo officer and
his wife at a train station in Laredo. The officer hadn’t even been on duty.
Murph’ had overheard him state his profession during a poker game at a saloon. He
had murdered him in cold blood the next morning.
Murphy didn’t point to whatever
direction he had left from. I stared long and low at the ground. Jimmy was the
only one I was worried about. He was quicker than me with a pistol and now had the
night on his side. I tried not to think about the fact that of the cretins I
had recently been running with, he also had a bit of intellect to him.
I drew my six shooter and pretended
to examine and give it a quick cleaning with my shirt.
Another man, Ken Kerns looked up
from the fire, he spit tobacco before speaking to me. I remembered him doing
that often. There was a night when he had forced a family of Indians into their
tent, and then set fire to their home. Each time one of them tried to rush out
to escape the flames, he’d shoot them. The last three got the message, refused
to take a step outside and were burned alive. “What’s eatin’ you anyhow?” Ken
had his pistol holstered. I had no doubt it was loaded.
Ken’s brother, Paul had often made
a living jumping claims. In one of these instances the owner had left his 14
year old son in charge while he went to town for supplies. Ken had robbed and
beaten the boy. And then made him to jump down the mine head first. His
prospector father had found him two days later, dead in the bottom of his own
mine. Ken joined in, “You, you’re looking all nervy. Like before a shoot out.”
Lem the youngest was cleaning his
rifle on a low sitting rock. He was new to the group and therefore eager to
handle any of the most unsavory acts. Rumor had it that he’d often scavenged
the victims of those we had killed or robbed. In one case he had stolen a
locket off a child. Inside there had been a picture of the girl’s folks. Lem
had ridden into town and under the premise of returning the locket, found them
and robbed them as well. He looked up, and studied me for a second before
saying, “You look like something’s on your mind.”
Bill Hamm, the man we looked to as leader was
reading from a book. He had perched himself in the crook of an old tree. “You
got an idea for our next job?” He spoke without looking up. His guns were
thrown haphazardly to one side.
Words that weren’t mine tumbled
from my mouth, “My own misery won’t let me rest but my newfound insanity won’t help
me sleep.”
The words were the definition of a
rant, but very nature of their strangeness caught my victims off guard. I spun
the cylinder of my revolver and time stopped. The moon hinted at the six
bullets that would soon leave the barrel. From the hip, I fired at Ken who was
closest. The shot hit him squarely between the eyes. His head slumped down
against his bedroll. It was the most peaceful death I reckon I have ever
witnessed.
A second later I was fully trained
on Lem. He died, with a bullet in the brain and his mouth hanging open. Shocked
at being murdered by a fellow rider. Someone he had considered a friend.
Murphy rolled over quickly, defying
his age. He had been a shark at cards. But even he had losing nights. Those
less stellar tales began with Murphy losing badly, only to meet the man who had
bested him outside of the saloon after the game. He had shot a few, and
reclaimed his money. He also had no qualms about keeping the gambler’s other
winnings as well. Murphy was able to grip his coach gun in both hands but his
aim was off because of old eyes.
Buckshot kissed the lower portion
of my left leg and I returned fire. He lay still, but the night didn’t reveal
where the bullet had hit him.
I staggered on a partially shredded
leg, but falling saved my life. Bill Hamm had reached his gun belt and had
fired both pistols without removing them from their holster.
Hastily, Bill had rolled too close
to the fire. I let another bullet loose. But because of my fall it was rushed
and ill timed. It missed Bill, while still serving a purpose. Reacting to the
wild shot Bill went to stand and unknowingly went shooting hand down, right
along with his pistol in the burning embers. He cursed as his skin sizzled,
dropping his one free gun in the flames.
In the raucous, Paul took a chance
and tried to grab me from behind as I struggled to stand. His bowie knife felt
cool against my throat, especially when weighed against the heat of the
campfire. I recalled how Paul had a fondness for whores. And stronger
proclivity for cutting on them with his favorite blade. I fired over my
shoulder and blew out my eardrum, as I blew out his brains. Ken’s body crumpled
in a heap, bringing up a cloud of dust.
Hobbling, I made my way to Bill, who was
nursing his hand and trying to find his gun belt in the chaos. He sifted
through the sand frantically, brushing past the book he had been reading. Until
today, I didn’t even know the man was literate. Bill was a man who never got
his hands dirty but had orchestrated every scheme we had carried out. We had
always done what he asked without hesitation. I fell on him. Straddling him, I
pushed my gun deep within the flesh of his temple. He whispered no, but this
time I didn’t listen.
“What in God’s name?” Jimmy came
hurdling towards the campsite, hitching his britches and drawing his gun.
“Well it’s a little late to bring
him into this now don’t ya think?” I was hot and tired, bleeding badly. Jimmy
looked newly sharpened, focused.
Jimmy gawked, taking in the scene.
“You did all this?” He cinched his pants, cocked his Colt, and aimed it at my
face all with the same hand, and all in one fluid motion.
I pointed as well, pulling the
trigger.
Click
Jimmy heard the sound. He showed me
a smile that was all black spaces and yellow teeth. He holstered his gun,
sauntering towards me as he did it.
“So before I let you die slow,”
Jimmy looked around again, seeing the bodies cast in orange firelight, “Just
what in the hell was all this about?”
I thought for a moment that I could
explain this to Jimmy, get my point across, and make him understand. I shook my
head not believing what was in my own head. I wasn’t even sure why I had gone
through with it, not entirely. That- plus, I wouldn’t have allowed myself to
get into a position where Jimmy, or any of these types could interpret my explanation
as begging for mercy.
When I didn’t answer, Jimmy
suggested, “Money?”
“You wouldn’t get it son.”
Jimmy approached me slowly,
studying. I felt him looking over the leg that Murphy’s buckshot had chewed up.
I saw him looking at my ruptured ear, I wondered if any telltale blood had
given it away.
“Jus’ tell me.” Jimmy’s voice had
taken on an eager, tinny tone.
“Ya Jimmy it was the money. Do what
needs to be done.” I held up my hands, not in surrender but in more of gesture
that demonstrated I don’t know.
The initial curiosity faded from
Jimmy’s timbre. He became angry, demanding. “Tell me or its goin’ to take you a
long time to die.”
I backed up; he pushed forward,
placing the barrel of his gun on my brow. “Tell me dammit!” he screamed in my
face. I was close enough to pick up his foul breath. I threw a punch to his
midsection which he absorbed. Jimmy then countered by easily sweeping my bad
leg out from under me. I hit the dirt, gasping on hot campfire air and desert
dust.
Jimmy knelt, shooting me a cold
glance. His eyes were storm clouds in the distance. Briefly, I toyed with the
idea that maybe Jimmy was carrying around some of the same demons I had
recently become acquainted with.
With as much speed as my battered
body could muster I tore free my straight razor.
I’ve had a lot of time to think
about it since then. In that moment I had thought that luck had been holding
that knife, fate had carried it into Jimmy’s neck. I am no longer so naïve.
Karma held that razor, and the devil used it to kill Jimmy.
At the expense of yet another life
I had still had breath. I musta looked
like a drunk after a long night at the saloon when I finally attempted to get
on my feet. The leg was likely worthless, if I made it to town, it would have
to be cut off. My ear throbbed and it was because of that, I didn’t hear Murphy
let loose with the second barrel of his coach gun.
Arms peeling back behind my body,
chest colliding with the gravel. These were the last things I felt. I didn’t
turn to see Murphy’s eyes. I had no idea if he were expressing glee or distaste
at having to kill me. More than likely he was just happy to have survived, even
if he had to play possum to do it.
Because I had been such a low man
in life, I crawled to my death much the same. I was able to pull myself to the
crook of Bill Hamm’s reading tree. I propped myself in the Y shaped hold. Life left me.
But I stayed.
One hundred and thirty one years
have passed since that night. I’ve been here ever since.
It took them about six weeks to
find the bodies. Some poor bastard was tasked with burying us. And a poorer one
still had to try and figure out what happened at that campfire.
So here I am at Sunset Cemetery,
confined to its rusty gates. My days I
am forced to see only the skeletons of ancient tombstones. Grave sites that have
been forgotten by even the most loyal of families. At night, the coyotes howl a
mournful tune. I don’t see anyone, not even the men that shed blood with me on that night long ago.
Here I am at Sunset Cemetery. I
know not of eternal rest, but I am no stranger to regret.
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