Wraiths of the Broken Land (28 page)

Read Wraiths of the Broken Land Online

Authors: S. Craig Zahler

Darkness expanded.

Water splashed.

“This pond’s cold as hell!”

“My nuts feel like acorns.”

“Mine feel like roulette balls—the metal kind.”

“I just killed some mighty handsome sperm.”

Sitting upon a twilit green hillock, Brent Plugford lowered the letter that he held in his hands and surveyed his cowboy outfit. Fat Jim (who was no longer heavy), Isaac Isaacs, Kenneth Wyler, Paul Caselli, Gramps Johnson, Otis Brown, Dummy II, Chester Bradington, Gregory Tappert, Derrick Selva and Dummy III stood within the shallows of a gully pond—a congregation of pale chests and tan appendages. The shivering men walked upon and sank into their own bright reflections.

Brent looked up at the grass plain that surrounded the dell and saw that the herded beeves were calmly grazing. Riding perimeter around the twelve hundred cattle were tiny dots that the foreman recognized as Apache, the Hall brothers, Orton Walderman, Little Brent, Leonard Cane and Kerry O’Boyle.

“Boss!” yelled Fat Jim.

Brent looked down at the pond. “Yeah?”

Fat Jim’s freckled head swiveled upon its mirror image, and his two mouths asked, “You gonna come in?”

“How’s the water?”

“Damp.”

“I was inquirin’ after the temperature,” said Brent. “The discussion seemed to indicate it was cold.”

Fat Jim’s mouths said, “You’ll shiver ten times and get used to it.”

“That sounds cold.”

“Better than twenty shivers.”

Isaac Isaacs declared, “It’s pleasant.” He rose from the water and the diagonal scars that the bear had given him last winter glowed red upon his chest. “Fat Jim thinks everything’s cold since he lost his blubber. Come on in.”

“I’ll join you after I’m done perusin’ my letter,” stated Brent. “I’ve gotta post it tomorrow in Kansas, and it’s gotta be written out proper correct.”

“Get a new author.”

Three cowboys splashed Isaac Isaacs.

“Who’s that letter to?” inquired Fat Jim.

“My sister.”

“The pretty cancan dancer who won’t go with no cowboys?”

“The other one,” responded Brent. “She went and got herself engaged.”

“Well tell her James M. Lyle said congratulations.” Embarrassed, Fat Jim covered up his bare nether region. “Don’t tell her I said it naked.”

“Put that in the appendix.”

Five cowboys splashed Isaac Isaacs.

“Leave me alone for a bit,” the foreman said, “the light’s startin’ to dwindle and I need to peruse.”

The wet men returned to their bathing and horseplay.

Brent scooted his buttocks across the hillock and stopped the moment that a beam of golden twilight illuminated the letter. His pupils narrowed, and he read.

Deer Yvette,

I hope youre happy out there in San Fransisco.

I was back home in Shoulderstone and got the news from Pa and Stevie and Patch Up that youre engaged to marry
that
Samuel C. Upfeeld the forth. I want to
say
write to you and give you and him my congrachulations. While me and him did not get along so good that one time I visted its clear to me that he treats you nice and loves you and is relijus which is important to you and speaks reel good English which is also important to you. It was good and proper that he asked Pa if he could propose to you and I think Pa
does not hate him anymore
likes him better now.

I offen think about us Plugfords and how we aynt like most familees. I aynt sure why this is so, but maybe if ma had lived after she birthed Stevie, we would all be married and have us big families by now. Or maybe its konnected to what Pa did long ago before he was a family man. But this is who we are. I like riding all over the grate lanscape free and unkonnected and Dolores says no to every man that likes her ever since her feeansay left her and Stevie is wayword and I hope is gonna get fixed better tho I don’t know. I think its very good that you found a man who loves you and that you wanna have a familee with because I don’t know who else is gonna do it.

I hope that I can ride down and vist with you two before the wedding and I can bring you a good heifer if you need one. I promiss that I will make every effert to get along better with Samuel C. Upfeeld the forth since he will be familee and the father of my nefews and neeses before long. I hope he can forgive the stuff I said about him being like a girl and I won’t hold it against him that he called me
unejucated
uneducated. Him and me are diffrent types, but we both care a lot about you and need to get along so that you can be all the way happy, one hundred persent.

I look foward to youre wedding.

Sinseerly,

Youre brother Brent Lawrence Plugford

P.S. The part about the heifer was a joke. I know you aynt got room for no cow in youre apartment.

Brent folded the paper, placed it within an envelope that Patch Up had addressed to Yvette and slid the missive inside his saddlebag.

“C’mon in!” coaxed Fat Jim.

Although Brent hated cold water, he knew that he needed to wash off his sour accumulations before he rode into Kansas City to drop off the letter. “I’m comin’ down.” He grabbed the heel of his left boot and pulled.

Darkness expanded.

The face of John Lawrence Plugford wailed and coughed up blood.

Darkness receded.

“Wake up!”

A hand shook Brent’s right shoulder.

The recumbent cowboy opened his eyes, but could not see anything. “What’s occurred?” The wound upon the right side of his head throbbed audibly.

Stevie gulped a breath of air. “It’s started!”

Part IV
The Tacticians

Chapter I
Alongside Corpses

Brent Plugford leaned forward and surveyed the enclosure. Diffuse moonlight crept through the vertical openings and shone upon the extinguished lantern, the weaponry, Stevie and the sleeping women.

Sitting upon the edge of his bunk, the cowboy asked, “Where’re the others?”

“Coverin’ over…the last…torpedoes,” Stevie replied in-between gasps.

“Is Patch Up back?”

“Not yet.” Stevie sounded worried. “We heard shots. Distant.”

Brent landed upon his feet, felt the impact pull at his stitches and walked toward his sisters. “Dolores.”

Beneath the yellow blanket, the redheaded woman stirred.

“You hear me?” inquired Brent.

“Yeah.”

“Sit up. I’ve gotta get at Yvette.”

“Okay.” Dolores sat forward and revealed the narrow blue line that was her younger sister.

Brent leaned over and banged his head upon the upper bunk. Fiery pain exploded across his skull, and he clenched his jaw to keep from crying out.

“You okay?” asked Dolores.

Brent grunted, bent his knees, leaned over, adjusted the blanket, scooped up the collection of interconnected bones that was Yvette and looked at Stevie. “Open up the pris’ners’ cell.”

Instantly, the young man hastened to the west side of the north wall and pulled open a thick door. The cowboy carried his sister through the portal into a windowless chamber and set her upon a stone bench, which was directly beside four whistling air holes.

Outside, a distant gunshot cracked. Yvette’s eyelashes fluttered like the wings of tired butterflies.

“I put some chow in the cubby for if you get hungry,” said Brent.

“Lower the drapes,” mumbled Yvette.

Brent reached into his pocket, withdrew two pieces of cotton, plugged up Yvette’s ear canals and withdrew from the prisoners’ cell. The circus dog ran into the room, and the cowboy shut the door.

Two tall shadows hastened into the fort.

“Grab a repeater rifle and get beside your crenellation,” ordered Long Clay.

“Somebody’s gotta bring me mine,” Dolores said as she hobbled toward the eastern opening, through which half of the stone well was visible.

“I got yours,” replied Stevie.

“And some spare magazines.” The redheaded woman sat upon Patch Up’s three-legged cooking stool.

“I got ‘em.” Stevie claimed two repeater rifles and twelve cylinders from the table and hastened toward Dolores.

A distant gunshot popped and was succeeded by two sharp reports.

Brent and Nathaniel reached the table upon which laid the firearms.

“You know how to shoot?” inquired the cowboy, feeling stupid that he had not earlier asked this question.

“I went hunting with my father when I was a child.”

“Good. This gun’s like a huntin’ rifle, but quicker to reload—just fling the trigger guard to throw a new bullet into the chamber, and after you send eight shots, change magazines.” Brent pointed to the pile of loaded cylinders that were resting within the munitions box. “Get some extra.”

Nathaniel claimed a repeater rifle and one additional magazine.

“Take more than that,”

The dandy acquired three additional magazines and walked toward the western slit, through which a sliver of the moonlit cemetery was apparent.

Stevie strode to the easternmost slit in the south face. Against the middle of the same wall, Long Clay leaned two weapons—a telescopic rifle and a repeater. Holding firearms, additional ammunition and a wooden spyglass, Brent walked to the other side of the gunfighter.

“Don’t fire until I give the word,” announced Long Clay.

“Yessir,” said Steve.

“There any chance a stray bullet can set off a land torpedo?” asked Brent.

“Almost none. The plungers must be pressed directly down, and gunshots fly horizontally, diagonally and in long arcs.”

“Okay.”

Brent raised his spyglass and peered through his opening, over dirt that was pregnant with land torpedoes, beyond the perimeter trench and down at the woodlands that laid five miles south of the fort. The vast forested region was opaque.

Two distant gunshots echoed and were succeeded by five reports. The sounds were tiny and distant, like rocks falling on the far side of a mountain.

“Can you discern anything?” Brent asked Long Clay. “Pa said you could identify guns by their sounds.”

“The first two shots were from Patch Up’s rifle, and the other five shots were from three different revolvers.”

“They won’t get him,” proclaimed Stevie. “He’s smarter than any of them Mex’cans and is skilled.”

“We’ll know if we hear him fire again,” stated Long Clay.

The silence that followed the gunfighter’s remark was long and heavy.

Brent felt a drop of blood trickle from his suture, past a torn stitch, beyond the edge of his bandage and down his cheek. The lateral wound burned as if it had been treated with hot coals.

“Goddamn!” exclaimed Stevie. “What’s that nigger doin’?”

“I’ve told you not to call him that,” complained Dolores. “It ain’t nice.”

“I’m just…I’m just worried is all.”

“Still.”

Brent surveyed the opaque woodlands with his spyglass. A volley of gunshots flashed amongst the black trees—a halo of white fire.

The Plugfords and the dandy looked at Long Clay.

“Patch Up fired the first, eleventh and twelfth shots. The others were revolvers and a shotgun.”

Stevie asked, “Why don’t he ride back?”

“He’s probably pinned.”

Brent monitored the woodlands with his spyglass, and saw five white bursts of gunfire along the northern edge. “The fray’s comin’ towards us.”

“None of those were from Patch Up,” stated Long Clay. “He’s on the run or they put him down.”

“No,” said Dolores.

“He’ll make it,” proclaimed Stevie. “He’ll make it.”

Brent’s heart pounded as he scanned the northern edge of the woodlands, hoping that he would witness Patch Up emerge atop the fast black mare, but the perimeter remained still and quiet.

The silence was suffocating.

Upon the side of Brent’s head, the laceration throbbed audibly. “Where’s Deep Lakes?”

“Getting into position.”

The cowboy scanned the terrain for the Indian, but did not see him. At the northern edge of the woods, seven gunshots flashed.

“Three revolvers and a pump action shotgun. Patch Up did not fire.”

“Well they’re still shootin’ at him,” Brent said, “so he’s still alive.”

Gunshots flashed across the woodland perimeter like a line of firecrackers.

“Two shotguns, seven revolvers and two rifles. Patch Up did not fire.”

Brent saw a lone black fleck emerge from the northern edge of the forest and careen directly toward the fort. Hope fluttered like a bird’s soft wings within his chest. “I think I see Patch Up.”

“That’s him,” confirmed the gunfighter, who observed the tableau through the telescopic sight of his long-range rifle.

At the edge of the woodlands, white fire crackled.

“Is he out of range?” asked Brent. It looked like the major part of a mile separated the negro and his western pursuers.

“He’s beyond accurate revolver rounds and buckshot.”

The dot that was Patch Up astride the black mare sped north on the grasslands, toward the fort.

“Is anybody giving chase?” asked the dandy.

Brent observed the area where he had last seen gunfire. “I can’t descry nobody.”

Patch Up neared the weedy terrain that laid in-between the grasslands and the sere rise upon which sat the fort. A constellation of gunfire sparkled at the edge of the woods.

Brent panned his spyglass to the illuminated area and watched tiny black dots drip onto the grass. “Hell. He’s got a train.”

“How many pursuers?” asked the dandy.

The cowboy studied the fleas. “Looks like…nine.”

“Goddamn!” exclaimed Stevie.

“Now eleven.”

“Even worse!”

Dolores swatted her younger brother’s back. “That ain’t helpin’.”

“Neither is hittin’ me.”

Brent divined Patch Up from the weedy terrain, exactly halfway in-between the forest and the fort. The pudgy negro clung to the black mare’s neck, and bouncing pell-mell at his side was his rifle. “I can’t tell if he’s been hit. Can you?”

“I can’t,” said Long Clay.

A crackling constellation glimmered southwest of Patch Up, and a star glimmered upon his tabard. The black mare shook its head and flashed its tail, but did not slacken its pace.

“Where’s that goddamn Indian?” complained Stevie. “How come he ain’t goin’ red savage out there?”

The black mare galloped toward the edge of the weedy terrain.

“He’s more than halfway here,” announced Brent. “And his train’s falling behind.” During the prolonged beeline, the incredible speed of the black mare transpired.

“He’s gonna make it,” stated Stevie. “I told you all. I told you.”

Presently, the cleft moon emerged from the clouds and washed over the landscape, and Brent saw that Patch Up’s gray hair was dark with blood. The cowboy felt punched in the stomach. “He’s…he’s been hit.”

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