Boon by Ed Kurtz (top 100 books to read .txt) ๐
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- Author: Ed Kurtz
Read book online ยซBoon by Ed Kurtz (top 100 books to read .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Ed Kurtz
Lefty and Paddy complained loudly about the smell but Willocks ignored their ire. And me, I watched the awful thing burn while I wondered who was crazier, Boon or Willocks?
Chapter Twenty-Two
In spite of myself, I slept hard when at last I hit the ground that night. Cold and hard as it was, an open sky does more for a manโs rest than a soft cot in a closed cell. The rain, never too strong to begin with, had let up considerably, though my hair and trousers and shirt were damp when I was kicked awake at dawn.
โGet up,โ Lefty growled at me.
I said, โMorninโ, Lefty.โ
Lefty sneered at me. I grinned. Then, a crackling pop echoed loudly over the flatland. Left turned his head slightly at the sound, just in time to catch a bullet in the throat. With the gunshot still rippling in the air, I could hear the round punch into and through his skin and windpipe, smash out through the other side in a red mist. Leftyโs eyes bulged and he grasped his throat with both hands, working his mouth like he wanted to say something, only no words were forthcoming. Red-black blood oozed between his dirty fingers. It looked like molasses.
โShit-fire,โ said one of the other deputies, a dark-faced lad no older than twenty-one. He had most of his teeth, but they were already gone black. โSomebody by God shot Lefty.โ
Lefty struggled for a breath heโd never take as he dropped first to his knees, then down to his side, still clutching at the jetting hole through his neck. The rest of the deputies scrambled for cover amongst the cottonwoods, though Tom Willocks stood stock-still in the middle of the copse, his arms limp at his sides, peering angrily into the distance.
โWhy donโt you get down,โ said the huge deputy, the brute who never spoke much.
Another shot cracked out, and a second later a cottonwood was hit in a shower of bark splinters. The shot missed the marshal by about a foot.
โFuckinโ Indians,โ said Blackmouth.
Willocks spit on the ground and rolled his shoulders.
โNo,โ he said. โItโs her.โ
To be truthful, the notion had not occurred to me. But damned if those werenโt the sweetest words Iโd heard in days. I just hoped he was right.
โFirst shot was lucky,โ said Blackmouth. โMissed the second, first was lucky. She canโt see shit.โ
He was growing hysterical, giggling and breathing hard like a snorting mustang.
Willocks went slowly and purposefully past the cooling firepit to a tree where heโd hung his belt on a low branch. He was quiet and stone-faced as he strapped it on, clumsy and fitful with his bandaged hand, a Smith & Wesson six-shooter bouncing against his leg in its holster as he secured the buckle. He then squatted down to retrieve a Springfield conversion rifle formerly belonging to Lefty. It was a .50-70 with a long, needle-gun firing pin that could most likely take down a buffalo with one good shot. He then went back to the edge of the clearing, the escarpment rising imperiously behind him and all of us, and went down on one knee to survey the broad horizon.
There came nickering from the remuda as the horses shifted about uneasily. Some horses got used to guns and others didnโt. I didnโt know which kind these were.
While Willocks watched and waited, I sat up and rubbed the sleep out of my eyes to watch along with him. The remaining three deputies squatted in the trees, uncertain. Lefty just kept bleeding out of his neck into the dust and dead, brown leaves. No one much seemed to mourn his passing.
The morning was cool and still. I looked for movement, signs of life, and I reckoned the marshal did, too. Who had the better eyes, I couldnโt say, though I never judged mine too poorly. But I did not see anything at all.
The morning chugged along slow, like a train trudging uphill towards a water station, getting hotter all the time and not a sound made by anyone or anyoneโs gun. Willocks moved from one knee to the other, stood for some while, then went down again. Now and again he tested his ability to hold the rifle backwards from the way he was accustomed to, his untried left forefinger brushing tentatively against the trigger. The men in the trees shuffled in the brush, some smoking here and there, checking their guns, sighing with frustration. Black ants had found Lefty before long; they came in two military columns and poked around the hole in his neck, filed into his mouth and nose. It was gruesome to look at, so I quit looking at it.
The sun got high, white as paper, and every man jack of us was getting to sweating in the gathering heat. Paddy pissed back in the trees and Blackmouth barked at him to stop splashing with his equipment all over the place. That seemed to be the last straw for the kid, who then leapt to his feet and hollered, โAll right! All right, God damn it!โ
โQuit your bellering,โ said Paddy.
โAll right,โ Blackmouth said again with a high giggle. He burst from the cover of the copse and bounded for the remuda, a single-action Army revolver gripped tight in his right hand.
Willocks said, โWhat in hell do you think youโre doing?โ
Paddy said, โScared crazy, thatโs what he is.โ
โAll by God right,โ Blackmouth said, swinging up into the saddle of the barrel-chested gray heโd ridden out of Revelation.
โGet your ass down and back to cover,โ the marshal scolded him.
The kid paid no mind. Rather, revolver still in hand, he took up the reins and put heels to haunches, and he spurred the gray out from the cottonwoods at a trot. He hallooed like a wild Indian and his hat blew back from his head, straining the cord against his neck as he gigged the horseโs withers again and again.
โAll right, do you hear me,โ he cried at the flatland, riding straight out
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