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Thanks to my wonderful betas: Mitzi & NotTasha Spoilers: Only for my fic Spectral Shadows. You might want to read it first. |
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The thick
heavy fog blanketed the air, leaving the pursued man in a quandary at
which way to run. The dampness clung like an oppressive burden.
The waterlogged droplets made it difficult for the much-needed oxygen to
enter the heaving lungs, and it also weighed down the dark coloured
woollen jacket as if it were a cloying sucker-like parasite. The
added weight of the garment sapped his strength further. Branches
reached out with their long and spindly limbs, snatching at the
desperate man as he raced blindly through the grove of trees.
Gnarled roots leapt from the ground, tripping him up at each lengthened
stride and drawing him to the ground in a tumble of bruising bones. The gambler
stumbled constantly, unable to see beyond the few paces of where he
placed his last step. He panted and gasped for breath. The
long strides of the galloping horse grew nearer and the reverberating
sounds echoed loudly in his ears. The Southerner stumbled
backwards, once again caught up in the forestry of hidden roots.
He groped for his sidearm, but instead came up empty-handed. Ezra
rolled onto his knees and fumbled around, scooping up large handfuls of
dirt in search of the missing weapon. The palms of his hands stung
as the stones and rocks brushed against the soft skin, but the weapon
was not anywhere within reach. And all the while, his tormentor
closed in. The hairs
stood on the back of his neck and his gut churned with unabashed fear.
Ezra trembled with uncertainly, shaking his head to clear the spell that
had cast him into displacement. He did the only option left to him
– Run! The steady
pounding of the horse’s hooves clipped on the gravel road, taunting
him with the close proximity, but allowing Standish to maintain an
insignificant lead. He climbed through the narrowest track, hoping
to forge a path that the rider would not follow, but every time he
peered over his shoulder, the ominous spectre and mount were still in
sight. A spark of
pain ripped through his shoulders sending a flash of light behind his
eyes before the Southerner pummelled forward. Losing his footing,
he tripped, landing spread-eagled on his stomach. With a grunt, he
rolled quickly and rose up on his elbows. The rider cut through
the thick fog and stopped at the edge of his vision, just long enough
for Standish to roll to the side and avoid the blade sharp hooves as the
horse was urged on to ride over the top of him. The gambler
bit down on his cheek as he slid down the embankment, almost
cartwheeling over the bruising rocks and shrubs and ending in a twisted
knot at the bottom. Ezra lay still, listening to his laboured
breaths and racing heartbeat. He hugged his body close to the
ground, hoping the fog completely covered him from the rider above. After being
chased for over an hour, his aching leg muscles cramped in the now
stationary position. The gambler could hear the horse toe at the
edge of the rise, waiting impatiently for its master to direct its next
moves. Standish vaguely wondered why the spectre waited, and why the
black-hooded nemesis hadn’t already finished him off. After all, this was the
third time the rider had tracked him down and cornered him. It
seemed to be some sort of perverted game of cat and mouse that he was
trapped in. Standish felt
around his hip and winced at the burning pain that radiated and
increased when he touched it. He felt the sticky mess on his pants
and curiously wondered how badly he was hurt – and when for that
matter. Ezra raised his hand in front of his face and winced at
the bloodstained hand. He needed to tend the wound soon, before he
lost too much blood. The
black-hooded rider and horse plunged down the slope, and all his
previous intentions of laying still and counting on the spectre to
overlook him, were drowned the instant the Southerner saw the bloodied
blade cut through the fog. The moon’s silver rays reflected off
the menacing weapon and a shudder of doom spirited him into action.
He scrambled back to his feet and ran, conscious of the small lead he
held over his attacker and how quickly it would be swallowed up.
The gambler ran on adrenalin alone, not daring to glance back over his
shoulder, for he knew the image that would greet him. Unable to see
a clear path, Standish slammed hard into an object, knocking himself and
the object to the ground, propelled by the force with which he’d hit
it. The Southerner grunted at the abrupt stop and the air was
forced from his lungs. He gulped audibly and rolled off the limp
figure beneath him. With unexpectedness, his eyes widened in
horror, recognising the familiarly haunting body of his dreams.
Ezra frantically scrambled off the corpse. When he did, the
body’s head rolled to the side, falling away from the main trunk of
the body. The gambler’s mouth fell open and he couldn’t take
his green eyes from the desecrated man. He felt the scream
bubbling at the back of his throat and Standish trembled violently.
Not again, he screamed! This can’t be happening again! He
closed his eyes hoping his imagination was playing tricks. When he
opened his eyes, the body still remained. No! This man is
dead! Or was? Wasn’t he? They buried him in the Four
Corners’ cemetery – and yet, here he was. “You’re dead,”
Standish croaked hoarsely. “You can’t be here!” he hissed
through clenched teeth, shaking his head. Ezra crawled backwards,
desperate to get away, but never for an instant leaving the corpse
unsighted, afraid of what would happen if he glanced away for a second.
He’d momentarily forgotten his black-hooded pursuer. His hands and
fingernails were caked in dirt and his own blood; his clothing was
practically in shreds. He kept pushing himself backwards until his
back was flush against a solid surface. Ezra reached behind and
felt the rough bark of a tree and a relieved sigh formed on his lips.
The heavy fog still milled about him, but it cut an open trail for him
to view the mutilated man. Why didn’t the fog close back around
the body? The question
remained unanswered as the whistling slice of the silver blade arced an
inch above his head and sank deeply into the flesh of the tree.
The stray hairs that had lay disturbed and ruffled became a statistic to
the weapon’s wrath. The gambler dove to his left and landed deep
in the brush of a small bush. It couldn’t hold his weight and
was crushed to the ground. Standish disentangled himself, ignoring
the numerous scratches and grazes he’d incurred and ran. The
Southerner tumbled more often, but unlike before, he no longer heard the
sounds of the horse, beating a path after him. He slowed his pace,
but refused to stop, listening intently to the midnight sounds.
The fog lifted a fraction, so he altered his course to account for this.
He climbed over the fallen log and stepped into the moonlit area. A harsh and
sadistic cackle greeted his arrival. Ezra
screamed, but no sound reverberated from his throat. He clutched
at his neck and fought to draw breath to utter a sound. Eyes wide
with fear, he swallowed the retching bile that rose. The rider
circled him, and the Southerner froze, paralysed on the spot. In
the spectre’s hands he held the decapitated head, holding it up by the
length of hair. The eyes of the head moved, staring intently at
the gambler as the rider continued his taunt, riding another loop around
him. The black-hooded tormenter swooped in closer and threw the
dismembered part to Ezra. Instinct took
over and Standish automatically reached out to catch the flying head.
When it landed neatly in his grasp, Ezra realised what he held and
dropped the object in disgust, letting loose the scream that had been
bottled up all night. The blade followed quickly and Standish
fell. The gambler
fell, landing hard on the wooden floor, tangled in his bedcovers.
He peeled his eyes open and with a heavy sigh, leaned against the side
of his mattress, steadying his breathing and racing heartbeat.
“Good Lord,” he panted wearily. **** The night
fires that lined the main street were beginning to shift as the hungry
flames ate through the mountain of wood. Sparks flickered and
embers spat into the dark recesses of the night. The burning
timber would not last the entire night, and sometime during the early
morning of the rising day, even the glowing coals would lose their
luminous sparkle. The muted glow of light flooded out from the
open doors of the saloon and onto the boardwalk, ending a short distance
onto the wide street. Slowly, one by one, even the lanterns in the
saloon were extinguished as the last patron departed, leaving the town
in quivering shadows. The soft
tread of leather soled boots skipped stealthily down the wide sidewalk.
Keeping an alert eye for trouble and light step, Vin Tanner strolled
intently and with purpose. He stood in front of the First National
Bank and cupped his hands on the cool glass window and peered inside.
His sharp blue eyes scanned the inner recesses of the institution, and a
dispassionate sigh left his lips at the ensuing empty building.
Tanner continued onto the next store. He rubbed at his cold and
cramping hands and elevated his height by a few inches to see over the
top of the half width curtain that covered the lower portion of the
window. Nothing moved inside, and the Texan moved on. The tracker
slowly checked each and every storefront in Four Corners, and the
burning sensation in the pit of his belly refused to settle.
He’d hardly slept in the three weeks since the haunting experience at
Chris’. And when he did succumb, he
slept so soundly that it terrified him, leaving him vulnerable in his
senseless state. Unaccustomed to sleeping so deeply, he found the
experience to be unsettling and he was ill at ease with the forced
change in habit. He found himself irritable and out of sorts, even
snapping at his friends for no apparent reason. He knew that he
was letting it get at him and needed to talk about his new fears, but
Chris and Ezra both seemed to be coping without any help and he
hesitated at bringing up the subject. Both his friends had been
hurt in the attack, and once they returned to town and explained to the
others what had happened, neither man had spoken of it since. The tracker
stumbled over a rut in the uneven road and he quickly spread his arms
wide to counter the sudden loss of balance. “Hell!” he cursed,
hissing between clamped teeth. He glanced over his left shoulder
and scanned the muted shadows for any witnesses, and a relieved sigh
dusted over his lips when he found the area empty. Damn, he
was so caught up in the nightmare that he wasn’t even paying attention
to where he was placing his feet. The sure-footed tracker
admonished himself, shaking his head in disgust. He realised that
it was only a minor incident, but he bit at his lip, worried, that in
the light of day when he was needed to protect the backs of his fellow
lawmen, that his mind would be wandering and not on the job. Maybe
he needed some time away, to clear his head and get back on track.
He did not want to be the cause of one of the seven being hurt. Vin ducked
down the narrow path along side of Virginia’s Hotel. The passage
was dark, but the light from the street fires led him directly to the
adjacent street. Tanner stood in the mouth of the alleyway for a
moment and checked to his right and then to his left. He stood
deathly still, waiting for any unnatural sounds and took a step out of
the shadows once he was satisfied. The light tap on his shoulder
caused the buckskinned man to whirl in a fluster, brandishing his
mare’s leg at his attacker. His eyes were wide with fury and his
finger pressed readily against the trigger. “Hold on
there, pard,” Larabee growled with a hint of a smile. “Hell,
Larabee! Ya aiming on going to an early grave?” Vin offered a
wry smile and tossed his head. He put away the weapon and felt his
cheeks begin to burn, knowing that Chris had been following him and
he’d not even noticed. “What ya doin’ sneaking around?” The man in
black widened his grin. “Could ask you the same thing.” “I’s
doin’ patrol,” Tanner replied in defence. “Uh huh,”
Chris nodded sceptically. “Buy ya a drink? Inez gave me
the key to the saloon,” he added, presumably to further convince his
friend to agree. Vin shifted
uncomfortably from one foot to the other. Yeah he could do with a
stiff drink right about now. “Sure.” **** Larabee
clapped the shorter man on the shoulder and walked along side the lanky
tracker to the saloon. The gunslinger was taken aback by the
Texan’s pallor. Hell, he hadn’t intended on scaring the man
half to death, just figured that seeing as how they were both still
burning the midnight oil, then they may as well have company.
Chris watched the tracker’s posture relax from the tense hold he’d
been exerting over himself and wondered if Vin’s stalking the streets
had anything to do with the murder that occurred at his cabin and
subsequent harassment by the spectre. Damn, that was what Standish
had called the murderous demon. He wished he knew what had happened to
the body. How did he disappear like that? Hell, he should
have been dead a number of times over with what the three of them did to
him, but still he slithered away. Chris’
breathing hitched a fraction, but he covered the slight with a cough.
No sense in passing on his fears and uncertainties to Tanner. His
back crawled with the sensation of thousands of eyes boring into him,
watching his every movement and silently waiting, biding their time.
The hairs stood up on end at the nape of his neck and he methodically
turned and scanned behind him. Muffled sounds of boot leather
shuffled on the boardwalk and the lazy whistle of the wind stroked
inanely at the wind chimes hanging from the veranda in front of Mrs
Potter’s store, swiftly returned his attention. They paused
outside of the doors of the saloon while Chris dug the key from his
pocket. “How come
Inez gave you a key?” Tanner queried straining to keep his voice
natural. “Guess she
figured it was easier to toss me out with the rest of the crowd at
closing time and if I wanted to stay longer, then I could come back when
they were all gone.” Larabee threw opened the door and slipped
inside the empty room. “Reckon
there’s some merit ta that,” he agreed with the gunslinger. “Yeah.
Want ta get some light and I’ll get us that drink.” Tanner only
bothered with one of the oil lamps; he didn’t want to make it too
obvious that the saloon was occupied. Kind of hard to turn
away other patrons, when here they were utilising the place themselves.
“Inez don’t mind?” “Pay for
what I take,” the gunslinger explained. Returning, Chris thumped
a bottle of whisky on the tabletop and sank gratefully into the chair. “Honesty…a
bane of humanity,” the thick Southern tones echoed in the empty
saloon. The two lawmen twisted in their seats and stared up the
stairs as the gambler leisurely sauntered down. “Mr Larabee, Mr
Tanner…” he paused for a moment then continued. “Isn’t it
rather late to be indulging…even for you?” “Yer up
kinda late, yerself,” Tanner quipped. “’Less ya planning on
seeing the sun rise?” Standish
licked his lips and steadily approached their table. “You could
try breaking in less audibly,” Ezra deadpanned, “then I wouldn’t
be roused from my feather mattress at the abysmal time of four in the
morning.” “Didn’t
wake up nobody else,” the tracker countered, rising to the
Southerner’s bait. “Must be my
exceptional hearing,” he drawled. Chris leaned
back in the chair and folded his arms across his chest. He arched
an eyebrow doubtfully at the gambler. He knew they hadn’t been
overtly noisy in entering the premises… and hell, he’d done it other
nights and the gambler hadn’t known. “Wouldna been already
awake now, would ya Ezra?” A small smile tugged at the
gunman’s mouth. He pushed out another seat in the Southerner’s
direction and studied Standish’s drawn features. Damned if he
didn’t look like he’d been fighting an army. “There’s
a law stating what time I am required to sleep?” Ezra asked mockingly. Tanner
snorted back a chuckle and slid the bottle of whisky toward the gambler.
“Hell, Ezra, we all know ya don’t sleep when normal people do,”
Vin goaded. Standish
opened his mouth and snapped it shut. Normal people? Ezra
squared his shoulders and sat straighter in the chair. Arching an
inquisitive eyebrow, Standish raised his voice a fraction inquiring
brusquely; “What exactly does that mean?” “Hell,
don’t ask me. Yer the one that speaks all fancy like…”
Tanner defended. “Just
because I can hold an intelligent conversation,” he stopped and
redirected his thoughts. Tanner was grinning ear to ear, and
he’d fallen into that so easily. “What has that got to do with
when I sleep?” he drawled, smiling sarcastically to show that he was
well aware of Tanner’s game. “Yer never
awake in the morning.” Vin stretched his arms high above his
head and yawned. “That is
because I prefer seeing the night time hours to the dreadful time of day
that sees you rising from your bed,” Standish replied indignantly.
“Perhaps you should retire, Vin” Ezra smirked, “seems to be well
past your bedtime.” Chris snorted
and quickly covered his mouth under his hand after the harangued
expression Tanner bestowed on him. You do look tired, Vin, Chris
mused. Then so does Standish, for that matter. Come to think
of it, it’s been a while since he’d been awake at this time in the
morning for no good reason. “Reckon I
can take care of myself, Ezra,” Vin rasped, still staring intently at
the man in black. “I’m
almost tempted to rise early this morning, just to catch a glimpse of
your sleep deprived body coping with dawn,” Standish taunted. “Reckon ya
should at that,” Vin turned his gaze back to the Southerner.
“Probably been a long while since ya’ve seen the sun rising,” the
Texan chuckled. “Droll,
very droll, Mr Tanner.” “You two
keep arguing like that and you’ll have everybody awake and down
here,” Larabee interrupted. He would have let them continue, as
he was certainly amused with the byplay, but he didn’t relish being
tossed out just yet. Ezra picked
up the whisky and drank directly from the bottle. Not willing to
voice his agreement with the black-clad gunslinger, he opted for
silence. Tanner sighed
dramatically, then grinned widely at the blond-haired gunslinger while
leaning across the table to garner the whisky back from the gambler. **** They sat in
amicable silence for what seemed like an eternity, passing the bottle of
whisky between them. When the last of the liquid drained from the
bottle, Larabee scooted back his chair and stalked to the bar to replace
it. He stopped mid stride when the Southerner’s suggestion cut
through the dark shadows. “If
you’ve a mind, there is a bottle of scotch from my private collection
available,” Ezra announced. Larabee
turned back to the gambler and glanced at the tracker to determine his
opinion. Tanner shrugged his shoulders in acquiescence and Chris
arched a speculative eyebrow at the Southerner. Ezra smiled,
the dimples in his cheeks showing at the genuine gesture. He
stood. “I’ll retrieve it…” “Sit down,
Ezra,” the gunslinger ordered. “Just tell me where it is
stashed and I’ll get it.” “Very well,” Standish shrugged, giving the directions he returned to his seat. After the light banter they’d shared before, Ezra was not expecting Vin’s serious tone of inquiry. “You not
sleeping cause of what happened at Chris’?” Ezra stared
intently at the tracker, attempting to ascertain if he was sincere or
attempting to put one over him. No, Vin was straight as an arrow;
the Texan wouldn’t be the one to pull a con… that was his arena.
He thinned his lips and pondered his answer. Does he tell the
former bounty hunter that he has been plagued with nightmares?
That he sees the face of the dead man in every stranger’s face?
He swallowed past the lump and dropped his eyes. He found that a
spot on his jacket sleeve had become exceedingly interesting. “Reckon, I
know how ya feel,” Tanner admitted cautiously. Ezra snapped his
head up and stared directly into his blue eyes. Vin smiled wanly
and nodded his head, recognising the unspoken query the gambler sought. Ezra returned
his gaze to his sleeve, and replied, almost a whisper; “I thought it
was only me.” Vin shook his
head and wiped the moisture that inexplicably appeared on his upper lip.
“Reckon I’m turned up inside…Feel like I’m playing some
waitin’ game and don’t know the rules,” he revealed. “Ya
know… I need some answers…” “I concur,
Vin. Perhaps when we have discovered the identity of our
mysterious dead man, then we’ll be afforded some answers.” “But
how’s knowing his name gonna tell us anything about the madman?
I just don’t get it, Ezra. We shot him, God knows how many
times…he shoulda been dead,” he finished lamely. Standish
sighed wearily; he’d gone over the scenario in his mind dozens of
times and was still none the wiser. “I don’t have a solution
for you, Vin.” “Feel like
he’s here, watching us.” Tanner noted the slight nod of the
Southerner’s head; he’d noticed it too. “What’s he
waitin’ for?” “I wish I
knew,” Ezra whispered thoughtfully. **** The spell was
broken when strains of shattered glass hit the floor and a string of
Larabee’s curse words erupted from the room behind the long bar.
Vin and Ezra shared a brief look of stunned bewilderment and leapt from
their seats and crossed to the bar. The single lantern burned
shallowly on the bar and spared no enlightenment to the two lawmen.
Standish jumped smoothly onto the smooth surface of the bar and
swivelled on his backside to complete the move and progress into the
darkened recess, which Larabee had disappeared through. Tanner
mimicked his movements, but both ultimately remained seated on the bar. “Madre
Dois!” the shrill tones of the Mexican barmaid brought Tanner and
Standish up stationary. “Senor? Are you hurt?” Vin and Ezra
struggled to keep the mischievous grins from turning up their mouths,
but both failed miserably and broke into a chorus of chuckles when the
feisty manager escorted Larabee from the backroom. “I’m
fine, Inez,” Larabee assured. “Senor
Standish, Senor Tanner…what are you doing seated on my bar?”
Inez demanded, her hands splayed on her hips. “I’m just
waiting to ascertain if Mr Larabee has broken my bottle of scotch,”
Ezra grinned roguishly. Larabee was rubbing at a lump on the back
of his head and was looking everywhere but at his fellow lawmen.
Ezra frowned at the gunslinger in concentration; the man in black
actually looked embarrassed. Without
looking up, Chris growled; “Didn’t break yer bottle, Standish.” “That is
good news,” he drawled. Inez
Recillios handed Ezra’s prize bottle of scotch to Standish and winked
conspiratorially at the gambler before returning to her abode.
“Night all,” she chimed, heading back through the darkness. “Night,
Inez,” Vin waved her off. “What just
happened there?” “Cowboy?”
Tanner added his befuddled query to the gambler’s. “Nothing!”
Chris growled more forcefully than intended. Vin tapped
the Southerner on the arm and motioned they should resume their drinking
by snatching the bottle from his gasp and upending it.
“Smooth,” he announced after the first mouthful. “Vin!”
Standish admonished, appalled at the Texan’s medieval consumption of
the alcohol. “This should be imbibed from a glass, sipped in
moderation to appreciate and enhance the taste and aroma.” “Like
this?” Vin put the mouth of the bottle to his lips and gulped
down a second mouthful. Standish
rolled his eyes and pulled the bottle from lax fingers. “No,”
he groaned, but proceeded to follow the Texan’s actions and drank the
scotch in a similar fashion. “Tastes the
same, huh?” Vin grinned at the gambler’s dramatic sigh.
“Chris?” “Was
beginning ta think ya weren’t gonna share.” The gunman pulled
himself onto the bar and sat between Tanner and Standish. “You gonna
tell?” “Ain’t
nothing ta tell, Vin,” Larabee countered. “That would
explain the string of expletives, the unknown havoc created out
there,” he pointed to the dark kitchen area. Ezra wondered
briefly how the gunman had wrangled out of having to clean up the mess,
“the growing lump on your head and the wet shirt,” Standish drawled
sardonically. Larabee
looked down at the damp shirt as though seeing it for the first time.
He moaned in irritation. “This doesn’t leave here,” he
threatened. Tanner nodded
his pledge of silence with a brief shake of his head. “On my
honour,” Standish gestured with a symbolic crossing of his heart.
“But I can’t vouch for Miss Recillis’ silence,” he teased. “Give me
that,” he ordered tersely, taking a swig of the fine Scotch. “Ya gonna
spill it?” Vin persisted. Larabee
pointed his index finger at the gambler and shook the digit. “Ya
couldna found a more accessible place ta hide ya liquor?” “Hardly …
just liquor,” Standish rebuked. “And its position has kept my
collection safe from nefarious…” “Yeah,
yeah,” Larabee grumbled, rubbing at his bruised head.
“Wasn’t expecting anybody ta be sneakin’ around back there is
all,” Chris glibly admitted. Standish and
Tanner’s joint burst of laughter rippled through the saloon. “Laugh it
up, boys,” the gunman groused. “Tanner you about near wet yer
pants earlier in the alley and Standish…well I’m sure you ain’t
down here cause ya heard us breakin’ in.” He glanced from one
man and back to the other. He watched Tanner stiffen and Standish
donned his mask, which had, up until that point, been absent.
Reckon both his friends where feeling a mite troubled. “Ain’t
nothing gonna happen!” he firmly predicted. “Of course
not!” the Southerner accepted. “Yep,”
Tanner conformed. Though Chris
noted that neither man could meet his eyes as they stated their
agreement. **** Vin leaned
his shoulder against the roof support and in the dawning light trekked
the path of the gunslinger as he marched across the street and toward
the boarding house. He waited until Larabee entered the building
before making his way to his wagon. He felt the pressing weight of
his eyelids and welcomed the comforts of a rested sleep. With a
relieved sigh, the Texan pulled back the flap of the oilcloth and lifted
his leg to climb inside. The wagon tilted ever so slightly that he
froze, paused on the brink of stepping inside. Vin frowned; his
lips formed a frosted line, and a sense of foreboding seeped from his
gut to his chest. He slid his raised foot back stiffly to
the ground and slowly circled his abode. Tanner bit
his lower lip while the frown furrowed his features. He crouched
to the road and let his fingers trace over the outline of the permanent
rut that the wheels of his wagon had gouged in the earth. The
wagon had remained in the same position for the two years that he had
lived in Four Corners. He hadn’t moved it, but here was the
evidence that that was exactly what had happened. Somehow, the
wagon had been moved, but only a matter of inches or so, just out of the
formed ruts in the ground. Vin slowly stood, rubbing along the
line of his jaw. He walked the circuit of his wagon once more and
was dismayed to find no evidence of a team of horses that would have
been needed to move his wagon. There were no footprints near and
nothing else seemed to be disturbed. He desperately wanted to
believe that Buck or one of the others had been up to this, but he
seriously doubted they could have covered all their tracks. He
felt relieved that he wasn’t imagining the prying eyes or the feelings
of unease, he felt vindicated in a sense, but what did that mean?
Were the others at risk also? The tracker
felt the intensity of the unknown eyes watching him, and spun quickly
hoping to catch a glimpse of his persecutor. Tanner gripped the
wagon behind him for support and grimly checked the shadows for
movement. He startled at the abrupt explosion of noise and swept
his panicked blue eyes in that direction. Vin took a faltering
step, but halted the action when he realised the commotion was only the
baker stepping out on the sidewalk. He berated himself for jumping
and smiled bleakly at the barrel-shaped man. He would not be able to
sleep now; instead he stalked to the livery deciding to take Peso on an
early morning patrol. **** Chris
smirked as he headed off in the direction of the boarding house.
He didn’t need to turn to know Vin watched his back, and that allowed
him time to relax his guard for a moment. He strolled leisurely
down the main street, noting that the night fires had burned down to a
pile of glowing embers. The stirrings of early morning activity in
the bakery caught his attention for a fleeting moment before he opened
the door that lead inside the boarding house. Larabee
paused in the parlour for few minutes, listening to the creaking timber
of the old building. He wondered whether it was worth the effort
to sleep at all, but decided the town would be quiet for another hour at
least. Perhaps he’d be allowed a few hours of slumber, before
his presence in the town was required. So long as he woke before
Standish, he mused. Larabee
turned the knob and nudged opened the door with the toe of his boot. He
wrinkled his nose as he stepped inside the room. Chris left open
the door and his hazel eyes stung with the smoky haze that hovered
thickly and congregated in a pluming cloud on the ceiling. The
smell was more than just the burnt remains of wood. Burnt flesh
mingled with the hazy smog. The gunman drew his Colt and
cautiously entered further. Moving toward the window he levered it
up and allowed the smoky atmosphere to idly drift outside. He felt the
anger burning in his chest and kicked out savagely at the ceramic pot
that had contained the blaze until it fettered out. The pot
collided with the far wall and broke into two large pieces and several
smaller ones, the coals scattered over the floor in blackish disarray.
The charred remains of a large rodent spilled onto the polished floor,
coming to rest against the leg of the bedside table. The fetid
stench and smoke brought back the unwanted memory refreshed in his
thoughts of the dead man’s burning body strung up on the cross against
his corral. He’d tried hard to push it to the back of his mind,
relegating it to the depths, but the message was clearly spelt out.
The spectre was here in Four Corners and was taunting them once again. Larabee
stomped in heavy measured steps and crouched at the remains. His
heels crunched on the perished wood and smudged the charcoal, embedding
it into the cracks in the floor. “Damn!” he swore, picking up
the pitcher of water from the bedside table and hurling in angrily.
“You son of a bitch,” he hissed under his breath, contemplating
retribution. The hardened gunslinger kicked at the door and
slammed out of the room. **** Ezra Standish
stayed at the bar longer, not wanting the pleasant ambiance that had
swallowed him to leave. He twirled the empty bottle on the counter
and smiled wryly at the expense he’d accrued from suggesting the use
of his private collection. Three bottles lined the bar; all empty,
and that didn’t include the single bottle of whisky that had been
downed at the table. He would have to find another hiding place
for his dwindling collection now that both Chris and Vin knew of its
whereabouts. Then again…maybe he wouldn’t. Standish
weaved his way up to his room and wondered at Vin’s reaction should he
rise before the tracker. After all, Tanner had only as much sleep
as Ezra so far this night. He smirked, considering staying in the
saloon until Vin arrived and claim that he’d woken before the other
man, but dismissed the idea as he was raked with a growing lethargy. He smelt the
putrid aroma, instantly recognising it as chloroform, and his gut
wrenched in spasms. “Oh God!” he rasped. His head swam with
the noxious odour; its familiar scent almost made him gag. The
clinging smell was nauseous in its consistency. Bile rose from his
stomach and the tangy taste lingered on his tongue, but not quite
overriding the foul stench of the heavy vapours. Standish covered
his mouth and nose with his white handkerchief and breathed shallowly
into the fine linen. He’d forever remember that odour and
pressed his face deeper into the folds of the cloth. His quarters
reeked of the foul stench. Blinking back the sting of tears, he
stumbled back out the door. He would find no rest in his room,
knowing that the spectre had only recently been in there. Sagging
down the wall outside his room, he lowered his head between his knees.
How had the scourge gotten inside his abode? Both the door and
window were secured. He had to get away from here, was his only
thought as his mind reluctantly played out the final scene at the cabin
once again. They needed
to defeat the spectre. And this time, do it right! |
The End - Until Next time
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Other stories in the series: Jumping at Shadows |
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