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Shadow Falls: Badlands

Page 13

by Mark Yoshimoto Nemcoff


  As Galen pushed forward, the woods began to thin and the ground to rise until there was nothing above his head except sun and air. The forest had opened up into a half-mile wide corridor lined with trees. And though the woods seemed to thicken on either side of him, what lay ahead appeared to be a clear path.

  For the next two hours he coaxed the horses up a hill, noticing its rise was growing steeper, until he found himself at the top of a fairly large gorge.

  Below him another forest spread as far as the eye could see, the leafy green canopy headed all the way to the horizon. From his many travels, Galen knew the country had been carpeted with these thick ancient woods.

  To the north, he spotted a thin plume of smoke several miles off. He squinted and looked again, catching at least two more smoky plumes—telltale indications of a settlement or town. Galen's eyes darted back and forth, scanning the woods for a thin break in the tree line, a trail headed directly toward those fires.

  The trail, Galen thought.

  But where was the way down into those woods several hundred feet below? It had to be here somewhere.

  He kept looking from the rim of the gorge into the basin; nowhere in sight was there a way down. Galen scratched his head. Suddenly, from his right, he heard a noise, causing him to draw one of his Colts before turning to the noise. It was the rustling of feet, and it came again; Galen drew the second gun, thumbing back both hammers simultaneously. He took a breath and held it to keep his aim steady, set to fire as soon as something appeared. The rustling grew closer still and as Galen tensed his fingers on the triggers ready to fire…

  “Blue?” Galen asked, stunned to see the animal he’d thought dead. Its body was unmistakable.

  Blue stepped right up to Galen and licked his hand—the typical indication that Blue wanted jerky.

  “Sorry, old pal—I don't have any,” Galen apologized...

  He looked back to where Blue had emerged; there was the trailhead.

  Galen took another look at the burro. Given the pace Blue walked, the old fleabag had to have left camp last night to get here.

  “Blue!” Galen shouted right into the burro's ear. Just a test; Blue didn’t respond, let alone startle. Galen reached down and scratched the burro between the ears before tying Blue's lead to the back of the wagon. Maria was still asleep. Galen reached over to put a hand on her forehead, but her fingers shot out and wrapped around his wrist like a steel trap. Instantly, her eyes opened wide, full of hate and anger. Her mouth, still encrusted with the dried blood and mucus, parted and—from untold, preverbal depths within her throat—came a hiss.

  That hiss evaporated into a deep and growling whisper. “We shall live in His house. We shall live in His name. We shall live in His house. We shall live—” The whisper from Maria's throat faded away, as did her grip on his arm. Slowly, her eyes closed and her body relaxed, resuming the heavy breathing of sleep.

  Galen watched her chest rise up and down to make sure she was indeed alive. “In His name,” He said to himself. “In His name.”

  Galen spent most of the remaining daylight navigating the two-horse wagon down the serpentine path cut into the woods by the gorge. After one sharp turn, he spied what looked like trouble ahead: a thick deadfall obstructing the way down.

  With the path so narrow, there would be no way to turn the wagon around. Galen cursed himself for not walking the trail first.

  Through the brush, Galen could swear he was being watched. There were no sounds, making it that much more foreboding.

  For the first time, Galen felt the horses become scattered in their focus; he was not the only one getting spooked by this dark and uneasy trail. Spotting a slight opening, Galen carefully drove through, its edges brushing lightly against the side of the wagon, which barely made it through.

  Moments after he’d gone through the opening, he looked back; again, it appeared to be an impassable wall of forest debris.

  Just a trick of the light, Galen assured himself. That’s all.

  As he reached the bottom of the basin, the woods gave way to a clear-cut path—obviously some kind of road.

  Galen held his hand to the sky; the sun was exactly four fingers width above the horizon. He knew that meant he had, at best, another hour of daylight. He pushed onward knowing it would be tough on Blue—but Galen aimed to get to that settlement tonight.

  But will the dark keep away that which you may find out here? He wondered.

  As he had first seen from the rim of the gorge, the road was a straight shot leading into the settlement Galen grew uneasy; the last time he’d been around a lot of people, he ended up dangling from a noose—and they ended up brutally slaughtered.

  If Maria hadn’t been in such dire need of medical attention, he would have turned the wagon back—even risking the climb up the gorge path. But he couldn’t just leave her; she was dying and needed any help she could get.

  She was most likely to die anyway, he tried to justify. But at the very least he had to try, he knew.

  The closer he got, the clearer it became that he was coming up on a well-populated town. As the night slipped in all around him, he could see the dim firelight of their camps glowing, first as pinpricks in the distance.

  As he got within a half mile, he could even hear voices, laughs, and rowdy shouts punctuating the otherwise silent night.

  And then he blinked in disbelief, trying to verify what he saw. In the shadow there were two eyes glowing in the moonlight coming toward him.

  *****

  CHAPTER 16

  Hovering barely a foot above the ground, the two yellow beads came swiftly toward Galen and, for the second time that day, he reached for one of the Colts. The thin quality of the moonlight angling through the tops of the trees lining the road was playing tricks on Galen’s eyes, causing a strobe effect as the yellow beads vanished then reappeared, each time closer yet.

  Galen cocked back the hammer. His heart raced, thinking that the loud report of a single gunshot could bring God-knows-what-else from the woods. His finger tensed on the trigger.

  As he squinted to see, the shape of the four-legged creature became clear to him against the shadow. He raised the pistol, aimed it dead between its eyes, and steadied his hand. But something—a bit of instinct—told him to hold off until it came closer.

  And when the animal trotted into the light of the moon, Galen chuckled to himself. It was nothing more than a vagabond mutt walking down the road, carrying its dinner.

  But as it passed, a chill ran down Galen’s spine. What was in the dog’s mouth was not a bone, but a severed human hand.

  Galen rubbed his eyes. Can’t be, he thought. The little voice in his head told him to turn around and avoid the camp ahead; but it was so close, and to do so would be like signing Maria’s death warrant, as the turn would cause doubtlessly consternate the horses.

  He pushed the horses forward to the end of road, which opened into an acre-wide clearing. Galen could see dozens of tents all facing a single cabin placed on the rise of a small hill. He headed in the direction of a campfire, around which he could see several men standing. As the wagon drew closer, the men broke from the fire and came toward him, noticing the Stranger quickly. One of them—the closest—raised a hand for Galen to stop.

  “Who are you?” the man asked. His pockmarked face carefully examining the Stranger before him.

  Instead of answering his question, Galen went into a quickly worded explanation of Maria’s condition.

  “Is there a doctor in camp?” Galen finished.

  “Nena!” the man called out over his shoulder.

  Moments later, Galen could see the front door of the cabin open. Briefly silhouetted in the light coming from inside was the figure of a woman. She shut the door and came down the hill toward the wagon. But, even as she drew closer, Galen could not see her face. It was not until she approached that he realized she was wearing a hooded cloak.

  “This fella says he’s got a dying woman in the back,” the man told
her.

  Not even glancing at Galen, the hooded Nena went to the back of the wagon and looked inside. She then turned back to the man who had summoned her and whispered something in his ear.

  Suddenly, he drew his pistol and pointed it at Galen. The other men who had accompanied him from the fire did the same, raising their guns right at the Stranger’s chest.

  “Get out of the wagon, Mister.” His voice was deadly serious.

  “What’s going on here?” Galen demanded, raising his hands.

  Instead of an answer, the man with the pockmarked face roughly grabbed Galen by his arm and yanked him out of the driver’s seat and onto the ground. “Don’t you move!” he yelled.

  And as Galen looked up, Nena pulled the hood from her head, exposing the outline of her moonlit face.

  She pointed to the back of the wagon and the prone, unconscious Maria. “This woman,” she shouted, “is a witch!”

  “What are you talking about?” screamed Galen as the men pulled open the rear gate of the wagon. Instead of an answer, he received the butt of a rifle delivered to his skull with stunning force. Instantly his head filled with stars and he felt his arms grow rubbery and weak. As they gave out under him, he fell face first into the ground.

  Through the ringing now braying in his ears, Galen could hear the men as they dragged Maria out of the wagon. He tried to get up, to help her, but was too woozy to even move.

  He tried to fight it and stand up, but his stunned mind wasn’t able to control his injured legs.

  “Stop!” he tried to shout, but could only whisper. His head felt like it was stuffed with cotton.

  Two more men yanked him to his feet, holding him up under his arms. Weakly, Galen lifted his head to find himself staring right into the face of Nena—her dark, handsome eyes gazing directly into his dilating pupils. She reached out with a finger and ran a nail along his cheek and down to his chin, and cocking her head as she examined his face.

  “Restrain him,” she said to the men holding Galen up.

  “What about her?” the man with the pockmarked face shouted as he and another man held up the unconscious Maria.

  “Burn her,” Nena said coldly. She turned to Galen who was fading into unconsciousness. “And make sure he sees everything.”

  ***

  The splash of water in his face brought him around. His vision was hazy at first. The blow to his head still rung in his skull; he had to take a moment to resurface to consciousness.

  Immediately, Galen was aware of the crippling pain in his neck and back; he was locked in a bent over position. As the fog in his brain cleared, he realized his hands were immobilized. He couldn’t turn his head, either. He was in the stocks.

  “Quit fighting, yer not going anywhere,” the beady-eyed boy said as before tossing another bucket of water in Galen’s face. As Galen struggled to see what kind of infernal contraption they had locked him into, it occurred to him what they had done. He’d heard that the settlers had used the pillory to restrain and punish criminals—and now he fully understood why: from here there was no chance of escape. Bent at the waist, it was difficult for Galen to breathe—and when the boy threw another bucket in his face, he coughed until it felt like his ribs would snap. When his lungs stopped seizing and he caught his breath, the bucket boy grabbed him by the hair and pulled his head up.

  Ahead—no more than a hundred feet away—Maria had been tied to a stake atop a large mound of wood and dried bramble—kindling. At the nod of Nena's head, the man with the pockmarked face touched the tip of a flaming torch to the bramble, causing it to ignite. Within mere seconds the fire spread to the whole pile.

  “No!” Galen tried to call, but the compression of his lungs caused the shout to only spill out of his mouth. As the sky thickened with smoke, Galen saw, to his horror, that Maria was not only still alive, but fully conscious as well. She struggled against the ropes that bound her to the pyre, her mouth silently, and futilely, crying out for help and mercy.

  “Witch!” bellowed Nena. “Dost thou ask for His forgiveness? We can spare you the agony of a slow death in the flame.” She nodded to a man a few feet away raising his rifle and taking aim at Maria's head.

  Galen tried to open his mouth to tell the bucket boy only to be greeted by another onslaught of frigid water.

  The fire had made its way up the base and to the wood under Maria’s feet. Through the choking smoke Galen could see Maria's head thrash around wildly while the fire consumed her legs.

  “Witch, hear me,” Nena bellowed again. “I can release you—but you must ask for His forgiveness.”

  Again Galen tried to speak, forcing his cracking voice out as loud as he could. “She cannot talk! She has no tongue!” But even so, the roar of the fire drowned out his plea; no one heard it.

  The flames now rose to her waist, licking at her chest and back. Her thick black hair began to curl and ball up on the ends from the heat.

  When no cries of forgiveness were heard, Nena motioned the man with the rifle to lower his gun. “Suit yourself,” she said.

  From his location, Galen could see Nena's face was placid as she watched the flames.

  Maria's head whipped back again as the fire rose to her face. Her mouth drew open as she struggled for breath inside the burning ring of superheated air. Tears streamed down Galen's cheeks and he averted his eyes, but the boy with the bucket grabbed his hair once more and yanked his head up, forcing him to see everything. Maria whipped her face back and forth, the fire roasting her flesh. As she did, her eyes met his—and, if only briefly, Galen could see they were full of hate. The contempt she felt for him was more than apparent on her charred and blistering visage before vanishing moments later behind the growing wall of smoke and flame.

  Galen tried once more to avert his eyes, falling upon them reveling in a small circle by the fire, their naked bodies swaying to a rhythm only audible in their minds. A circle of undressed men, their hands joined, chanted in low voices as they watched the ritual taking place inside their confines. There crouched Nena in the nude, up on all fours as if she were imitating the attack stance of an animal. Behind her stood a man holding her by the hips, thrusting into her while the other men watched and chanted.

  By this time they were oblivious to the pyre, whose flames had entirely consumed their witch. Its greedy orange fingers reaching ten feet into the sky. The bucket boy refused to let Galen look away so he watched, and he wept.

  The nearly primitive ritual went on for what seemed like hours as each naked man had his way with Nena—though never did it seem like she was submitting. It ended when the flames died, the fire leaving behind what was left of the slumped and roasted figure still lashed to the pole, its mouth open in a never-ending cry of unspeakable pain. The boy finally let Galen's head drop down before he picked up his bucket and walked away.

  Hours later, as a group of men cleared the pyre—and Maria's charred bones—Galen was surprised by a visitor. It was Nena, once again dressed in her red cloak. She reached down and raised Galen's head by using just her fingertips to lift his chin.

  Galen could not even bear to look at her.

  “She had no tongue!” he screamed. “How could she have asked for mercy with no ability to speak?”

  She ran a finger along his cheek and asked how he knew such a thing. Galen told an abbreviated version of how he'd come upon Maria in the woods, leaving out the part about his death and resurrection.

  Before he could go on, Nena stopped him. “Why do you think they cut her tongue out?” she asked. “A witch cannot cast a spell if she cannot speak.”

  “You’re crazy,” Galen told her, his voice full of contempt. Though something in her words bothered him. “Where am I?” he demanded.

  “You’re in the camp of the Magus. This is our settlement and you intruded. I will decide what will be done with you.”

  “Lady, I have no fucking idea what you’re talking about. I mean, what state are we in? Arkansas? Tennessee?”

  Nena l
ooked at him, her dark eyes examining him closely. Then suddenly she broke out into a braying laugh. “What makes you think, dear stranger, that you are still in the mortal world?”

  *****

  CHAPTER 17

  Cyril’s head nodded forward. He had been on the horse for nearly twelve hours straight, and time and again he jarred himself awake. It was obvious the nag was exhausted as well, but Cyril pushed the beast, not caring if he killed it in the process. He was so close he could feel it. It had been four days since he'd left Sagebrush, the town’s air so thick with the reek of death that each breath choked his lungs. Everywhere he looked, there were bodies—weeks dead; mostly picked clean; their sun-bleached bones in disarray where the scavengers had mindlessly tossed them.

  The bodies left inside were a different story. Using the heel of his boot, Cyril had kicked in the door to the Sagebrush’s one hotel. Through the haze of dust he’d stirred up, he found a family of four huddled in the corner of the small dining area. They had been spared the scavengers by virtue of the four walls that had become their tomb—but the maggots had descended on them in force. The wriggling white shroud covering them flowed across their bodies like liquid, crawling in and out of their mouths and eye sockets with gleeful abandon as they feasted upon what was left of the rotting corpses. Cyril could imagine their deaths, the wonderful moment in which the coyotes sent on their mission of vengeance had struck these folks down, tearing at their soft throats and pleading eyes.

  Cyril had wrapped a kerchief soaked in water and camphor around his face to keep out the heavy odor of death. He went to the jail where they had kept Galen—first as a condemned prisoner, then as a hanged man lying with a broken neck on the hard, packed dirt floor. Inside, Cyril could feel Galen's presence in the room.

  He stopped. He cocked his head. There was something else. The presence of someone, no, something else that had been in the cell as well.

 

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