Killing Mr. Sunday
Page 13
keeping her clothed and fed in comparison to how
much she might be able to earn down the line.
“I’m not a hard man, mind you,” he said in order
to lift her spirits just a bit. “But I am a sound busi-
nessman and I’ll weigh it careful and give you my de-
cision in a day or two.”
The corners of her mouth lifted slightly.
Not long after, they saw the others returning, the
men tucking in their shirts, adjusting their hats and
gunbelts.
“Well, that was right pleasant,” said Zeb when they
reached the wagon. “You got any more wheels need
fixing?” He had the grin of a jack-o’-lantern.
“We’ll be getting on now,” Ellis said, giving the
girls a hand up in the wagon.
“Say, I don’t suppose in your travels you come
across a man named William Sunday?”
Ellis ran the name through his mind. He’d heard of
William Sunday. Probably everybody west of the Mis-
sissippi and east of it, too, had heard of William Sun-
day. And if memory served, he’d once seen him drink-
ing in a saloon in Fort Sumner.
“No, I don’t recall running across anyone with
that name,” he said. “He a friend of yours?”
“You could say that.”
“Well, good luck in finding him,” Ellis said, and
snapped the reins over his two-horse team. It felt
good to be back on the move again and not broke
down in the middle of nowhere and at the mercy of
strangers. He determined that from now on he’d carry
a shotgun with him just in case. He could use it for
future negotiations.
The Stone brothers felt as weary as children who’d
played all day and decided that before continuing
their search for William Sunday, they’d lie down and
take themselves a little siesta in the grass. Their blood
felt warm and lazy, their thoughts slow as some old
river, the sun settled nicely on their closed eyelids.
Life for the trio seemed as though it could not get
much better.
In a way, they were right—life couldn’t get much
better and was about to get a whole lot worse.
17
He lived alone. Old shack so far-flung and off the
beaten track you had to be lost or unlucky to come
across it. Nobody knew his name. Hell, he didn’t even
know his name. The sound of his own voice startled
him. He disdained the company of strangers, kin,
anybody. He subsisted on squirrel, prairie dog, ante-
lope, occasionally deer, and even rattlesnakes. In a big
heavy Bible set on a plank shelf above a cot, half its
pages gone—used for firestarter or outhouse paper
when nothing else was available—there was a name
written just inside the front cover: genius jackson.
The shack was rough-hewn logs with a leaky
shake roof, oilskin in place of where window glass
once was. A heavy oak door that used to stand as the
front entrance to a Negro sheriff’s office in Okla-
homa was fastened by leather hinges and ill fitted; its
history of how it had found its way all this distance,
long forgotten. It had the goddamnedest fanciest lead-
glass doorknob that ever could be found in the whole
territory.
Blackened-tin stovepipe poked through an outer
wall like an arm crooked skyward. Off to the rear of
the place rose a rusting pyramid of cans. And farther
out, up a worn path of grass, an outhouse leaned as
though ready to fall over, as though the rotation of
the earth had shaped it over time. The original owner
had been wise enough to place it downwind of the
shack.
Genius Jackson wasn’t any more sure of when he’d
arrived at this place or how than he was his name or
any of his other personal history. Didn’t matter to
him. Nothing about the past mattered anymore than
did the day not yet arrived. It was enough just to get
along hour by hour, to get past the pain of old bones
broke how many times he didn’t know, mostly from
being tossed off horses into fences, down ravines,
onto rocks. Fist fights and such. Horses were the god-
damndest cruelest creatures ever was made other than
humans and he had no truck with either now that the
old days were behind him.
Still, he dreamt of such horses, and it frightened
him: being bucked off in dreams, stomped, bit, kicked.
His fear of horses was only matched by his fear of
fire. He’d been in several: old houses, a warehouse,
once, prairie fires. All of which he did not like to
think about, but whose memory came unbidden to
him as unexpected as did his dreams. He hated sleep-
ing and he hated being awake. He hated being old and
he hated being forgetful and he reckoned he hated
about every goddamn thing there was to hate in life.
He learned to eat crows and turkey buzzards in ad-
dition to the badgers and prairie dogs and snakes
whenever such availed themselves to him. His habit
was to sit all day in the yard with an old single-bore
.50-caliber rifle—his acquisition of which was as much
a mystery to him as everything else—and wait for
something alive to present itself. He was an uncanny
shot with crack good sight in one eye. He didn’t re-
member how or where he’d learned such a skill as
shooting. His memory was as cloudy as was his blind
eye. How his bad eye got to be blind and when, he
couldn’t say.
Sometimes he got lucky and a gray wolf would
come loping within range. He liked them roasted
best; they were gamier than regular dog, but much
more tasty than badger.
All day he sat like that, even in bad weather, unless
it rained so hard he couldn’t see even with his good
eye. For life had come down to eating, shitting, and
sleeping. Wasn’t no use to worry about anything else,
but a tooth had recently caused him a ton of misery
and forced him to consider prying it out of his mouth,
though he hated the prospect of the pain it would
cause him.
So it was while waiting for something alive to come
along he could shoot and eat that Genius Jackson saw
the approach of a buggy with two folks in it—more
folks than he had seen in months, especially at one
time. It had been four full days since he’d last eaten: a
three-foot coontail rattler that had crawled out from
under the pile of tin cans in pursuit of a pack rat.
His tooth throbbed against his jawbone—one of
them back teeth hard to get at—until it felt like a
clock of misery ticking in his mouth. He’d tried the
previous evening prying it out with the tip of his knife
but it was about like trying to swallow a hot poker.
The pain nearly blinded him in his good eye.
“Look,” the Swede said to Martha. “There’s a nice
house we can move into.”
Martha remained silent. She didn’t want to say or
&n
bsp; do anything that would either encourage or discour-
age him. He had that little pistol she was sure he
would not hesitate to use on her. So far, the Swede
had not tried to have relations with her, and for that
she was grateful. She did not want to be unfaithful to
Otis, even if he was dead. And she certainly did not
want to be unfaithful with a man as ugly and crazy as
the Swede.
Martha could see a man sitting on a chair in front
of the distant shack that obviously the Swede could
not. She’d noticed among other things about the
Swede that he squinted a great deal. The sight of an-
other human gave her hope for salvation.
“Oh,” said the Swede as they drew nearer and saw
Genius Jackson sitting on a chair out front. “Some-
body has come to visit . . .”
“Maybe he’s a friend,” Martha said, summoning
up her courage to try and entice the Swede to stop in-
stead of swinging wide of the place.
“Yah, maybe so.”
Martha could see that when the man stood he had
the posture of a nail hit wrong. He had a rifle in his
hands. No shoes and bareheaded.
The Swede drew reins. The wind brought with it
the smell of wet grass.
“Who you and what you want?” Genius Jackson
said.
“I am Bjorn and this is my wife,” the Swede said.
Martha shook her head ever so slightly hoping the
old man would catch her meaning. He didn’t seem to.
“You still ain’t said what you’re doing here, Yorn.”
“I like this house. We going to move in. You got the
keys?”
Genius Jackson’s gaze drifted to Martha and
stayed on her and she could see he had one clear eye
and one that was milky.
Lord god almighty, when was the last time he’d
lain with a woman? He couldn’t recall. Maybe the
summer of fifty-two when he was yet a young waddy?
Or was it in his whiskey-peddling days down in the
Nations? Seemed like there was a squaw woman had
butternut color skin and fat thighs and smelt like
woodsmoke he could recall. It caused his flesh to
crawl just thinking about having a woman.
“Move in, you say?”
“Yah.”
“ ’At might be all right. Get on down from there
and let’s have a look at you and the missus.”
Genius Jackson’s mind was doing a buck dance at
the sight of Martha.
It hadn’t escaped her notice the way the old devil
was watching her. If she had a plugged nickel for every
man who looked at a woman with that same look in
their eye she’d be living in a palace in Egypt. But she
knew, too, that a man with that on his mind could
work to her advantage. Nothing created a distraction
like men fighting over a woman, and a distraction was
exactly what she needed.
“Water?” the Swede said. “My got, it’s been two,
maybe three days since we had something to drink,
yah.” It hadn’t really been that long, but it seemed to
him as though it had.
“The well stands yonder, help yourself,” Genius
Jackson said, hooking a thumb toward the well.
The Swede took Martha by the wrist and led her
over to the well, then winched up a bucket of pure
cold water. He used a hanging tin dipper to slake his
thirst, then handed it to her. Both men watched the
movement of her throat as she drank, the rise and fall
of her chest. Their eyes tumbled all the way down
past the swell of her hips to the smallness of her feet.
Genius Jackson licked his lips without realizing
he was.
The Swede’s instincts were sharp, too. Trouble
was, his pistol was empty of bullets and no way to kill
this claim jumper.
“Yah, that’s some good water,” he said.
“Come out of the deep ground,” Jackson said.
The Swede walked around studying the place, as
though assessing it for its value.
“We got us a good house here,” he said to Martha.
“That fellow is looking at me like I’m a hambone
and he’s a yellow dog,” she said. “I think he aims to
steal me away from you.”
“Yah, yah,” said the Swede out of the side of his
mouth. “Maybe you make a little eyes at him, eh? Till
I can grab his gun.”
Jackson followed the pair around as they studied
his layout. He didn’t know whether to shoot the man
or just run him off and keep the woman. He hadn’t
had to make a hard decision in a long time. Until this
very hour, all he’d had to think about was how he was
going to get through the next hour of his life. Now he
had strangers in his yard and lust risen in his nether
parts like yeast bread setting in the sun. Then there
was that damn tooth worrying him all to hell.
A little time with the woman might just take away
some of his grief.
“I got whiskey in the house yonder, and victuals if
you all is hungry and thirsty.”
“Yah,” the Swede said. “Sure we are, ain’t we?” he
said to Martha as the old man led them inside the
house, his head full of evil plans, matched only by
those of the Swede.
The hansom’s tracks became fresher with each pass-
ing hour.
“We’re on them now,” Toussaint said once they’d
crossed a small feeder creek.
“Look,” Jake said. “I don’t want to have to shoot
this man if we don’t have to. I’d just as soon he stood
trial for his crimes—let the legal system have its way
with him.”
Toussaint looked at him.
“Squeamish ain’t a good trait for a man in the law
business.”
Jake looked at the badge he wore, said, “It’s only
temporary, this work. I’d like to keep the bloodletting
to a minimum.”
“Fine by me.”
“Just so you know.”
“Just so I know.”
Two hours more and they came within view of the
cabin, the sun low in the west.
“What do you think?” Jake said as they halted
their horses a quarter-mile distance.
“Seems likely they’d be there.”
“Yeah.”
“How do you want to do it?”
“Straight on is the only way I see, what about
you?”
“I don’t see any other way, no trees or nothing we
could sneak up on them behind.”
“He’ll have plenty of time to see us coming if he’s
in there.”
“Might shoot us out of our saddles.”
“I mean if we have to take his life, then we will. I
don’t want you mistaken as to where I stand on this,”
Jake said.
“Somehow twenty dollars doesn’t seem like enough
pay right now.”
“Well, if he shoots you out of the saddle, it won’t
matter, and if he doesn’t—it’s still twenty dollars.”
Toussaint broke open the shotgun and put in fresh
loads, then snapped it clo
sed again resting the butt
against his leg.
“Maybe we’ll get lucky and he’ll be taking a nap,”
he said, judging the time to be around noon.
“We could wait until dark,” Jake said. “But I’m all
for taking them now.”
“You’re even starting to talk like a damn lawman.”
“I’m just tired of chasing this man. Let’s finish it,
get Otis’s wife back if she’s still alive.”
Toussaint walked his mule out wide to the south,
Jake rode his horse out wide to the north.
18
She knocked on the door and waited. When no
one answered, she turned to go. She wasn’t sure
why she was even bothering. She’d reached the end of
the hall when his door opened.
“Clara.”
She turned to see him standing there half dressed,
his hair uncombed, looking old and beat down.
“Come back, Clara.”
Reluctantly she walked back to his room.
“I can only stay a few minutes,” she said. “I’ve got
to open school.”
He closed the door and motioned toward a chair
but when she refused it, he went himself instead and
sat down gingerly. She waited for him to speak.
“I want to stay with you until my time’s come,” he
said.
“Impossible.”
He drew a deep breath.
“I won’t be a burden to you. I can take my meals
out, have my clothes cleaned at the laundry.”
“You’re asking something of me I can’t give you.”
“Anything is possible. Hear me out.”
She listened as he told her about the cancer, how
far advanced it was.
“Doc says I won’t make it till spring. But the way
I’m feeling, I won’t make it till next week.”
She hadn’t expected this, even though he told her
the evening before he was dying. It was the sudden-
ness of it that got to her. He seemed a broken man—
not at all the way she had always remembered him.
“Why come here and ask me to do this?” she said.
“We hardly know each other. We’re just kin in name
only.”
“No,” he said. “We’re kin in blood, too.”
“All these years you didn’t bother to concern your-
self with me, but now that you’ve got this trouble you
want me to take care of you. I can’t do this.”
“Yes, you can.”
“Why should I?”
“Because I’m asking you to. Because your father is
asking this one thing of his daughter.”
“No!”
“I want to get to know you before it happens. I