Tag Archives: horror

Undead Man’s Hand – Chapter 29

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Otto was a monster. Bulging, rippling muscles. Thick red beard. And his arms? When his right hook connected to Jack’s face, it was as if he’d just been smacked with a tree trunk.

The kid was dizzy now. He was seeing double. Blood, sweat and tears dripped into his eyes. He could barely see it but he sensed it. Another wallop coming his way.

Jack dodged. Slowly, his vision came back to him. He blocked another punch with his forearms. It left his arms feeling as though a polar bear had just tried to rip them off, but at least his face was spared further abuse.

The crowd was out of control. They cheered wildly, urging Otto to pummel Jack to death. Who can blame them really? There wasn’t much else in the way of entertainment in Deadwood.

Jack spotted Ginny. She didn’t look particularly concerned…or interested…just bored. Alas, the distraction was just what Otto needed to land a clobbering blow to Jack’s jaw.

Every one of Jack’s teeth mashed together as the kid went down for the count. Buck, who served as both fight promoter and referee, stepped into the ring and counted.

“1…2…3…”

Oh how women make men do stupid things. Motivated solely by his unrequited love for Ginny, Jack’s legs twitched. He put one hand on the fence.

“…4…5…6…” Buck looked down at the victim.

“Stay down, kid,” he whispered out of the corner of his mouth.

Too late. Jack was up. Barely. His knees buckled. His body shook all over. But he balled up his fists and took a fighter’s stance.

Otto laughed. “Come on,” the giant said as he pounded his chest. “I’ll give you a free one.”

Jack soared his fist into Otto’s chest. It felt like he’d just punched a brick wall.

Otto responded with an uppercut that lifted Jack three feet into the air until he slammed to the ground below.

This time he was out. Buck started in on the ten count. When he reached nine, Jack stirred just a bit until his body gave out on him.

Buck raised Otto’s hand high in the air for the whole crowd to see. “Otto Ziegler, ladies and gentlemen! The reigning champion!”

Otto bowed and collected his cheers as Buck bent over to whisper in Jack’s ear. “Thus ends your whirlwind career in pugilism, kid. Get up and get the hell out of here.”

Buck tucked a five dollar bill into Jack’s pants pocket.

“And don’t say I never gave you anything.”

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Movie Controversy – The Great Wall

Hey nerds.

BQB here.

Soo…OscarsSoWhite.  That whole issue has led to people really paying attention to casting decisions lately.

A trailer is out for a moving coming out next year.  Sort of an action horror fantasy movie.  “The Great Wall” the idea being that the Great Wall of China was built to keep monsters from invading China.

So the hero’s an Asian guy, right?

Wrong. It’s Matt Damon.

I guess he had some time between filming the last Jason Bourne movie and the next Jason Bourne movie.

Hmmm…ok.  So I assume the story explains how a white guy ended up as the hero but…maybe just maybe Good Ole Matt has a good run in Tinsel Town.  Maybe just maybe there was an Asian guy who could have been the lead…in a movie…about China.

By the way – I’m not sure I blame Matt Damon.  I mean, if Hollywood’s passing out big bucks to pretend to be a warrior in China, I’d take it.  But, it is up to Hollywood to say, “Huh.  Maybe a movie in Asia needs an Asian lead.”

What say you, 3.5 readers?

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Undead Man’s Hand – Chapter 28

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Buck Mulligan stood in front of a horse pen and waved a fat wad of cash in the air. The horses had been cleared out and replaced with two gargantuan, shirtless men.

“Place your bets! Place your bets! In today’s bout, Earl “Feelin’ Fine” Klein squares off against Otto “the Ox” Ziegler. Ladies and gentlemen, this is truly a clash of the titans. Hold onto your hats because these champions are bringing enough thunder to make Zeus himself nervous. Who wants in on the action?”

Buck twirled the end of his waxed mustache between his thumb and forefinger, then adjusted the bowler hat he was wearing. Before his very eyes emerged more cash stuffed fists than his eyes could count.

And then came the barked orders.

“Put it all on the Ox!”

“A sawbuck on Klein!”

As Buck counted up the loot, he felt a finger tap his shoulder. He turned to his right.

“Shit on a shingle, McCall, you’re a glutton for punishment, aren’t you?”

“I want a fight,” Jack replied.

“Look kid,” Mulligan said. “I love an easy mark but you’re too easy. So easy that you make my moral compass point north. Beat your feet down the street.”

“Come on Buck,” Jack said. “I need this.”

“Kid,” Buck said. “You’re 99 and 0. If I threw a slab of beef in there it would do better than you.”

“If I lose, I’ll never come back,” Jack said.

Mulligan collected the last bet and tucked the giant cash wad into his pocket. He turned his attention to the fight.

Otto was giving Klein’s face what for.

“Fine,” Mulligan said. “Make it an even hundred then. When you lose…”

Jack corrected Mulligan. “If I lose…”

“When you lose,” Mulligan said. “That’s it. You’ll never get another fight from me ever again. I got standards, kid. Not many, but I got some.”

The crowd gasped. Then shouted various guttural noises. Then came the cheers as Otto delivered one last crushing blow to Klein’s face.

Klein dropped to the ground. Otto, his muscles glistening with a mixture of his opponent’s blood and his own, raised his bare fists high in the air as the crowd cheered.

“Time to doesy doe, kid,” Mulligan said. “Your dance partner awaits.”

Most men would have fled in at the sight of the giant beast in the middle of the ring. Jack smiled and was on his way when he spotted a young brunette beauty in the crowd.

He walked over to her.

“Hi Ginny.”

Virginia Pierce, the town butcher’s daughter, rolled her eyes and belted out an exaggerated sigh.

“Hello Jack.”

“I’m up next,” Jack said.

“Good luck,” Ginny said.

Jack blushed and looked down at his shoe. He stalled for a moment then looked back at the girl.

“You know they say a kiss brings good luck.”

“It’s over, Jack,” Ginny said.

“I know,” Jack replied. “Just, you know…if I die…”

“Uggh,” Ginny said. “Fine.” She leaned up on her tip toes and pecked Jack a fast one on his cheek.”

Jack grinned. “I’ll never wash my face again.”

“What else is new?” Ginny asked.

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Undead Man’s Hand – Chapter 27

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“Jack you lazy son of a bitch!”

What a way to start the day. Twenty year old Jack McCall couldn’t remember a morning that hadn’t begun without his perpetually angry father screaming at him through the door over something.

The door rattled as Pa McCall pounded on it. “Open this door!”

“Crooked Nose Jack” was the young man’s nickname about town. He fancied himself a prizefighter but his rearranged beak said otherwise. In his short career, he’d taken more punches than he’d landed, and with the beating his father was giving the door, it was starting to look like he was about to take another one, or two, or twelve.

The rattling stopped. “You didn’t muck out the pig pen. You didn’t milk the cow. You are the most worthless sack of shit I’ve ever seen in all of my days, boy! Get out of bed and get to work or so help me…”

Jack brushed his black hair out of his face and hopped out of bed. He picked up the button down shirt he’d worn the day before up off the floor and put it back on. He was still wearing the previous day’s trousers.

Inside Jack’s mind there was a vision of his fist connecting to his old father’s face, shutting up his tirade instantly and sending him to the ground in a heap.

He’d yet to do that to an opponent in the ring, but he was certain he could do it to a mouthy old timer.

But he didn’t want to. Yet he knew that it was only a matter of time before he lost control.  So, he slipped on his shoes and opened a window.

His father had good ears. “Boy, don’t you think about leaving without your chores done! You give up that scrapping and you get to work, you hear me?”

Jack grabbed a book off his night stand, then slipped out the window and landed in the road. His father bellowed even louder.

“Damn it, Jack!” Pa McCall screamed. “You’ll never amount to anything! Twenty Goddamn years old, no fucking job, no wife, you’re a loser! You hear me?! A loser! Don’t you ever come back here!”

“Loser.” The word had such a sting to it. It was odd that the word retained such power as Jack had the word hurled at him by so many people in his life.

Pa McCall had told Jack to get lost plenty of times before and always let him come back, though not without a profanity laced lecture of course. Still, Jack always felt like he was eating shit whenever he did come back.

Rude as his father’s summation of Jack’s life was, the lad knew the old man wasn’t wrong. Twenty. Jobless. Broke. No wife. There was a girl but she changed her mind about Jack as often as the seasons changed the weather.

As Jack strolled down the road, he felt as if he might as well have had a letter “L” carved into his forehead.

He was in need of inspiration. He parked himself on a bench in front of one of the town’s many saloons and looked at the cover of his book.

“The Life and Times of James Butler “Wild Bill” Hickok – a Biography by Elliot P. Forysthe.”

The book was worn and its pages dog eared from multiple readings. Jack licked his finger and turned to the first chapter. It was his favorite part.

“Chapter the First – Given the fact that the name ‘Wild Bill Hickok’ is well known in every household from New York to San Francisco, it may come as a tremendous surprise to the reader to learn that Mr. Hickok came from very humble beginnings, thus proving that the American dream is achievable by all willing to struggle for it.

‘I know what it’s like to be dirt poor, dead broke, and written off like a bump on a rented mule’s behind,’ Mr. Hickok told this writer. ‘But the hard times we all fight through make the victory that much sweeter. Every day a nobody becomes a somebody. It can be done.”

“It can be done,” Jack mumbled to himself.

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Undead Man’s Hand – Part 4

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Bullock officially becomes Deadwood’s new sheriff, only to find trouble within a few minutes of pinning on his star.

Chapter 20       Chapter 21        Chapter 22

Chapter 23       Chapter 24       Chapter 25

Chapter 26

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Undead Man’s Hand – Chapter 26

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Mike had washed up and changed clothes, but his face was still bruised and sore. He stepped into Al’s office.

Andy Clement’s body was still on the floor. The floorboards were coated with blood, much of it from Mike’s crude attempt to saw off the body’s arm. It was still attached, though only by a little bit of tissue.

Al was holding an unlit torch – rags soaked in kerosene wrapped around the end of a wooden handle.

“Look at yourself,” Al said. “What am I going to do with you?”

“I’m sorry, Al.”

“The thing you need to remember is threats don’t work on a man like Bullock,” Al said. “You either do something to him or you don’t but if you decide to do something, you don’t let him know its coming. You just do it. Got it?”

“I got it,” Mike said.

Al shook his head. “Aww who knows what’s going on inside that squirrel brain of yours?”

The barkeep walked over to a bookcase that was positioned up against the wall and put his hand on a copy of Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables.

“Know why I like this book?” Al asked.

“No,” Mike replied.

“It’s about a bunch of French do-gooder fucks,” Al explained as only he could. “During a time of war and famine everyone’s dying while they try to do the right thing. The only two remotely happy people in the entire sordid tale are the corrupt innkeeper and his crooked wife who lie, cheat and steal their way through life.”

Mike just stood there.

“Get it?” Al asked.

Mike shrugged his shoulders. “Try to do good?”

Al rolled his eyes. “You are useless. Now listen ignoramus, I’m about to show you something that you can never reveal to another living soul. Understand?”

Mike nodded.

“I’m not telling tales out of school here, kid,” Al said. “You tell no one about this. Not one of your drinking buddies, not some girl you’re diddling, not even your whore of a mother.”

“I won’t tell,” Mike said.

Al pointed a finger at Mike. “Let me make it clear. Anyone you tell will have to die. If you tell anyone, you have killed them.”

Mike nodded again.

“Good,” Al said. “So long as we have an understanding.”

Al pulled the book forward. Gears and cranks built into the wall began to churn as the entire bookcase slid to the left.

The barkeep struck a match, lit his torch, then led Mike down a dark, dank staircase.

“Where the hell did you leave Farley’s hide?” Al asked. “Clearly not in a good spot since Bullock was just trying to stick his head up my ass.”

“Stable,” Mike said. “Under a hay bale.”

Al sighed. “In the stable under a hay bale. Jesus Christ I should just hire a fucking donkey.”

“Sorry Al,” Mike said. “I didn’t know what else to do.”

“I know dummy,” Al said. “Now I’m going to show you.”

The staircase wounded around in a spiral for awhile. “See, no one really gives a shit what we do, but we just can’t be so obvious about it. Some dopey shit heel disappears, everyone knows what happened but they can at least pretend maybe the dumb ass ran away or some shit.”

A rat scurried past Mike’s feet. He kicked it away.

“But if you start stacking the bodies like cordwood out in the open for everyone to see, that’s when do-gooder fucks like Bullock start asking questions.”

At the bottom of the staircase was a tunnel. It was so dark that it was difficult to see just how far it went. Mike followed Al’s torchlight into the darkness.

As they walked, Mike noticed all sorts of boxes and crates. Several of them were marked “TNT.”
“What is all this, Al?” Mike asked.

“I’ll just say it’s some shit that fell off the back of an Army wagon and leave it at that,” Al said. “But naturally, if you’ve got shit that belongs to the Army, you don’t want to leave it lying around for every mouthy son of a bitch to see, do you?”

“No,” Mike said.

Out of curiosity, Mike lifted up the lid of a chest. It was filled to the brim with shiny golden nuggets.

Al snapped the lid shut.

“This tunnel,” Al said. “And the shit I keep in it are my insurance policy.”

Mike was clearly confused. “Insure-whatance?”

“God Almighty what a simpleton,” Al said. “Insurance. It’s uh. Jew shit. You pay a Heeb some money and they agree to pay you the money you need to fix something if it gets fucked up.”

“So Jews built this tunnel?” Mike asked.

“No,” Al replied. “I actually hired a bunch of Chinks to build it.”

“Now you’ve lost me,” Mike said.

“What else is new?” Al said. “Forget about the insurance. The point is that I realize that one day the U.S. government is coming for me. They’re coming to take over this entire town. When they happens, I’m not going to be strung up by my neck while some self-righteous fucks pat themselves on the back about how honest and decent they are and what a fuck I am.”

Mike and Al kept walking. More crates of gold and dynamite lined the walls.

“Hopefully if the Army ever comes, I’ll get a warning from one of the crooked politicians in my pocket so that I can load all this gold on a wagon and hightail it into Canuck territory,” Al said. “Fucking Canucks. Bunch of syrup swilling moose fuckers if you ask me.”

Al stopped. “But if they come without warning, I’ll at least be able to fill my pockets and run out of here like a thief in the night. Now you can do that too.”

The barkeep pointed a finger at the tunnel’s seemingly endless darkness.

“Next time we’ve got a carcass to get rid of,” Al said. “Don’t leave it around for any old asshole to discover. Bring it down here, lug it a mile north and you’ll be in the woods. Once you’re there you can dump the body under a tree, bury it, let a bear eat it, let a skunk fuck it, let a family of possums built a next in its belly, I truly don’t give a shit.”

Mike nodded.

“Just don’t leave it lying around town for self-righteous pricks like Bullock to find,” Al said.

“OK,” Mike said.

“New project,” Al said. “I want you to take some of this dynamite and rig the tunnel to blow. That way when the Army comes we can get the hell out of Dodge and cover our tracks so they can’t follow us.”

“Shit Al,” Mike said. “I don’t know anything about dynamite.”

“You better learn,” Al said. “If you blow my fucking joint up by accident and kill me in the process I’ll come back as a ghost and smack the shit out of you.”

Mike opened the lid to one of his gold crates, removed a nugget and tucked it into the henchman’s hand.

“Here,” Al said. “Don’t spend it all in one place.”

“Wow,” Mike said. “Thanks Al.”

Al shook his head. “I’m going to regret telling you about this, aren’t I?”

“No,” Mike replied.

“Shit,” Al said. “Yes I am. I know it. I might as well chop off my cock and mail it to Grant by pony express to save him the trouble.”

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Undead Man’s Hand – Chapter 25

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About an hour later, Bullock found himself nearly catatonic, silently staring at the wall as he sat in the back of Aunt Lu’s cafe. He wasn’t hungry. He just sat there.

Merrick and McGillicuddy, on the other hand, were scarfing breakfast down. Ham and eggs, bacon, home fries, grits, pancakes – it was as if Aunt Lu’s mission in life was to make everyone in town morbidly obese.

“Mr. Bullock,” Doctor McGillicuddy said. “Please. Get a plate and take some of this. You don’t know what you’re missing.”

“No word of a lie,” Merrick added. “In all my travels I have never encountered a chef as skilled in the culinary arts as our own Aunt Lu.”

Bullock ignored both men and kept staring at the wall. Finally, he spoke up.

“I hate your guts, Merrick.”

“I know,” Merrick said. “I don’t blame you.”

“Why did you do this to me?” Bullock asked.

“I tried to stop you,” Merrick said. “Once I thought the whole thing through.”

“But I…”

Doctor McGillicuddy cut him off. “You assumed due to your experience as an officer of the law that you could handle Al Swearengen but he is like no other criminal you have ever seen, a modern day megalomaniac who has dotted his every “i” and crossed every last one one of his ’t’s.’ Our entreaties did not do the man justice and you did not realize how evil he was until you met him in person.”

“That sums it up,” Bullock said without taking his gaze away from the wall.

A hand waved its way past Bullock’s face. It belonged to Lu, who stopped by to drop more plates on the table. Corned beef hash and buttered biscuits with gravy.

“Oh no,” Merrick said. “Lu, please! I’m going to bust!”

“Well someone’s got to eat it,” Lu said. “I made too much and I can’t let it go to waste.”

Lu looked Bullock over.

“Why isn’t he eating?” she asked.

Merrick took a sip of coffee. “He’s had a rough morning.”

“Hey,” Lu said as she snapped her fingers in front of Bullock’s face. “Don’t you know its an insult to come in my place and not eat something?”

The cook noticed the star pinned to Bullock’s shirt.

“New sheriff?” she asked.

Doctor McGillicuddy sighed. “Afraid so. And worse, he’s contemplating a war with Al Swearengen.”

Lu threw her hands up in the air and walked away. “Oh hell no. Last thing I need is to make friends with a dead man.”

Bullock sighed. “I hate you Merrick.”

“I know,” Merrick replied.

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Undead Man’s Hand – Chapter 24

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Al rapped on his office door. “Mike.”

“Busy, Al,” came Mike’s voice from the other side of the door. It was followed by a strange sound. Bullock wasn’t able to place it though Al realized it was the sound of a saw cutting its way through bone.

Al was a man of multiple personalities and in the presence of the new sheriff, his “I’m just a nice guy” routine was on full display. “Join us on the veranda imminently.”

“Huh?” Mike asked.

The barkeep wasn’t perfected. His default gruffness poked through. “Get the fuck up to the veranda quick as you can.”

Al forced a smile at Bullock and then added one more thing for Mike. “I’d like you to meet the new sheriff.”

A short silence followed by…”Oh. OK.”

The barkeep put an arm around Bullock and led him upstairs. “Got my assistant cleaning my office for me. It’s a real mess. But the air will do us some good. What’d you say your name was?”

“I didn’t,” Bullock said. “Seth Bullock.”

Al snapped took his arm off Bullock’s shoulder and snapped his fingers repeatedly. “Bullock….Bullock…Bullock….where do I know that name? Oh!”

Bullock stayed quiet as he walked with Al up the stairs.

“The Johnny Do-gooder who held off a wild mob with a shotgun while he hanged a no good horse thief all by himself.” Bullock said.

“That’d be me,” Bullock replied.

“Ah,” Al said. “So the town council went out and hired an honest man, those cunts.”

“Pardon?” Bullock asked.

“They hired an honest man for once,” Al said.

Al lead Bullock into his own personal quarters. Pretty drab. Nothing hanging on the walls. Just a lonely bed and a chair to sit in. He opened up a set of doors and walked out onto a veranda that overlooked the town.

Bullock leaned over the railing and did some people watching. From a distance, the lives of the townsfolk as they hustled and bustled, fought, argued and lived seemed halfway interesting.

“All right,” Al said. “Now that we’re alone lets cut the bullshit. How much do you want?”

“Excuse me?” Bullock asked.

“McKenna was a greedy fuck,” Al said. “Took his pay from the council. Hit me up for even more. It got to be too much, and he was an incompetent lowlife fat fuck who never met a pie he didn’t want to shove down his throat. You actually look like a halfway useful person so you’ll be worth the extra scratch. How much you thinking?”

“I’m not thinking about that at all,” Bullock said.

“Then what are you in my face for?” Al asked.

Bullock pulled his pistol. Whereas many men would have reached for the sky, Al indignantly folded his arms.

“And what the fuck do you suppose you’re going to do with that?”

“You’re under arrest, Al Swearengen,” Bullock said. “For the murder of Patrick Farley.”

Al couldn’t keep a straight faced. He laughed and laughed. “You’re…you’re serious!”

“As a bullet through your head,” Bullock said.

At that moment, Bullock heard the distinct sound of a pistol’s hammer being cocked behind his head.

“That can be arranged,” Mike said.

Undeterred, the sheriff kept his weapon pointed at Al. “You want to call off your dog?”

“Mike,” Al said. “Remember what I said…”

With his weapon still pointed at Bullock, Mike walked around to Bullock’s left side so as to avoid the possibility of shooting Al by accident.

“That and the other thing,” Al said.

“I won’t shoot till your say-so, boss,” Mike replied.

Bullock cocked his hammer and leered at Al. “You better tell him to drop it right quick.”

“Tell you what,” Al said. “Howsabout you both drop your steel and we have a little talk?”

“Whatever you want, Al,” Mike said.

“I don’t negotiate with lowlives,” Bullock said.

“You might consider it,” Bullock said. “The kid’s a hair trigger and not right in the head.”

Bullock sighed. “Fine. On three.”

Hearing agreement all around, Bullock counted down. “One…two…”

On three, Mike lowered his weapon only to have it immediately snatched out of his hand. Bullock now had two guns and pointed one at each scumbag.

“Mike,” Al said. “I swear to God you are the worst fucking henchman ever.”

“Both of you,” Bullock said. “Let’s go.”

“Fine, fine,” Al said. “I wanted to talk like gentleman but if you have to be Mr. Squeaky Clean Law Abiding Fuck then let’s do this the hard way. I’m not going any where.”

“The hell you aren’t,” Bullock said.

“Which one of those turd sniffers put you up to this?” Al asked. “McGillicuddy? Nah. He wouldn’t dare.”

“Less talking, more walking,” Bullock said.

“Merrick!” Al shouted. “It was that fucking newsboy wasn’t it? Aww I ought to chop of his pecker with a rusty razor and run it through his printing press.”

“Enough,” Bullock said.

“Now that’d be a short edition.”

“I don’t want to hear another word,” Bullock said.

“Well you’re going to,” Al said. “Because I own this town. Look around you, Bullock. Everything you see is mine. We’re outside the United States, so if I wanted to, I could build myself a throne, pop a fucking golden crown on my head and declare myself ‘King Al the First, Rightful Ruler of the Drunk Fucks of Deadwood’ and no one could stop me, least of all you.”

Curiosity got the best of Bullock and he allowed Al to keep talking.

“But U.S. Grant,” Al said. “Mr. Unconditional Surrender himself. That bearded fuck could stop me. He and all his political lackey ass kissers would love nothing more than to march their fat asses up here and take everything that isn’t nailed the fuck down. I’m the one who greases the right palms, whispers into the right ears and most importantly, bribes the right shit bags to keep a vote on whether or not this fucking territory should be taken the fuck over by America from happening.”
Bullock did not like the direction of this conversation one bit.

“Everyone with an office in this town is expected to be my puppet,” Al said. “Shut the fuck up, do what you’re told, act like you’re doing something important so that it makes it hard for the politicians to just send the Army up here to wipe us all the fuck out. Oh sure, the government can slaughter scores of the heathen savages all day long and twice on Sunday and no one gives a fuck but harm a bunch of simple townsfolk who even went to the trouble of forming a rudimentary government with a mayor, a council and a sheriff? That’s a whole other story.”

“You broke the law,” Bullock said.

“What law?” Al asked. “There are no laws here. You are a sheriff in a land without a single fucking law on the books.”

Bullock scoffed. “You got to be shitting me.”

“Nope,” Al said. “Not one. Why do you think people come here? Sure, out of a sad hope they might find a shiny gold nugget or two, but they stay because this is the only place in the world where you can do whatever the fuck you want and no Goddamn nosey lawman sticks his nose in your business. Why would you want to ruin a good thing like that?”

“No more bullshit,” Bullock said. “Time to lock you two up.”

“Where?” Al asked.

“Huh?” Bullock asked in return.

“Where are you going to lock us up?” Al asked. “There isn’t a jail.”

“There isn’t?” Bullock asked.

“Nope,” Al replied. “No jail. No Sheriff’s office. No judge to try us, no jury to convict us, no law except for dog eat dog and I’m the biggest dog here.”

Beads of sweat collected on Bullock’s brow. “That can’t be right.”

“Woof fucking woof,” Al said. “And let me assure you, Bullock. You put one in me and there will be over a hundred assholes lined up to put two in you. There’s no end to the list of people I’ve got on the take. Once I go, the livelihood of a lot of people go with me and they’ll make you answer for it, I assure you.”

Bullock’s stomach was queasy. His head ached. It was an experience he’d never been through before. A criminal had talked him out of making an arrest.

He kept his guns pointed at Al and Mike as he backed his way toward the door.

“Good idea,” Al said. “And don’t show your face around here until you’re ready to be a useful part of the operation.”

“Don’t tell me what to do,” Bullock said.

“I’ll tell you whatever I want you to do,” Al said. “And you’ll do it and like it.”

Mike grinned. “Yeah. And if you don’t we’ll cut your wife’s tits off.”

That did it.

Bullock’s eyes widened. His nostrils flared.

Al was displeased. “Oh Christ, Mike.”

“What the fuck did you just say to me?” Bullock asked.

“I said if you don’t…”

Before Mike could finish his sentence, Bullock was pistol whipping Mike across the face. It only took a couple of blows before the young man was on the ground, but that didn’t stop the sheriff from continuing his assault.

Al put his hands on Bullock’s shoulders, attempting to pull the lawman away.

“Bullock!” Al cried. “That’s enough!”

Bullock was too focused on pounding Mike’s face.

“He does not have permission to speak for me!” Al shouted. “Don’t kill him!”

The thought that continuing his attack could lead to Mike’s death was enough to bring Bullock back to his senses. He stepped away.

“I’m not completely without honor, Bullock,” Al said. “I’ve yet to punish anyone just for being the relative of a dumb fuck I didn’t like. I assure you that your wife’s lovely tits will remain quite stationary.”

Bullock headed for the door then stopped. “As soon as I figure this all out, we’ll talk again.”

The sheriff was gone before Al could think of a snide comeback. Instead, he put his energy into helping Mike to his feet.

“You all right?” Al asked.

Mike clearly wasn’t. His face was bloody and he was having a hard time staying upright. Al took his lackey’s arm and put it over his shoulder.

“Just can’t get it through your stupid skull can you?” Al asked.

“I’m trying,” Mike answered.

“Try harder,” Al said. “Speak when spoken too. Come on. Get cleaned up. I have to show you something.”

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I am a Traitor to the #OscarsSoPretty Movement

It dawns on me that just about every villain, evildoer or henchman in my Zombie Western books is ugly.

Sigh.  I am a traitor to #OscarsSoPretty

This has been difficult. So much time is spent on writing pages that, if I’ve done my job correctly, will be breezed through by the reader.  Within the novel, there’s only so much time/space to explain your characters.

Unfortunately, “ugly guy=evil” is something people quickly recognize even though it is totally wrong. But “really handsome guy who had a tortured past and became evil because of X reason” is more than people care to hear about.

Oh I feel awful. I have betrayed the #OscarsSoPretty movement.

 

 

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Undead Man’s Hand – Chapter 21

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“Rip that tooth right the fuck out,” Al said.

“They’re all gone,” Mike said.

“I can see one right there,” Al replied.

Poor Andy Clement, a short haired man in his early thirties, was tied to the same chair in Al’s office that the late Pat Farley had been tied to the day before. All but one of his teeth were laid out on Al’s desk and Al was determined to get that last one.

“Where?” Mike asked as he held Mike’s mouth open.

“You don’t see that?” Al asked. “It’s clear as fucking day.”

“Oh,” Mike said as he picked up a pair of rusty, blood soaked pliers off of Al’s desk. “Hold on.”

“Noooo!” Andy cried. “Al I’ve told you everything I know I swear.”

“Famous last words from a malicious little prick trying to fuck me over and save his life at the same time,” Al said. “You’re not going to do both so what’s it going to be?”

“If I knew something else I’d tell you,” Andy said.

“Let us lay out the facts,” Al said. “Pat, that stinking filth bag, told me that you took my shit and now you are telling me that you did not take my shit. Either he lied to me or you’re lying to me right now. Which is it?”

“He lied!” Andy shouted. “He lied, I swear!”

“Tell me something useful and you might save your last chomper,” Al said.

Andy’s face was soaked with a mixture of tears, blood and sweat. “He…he…uhh…”

“What?” Al asked. “Be a fucking man already!”

“He took it!” Andy said. “He fucking took it and sold it and he was laughing the whole time, Al! I tried to stop him but he was all like, ‘No fuck Al I hate him and stop being such a good fucking friend to Al for trying to stop me Andy.”

Al stroked his chin and looked at Mike. “You buy it?”

Mike shook his head no.

“Pull it out,” Al commanded.

Al turned away and took a seat behind his desk, pouring himself a scotch as he watch his young protege yank out Andy’s one last tooth. The screams, the cries, the sheer terror on Andy’s face, the chilling efficiency with which Mike did his dirty work, none of it went unnoticed.

“You brought this on yourself, Andy,” Al said as Mike dropped the last tooth on Al’s desk.

The barkeep took a sip of scotch. “A mystery for the ages. Was I fucked by Pat? By you, Andy? Or did you two twats collude to fuck me together?”

Andy was struggling to breathe. “Maybe…it was…someone else.”

“Maybe,” Al said. “Shit I hadn’t even considered that possibility. The plot fucking thickens.”

Al coughed. At first it was a little. Then it was a lot. Soon it was a fit. His face turned red.

“You all right, Al?” Mike asked.

Al stopped coughing. “I’m fine,” Al replied as he closed his eyes. “Booze went down the wrong pipe I guess. Goddamn it I’m so done with this bullshit.”

BLAM!

Startled, Al opened his eyes and jumped out of his chair to see that the right side of Andy’s face had been blown off. Mike was standing off to the right and once again holding a smoking revolver.

“What the fuck was that?!” Al shouted.

“What?” Mike asked. “You said you were done!”

“I meant it figuratively, you dopey fuck!” Al shouted. “The whole mess exhausted me is what I was trying to say but I wasn’t actually done. I had more questions for the stupid prick!”

“I’m sorry Al,” Mike said as he holstered his gun.

“What did I tell you yesterday?” Al asked.

“Not to shoot a man in the back of the head when you’re sitting in front of him,” Mike said. “That’s why I did it from over here.”

“Well I guess you’re not that stupid but I meant the other thing,” Al said.

Mike shrugged his shoulders.

“I think!” Al shouted. “You do!”

“Oh,” Mike said. “Right.”
“You’re fucking right I’m right,” Al said. “And do not do the fucking doing until I tell you to do it! You got it?”

“I got it,” Mike said.

Al walked over to Mike, rested his hands on the young man’s shoulders and looked him in the eye. “Jesus H. Christ, kid. You got guts and you remind me a lot of myself when I was your age but you have got to learn how to take a fucking order.”

Mike nodded.

“No more killing people in my office,” Al said. “It makes a giant, unnecessary mess. I’m still finding little chunks of Pat’s brain everywhere.”

“I thought I got ‘em all,” Mike said.

“And yet they persevere,” Al said.

Al downed the last of his scotch and pounded the shot glass down on the desk. “Clean this shit up. I gotta get back to the bar. Mitsy pours suds about as good as she fucks, slowly and with a lousy attitude.”

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