1
We rise and we fall. In our hands
we hold the ashes. Love passes into nothingness. And through it all, the world
goes on.
2
A man
walks alone. Through the wastelands and the heat. A holstered revolver hangs
from his right hip and a sword in a sheath from his left.
He stops, pushes his hat back and looks up at
the sky. It is vast, with not a cloud to break up its blue emptiness. The sun
beats down relentlessly. The man moves on.
The road he follows is dull and
overgrown with weeds. Nothing can be seen in the western wastelands but a few
large dead trees, patches of yellow weeds and a group of distant mountains far
to the north. The ground is hard and flat.
A large crow flies overhead. Its cry stabs
through the rumbling silence. A small animal scurries threw the dead grass and
disappears into the ground.
He is thirsty. But he cannot drink.
Not now. The water skin tied to his belt with strips of rawhide is less than
halfway full. He cannot drink and the road is long. His stores of grain and
beef jerky are beginning to run low.
He thinks of the man with the
blonde hair and the scar on his cheek.
The group he hunts is far ahead. They
are well armed. They are better supplied. They have companions. They are
dangerous.
A wind blows across the desert.
Warm dust rises into the sky. The man walks on.
The man is alone. He follows his
prey. Through the wastelands. Through whatever might come.
3
The man
with the gun on his hip stops. He is walking east on the old road. About half a
mile up ahead here is another man on the road. His hand drops to the butt of
his revolver and approaches slowly. He scans the dead grass around the road for
movement. The man in the road might be bait for an ambush. The blonde man was
cunning.
There was an ancient looking wagon
broken down in the road. The man was sitting in the shade with his back against
the wagon. The man is old, bearded and skinny. His clothes are old and a little
tattered, but they are clean. To his left sits a large pack. He is unarmed.
How strange it was to see another
man in the middle of this emptiness. He had set out on his journey through the
western wastelands two weeks ago. And in all that time he had not seen a hint
of another human being or intelligent creature. Aside from the grey-black
remains of old fires.
He walks up to the old man, who
appears to be fast asleep. He doesn’t hear him approach. He scans the desert once
more carefully. With the toe of his boot he taps the old man’s arm.
The old man groans and stirs but he
does not wake. This time the man with the sword draws his boot back and gives
the old fart a hard kick to the thigh.
The old man wakes with a shrill cry
and waves his hands around his head as if to swat away flies.
“What in hell do ya think-“the old
man cries, then cuts himself off. His eyes go wide. He is looking at the man
standing before him. Specifically his big revolver. He clears his throat and
gets to his feet with a groan of effort. He speaks again, but this time his
voice is small and scared.
“Ima sorry but ya can’t be going
around just waking people up like that, son.”
He licks his lips. His eyes on the
revolver.
“What are ya anyways? A robber?
Walking around with a piece like that?”
The man with the big gun and the
sword on his hips took a step back and bowed his head. Now the old man looked
at his face.
“Just a traveler.” he said, a small
smile on his face. His voice was deep and rough. His smile real.
“And I shall tell you my name if
you would tell me yours”
The old man seemed to relax a bit
now. He slumped back down in the shade of the old wagon. He grabs his pack and
opens it. The old man does not fail to notice that the travelers’ hand has moved to
the butt of his gun. The old man slowly pulls out a small pouch. From the pouch
he produces two scraps of paper and a small bag of tobacco.
“Sit with me in the shade, traveler.
I’ll roll ya a smoke.” The man considered this for a moment then sat next to
the old man. It felt good to get out of the sun’s heat. He looked over at the
old man. He finished rolling the cigarettes, put them in his mouth, then he
produced a small knife and flint from his pack. He grabbed a handful of dry
grass and put it on the ground. He struck the flint and the grass caught the
spark easily. He used the small flame to light the cigarettes. The old man
passed one over and the traveler took it gratefully.
He took a deep drag from his smoke,
and exhaled slowly.
“Ma name is Goomy,” the old man
said with his smoke in his mouth. “Just Goomy. Everybody calls me Goomy.”
The old man puffed out a smoke ring.
The warm dusty wind blew the ring away.
The man of the sword and the gun
gave his small smile again. He removed his hat to reveal black hair. He bowed
his head again.
“My
name is Davis son of Victor,” he said. His head still bowed. “Thank you for the
smoke, sir”
4
The two
men sat in the shade smoking for a few minutes. The wind kicked up and brought
up a new wave of dust. Davis snubbed out the remains of his smoke and stood up.
The old man did the same. Goomy seemed to be a good enough man, simply going about
his business. But Davis hadn’t gotten this far by being careless about the
people on the road.
“Well I
figure ya got some questions for me,” Goomy said while beginning to put his
things carefully back in his pack.
“Otherwise
ya woulda just walk on by a old sleepin man”
Davis
looked at Goommy carefully. Then he simply nodded, trying to figure out the
best way to ask his questions. He put his hands on his hips.
“First,
I want to know what you are doing in the middle of the western wastelands” Davis’s
face was serious. His tone was flat and his small smile was gone.
“This
is no place for a man who has seen as many winters as you.”
“Bah.”
Goomy said and waved the question away with is hand. “Look here son. I got me
some business in the border town of Majin. I made the crossing through this
here frying pan six or seven times in ma day. And I got no doubt I make it this
time too.” He thumped his chest with a fist and smiled. Davis nodded. He had
passed through the small town of Majin on the trail of the blonde man. Stopping
only long enough to resupply.
“I’m
old, yar! But I made of some tough stuff!” As if to prove this point he slung
his heavy pack over his back easily.
“Now,
what ya really want to know?”
Davis
looked at this old timer a moment longer. He admired his rough nature, and
simple but direct manner.
“I’m
looking for a man.”
Goomy
did not seem surprised to hear this. But still his eyes narrowed slightly and
he looked back towards the road he had come from. He looked down at the ground.
“He is
a thin, blonde man, with a deep scar in his left cheek. He and his posse set
out three days before me from Majin.”
Goomy
cleared his throat. “And what is ya business with these men?”
Davis spoke
no reply, but simply rested his hand on his revolver. Goomy nodded as if this
was all the answer he needed.
“It
seems ya have closed the distance between ya. I seen the man ya ask for. Passed
that fellow and his friends on the road not two days ago. He and his buddies
had a fowl look to em so I walked off the road and let em pass. There was four
of em. And I be damned if all four of em didn’t have guns about their hips. Ma
eyes are old but their sharp. I ain’t seen that many guns at once since I was a
younger man.”
Davis
nodded and now he looked down the desert road.
“About
six days to get to the town of Lock from here” Goomy said “But I think that the
Posse will get their before ya can catch up to em.”
“I
think that you are right” Davis said and removed his hat. He turned back
towards Goomy. He seemed eager to go. And also far livelier than a man his age
had any right to be. Davis had no doubt that the man would make it Majin.
“Thank
you for your help Goomy.” Davis held out his hand to old man. His small and
easy smile was back and it might have been a little wider. “And thank you for
the smoke.” Goomy took his hand and shook it.
“Tis
always good to meet decent men on the road. Sometimes they are hard to come
by.” Davis nodded and reached into his pack and produced a gold piece. He
handed it to Goomy. Goomy smiled and bit down on the gold piece as he turned to
leave.
The men walked in different
directions, but on the same road as they both left the shade of the broken cart
behind. Before they were out of sight Davis turned around to look at the old
man. Off in the distance through the waves of heat Goomy also turned. He
thumped his chest twice and headed off.
Davis
walked alone down the desert road once again. Through the wastelands and the
warm desert dust. He knows his prey is closer now. His small smile returned
and his pace quickened.
5
The blonde man followed the road
east to the town of Lock. The road out of the wastelands. With one hand he
adjusted the strap around his shoulder. He traveled with three companions.
Mercenaries. The four men walked across the desert, hard calibers slung about their waists.
Mercenaries. The four men walked across the desert, hard calibers slung about their waists.
The blonde man, whose name was
Elven Greene, had paid them well and the promise of more gold to come had kept
them loyal, for the time being. The leader of the mercenary trio was a stout
man by the name of Lee. He was quiet by nature but quick to anger if provoked.
Elven had seen this first hand in a saloon back in Majin. Lee and his mates, Waters and Grayson, had been drinking the night the blonde man had stopped in
town. He had noticed the trio right away. They carried firearms and it was rare
to see any guns that far outside of the main provinces. Let alone three. Lee
sat drinking with his mates to either side of him. The blonde man had taken a
small table in a corner.
As the night progressed, a table of men playing cards had become rowdier and rowdier. The drunken slurs and obscenities became louder. It wasn’t long before the fists began to fly. In the commotion a bottle was thrown. It flew across the saloon and struck the leg of Lee’s bar stool. The bottle shattered covering his pant leg with draft. The fight continued at the card table and the men never noticed Lee getting up from his stool.
As the night progressed, a table of men playing cards had become rowdier and rowdier. The drunken slurs and obscenities became louder. It wasn’t long before the fists began to fly. In the commotion a bottle was thrown. It flew across the saloon and struck the leg of Lee’s bar stool. The bottle shattered covering his pant leg with draft. The fight continued at the card table and the men never noticed Lee getting up from his stool.
He produced a handkerchief and
cleaned his pant leg. He then walked over to the card table and drew himself up
to his full height. Lee could not have been any taller than five foot five
inches. One of the brawling men caught sight of Lee and froze. The others
turned to look at him.
With one fast and fluid motion, Lee
drew his revolver and shot six times. The shots rang like thunderclap in the
small saloon. The saloon was now quiet. He returned the gun to its holster. Six
men had fallen dead. All six shot in the head. One of them had landed on the card
table. Lee grabbed the dead man by the hair and slid his body off the table. He
collected the gold and silver pieces strewn across it. Waters and Grayson
watched the ordeal with bemused expressions.
The rest of the saloon’s patrons cleared out
pretty quickly. After a few more drinks Elven had approached Lee and his mates
with a proposition. The next morning all four men set out from the small dusty
town of Majin.
The man of the gun and the sword was on his
trail and gaining every day. That cursed man had not relented in his hunt. In
their last encounter they had left their mark on each other. Although the mark
the blonde man wore was far easier to see.
As he walked Elven adjusted the
strap around his shoulder that held a long thin object to his back. It was
about the size of a broom handle and was thickly wrapped in cotton bandages.
This item had not left his side since the day his dying father had given it to
him. All those long years ago. Even when the man of the sword and the gun had
come for it and his life. He had fought that day and escaped scarred but with
his life. Elven would die before he let his father’s treasure fall into that man’s hands. He would Kill before he let it happen.
The wind was hot and full of dust.
The four men walked on to the town of Lock. Elven had family in this town. If
he could reach the home of his cousin Lord Ted Greene, he would finally be
safe. It would finally be safe. And
after so long, he could finally rest. The blonde man stopped. Lee and his
companions also stopped. Elven looked back down the way they had come. The old
cracked road stretching behind them. The wastelands huge and empty. He saw no
one.
“You hear something?” Lee asked as
he too looked around.
“No.” The blonde man responded and
began walking again. They followed
“I don’t see anything.” His hand
came up and touched the scar on his face.
He will come, the man of the sword
and the gun. Elven could feel it. Just as he could feel him somewhere on the
road gone by. Fine. Then let him come, Elven thought. I swear by the name of my
father, I will be his death.
6
For five days Davis traveled the
road at a high speed. The days were hot but he allowed himself to drink only
when absolutely necessary. He cut his mind off from the heat and from his
thirst. His prey was so close. The blonde man. When he caught him this time
there would be no running for them. There would be no mercy. He would kill this
man and follow his duty.
Davis thought of the wizard. He of
the smoke and the future. With his old, bright blue eyes. The end of his
service must be coming soon. It must be if the wizard wants Davis and
his line to continue his work. No more work for the old fortune teller.
But this time had not yet come. He
was still on the trail of his latest prey. And Davis son of Victor, would do his
duty. Just as his father had and his father before him. All the way back to the
former king of Erebus.
Davis took the smallest drink from
his water skin. He then began to move north, away from the road. He went north
until the road was barely visible. Then he began to move parallel to the road.
His speed increasing again, he now scanned the wastelands more carefully for
signs of his prey. Davis cut himself off from all thoughts now. All that there
was in him was yearning for the coming battle. Somewhere deep in his stomach it
ached. Soon there would be gunfire and screams. Soon there will be blood. Davis
traveled alone through the empty wastelands. The bloodlust rising in him.
7
Elven the blonde man, woke from a
kind of daze he was in. Lee or one of his companions had said something. They
had been walking through the wastelands for so long now. The huge empty desert
had dulled Elven’s mind and senses. He and his companions had slowed down
considerably in the last few days. Stopping to rest longer and getting up later
in the mornings. They had seen nothing in their long walk through the
wastelands but a single old man who would probably die on his way to Majin. His
three companions had become short tempered. Lee especially, who had developed a
slight limp a few days back. Although he would not admit to any pain. When they
had set out that morning, Waters had assured them that they would reach the town
of Lock before night fall. The irony of
Waters’s name was not lost on Elven. Their water stores were running dangerously
low. As they were, they would not have survived another three days on the road.
“What was that?” Elven asked as he
shook his head a little.
“Lock is just up ahead.” Grayson
said. Elven could hear a small amount of relief in his voice.
Elven looked ahead. In the distance
and through waves a heat he could see small buildings and patches of green
that could only be trees. His heart jumped at the sight. His companions
straightened up a little and the pace of all four men quickened. There, in the
town there will be fresh food and a soft bed. There will be other people. There
will be protection and safety. There will be rest.
Within the hour they were almost to
the town. The great road through the wastelands did not lead to a gate. In
simply became one of the main streets of the town and lead to the river. The
river could not be seen from where they were. Too many buildings were blocking
their view. The smaller buildings of Lock stood with their backs to the
wastelands. The buildings became larger as you moved closer to the center of
the town and the river. The trees also became more common the closer to the
river you were. Near the river is where the home of Lord Ted Greene would be.
That was their first and only stop.
Elven would pay Lee, Waters and
Grayson and have them be on their way. Over the journey he had come to dislike
all three men. Especially Lee. And now it seemed that hiring these men had been
completely unnecessary.
As they approached, the noises of
the town began to fill the air. The distant sounds of horses and the bustling
town market. The smell of cooking food. Elven smiled. He was close to the end
of his long journey. His blonde hair blew in the warm wind. He adjusted the
strap on his shoulder and the four men made for the entrance of the town with
some haste.
Maybe I’ll stop at an Inn first and
wash up before going to meet Lord Greene, Elven thought. It will not do to show
up looking so unkempt. His clothes were dirty and sweat stained and his
face was red with sunburn. A quick bath and warm meal might be in order. Lee
stopped and turned.
“Before we reach the town, I think
that we should deal with our business. You contracted us to protect you across
the wastelands and we have. We would like to be on our way.” Lee said.
Grayson and Waters grunted their
approval.
“And a hard road it was.” Grayson
said. “Maybe a little extra would-“
Grayson’s face exploded outward in
a spray of blood and bone as the sound of a gunshot rang through the air.
8
Lee was
the first to react and was also fast on the draw.
Davis had reached the town of Lock
just a few hours before the blonde man’s group. He had walked into town and
headed to the nearest fountain. After drinking his fill he had eaten what
little food he had left in his stores. He would need his energy for what was to
come. Then after taking a short rest he headed back towards the road out of
Lock. He walked south away from the road and stopped in front of one of the
houses that had its back to the desert. Davis found a small patch of shade with
a clear view of the road. He sat, relishing the cool ease of the shade after
the harsh glare of the wasteland sun.
Davis did not move. His breathing
was slow and even. He watched the empty road to the north with one hand on the
butt of his revolver the other on the hilt of his sword. He smiled his small
smile. This hunt was at its end.
9
Davis fired. One of the blonde
man’s men fell to the hard ground. He took aim at the second man who was
standing in front of the blonde man. He was looking at his fallen friend with a
look of both confusion and shock. Davis shot him twice in the chest. He fell,
screaming. Blood began running from his mouth choking his shrieks.
By this time the third man had drawn and was
leveling his gun at Davis. This man was short and had a limp but he was quick
on the draw.
Davis jumped to his right and
rolled against the hot ground. He was too slow. The short man fired and the
round grazed Davis’s right arm. A sharp pain shot from the wound. Warm blood
ran down his arm. Davis did not notice. Could not notice, not now. He used the
forward momentum of his roll to get to his feet and run for the nearest
building.
The blonde man had drawn his piece.
He and the short man were both firing. Davis ducked for cover behind one of the
houses. His ambush had reduced his enemies by half. He sat and calmly reloaded
his revolver. He could hear the sharp snap of the bullets hitting the wall
behind him.
Davis counted the rounds fired
carefully. He took a deep breath and stood up. Time seemed to slow. His eyes
sharpened as the world took on a bright clear shine before his eyes.
Elven and Lee continued to fire.
Lee emptied his gun and reloaded quickly. He started towards the house, his
revolver raised in front of him. Elven followed closely. Lee fired two more
rounds into the house.
Davis jump out from behind the
wall. He sailed horizontally roaring at the top of his lungs, with both hands
on his gun. Lee was able to fire one shot. It went wild. Davis fired twice. The
first hit Lee in the cheek. The second imploded his right eye.
Two quick sprays of warm blood hit
the blonde man who was standing directly behind Lee. Lee’s blood covered his
face and flew into his eyes. He was shooting wildly, momentarily blinded by the
blood.
Davis hit the ground and let off
another shot. This round hit the blonde man in the shin as Lee fell to his
knees then fell forward. The blonde man screamed in pain and fell back holding
his leg. The long item wrapped in bandage fell from his back. Blood spurted from
between his fingers.
Davis got to his feet and fired a
round. It struck Elven in the hand. He dropped his gun and screamed in pain. He
walked over to the two fallen men. He reloaded, his hands moving quickly and
confidently. Davis holstered his weapon and let out a long sigh. The bright
sharp quality had left his a quickly as it had come.
He looked down at the blonde man. A
scar ran down his face. The man he has been chasing for so long. This man may
even be his freedom if the wizard so chose.
“It’s over.” Davis said.
Elven did not look up. Davis kicked
the blonde man’s revolver away from him.
“Anything you’d like to say?” Davis
asked. He slowly unbuttoned his shirt and moved it. On his shoulder there was
an old stab wound. The scar, a thin white line, looked much like the scar on
the blond man’s face.
“Fuck. You.” Elven said looking up
at Davis. The blonde man was shaking, but not with fear. Fury burned in his
eyes. He spit on Davis’s boots.
Davis drew his sword and took a
step back.
“Give it to me.” Davis said. He
used his sword to point to the object Elven had had on his back. If the object
was cursed in anyway having the blonde man give it over to him would negate its
effects.
Elven’s face contorted into an
awful smile.
“Why don’t you just take it?” He asked. That hateful smile
still on his lips. The hot desert wind kicked up.
In one fluid motion Davis stepped
forward and buried the tip of his swords half an inch into the blond man’s chest.
He gave a single sharp cry of pain.
“I will not ask again.” Davis said.
His tone was flat and final. He drew his sword back.
Davis was then a little surprised
see tears falling from the blonde man’s eyes. His face still full of hate.
Elven reached back with his one
good hand. His fingers paused just before touching it. A shadow fell over his
face. He grabbed the object, his hands shaking. He brought it up but when Davis
reached to take it Elven drew it back. He pressed it against his chest like a
mother protecting her child.
“I-I can’t! I won’t give it to you.
To protect it was my father’s duty! Just as it is now my duty.” Elven sat there
in the dust, covered in blood.
Davis understood better than the
blonde man would ever know. A father’s duty. Passed on to his son. A burden
that one must bear until the day his own son was ready to take it. To lift it
from his father’s shoulders and allow him to die in peace. Oh yes, Davis
understood.
But the wizard wanted what this man
had. That was all there is.
Elven bit down on the object. Davis
lowered his sword, a little confused. What the hell is he doing?
He brought his head back and tore
off a mouthful of cotton bandage. Then another. Then another. What was beneath
the bandages was now visible. It appeared to be a sword. Some kind of short
sword. The steel of the blade was clean and bright but broken. It came to a
jagged point. The hilt was beautifully ornate, with gold and silver inlay. It
had no cross guard and a pointed pommel. The steel shone bright.
Elven Greene, the blonde man,
grabbed it by the handle. Davis looked away as the blade gave off a bright
flash of white light. The light consumed the blonde man. Davis took a step
back. Elven got to his feet. But that was impossible. Davis had shot him in the
leg not three minutes ago. The light dissipated. Elven stood holding the broken
sword and was covered in blood. The cotton bandages seemed to be burning at his
feet. Gunshot wounds in his leg and hand were no longer bleeding.
“Now.” The blonde man said. His
voice was no longer trembling and it had taken on a strange new quality, as if
the sound was not coming just from his mouth but from everywhere at once.
“I will remove your fucking head.”