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	<title>Robert James Russell &#187; Blood Quantum</title>
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	<description>Writer. Dreamer.  Nerd.</description>
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		<title>Read &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; FREE for a limited time!</title>
		<link>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/05/06/read-blood-quantum-free-for-a-limited-time/</link>
		<comments>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/05/06/read-blood-quantum-free-for-a-limited-time/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 May 2010 19:05:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert James Russell</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blood Quantum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/?p=488</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[So, I&#8217;m trying something new out here.
Below is the wonderful application known as Bookbuzzr.  Basically, you can read my Western short story &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; by clicking the book image below (click the full-screen button), then flip through it like you would an actual (hardcopy) book.  Crazy, huh!?
I won&#8217;t have this up forever, so&#8230;you know&#8230;do your [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So, I&#8217;m trying something new out here.</p>
<p>Below is the wonderful application known as Bookbuzzr.  Basically, you can read my Western short story &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; by clicking the book image below (click the full-screen button), then flip through it like you would an actual (hardcopy) book.  Crazy, huh!?</p>
<p>I won&#8217;t have this up forever, so&#8230;you know&#8230;do your thing&#8230;</p>
<p><img style="visibility: hidden; width: 0px; height: 0px;" src="http://counters.gigya.com/wildfire/IMP/CXNID=2000002.0NXC/bT*xJmx*PTEyNzMxNzEyMjA2OTImcHQ9MTI3MzE3MTY2NzQwNCZwPTU*OTI4MiZkPSZnPTImbz1kYmYxNzQxMzBiNDA*NDgzYWE2/OGZkMzk5ODIwZGQ*ZCZvZj*w.gif" border="0" alt="" width="0" height="0" /><object id="bookwidget" classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="328" height="220" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="name" value="bookwidget" /><param name="book" value="http://www.freado.com/bookwidget.swf" /><param name="flashVars" value="&quot;document_Id=7036_5574_1" /><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always" /><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allownetworking" value="all" /><param name="src" value="http://www.freado.com/bookwidget.swf" /><param name="flashvars" value="document_Id=7036_5574_1" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><embed id="bookwidget" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="328" height="220" src="http://www.freado.com/bookwidget.swf" allownetworking="all" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" flashvars="document_Id=7036_5574_1" book="http://www.freado.com/bookwidget.swf" name="bookwidget"></embed></object></p>
<p align="left"><a target="_blank" class="tt" href="http://twitter.com/home/?status=Read+%26%238220%3BBlood+Quantum%26%238221%3B+FREE+for+a+limited+time%21+http://ch3xw.th8.us" title="Post to Twitter"><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/tt-twitter-micro3.png" alt="Post to Twitter" /></a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>&#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; now available in paperback form! Delicious!</title>
		<link>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/31/blood-quantum-now-available-in-paperback-form-delicious/</link>
		<comments>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/31/blood-quantum-now-available-in-paperback-form-delicious/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 2010 02:17:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert James Russell</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blood Quantum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/?p=389</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Earlier today I made it known to the world that my Western short story &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; was available to purchase as an eBook (check that out here).  Now, for all you old fogies out there that still prefer your books in hardcopy form, click here and quit your whining!
  
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Earlier today I made it known to the world that my Western short story &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; was available to purchase as an eBook (check that out <a href="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/31/in-the-land-of-the-ebooks-i-am-king/">here</a>).  Now, for all you old fogies out there that still prefer your books in hardcopy form, click <a href="http://www.lulu.com/content/paperback-book/blood-quantum/8585878">here</a> and quit your whining!</p>
<p> <img src='http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_wink.gif' alt=';)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p align="left"><a target="_blank" class="tt" href="http://twitter.com/home/?status=%26%238220%3BBlood+Quantum%26%238221%3B+now+available+in+paperback+form%21+Delicious%21+http://rbw5i.th8.us" title="Post to Twitter"><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/tt-twitter-micro3.png" alt="Post to Twitter" /></a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>In the land of the eBooks, I am king</title>
		<link>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/31/in-the-land-of-the-ebooks-i-am-king/</link>
		<comments>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/31/in-the-land-of-the-ebooks-i-am-king/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Mar 2010 20:29:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert James Russell</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blood Quantum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/?p=385</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hey, remember that Western short story I posted on my blog a while back, &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221;? Well, I decided I wanted to try something new and offer it up as an eBook on Lulu.com.
Basically, I&#8217;m going to take my story down eventually from the site, so check it out while you can, and if you [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hey, remember that Western short story I posted on my blog a while back, &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221;? Well, I decided I wanted to try something new and offer it up as an eBook on Lulu.com.</p>
<p>Basically, I&#8217;m going to take my story down eventually from the site, so check it out while you can, and if you think it&#8217;s worthy of the $2.99 I&#8217;m asking, get yourself a copy by clicking the logo below. Cool?</p>
<p><a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=8584284"><img src="http://www.lulu.com/services/buy_now_buttons/images/gray.gif" border="0" alt="Support independent publishing: Buy this e-book on Lulu." /></a></p>
<p align="left"><a target="_blank" class="tt" href="http://twitter.com/home/?status=In+the+land+of+the+eBooks%2C+I+am+king+http://twdy9.th8.us" title="Post to Twitter"><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/tt-twitter-micro3.png" alt="Post to Twitter" /></a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Short story: &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/15/blood-quantum/</link>
		<comments>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/15/blood-quantum/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Mar 2010 00:51:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert James Russell</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blood Quantum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Full text below.  Enjoy.
&#8212;
Blood  Quantum
◊      ◊     ◊     ◊
Bob Antrim felt a cold steeled barrel matt his thick hair down and  wedge into the back of his skull.  He heard the hammer click back  metallically and in that moment recalled his wife dying of consumption,  spittles of blood curtained along the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Full text below.  Enjoy.</p>
<p>&#8212;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>Blood  Quantum</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">◊      ◊     ◊     ◊</p>
<p>Bob Antrim felt a cold steeled barrel matt his thick hair down and  wedge into the back of his skull.  He heard the hammer click back  metallically and in that moment recalled his wife dying of consumption,  spittles of blood curtained along the contours of her sunken face and  chest, and then he mulled on his boy who had died in infancy.  His hands  gripped the splintered haft of the pick and for a minute further he  dreamt of spinning in place and lodging the wedged spade into his  attacker but amid the hallucinated escapades a shot thundered out like  drums.  The bullet churned down the barrel of the spunked and dusty  revolver and it crushed through Bob’s skull and out his right eye socket  as fluids sprayed like some geyser and his body fell to the ground  sharp like stone.</p>
<p>Everett Root rolled the dented .44 caliber Dance revolver around his  index finger and holstered it as if he were some dashing and wily  roughrider that had been wrangled into a Wild West Show.  He coughed a  bit and waved the smoke away from his face with his hands and then set  his eyes on the heaped body, smiling crookedly and scratching his chin.  The ache in his leg gathered up again like a fist and he snorted out a  dollop of snot from his nostrils and lowered himself carefully to the  floor of the gritty mine.  He set his feet up on the twin timber planks  that bridged across mud and wet recessed puddles in the rock.  The air  smelled like sulfur.</p>
<p><img title="More..." src="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/wp-includes/js/tinymce/plugins/wordpress/img/trans.gif" alt="" />He unwound a  piece of stained-red cloth from around the upper part of his left thigh  and he dropped the saturated tourniquet into a soaked pile beside him.   Then he took two fingers and peeled an opening in his gray trousers that  sat dark like cotton flesh and beneath the opening laid a bullet wound  that fizzled deep, the opening lipped out as if it had been disturbed by  some plated tremor deep below.  A glossy covering of black-red blood  formed at the surface and he thumbed at it curiously as if he had  previous familiarities with human anatomy, then recoiled from the shocks  of pain that shot back.  He coughed deeply and squinted his eyes at the  gaping hole, imagining he could see the top of the stunted round poking  out and he wished he had dug the thing out in San Augustine.</p>
<p>He scooted himself along the ground to alleviate the pressure on his  hurt leg and kept at it until he reached the miner’s boots and he  stopped.  He sized them up mechanically and concluded they were too  small and then he wormed his way along the body further, grimacing with  hurt at every length he moved.  He stopped again at the miner’s waist  and breathed hard and squinted his eyes again into the dark and smiled  at the smoking wound lodged in his pale face.  Then Everett took a  smudged hand and turned the man’s head from side to side, gripping it  along the jaw with the charm of a grandfather admiring a boy.</p>
<p>&#8220;Sunnuvabitch!”</p>
<p>He guffawed and looked around for encouragement as if he had  hallucinated an audience that likewise enjoyed his clowning and then let  the head flop back with a heavy bump.</p>
<p>“From the right angle, boy, you look like my brother Jesse.&#8221;</p>
<p>He coughed again and rummaged through the large denim pockets of the  man&#8217;s overalls and pulled out a small pocketknife with a pewter handle  that it folded back into.  He unfurled the blade and it was dinged  around most of the edge but the tip still pricked hard into the whorl of  his thumb.  He collapsed the knife and slipped it into his shirt pocket  and kept digging.  He pulled out a piece of folded paper that had  browned along the edges.  He placed it into his teeth and bit down to  keep it in place and the prospect of something other than his tongue  taking up room in there caused him to slobber a bit around the corners  and wet the edge of the note.  He then pulled out another folded and  waxed piece of paper and he unfolded it.  He examined it and it appeared  to be a map of the area with hashes penciled in and around the  mountains he was currently in, possibly marking failed claims and there  was a longer scratch that portended to what might be a homestead a few  miles off.  He laid the map down and then dug through the remaining  pockets, pulling out a length of twine and he pushed it aside.  He  noticed the claw hammer slung along a leather belt askew along the  miner’s hips and he fingered the splintered handle and the iron cheek  felt cool against his skin.</p>
<p><span id="more-328"></span>Everett sighed loudly and fisted the map and with the note still  tucked between the bite of his misaligned teeth he squirmed his way  backward along the ground until he was again propped against the rock  next to his used dressing.  He extended the map, running his index  finger along the creases until it laid flat and he set it at one side  then took the note from his mouth and wiped it along the seam of his  shirt to take the moisture.  He then reexamined his bullet wound and  grunted at the shoot of pain and rested his head back again and he  wished for a drink of water.  His eyes began to glaze over and he  slapped himself awake again and then turned onto his side with the map  spread before him.  He traced his finger along a ridge of the Organ  Mountains then down through the scrublands until he hit Mesilla and he  tapped it twice as if to make sure it was no phantasm of his mind.  The  edges of the map flayed and he took his thumbnail and chipped off dry  mud from the lower left corner which revealed the words <em>Johnson&#8217;s  California, Territories of New Mexico and Utah by Johnson and Browning</em> <em>1860. </em>He stroked his hand over the dulled reds and yellows and  greens that covered it and imagined they had been brighter once.</p>
<p>He sat back up and another surge of pain shot up and he crossed his  legs at the ankles.  He unfolded the note and turned it in his hands,  fascinated by the theatrics of it and he held the paper close and  squinted at the longhand words.  He lowered the note and looked around  and spotted a thick and white candle wedged onto an iron rod that had  been wedged into the working face beyond the body, the flame nearly  wicked away.  Then he angled the paper in such a way that the remaining  flicker of yellow-orange light illuminated the page.  He licked his lips  and ran a hand through his greased hair and glanced to the entrance of  the shaft a ways to his right and the sun had yet to recede.  Then he  focused on the extravagant loops staring back at him and enunciated with  all the precision he could afford.</p>
<p><em>My dearest Bob,</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>I knowd you aint seen me for a while now but I just wanted yuh to  know I’s doing alright.  And I’s really proud of how good things are  going for yuh now that yuhs working the land for the colors. </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>I don’t know if yuh forgot or not, but my berthday was last week.   And now that I’s fifteen years old Ma’s making me work down at  William’s store when I can.  I’m meant to earn some extra money because  of Pa’s arm being shot off by the Mexicans.  I hope yer still planning  on saving up to come marry me and build me that house you told me of.   And I never did tell anyone what happened between us and I never would  either.  I wouldn’t risk getting yeh in trubble because of me nohow. </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>I hope this letter finds yeh well and I hope yeh can take me far  from here soon and we can live forever together.</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>Signed with great love, </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>Charlotte</em><em> </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p>Everett found himself smiling at the very notion of the  correspondence and he carefully folded the note back up and set it aside  and exhaled loudly.  He looked up to the jagged ceiling which sat  serrated by erosion and the hands of man and then counted the lateral  wooden girts that had been placed at intervals of the shaft, bracing  between walls and doused in runoff that seeped from some unknown source  above.  Everett then tried to calculate how long Bob had been working  the coyote-hole and his leg resounded with another flirt of sharp hurt  and he took the knife out and opened the blade.  He looked back to the  candle and thought maybe he would try to dig the bullet out now and he  saw how infection had spread up his thigh and neared his groin, the skin  tender and yellowblack.  He grunted and rested a hand on the rock  behind him and rose carefully without putting any pressure on his left  leg.</p>
<p>Everett panted for a moment with the knife still poised and he turned  toward the body and then heard a thunderous recoil echo back from  somewhere outside, bouncing off the walls of the mine until the sound  hit him fierce.  He stopped and arched his back and the hair on his neck  stood and he pursed his mouth so as not to produce any sound and he  waited and blood pumped to his leg and it ached.  The reverberation had  deteriorated to a faint nothing and he couldn’t quite decide if it was  thunder or a rifle shot.  He thought he had lost him days ago.</p>
<p>He felt his nerves give way and his heart raced and thumped  erratically and he hobbled to the body ignoring any better judgment to  rest.  He bent down and took the man&#8217;s sweat-stained shirt and ripped a  thick strip off, cutting the end free with the pocketknife and he tied a  new tourniquet tight around his thigh.  He winced as he double-knotted  the bandage and then he noticed a tin ore bucket resting beneath the  candle soaked by shadows.</p>
<p>A piece of loose rock stripped from the walls somewhere behind and he  anxiously stared back to the entrance of the angled shaft that glowed  white from sunlight and then back to the body.  He swallowed hard and  his throat was dry and the new bandage provided a bit of release from  the pain as he lurched forward.  Then he reached into the dark tin  bucket and pulled out a large and blocky hunk of silver ore that fizzled  in parts from the candleglow.  He took his thumb and scraped dust off  the surface and deliberated on the worth of the ore then reached back in  the bucket and pulled out a Colt 1851 Navy.  The grip had been worn  away and the steel of the frame and barrel had been dulled and  tarnished.  He broke open the cylinder and counted two full chambers and  then jammed the gun into his belt.</p>
<p>Everett stood there over the body a moment longer and breathed hard.  He detailed the scene as he lingered and noticed an iron chisel peeking  out of a fissured line of rock and an old shovel lying near.  Finally  satisfied he had scavenged anything of value from the place he hopped on  his good leg along the planked runners.  They creaked and swayed in  addled piles of mud as he moved awkwardly and he emerged along the  entrance of the cave and pulled his Dancer out.  The flat and  polished-silver frame sat in contention to the pieced walnut grips and  the brass trigger guard glistened in the afternoon sun as he knelt and  rested it along the ground next to him in preparation for some ambush he  figured was imminent.  He squinted his eyes as they adjusted to the  flood of light and surveyed the scrubland then slowly stepped onto the  graveled slope that ran down to his horse that sat posted where he left  it.  He stood tense until he was sure nothing had stirred in the  distance, musing that maybe he had been on the run for too long, and he  distracted himself from the specters he created by looking at the ore  heavy in his hand still.  He rubbed his forearm against his cheek where  sweat beaded and there was dried blood thick like jam along his brow.   He smiled crookedly at the ore and rubbed the surface clean and he began  shoveling his way down the steep slope past a bouquet of mesquite.</p>
<p>He reached his sorrel-hued Morgan horse and he placed the silver ore  in a thick leather haversack that slapped against the animal’s loins and  he gripped the horn and pulled himself up.  He took a double-breasted  butternut frockcoat lying flat along the rear housing and placed it over  his shoulders and it hung long and tattered at the cuffs.  He then  reached forward to a black fur-felt Kossuth whose hat-cord was tied to  the front rigging ring and he placed it on his head.  He scratched his  chin and balled up a wad of phlegm he intended to spit and suddenly a  rifle-shot rifled past him and struck the gravel slope to his left,  catapulting pieces of stone and dirt up and out.</p>
<p>Everett heyawwed and clicked and dug his heels deep, slinking low in  the saddle as he fled.  He rose up a winding path back into the  mountains and looked back only once to see where he was but the glare of  the fading sun was strong in his eyes and he couldn&#8217;t see his attacker  as he raced further into the hills.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">◊      ◊     ◊     ◊</p>
<p>The next morning Everett walked down a hillside from the mountains  leading his horse by the reins.  He had run a zigzag path the night  before until he exhausted his equine and then took a position against a  sheered cliff-face that looked out into a small valley surrounded by a  grove of tlacocote that tangled thick.  The small valley had only one  entrance that he had guarded like some stern despot and he had only  slept for thirty minutes, shivering under his thinned coat and caught  beneath stray and howling gusts that wound in looping patterns.</p>
<p>He pressed on further from the hillside, stopping at a small creek  that snaked down through the parched ground that was more mud than water  and he let his horse drink while he inspected the map again.  His  detour had ousted him too far north and on the west side of the Organs  and now he&#8217;d have to cross back through.  Everett clicked his teeth for  amusement as he computed his new trajectory south and east and he looked  for any mention of a trail or road through the mountains.  He found  none but felt optimistic that he was about a day’s ride from Mesilla and  he folded the map again along the worn creases and placed it back in  his shirt pocket.  He took out the miner’s stolen pistol and broke open  the cylinder again and blew into the empty chambers and tucked it back  into his belt.  He ran his fingers over his own large holster and  stalled on the basket-weave pattern and then onto the walnut stock of  the gun as if he was anticipating the arrival of a duel.</p>
<p>He yawned wildly and scratched the back of his head where it met the  neck and bent down to the stream.  He lifted a handful of the gray water  to his head and spooned it over and slicked his hair back.  Then he  took another cupping of water and slurped it greedily and then sat along  the bank and watched his horse which had taken to grazing on a sweep of  hoary feather-grass.  He unwound the bandage from his leg and dipped it  in the creek and rung it out.  Watery red sifted from the dressing and  he scraped it along his forehead which revealed a deep and festering  gash that had begun to scab over.  He reapplied the covering to his leg  and it was cold against his torn skin and he sucked in air through his  teeth as if it deterred the stinging sensation.</p>
<p><img title="More..." src="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/wp-includes/js/tinymce/plugins/wordpress/img/trans.gif" alt="" />Everett pulled  out the pocketknife and extended the blade and splashed water on before  thumbing it clean.  He admired his reflection in it then saw the  scraggly beard that had supplanted his jaw.  He wet his face again  thoroughly and took to peeling off layers of the hair with the knife one  stroke at a time.  He cut himself repeatedly and left a twizzled  mustache and when he was done he splashed water on his face again and it  burned like fire, his neck dotted with red like Dalmatian-spots.</p>
<p>He stood and looked out into the distance and he limped to his horse  and caressed the haversack that held the silver.  He pocketed the knife  and looked out onto the landscape as he swallowed down a great wave of  pain.  He took off his coat and held it up and traced the mementos of  battle, fingering where grapeshot had ripped through the cape and noting  the splatters of blood that formed garish patterns where an elaborate  sleeve-braid used to reside on the left cuff.  He laid it over the  horse’s shoulders and orientated himself in his intended direction and  he looked out on the brown rangeland and he felt tired.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">◊      ◊     ◊     ◊</p>
<p>Everett had been riding for hours when sleep began to take him over  in the saddle and he slapped his face to stay awake and calculated it  was sometime in the afternoon.  He approached a young Emory oak whose  branches cascaded out like a hundred tentacled arms and he tied his  horse off and propped himself up against the darkbrown knotted bark.  He  unholstered his heavy revolver and laid it on his belly and he fell  asleep under the shade of the bell-shaped tree, settling almost  immediately into a rhythmic snoring.</p>
<p>He awoke two hours later when his horse began to bray wildly and  stomp the ground as if it were dancing to an unheard beat.  Its eyes  were large and white and rolled back and its mane stood up on its own.   His senses still percolating, Everett wiped his eyes clean and felt a  great pressure behind his nose.  The ache had had been festering for  days and for a moment he felt his face and thought he was conscious of  someone else’s body, remembering after a minute further that he had  previously shaved.  It was then that he grew alert to his horse’s alarm  and he heard the crackle of a rattler’s tail and he spun and saw the  graybrown snake coiled at the side of the tree, the dorsal  diamond-shaped blotches running the length of its spine mesmerizing.</p>
<p>“Shit!”</p>
<p>Everett jumped back as the snake lunged and its fangs nicked the  heels of his boots as he landed.  The snake reloaded for another attack  and Everett stomped down hard on its head, repeating this action until  it thrashed in place and was no more.  He slumped back against the tree  and breathed hard and loud, the adrenaline momentarily taking over the  pain that spouted from the wounds he suffered.  He bent down and sawed  the snake’s head off with the pocketknife and then unfurled it  lengthwise and marveled at its span and girth.</p>
<p>He waited until dusk and he scouted the area on foot until he could  no longer take the pulsing of his hurt leg and he returned to the oak  and felt comfortable that he hadn’t been followed.  He set to making a  fire and skinning the snake, slicing the meat into finger-length strips,  and then cooked the flesh in a small and near-smokeless blaze.  He ate  until he felt fat and bloated from the stringy meat and gathered a  handful of acorns still clinging to the tree and cupped them between a  set of limestone bricks that ringed the fire until the outsides of the  nuts had seared.  The roasted perfume reminded him of his youth and he  peeled the largest of the acorns and bit into it, finding it sour and  tough.  He finished it for the nourishment and pocketed the rest.</p>
<p>He limped around the camp to keep the blood flowing regular and he  found a snapped bough nearby that split at the ends.  He inserted the  sheath of the knife into the split and held the blade out into the fire  until it glowed whiteyellow around the edges.  He hopped back to the  saddle and took out a small tin flask and sloshed it around.  It was  nearly empty and he took it back to the fire and opened the tear in his  trousers wider with his hands, pouring the liquid over his wound and he  growled at the twinge.  The knife had cooled some and clenching his  teeth he began digging into the flesh of his thigh until he had carved  his way around the expanse of the lodged cartridge and he began prying  the thing up until it popped out like a cherry pit.</p>
<p>Night had settled fast on the rangeland and he began to feel the  faint of darkness approach him like a train.  He picked up the crinkled  shell and examined it and chucked it out into the brush.  He then  rewrapped his leg and piled a mound of sand on the fire to squash it out  and he dropped into a deep and senseless sleep.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">◊      ◊     ◊     ◊</p>
<p>Everett woke at sunrise and his mouth felt dry like cotton.  He  stretched and yawned and played with his mustache as he drank cold tea  made from the leathery darkgreen oak leaves.  He packed his things and  rode through the morning, attentive to any sudden changes in the  landscape and he felt ready if the course of action presented itself.   The left side of his abdomen had become sore and he felt a tightness  when he inhaled, another complication from his previous conflict, and  held no doubts that at least one of his ribs had been broken.</p>
<p>He pressed on further north and another hour went by before he found a  broad path that steered back through the mountains which he calculated  would eventually spit him out onto the great flood plains north of  Mesilla.   He smiled and petted the horse’s great brown mane and they  began the trek, eventually coming across two sets of naked footprints in  the dirt and mud but he didn&#8217;t stop. He made himself aware of his  surroundings as he rode, practicing his draw and repeatedly turning to  speculate on where they&#8217;d been.  He soon came across a thick strand of  creosote bush sandwiched between a narrow pass of land embanked on both  sides by inclines.  As his horse pressed on he squinted and saw black  smoke willow up beyond the last of the soldiered shrubs.  Everett ran  his hand across the knurl of his gun and he stalled near a thicker  expanse that shaded him from view.</p>
<p>He waited and listened and heard a scream belt up and then a  carnivorous and mocking baritone laughter follow quickly behind.  He  moved his horse forward behind the next column of creosote and from his  new vantage he saw a small cabin aflame.  Out from the rear circled a  thin girl in an overgrown coat being chased by two Apaches dressed like  Texans, their faces painted with dark soot and the braids of the hair  winding down along their shoulders and bouncing as they moved.  They  danced and chased her and let her believe for a moment she could escape  and then the closest of the pair tackled the girl to the ground.  The  second danced around like a drunk as the first mounted atop her and hit  her hard in the jaw.  She screamed and kicked and he held her hands  down.  Everett watched the scene dramatize before him, his eyes like  dark stones set deep.</p>
<p><img title="More..." src="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/wp-includes/js/tinymce/plugins/wordpress/img/trans.gif" alt="" />After a moment  he clicked at his horse and double-backed through the grove and when he  emerged he was at the far end of the cabin and clear of the  activities.  The smoke was thick and smelled like a smithy and it stung  as he sucked in air and swallowed down a succession of coughs that tried  to rise up.  He steered his horse around the side of the cabin and  looped around back and when he came upon the Apaches his horse snorted  loudly and alerted them to his presence.</p>
<p>The Apache that had been dancing was the first to react.  He reached  to his belt and attempted to pluck a revolver from it but Everett pulled  out the miner’s Navy with lightening reflexes and let ripple a shot  into the Apache’s head that struck him through the cheek.  He fell  lifeless to the ground and amid screams from the girl the second Apache  rose up and howled and Everett fired the last shot of the miner’s pistol  that struck the Indian in the throat.  He collapsed to his knees and  hugged at the wound with his hands as if he was praying and blood came  down in torrents.  Everett threw the gun down and clicked at his horse  again and circled the fallen warrior.  Then he took his long and heavy  Dancer from his holster methodically, taunting the dying Apache, then  fired another shot that struck the him in the head.</p>
<p>The girl stood and her eyes were sunken and bagged with dark rings  and she whimpered in disbelief.  She looked up to Everett and dusted  herself and her coat that looked as if it had once belonged to a  barrel-chested man and she took one of her oversized sleeves and wiped  the blood from her mouth.</p>
<p>&#8220;T-thank yuh, mister.  Thank yuh kindly.  My name&#8217;s Erin Sunderland.”</p>
<p>Everett turned his head and spit a thick string of expectorate and  eyed her warily, sweat forming at his palms and if his leg ached at that  moment he chose not to show it on his face.</p>
<p>“Yuh have no idea, they was ahollerin about and they was going to  have me, then kill me.  Yuh really saved me, mister. What&#8217;s yer name?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Everett.”</p>
<p>“Everett what?”</p>
<p>“Everett Root.&#8221;</p>
<p>And then Everett extended his arm from his lofted angle and clicked  the hammer back and shot a single round that entered between Erin’s yes,  knocking her back onto the ground and sending a mushroom of dust and  sand up around her.  He holstered his gun and waited as her body spasmed  in retaliation of the death that took her and then she laid still and  he dismounted.  He rested his jacket along the seat and tied the reins  to an old hitch and hobbled to her and her oversized sackcoat.  He tried  to kneel but the pain from his bulletwound had grown powerful again and  instead he sat on the ground at her side.  He was a distance from the  cabin and the smoke was thick and it fingered into the cloudless sky  like a dark beacon.  He swallowed and licked his lips and then studied  the gray felted material that matted together to form her worn jacket  and he touched it like a haberdasher might.</p>
<p>Everett smiled and set his hat next to the girl’s body and looked up  into the morning sun and the warmth felt good on his face.  He rested  for a while then began rifling through her pockets, pulling out a few  copperheads and a silver locket on a silver chain whose clasp had  twisted and snapped.  He opened it and there was a tiny manicured  daguerreotype of a plump infant cut and wedged into the oval-shaped  cavity.  He thumbed over the silver outside again, the embossed floral  patterns pleasing and then put it in his pocket.  Then he glanced down  at her left hand and noticed a dulled brass wedding-band.  He tugged at  it and it wouldn’t budge past the base knuckle.  He lifted her tiny hand  and took her ring finger into his mouth to wet it and took his left  hand and braced it onto hers and then yanked with a great fulcrummed arm  movement, jamming the ring off and into his palm.  He picked it up with  his index and middle fingers and held it suspended in front of his face  like it had some spectacular authority over him.  He analyzed it and  then tucked it back into his palm and spit at it, rubbing it ferociously  with two fingers until it gleamed and distorted his reflection like  some mirrored caricature.</p>
<p>The cabin took to burning and the roof collapsed in on itself within a  half an hour and he watched in wonder as his horse paraded and rummaged  through a stray clump of tussock.  Everett scouted the area and  followed a path that continued past the cabin through a narrow precipice  that spilled out onto the flood plains.  He leaned against a  copper-colored hill of rock and vegetation at the trailhead and took the  map out again, tracing his finger from where he presumed he was  currently stationed.  He would head south from the flood plains and then  cross the Rio Grande at its most narrow and then he&#8217;d be in Mesilla.   He folded the map along the edges and returned to the cabin and drank  water from a shallow well that tasted of iron and dirt.  One of the  Apaches had a rawhide canteen and he filled it up with water and  replaced his pocketknife with a large Bowie variety that the other  Indian had hidden in his boot.  Everett tucked it against the back of  his belt and then checked both their guns.  The sights were set crooked  and he tossed them into the hillside where they landed with an echoed  thwack.  He saw an old Saratoga trunk that peeked out of the doorway and  he dragged it out before it could be ravaged by flames and found  nothing inside but old garments and the mildewed smell of age.</p>
<p>Everett coughed as he stood studying the trunk and the girl&#8217;s outline  through her coat, satisfied he had looted anything of value from the  scene.  He tucked the map in a large pocket of his frockcoat and again  took the silver ore out of the tied haversack and washed it with well  water until it was lustrous and youthful.  He took a segment of the  girl’s homespun dress and ripped it into a rectangle and wrapped the  ore, tucking it into his shirt where it sat like a cancerous  protuberance at his side.  Then he straddled each of the Apaches and  fired another round into their skulls which splintered and thudded like  bark as they seizured posthumously.</p>
<p>He let his horse continue to graze and he hopped back to the first  row of creosote bush and lowered himself as he grimaced at the pain like  a stage-actor might.  He shifted in place until he had worn a  comfortable seat in the dirt and strawed grass-shoots and he had the  perfect view of the house turn to kindling.  He unwound the bandage from  his leg and it stuck to the wound, the fluids thick like honey.  A rock  wren flapped noisily above and it called <em>kereekereekeree</em><em> </em>at  the fire that roared, supplanting its dissatisfaction at the  intrusion.  Everett diverted interest from his hurt leg and held a hand  visored along his brow.  He squinted as the sun rayed down bright and  with one eye shut he followed the graybrown bird and its great arced  pattern until it disappeared beyond the ridges that humped up behind the  cabin.  He bit at his thumbnail until a chipped piece flicked off in  his mouth and he spit it at his side.</p>
<p>He mumbled to himself and looked back down to his leg and propped  open the tear in his trousers.  The skin around the wound had become  darker and the sepsis trailed further up his thigh.  He could barely  touch the infected area without recoiling from considerable hurt and he  held up his fingers and counted them down one by one until none  remained, each a token of days past.  His mind raced and he damned  himself for being too cautious in Las Palomas.</p>
<p>He took an acorn from his pocket and bit into the flesh with his  incisors and then began to peel the russet-colored skin away from the  point of insertion.  He chewed a sizable piece and it was bitter and he  swallowed it largely whole.  He took the rawhide canteen he had flung  over his shoulders and drank to dilute the taste of the nut.  The water  gave off hints of whiskey that had been stored there previously and it  burned slightly as it pitched down his throat.  He slung the leather  strap of the canteen around his neck and wiped his mouth clean with his  shirtsleeve then dried his hands along the breast of his shirt.</p>
<p>The cabin timbers crackled and turned red in the centers while the  rest charcoaled and a popping sound rose up from the rubble.  Everett  grew bored with the combustioned demonstration before him and took to  scraping off the blood that streaked in filamented designs along his  shirt with his shorn thumbnail and he felt a respite wash over him.</p>
<p>And then a booming shot whirred past him and hit the ground to his  right, boring into the loose soil as he backed up against the narrow  trunk of the creosote bush with great alarm.  Everett breathed hard and  put excess pressure on his leg as he shifted positions and it started to  bleed blackred again.  Another shot rang out and struck the ground in  nearly the same spot, slingshotting debris up and out and he panicked  and looked around for its origin.  Then he stood with as much ferocity  as he could afford, bolting toward the wreckage of the cabin while his  horse began to bray and run in circles nearby, disoriented from the  sudden incursion of violence.</p>
<p>Everett&#8217;s strides were narrow and as he stilted forward his face  twisted in agony and then he heard the explosion of another rifle-round  exit the gun and he felt a daggered stab hit him in the right shoulder.   The pain was severe and it spread and he tripped over himself and  shoveled hard to the ground.  He spit out a hash of saliva and dirt and  with his thumb and forefinger he pinched his eyes clean.  Lying on his  belly between the trunk and the cabin, the smoke was thick and near to  the ground and sheltered him for the moment from the assault. He could  hear his heart thump wildly and he tried to press himself up as his body  wracked in a collective contraction of hurt and he fell back.  A cough  tried to come up as he breathed in the black smoke and he swallowed it  down best he could, letting only a burp exit.  He laid still and tried  to take note of the approaching steps of his attacker then reached his  right hand down until he felt the stock of his gun.  He gently tugged  and it came loose from the holster with what seemed like a cacophony of  noise.  He warily checked his flanks and broke open the cylinder and he  took note of the three rounds remaining.</p>
<p>He rearranged himself on his side and peeked beyond the trunk to the  grove of creosote bush then another shot hit the thin wooden siding of  the trunk and bored right through, only just missing his arched neck.</p>
<p>&#8220;Wait, just wait a damn minute!&#8221;</p>
<p>He let his words resonate from the sloping hillsides and he waited  with the hammer of his gun cocked.</p>
<p>&#8220;How about we have a chat about all this, alright?&#8221;</p>
<p>He rolled onto his back and the bullet in his shoulder felt awkward  and buried and it pained him.  He squirmed some more and the handle-head  of the knife he had tucked away in his belt pressed hard into his back.</p>
<p>&#8220;You got me between shit and sweat here.  Payback, I suppose.&#8221;</p>
<p>He trailed off and again awaited a response and got none.  His mind  began to hum and formulate escape routes.  He thought of ducking into  the grove and returning fire but didn’t know where the shots were coming  from and he wasn’t certain how fast he could move.  Then he counted how  many steps it would be to the cabin&#8217;s front door.  Most of it had been  eaten away, leaving a garish and charred breach that sat open like some  devilish and crackling mouth.  He glanced quickly to the concaved roof  and then to the two anterior window-frames that had collapsed fully from  the weight of the headers and tie-beams.  The cabin was all but  cindered ruins now and yet still he concocted in his mind.</p>
<p>&#8220;Fine, cuffee.  Just fine.&#8221;</p>
<p>Everett&#8217;s palm sweated along the grip of his gun and he breathed hard  and counted to three.  Then with a great burst of power and speed he  rose and ran as best he could toward the cabin.  A shot flew past him  and smacked a piece of the shingling, chipping off flakes of wood just  above his shoulder.  He vaulted himself through the charred doorway and  over a small mass of dark timbers then fell awkwardly onto the floor.   He landed on the wrapped silver ore tucked in his shirt and it dug into  his already sore ribs and he howled out a mix between laughter and  hurt.  Another shot pierced overhead and he opened his eyes slowly,  biting his lip.  He was caked in dark soot.  He wiped his eyes clean  with his palms, revealing pale flesh that ringed his eyes.  He coughed  wetly and pulled himself up and began stumbling forward in the smoky  room toward the rear, waving his arms about to dissuade himself from  breathing more of it in and to help him see.</p>
<p>Lying around him were the scalded remnants of the girl Erin’s life.   He spotted a pair of leather brogans collected and melting by an old  cast-iron cook-stove and a partially finished and ornamental rug aflame  along the edges close to the bed which also sat dark and matted from  fire.  His boots echoed on the floor and his eyes stung from the drape  of thickblack smoke.  He coughed again and he though he was moving in  circles until his waving hands thudded against the far wall.  He heard  the recoil of the rifle again, sounding closer as he strafed his hands  along the wall until he reached a window that had not yet buckled.  He  lifted his shirt up onto his nose like a bandit&#8217;s mask and he thumped  the butt of his heavy gun against the glass until it shattered with a  loud crash.  Smoke and spits of flame rocketed out the new exit and he  jumped back to avoid a scalding.  Then he shaved the remaining pieces of  wedged glass from the frame with the barrel of his gun and heaped one  leg out and over the sill.  He ran his hand along his shirt and felt the  silver and then clasped the trim with his free hand and pulled himself  free of the house, falling onto his hands and knees onto the dirt.</p>
<p>He remained in that position while he finished a sequence of wild and  arresting coughs, his eyes clamped shut and his tongue wagged  helplessly and felt as if it might rip off from the root.  He thumped  his chest with his fist and then wiped a streak of the black soot from  his mouth as he tilted his head up.  Near him sat the trail that would  spill out onto the flood plain.  He hadn&#8217;t heard another shot and  figured his attacker was either out of ammunition or biding his time and  playing mindgames.  He sat up on his knees and he quickly wiped his gun  free of soot and debris and his hurt leg and his back pained together  in a distressing synchronization.  He took in large gulps with the hopes  it might fend off his broken ribs but it hurt far worse and he coughed  with every lungful he took in.  Then Everett saw his horse kicking  wildly to his right, dancing and trotting and braying near the Apaches&#8217;  bodies and he thought of running over and riding off but then figured  his attacker might be expecting that.  He stood on his leg and heard his  hip pop and he limped forward, the soot blowing from his person as he  moved.</p>
<p>He stirred into the narrow trail flanked by the hills on both sides  behind the cabin and grabbed the rock faces for support.  He clutched  his gun firmly and heard the <em>kereekereekeree</em> of the rock wren  again.  He glanced up into the blue sky as he lurched ahead but couldn&#8217;t  locate the bird, the headache he had swallowed down for days fierce and  pounding now.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">◊      ◊     ◊     ◊</p>
<p>Everett peeled a blackred paste from his lips as he sped through the  trail.  His groin excruciated in waves and he knew it was lead  poisoning.  He pushed through the hurt further and eventually slowed his  pace, confident that his attacker took to rummaging through his  belongings back at the cabin in an attempt to look for the silver, still  tucked away safely in his shirt.  He ran a hand through his hair and  coughed a bit and the path eventually opened up into the flood plain,  dotted with lone cottonwoods and sweeps of greenbrown desert grasses.   He stood briefly to navigate and spied the Rio   Grande about a mile  out, gray and loud.  Mesilla was still further south but he noticed a  road on the far side of the river that would take him there and he  smiled crookedly.</p>
<p>He trotted down the steep slope and across the range, passing  monuments of salt cedar and sagebrush and croppings of bouldered  limestone and sandstone.  Everett marched on, glancing back to the pass  like clockwork.  His vision began to blur and he mistook shadows of  dashing clouds overhead as armies of villains bent on doing him harm.   He crept on as his headache worsened and soon he forgot his sentried  errand.  He kept low to the ground and stopped himself twice from  collapsing completely, bracing himself on passing man-made edifices of  rock and earth.  His limp had worsened and he stumbled upon wreckage of  some wrecked wagonette and used a long timber from the wagon-bed as a  crutch until it snapped in half ten minutes later.  The sun was hot and  without his hat or coat he felt the full effects of it on the nape of  his neck.</p>
<p>Everett had been walking for three quarters of an hour in an  unintentional crisscross route through the plains and had been stopping  every few minutes to realign himself amid his worsening condition,  finally stopping at a large and rounded granite stone at the bank of the  river.  He gently lowered himself into the damp mud and his body  throbbed all over as he arched his back along the boulder, the bullet  buried in his shoulder shouting in pain.  The rock gave him significant  cover and a cool draft washed over him.  He began another succession of  coughing fits and spit up blood at the conclusion of each.  His hands  were shaking from his wounds and the hunger that plagued him and he took  out the last acorns and chewed them skins and all.  They were rubbery  and sour and he felt puke come up in his throat but he managed to keep  them down.  He untwisted the canteen from his torso and drank the rest  of the water.  Some of it spilled down his chin and felt cool against  his skin.</p>
<p><img title="More..." src="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/wp-includes/js/tinymce/plugins/wordpress/img/trans.gif" alt="" />The river sat  before him and bubbled and called loudly and the opposite bank seemed  forever away.  He had to squint to keep it in focus and mulled on his  original intent to head further south, of finding a bridge or a shallow  sandbank closer to Mesilla that he could easily negotiate, but he knew  he no longer had the strength for this kind of exploration.  He blinked  his eyes and slapped his face twice and felt a bit of refreshment from  the acorns.  He took out the silver ore from his shirt and unwrapped it,  caressing the jarred surface with his sooty hands.  He placed the rock  next to him and then with the bowie knife he sawed off the left sleeve  of his shirt, tugging at the threaded remains until it ripped free at  the seams.  He then sliced the fabric down the center which opened the  shirt up as a large piece of fabric and then he cut the leather strap  off the canteen.  He rested for a moment and breathed hard and then cut a  small hole at each end of the sleeve, placing the ore at the center and  wrapping it.  Once it had been covered fully and wound tight he needled  the leather strap through each of the small holes and knotted it at  each end.  He tested if it would hold by putting weight on it and it  held up fine and looked like some sort of vulgar swaddling.  He placed  the strap around his neck then tucked it back into his shirt.  He  fastened his gun into his holster with a small leather buckle that  buttoned and he stood and braced himself on the rock.  He looked back to  the steep slopes behind that ran up to the mountains and then to the  pass that sat thick and dark with shadows and ran a hand through his  hair.</p>
<p>He crutched along the riverbank until he found a downed cottonwood  limb bleached white from the sun.  It was dry in parts and he broke off  the rotted and chipped end and hiked it up slowly under his arms,  cradling it tight.  He stood and peered into the river and couldn’t see  the bottom but stepped in slowly anyway, his high-leg laced boots  filling with the cold water, chilling him violently.  He waded further  out and he felt a sharp pinch when the water hit his leg-wound then  groin.  He tested the bough and it floated and he again secured his gun  and the parcel in his shirt.  He then took handfuls of water and  splashed it lavishly onto his shoulders in preparation for the looming  immersion.</p>
<p>“Alright.”</p>
<p>Everett could feel his boots sink in deep to the sand of the riverbed  and knock against stones half-buried and continued on until the bottom  slipped from him altogether.  He hooked one arm over the branch and  paddled until he hit a strong current that began to lead him south and  he angled his legs out in front in such a way that if he did happen upon  any submersed obstacle, he’d be deter any major damage.</p>
<p>He passed parts of the river that became shallow again and he tried  his best to be closest to the east shore, but found himself pulled back  to the center.  Water splashed in his mouth and it was cool but tasted  dirty.  His headache had retreated some and his wounds seemed to be  puckered shut from the sudden temperature change.  After drifting half  an hour he began to kick wildly, his hurt leg biting with the movement,  and he began paddling with one arm, eventually digging his boots into  the ground.  He hauled himself up onto the muddy bank and collapsed on  his back while the branch floated on.  His chest raised and lowered in  great peaks and recesses and he coughed again, turning his head to side  and letting loose a thick stream of blood and phlegm.</p>
<p>He cradled a hand over the ore which sat bunched along the side of  his abdomen and he abbreviated his breathing to again avoid further ache  against his ribs.  He sat up and felt dizzy and looked behind him with  both palms plastered in the mud.  A lip of greenbrown grass oversaw the  sloped riverbank behind where he sat, the dirt road just beyond and out  of sight.  He felt confident he had outmaneuvered his attacker and  rested for a while then pressed himself up and climbed the rise behind,  pulling himself onto his knees along a thick patch of the tussock.  He  looked back to the river and saw his tracks in the bank and his  handprints sunken in the mud as he coughed and spit blood again. Twin  grooves ran along the road, worn by wagons and schooners, and he looked  south and saw a house about a mile away.  He put his hand along his brow  to shade from the sun and could just make out Mesilla about a  quarter-mile beyond the lone structure.  He clutched the ore closely at  his side and began shuffling along the side of the road, the enduring  pains of battle swallowed down again at the prospects just ahead.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">◊     ◊     ◊     ◊</p>
<p>Everett reached the lone house but it was little more than a  converted storehouse.  He stumbled up on the porch and unclamped his gun  in the holster then took the collar of his shirt and wiped a circle  clean in the thick dust that sat along a sectioned window.  Inside sat  heaps of crates and sacks of grains stacked like pyramids.  His coughing  had worsened during his walk and it felt more cavernous now, as if his  body was trying to eject something deep from within.</p>
<p>He stepped off the porch and left the shade of the eave and he crept  on toward Mesilla.  He could make out a sidewalk running alongside the  hotel and a livery at the rear.  Everett smiled at the prospect of  civilization and ran a hand down the center of his shirt as if pressing  the wrinkles out.  Two buttons had been shorn off in his march and their  absence exposed his drawn pectorals, matted with dark hair and clinging  to the ribs beneath.  His boots had dried some but his feet felt damp  and waterlogged and he could feel the skin on his toes begin to peel  away from the saturation.  His limp was extreme now and as he hobbled  into Mesilla he came upon two middle-aged men conversing, gesticulating  wildly as if they were traipsing over a tale of mythic proportions.  The  first man was bloated and fat and his charcoal waistcoat seemed to be  ready to burst.  He wore a .36 caliber Pocket Navy revolver slung in a  small holster at his left side.  The second man was tall and thin and  wore a dark Prince Albert double-breasted frockcoat with abbreviated  lapels and carried no gun.  The tall man blushed and stopped mid-speech  at the sight of the tramp approaching and an awkwardness settled between  the pair.  Everett eyed them back and waved with one hand while pinning  his torn shirt closed with the other.</p>
<p>“Afternoon, gentlemen.”</p>
<p>“Howdy.”</p>
<p>“Can we help with you something, friend?”</p>
<p>“You gotta color mill here?”</p>
<p>“Color mill?”</p>
<p>“Yessir.”</p>
<p>The skinny man thought hard and licked his lips.</p>
<p>“What you mean is an assay office, right?”</p>
<p>“Yes, that.”</p>
<p>The fat man pointed to Everett’s leg and to his missing sleeve,  highlighting the wounds he was already conscious of.</p>
<p>“Land sakes, son.  Are you alright?”</p>
<p>“I’m fine.”</p>
<p>“If you’ll allow me, maybe yeh should go see the doc, get yerself all  fixed up.”</p>
<p>“Just the assay office, please.”</p>
<p>“Son, there aint no point cashing in if you aint gunna be healthy to  spend it.”</p>
<p>“Yes, what’s the hurry, friend?”</p>
<p>“Just the assay office.”</p>
<p>The fat man exchanged a wayward look with the tall man and then  motioned behind to a shop a block down and on the right with a small  sign stenciled with lettering too insignificant to read from their  position.</p>
<p>“There?”</p>
<p>“Yes.  Charlie Lamb’s place.  It aint official, but he’ll take care  of you, give you a fair price.”</p>
<p>The fat man tugged at his ear and tried hard to attempt any form of  civility and then coughed into his fist.</p>
<p>“You uh, you been mining?”</p>
<p>“Yessir.”</p>
<p>“Near here?”</p>
<p>“In the Organs, day’s ride or so.”</p>
<p>“Oh.”</p>
<p>“Where you from?”</p>
<p>“Carolina, originally.”</p>
<p>“North or south?”</p>
<p>“South.”</p>
<p>“You with Sibley?”</p>
<p>“Was.”</p>
<p>“The rest of you left last year.”</p>
<p>“I know.”</p>
<p>“Well, just sayin we aint aiming for any trouble, things have settled  here now.  You aint trouble, are yeh, boy?”</p>
<p>“No, sir.  Just needin to get cashed in is all.”</p>
<p>“I thought yall went east to San Antonio, anyway?”</p>
<p>Everett kicked the dirt a bit and bit his lip and folded his arms  about his chest, his bare arm thick with dried blood and caked soot and  mud.</p>
<p>“I parted ways after Glorietta.”</p>
<p>The fat man placed a hand on his hip and coughed again.  He saw  hunger in the stranger’s eyes and it shook him cold.  The wound on  Everett’s leg started to pound with hurt again and his shoulder began to  rack and spasm and pump thickblack blood.  He shifted his weight  uncomfortably and then heard the trill and familiar <em>kereekereekeree</em><em> </em>of the rock wren again.  Everett smiled and stared up to the sky  and the afternoon sun was heavy and glaring in his eyes as he saw the  small bird whoop and twirl and dance. Everett hooted in place, genuinely  amused by the happenstance.</p>
<p>“Well I’ll be, gentlemen.  I believe that bird there’s been following  me for miles.  You fellas ever seen anything like that before, a bird  taking to a man like a dog?”</p>
<p>The fat man squinted his eyes and followed the bird in the sky and  the tall man did the same then smiled a bit.</p>
<p>“I saw a man, oh, some twenty years ago with a tamed magpie.  Louder  than hell, that thing was, but smart.  Could even make it talk when he  wanted.”</p>
<p>“But this bird aint tame, though.  I’ve never seen a wild animal like  that take to someone before, is what I’m saying.  It’s queer.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it is queer.”</p>
<p>The fat man clicked his teeth and Everett felt he had had enough of  their company and he palmed his jaw in quick strokes, the skin coarse on  his fingers.</p>
<p>“Alright, then.  Thanks to you both for the directions.”</p>
<p>“Good luck to yeh, son.”</p>
<p>“Yup.”</p>
<p>Everett nodded and limped along and studied the buildings as he  passed.  A woman dawdled out of a general store with her young son and  then saw the rough and beaten man and scurried back in.  He smiled and  passed the doctor’s quarters and made a note of its location.  Laughter  emerged from somewhere nearby and he heard the muted harmony of a piano  being played.  Thick piles of horse manure settled in the street and  twice he saw deputies on the far end of the main boulevard circle one  another and talk and motion.  Everett kept to himself and bundled his  shirt shut, keeping his eyes to the ground as he stepped up on the  boardwalk connecting Charlie Lamb’s to a fancy-type restaurant.  He came  upon the small door of the assay office and there was a sign nailed to  it and he traced the words with his fingers, straining to keep the  letters cohesive between thuds of his beating headache.  He then rapped  his knuckled on the small glass window set in the door and waited.</p>
<p>“Yes, come on in.”</p>
<p>He pushed the door open and the room was spacious with a significant  lack of décor.  In one corner sat a small adobe furnace corroded and  dirty next to a long table with a handful of small molds laid out.   Everett hobbled up to an ornate desk near the far wall and an elderly  man emerged from a back room wiping his hands clean on a soiled cloth, a  white apron strung about his waist.  He looked up through a pair of  small and round glasses at the wretch before him.</p>
<p>“What&#8230;uh, what can I do for yeh?”</p>
<p>Everett reached in his shirt and took out the swathed silver ore and  peeled the leather strap from around his neck before setting it on the  desk.  He carefully took the wrapping off and then took a lurching step  back, presenting the rock like a proud parent might a child.</p>
<p>“That’s a nice piece.”</p>
<p>“Yessir.”</p>
<p>“It’s going to take me, uh, going to take me a while to process it.   You know, to tally it up?  I aint usually processing pieces this size.”</p>
<p>“That’s fine.  I’ll wait.”</p>
<p>“Yes, alright.  Let me go grab some papers in the back for yuh to go  over.  Can you read?”</p>
<p>“Yessir.”</p>
<p>“Alright.  I’ll be right back, then.”</p>
<p>The old man creaked into the back room and Everett stood erect and  ran a hand through his dried hair.  His shoulder ached furiously and his  groin felt as if it had been set aflame but he stood proud with his  chest puffed out triumphantly.  A quick draft raked against his naked  arm and he heard the door push open and yet he held his affixed gaze to  the silver ore on the desk, smiling crookedly and placing a hand along  it again, molesting the surface with great tenderness.</p>
<p>Then Everett Root felt the steel of a rounded aperture wedge into the  back of his skull.  He smelled a familiar tang of heavy musk and black  tobacco and his face washed over white and harrowed as he heard the  hammer of the gun click back.  He moved his hand slowly to the stock of  his Dancer and his thoughts turned to the grove of creosotebush and the  girl Erin whose life he ended with a single shot.  He heard the man’s  lips part with a smack as if he had planned the next words with great  and meticulous detail.</p>
<p>&#8220;Happy New Year, Root.&#8221;</p>
<p>And then a shot thundered out like drums.  The bullet tunneled  through the dented blue-steel barrel of the revolver and it crushed  through Everett’s skull and back out through his cheek, chipped bone and  teeth and strings of fluids springing out, his body falling to the  ground heavy like stone.</p>
<p>George Lynn Hany holstered the .44 caliber Colt Army revolver.  A  significant ring of dark and dried blood sat at the right shoulder of  his shirt and he wiped his ebony hands clean on his worn galluses then  smiled.  He stepped over Everett’s pretzled body and grabbed the silver  ore from the desk and tucked it back into the fabric and under his arm.   The old man peeked sheepishly from the back room and George tipped the  stunted brim of his derby then swiveled toward the door.  His jackboots  echoed on the puncheoned floor as he cleared his throat and smiled and the air  smelled like sulfur.</p>
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		<title>&#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; Part 4</title>
		<link>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/14/blood-quantum-part-4/</link>
		<comments>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/14/blood-quantum-part-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Mar 2010 23:01:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert James Russell</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blood Quantum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/?p=317</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Finally! The conclusion of my Western short story &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221;!
If you missed any of the previous Parts, catch up here: Part  1 &#124; Part  2 &#124; Part 3
Enjoy!
&#8212;
◊     ◊     ◊     ◊
Everett peeled a blackred paste from his lips as he sped through the trail.  His groin excruciated in waves and he knew it [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Finally! The conclusion of my Western short story &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221;!</p>
<p>If you missed any of the previous Parts, catch up here: <a href="../2010/03/02/an-ode-to-cowboys-and-serials-blood-quantum-part-1/">Part  1</a> | <a href="../2010/03/07/blood-quantum-part-2/">Part  2</a> | <a href="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/11/blood-quantum-part-3/">Part 3</a></p>
<p>Enjoy!</p>
<p>&#8212;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">◊     ◊     ◊     ◊</p>
<p>Everett peeled a blackred paste from his lips as he sped through the trail.  His groin excruciated in waves and he knew it was lead poisoning.  He pushed through the hurt further and eventually slowed his pace, confident that his attacker took to rummaging through his belongings back at the cabin in an attempt to look for the silver, still tucked away safely in his shirt.  He ran a hand through his hair and coughed a bit and the path eventually opened up into the flood plain, dotted with lone cottonwoods and sweeps of greenbrown desert grasses.  He stood briefly to navigate and spied the Rio   Grande about a mile out, gray and loud.  Mesilla was still further south but he noticed a road on the far side of the river that would take him there and he smiled crookedly.</p>
<p>He trotted down the steep slope and across the range, passing monuments of salt cedar and sagebrush and croppings of bouldered limestone and sandstone.  Everett marched on, glancing back to the pass like clockwork.  His vision began to blur and he mistook shadows of dashing clouds overhead as armies of villains bent on doing him harm.  He crept on as his headache worsened and soon he forgot his sentried errand.  He kept low to the ground and stopped himself twice from collapsing completely, bracing himself on passing man-made edifices of rock and earth.  His limp had worsened and he stumbled upon wreckage of some wrecked wagonette and used a long timber from the wagon-bed as a crutch until it snapped in half ten minutes later.  The sun was hot and without his hat or coat he felt the full effects of it on the nape of his neck.</p>
<p>Everett had been walking for three quarters of an hour in an unintentional crisscross route through the plains and had been stopping every few minutes to realign himself amid his worsening condition, finally stopping at a large and rounded granite stone at the bank of the river.  He gently lowered himself into the damp mud and his body throbbed all over as he arched his back along the boulder, the bullet buried in his shoulder shouting in pain.  The rock gave him significant cover and a cool draft washed over him.  He began another succession of coughing fits and spit up blood at the conclusion of each.  His hands were shaking from his wounds and the hunger that plagued him and he took out the last acorns and chewed them skins and all.  They were rubbery and sour and he felt puke come up in his throat but he managed to keep them down.  He untwisted the canteen from his torso and drank the rest of the water.  Some of it spilled down his chin and felt cool against his skin.</p>
<p><span id="more-317"></span>The river sat before him and bubbled and called loudly and the opposite bank seemed forever away.  He had to squint to keep it in focus and mulled on his original intent to head further south, of finding a bridge or a shallow sandbank closer to Mesilla that he could easily negotiate, but he knew he no longer had the strength for this kind of exploration.  He blinked his eyes and slapped his face twice and felt a bit of refreshment from the acorns.  He took out the silver ore from his shirt and unwrapped it, caressing the jarred surface with his sooty hands.  He placed the rock next to him and then with the bowie knife he sawed off the left sleeve of his shirt, tugging at the threaded remains until it ripped free at the seams.  He then sliced the fabric down the center which opened the shirt up as a large piece of fabric and then he cut the leather strap off the canteen.  He rested for a moment and breathed hard and then cut a small hole at each end of the sleeve, placing the ore at the center and wrapping it.  Once it had been covered fully and wound tight he needled the leather strap through each of the small holes and knotted it at each end.  He tested if it would hold by putting weight on it and it held up fine and looked like some sort of vulgar swaddling.  He placed the strap around his neck then tucked it back into his shirt.  He fastened his gun into his holster with a small leather buckle that buttoned and he stood and braced himself on the rock.  He looked back to the steep slopes behind that ran up to the mountains and then to the pass that sat thick and dark with shadows and ran a hand through his hair.</p>
<p>He crutched along the riverbank until he found a downed cottonwood limb bleached white from the sun.  It was dry in parts and he broke off the rotted and chipped end and hiked it up slowly under his arms, cradling it tight.  He stood and peered into the river and couldn’t see the bottom but stepped in slowly anyway, his high-leg laced boots filling with the cold water, chilling him violently.  He waded further out and he felt a sharp pinch when the water hit his leg-wound then groin.  He tested the bough and it floated and he again secured his gun and the parcel in his shirt.  He then took handfuls of water and splashed it lavishly onto his shoulders in preparation for the looming immersion.</p>
<p>“Alright.”</p>
<p>Everett could feel his boots sink in deep to the sand of the riverbed and knock against stones half-buried and continued on until the bottom slipped from him altogether.  He hooked one arm over the branch and paddled until he hit a strong current that began to lead him south and he angled his legs out in front in such a way that if he did happen upon any submersed obstacle, he’d be deter any major damage.</p>
<p>He passed parts of the river that became shallow again and he tried his best to be closest to the east shore, but found himself pulled back to the center.  Water splashed in his mouth and it was cool but tasted dirty.  His headache had retreated some and his wounds seemed to be puckered shut from the sudden temperature change.  After drifting half an hour he began to kick wildly, his hurt leg biting with the movement, and he began paddling with one arm, eventually digging his boots into the ground.  He hauled himself up onto the muddy bank and collapsed on his back while the branch floated on.  His chest raised and lowered in great peaks and recesses and he coughed again, turning his head to side and letting loose a thick stream of blood and phlegm.</p>
<p>He cradled a hand over the ore which sat bunched along the side of his abdomen and he abbreviated his breathing to again avoid further ache against his ribs.  He sat up and felt dizzy and looked behind him with both palms plastered in the mud.  A lip of greenbrown grass oversaw the sloped riverbank behind where he sat, the dirt road just beyond and out of sight.  He felt confident he had outmaneuvered his attacker and rested for a while then pressed himself up and climbed the rise behind, pulling himself onto his knees along a thick patch of the tussock.  He looked back to the river and saw his tracks in the bank and his handprints sunken in the mud as he coughed and spit blood again. Twin grooves ran along the road, worn by wagons and schooners, and he looked south and saw a house about a mile away.  He put his hand along his brow to shade from the sun and could just make out Mesilla about a quarter-mile beyond the lone structure.  He clutched the ore closely at his side and began shuffling along the side of the road, the enduring pains of battle swallowed down again at the prospects just ahead.</p>
<p>◊     ◊     ◊     ◊</p>
<p>Everett reached the lone house but it was little more than a converted storehouse.  He stumbled up on the porch and unclamped his gun in the holster then took the collar of his shirt and wiped a circle clean in the thick dust that sat along a sectioned window.  Inside sat heaps of crates and sacks of grains stacked like pyramids.  His coughing had worsened during his walk and it felt more cavernous now, as if his body was trying to eject something deep from within.</p>
<p>He stepped off the porch and left the shade of the eave and he crept on toward Mesilla.  He could make out a sidewalk running alongside the hotel and a livery at the rear.  Everett smiled at the prospect of civilization and ran a hand down the center of his shirt as if pressing the wrinkles out.  Two buttons had been shorn off in his march and their absence exposed his drawn pectorals, matted with dark hair and clinging to the ribs beneath.  His boots had dried some but his feet felt damp and waterlogged and he could feel the skin on his toes begin to peel away from the saturation.  His limp was extreme now and as he hobbled into Mesilla he came upon two middle-aged men conversing, gesticulating wildly as if they were traipsing over a tale of mythic proportions.  The first man was bloated and fat and his charcoal waistcoat seemed to be ready to burst.  He wore a .36 caliber Pocket Navy revolver slung in a small holster at his left side.  The second man was tall and thin and wore a dark Prince Albert double-breasted frockcoat with abbreviated lapels and carried no gun.  The tall man blushed and stopped mid-speech at the sight of the tramp approaching and an awkwardness settled between the pair.  Everett eyed them back and waved with one hand while pinning his torn shirt closed with the other.</p>
<p>“Afternoon, gentlemen.”</p>
<p>“Howdy.”</p>
<p>“Can we help with you something, friend?”</p>
<p>“You gotta color mill here?”</p>
<p>“Color mill?”</p>
<p>“Yessir.”</p>
<p>The skinny man thought hard and licked his lips.</p>
<p>“What you mean is an assay office, right?”</p>
<p>“Yes, that.”</p>
<p>The fat man pointed to Everett’s leg and to his missing sleeve, highlighting the wounds he was already conscious of.</p>
<p>“Land sakes, son.  Are you alright?”</p>
<p>“I’m fine.”</p>
<p>“If you’ll allow me, maybe yeh should go see the doc, get yerself all fixed up.”</p>
<p>“Just the assay office, please.”</p>
<p>“Son, there aint no point cashing in if you aint gunna be healthy to spend it.”</p>
<p>“Yes, what’s the hurry, friend?”</p>
<p>“Just the assay office.”</p>
<p>The fat man exchanged a wayward look with the tall man and then motioned behind to a shop a block down and on the right with a small sign stenciled with lettering too insignificant to read from their position.</p>
<p>“There?”</p>
<p>“Yes.  Charlie Lamb’s place.  It aint official, but he’ll take care of you, give you a fair price.”</p>
<p>The fat man tugged at his ear and tried hard to attempt any form of civility and then coughed into his fist.</p>
<p>“You uh, you been mining?”</p>
<p>“Yessir.”</p>
<p>“Near here?”</p>
<p>“In the Organs, day’s ride or so.”</p>
<p>“Oh.”</p>
<p>“Where you from?”</p>
<p>“Carolina, originally.”</p>
<p>“North or south?”</p>
<p>“South.”</p>
<p>“You with Sibley?”</p>
<p>“Was.”</p>
<p>“The rest of you left last year.”</p>
<p>“I know.”</p>
<p>“Well, just sayin we aint aiming for any trouble, things have settled here now.  You aint trouble, are yeh, boy?”</p>
<p>“No, sir.  Just needin to get cashed in is all.”</p>
<p>“I thought yall went east to San Antonio, anyway?”</p>
<p>Everett kicked the dirt a bit and bit his lip and folded his arms about his chest, his bare arm thick with dried blood and caked soot and mud.</p>
<p>“I parted ways after Glorietta.”</p>
<p>The fat man placed a hand on his hip and coughed again.  He saw hunger in the stranger’s eyes and it shook him cold.  The wound on Everett’s leg started to pound with hurt again and his shoulder began to rack and spasm and pump thickblack blood.  He shifted his weight uncomfortably and then heard the trill and familiar <em>kereekereekeree</em><em> </em>of the rock wren again.  Everett smiled and stared up to the sky and the afternoon sun was heavy and glaring in his eyes as he saw the small bird whoop and twirl and dance. Everett hooted in place, genuinely amused by the happenstance.</p>
<p>“Well I’ll be, gentlemen.  I believe that bird there’s been following me for miles.  You fellas ever seen anything like that before, a bird taking to a man like a dog?”</p>
<p>The fat man squinted his eyes and followed the bird in the sky and the tall man did the same then smiled a bit.</p>
<p>“I saw a man, oh, some twenty years ago with a tamed magpie.  Louder than hell, that thing was, but smart.  Could even make it talk when he wanted.”</p>
<p>“But this bird aint tame, though.  I’ve never seen a wild animal like that take to someone before, is what I’m saying.  It’s queer.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it is queer.”</p>
<p>The fat man clicked his teeth and Everett felt he had had enough of their company and he palmed his jaw in quick strokes, the skin coarse on his fingers.</p>
<p>“Alright, then.  Thanks to you both for the directions.”</p>
<p>“Good luck to yeh, son.”</p>
<p>“Yup.”</p>
<p>Everett nodded and limped along and studied the buildings as he passed.  A woman dawdled out of a general store with her young son and then saw the rough and beaten man and scurried back in.  He smiled and passed the doctor’s quarters and made a note of its location.  Laughter emerged from somewhere nearby and he heard the muted harmony of a piano being played.  Thick piles of horse manure settled in the street and twice he saw deputies on the far end of the main boulevard circle one another and talk and motion.  Everett kept to himself and bundled his shirt shut, keeping his eyes to the ground as he stepped up on the boardwalk connecting Charlie Lamb’s to a fancy-type restaurant.  He came upon the small door of the assay office and there was a sign nailed to it and he traced the words with his fingers, straining to keep the letters cohesive between thuds of his beating headache.  He then rapped his knuckled on the small glass window set in the door and waited.</p>
<p>“Yes, come on in.”</p>
<p>He pushed the door open and the room was spacious with a significant lack of décor.  In one corner sat a small adobe furnace corroded and dirty next to a long table with a handful of small molds laid out.  Everett hobbled up to an ornate desk near the far wall and an elderly man emerged from a back room wiping his hands clean on a soiled cloth, a white apron strung about his waist.  He looked up through a pair of small and round glasses at the wretch before him.</p>
<p>“What&#8230;uh, what can I do for yeh?”</p>
<p>Everett reached in his shirt and took out the swathed silver ore and peeled the leather strap from around his neck before setting it on the desk.  He carefully took the wrapping off and then took a lurching step back, presenting the rock like a proud parent might a child.</p>
<p>“That’s a nice piece.”</p>
<p>“Yessir.”</p>
<p>“It’s going to take me, uh, going to take me a while to process it.  You know, to tally it up?  I aint usually processing pieces this size.”</p>
<p>“That’s fine.  I’ll wait.”</p>
<p>“Yes, alright.  Let me go grab some papers in the back for yuh to go over.  Can you read?”</p>
<p>“Yessir.”</p>
<p>“Alright.  I’ll be right back, then.”</p>
<p>The old man creaked into the back room and Everett stood erect and ran a hand through his dried hair.  His shoulder ached furiously and his groin felt as if it had been set aflame but he stood proud with his chest puffed out triumphantly.  A quick draft raked against his naked arm and he heard the door push open and yet he held his affixed gaze to the silver ore on the desk, smiling crookedly and placing a hand along it again, molesting the surface with great tenderness.</p>
<p>Then Everett Root felt the steel of a rounded aperture wedge into the back of his skull.  He smelled a familiar tang of heavy musk and black tobacco and his face washed over white and harrowed as he heard the hammer of the gun click back.  He moved his hand slowly to the stock of his Dancer and his thoughts turned to the grove of creosotebush and the girl Erin whose life he ended with a single shot.  He heard the man’s lips part with a smack as if he had planned the next words with great and meticulous detail.</p>
<p>&#8220;Happy New Year, Root.&#8221;</p>
<p>And then a shot thundered out like drums.  The bullet tunneled through the dented blue-steel barrel of the revolver and it crushed through Everett’s skull and back out through his cheek, chipped bone and teeth and strings of fluids springing out, his body falling to the ground heavy like stone.</p>
<p>George Lynn Hany holstered the .44 caliber Colt Army revolver.  A significant ring of dark and dried blood sat at the right shoulder of his shirt and he wiped his ebony hands clean on his worn galluses then smiled.  He stepped over Everett’s pretzled body and grabbed the silver ore from the desk and tucked it back into the fabric and under his arm.  The old man peeked sheepishly from the back room and George tipped the stunted brim of his derby then swiveled toward the door.  His jackboots echoed on the puncheoned floor as he cleared his throat and the air smelled like sulfur.</p>
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		<title>&#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; Part 2</title>
		<link>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/07/blood-quantum-part-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/07/blood-quantum-part-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Mar 2010 02:19:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert James Russell</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blood Quantum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/?p=259</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Part 2 of my Western short story &#8220;Blood Quantum.&#8221;  Check out Part 1 here.
&#8212;
◊     ◊     ◊     ◊
The next morning Everett walked down a hillside from the mountains leading his horse by the reins.  He had run a zigzag path the night before until he exhausted his equine and then took a position against a sheered [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Part 2 of my Western short story &#8220;Blood Quantum.&#8221;  Check out Part 1 <a href="http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/02/an-ode-to-cowboys-and-serials-blood-quantum-part-1/">here</a>.</p>
<p>&#8212;</p>
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<p>The next morning Everett walked down a hillside from the mountains leading his horse by the reins.  He had run a zigzag path the night before until he exhausted his equine and then took a position against a sheered cliff-face that looked out into a small valley surrounded by a grove of tlacocote that tangled thick.  The small valley had only one entrance that he had guarded like some stern despot and he had only slept for thirty minutes, shivering under his thinned coat and caught beneath stray and howling gusts that wound in looping patterns.</p>
<p>He pressed on further from the hillside, stopping at a small creek that snaked down through the parched ground that was more mud than water and he let his horse drink while he inspected the map again.  His detour had ousted him too far north and on the west side of the Organs and now he&#8217;d have to cross back through.  Everett clicked his teeth for amusement as he computed his new trajectory south and east and he looked for any mention of a trail or road through the mountains.  He found none but felt optimistic that he was about a day’s ride from Mesilla and he folded the map again along the worn creases and placed it back in his shirt pocket.  He took out the miner’s stolen pistol and broke open the cylinder again and blew into the empty chambers and tucked it back into his belt.  He ran his fingers over his own large holster and stalled on the basket-weave pattern and then onto the walnut stock of the gun as if he was anticipating the arrival of a duel.</p>
<p>He yawned wildly and scratched the back of his head where it met the neck and bent down to the stream.  He lifted a handful of the gray water to his head and spooned it over and slicked his hair back.  Then he took another cupping of water and slurped it greedily and then sat along the bank and watched his horse which had taken to grazing on a sweep of hoary feather-grass.  He unwound the bandage from his leg and dipped it in the creek and rung it out.  Watery red sifted from the dressing and he scraped it along his forehead which revealed a deep and festering gash that had begun to scab over.  He reapplied the covering to his leg and it was cold against his torn skin and he sucked in air through his teeth as if it deterred the stinging sensation.</p>
<p><span id="more-259"></span>Everett pulled out the pocketknife and extended the blade and splashed water on before thumbing it clean.  He admired his reflection in it then saw the scraggly beard that had supplanted his jaw.  He wet his face again thoroughly and took to peeling off layers of the hair with the knife one stroke at a time.  He cut himself repeatedly and left a twizzled mustache and when he was done he splashed water on his face again and it burned like fire, his neck dotted with red like Dalmatian-spots.</p>
<p>He stood and looked out into the distance and he limped to his horse and caressed the haversack that held the silver.  He pocketed the knife and looked out onto the landscape as he swallowed down a great wave of pain.  He took off his coat and held it up and traced the mementos of battle, fingering where grapeshot had ripped through the cape and noting the splatters of blood that formed garish patterns where an elaborate sleeve-braid used to reside on the left cuff.  He laid it over the horse’s shoulders and orientated himself in his intended direction and he looked out on the brown rangeland and he felt tired.</p>
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<p>Everett had been riding for hours when sleep began to take him over in the saddle and he slapped his face to stay awake and calculated it was sometime in the afternoon.  He approached a young Emory oak whose branches cascaded out like a hundred tentacled arms and he tied his horse off and propped himself up against the darkbrown knotted bark.  He unholstered his heavy revolver and laid it on his belly and he fell asleep under the shade of the bell-shaped tree, settling almost immediately into a rhythmic snoring.</p>
<p>He awoke two hours later when his horse began to bray wildly and stomp the ground as if it were dancing to an unheard beat.  Its eyes were large and white and rolled back and its mane stood up on its own.  His senses still percolating, Everett wiped his eyes clean and felt a great pressure behind his nose.  The ache had had been festering for days and for a moment he felt his face and thought he was conscious of someone else’s body, remembering after a minute further that he had previously shaved.  It was then that he grew alert to his horse’s alarm and he heard the crackle of a rattler’s tail and he spun and saw the graybrown snake coiled at the side of the tree, the dorsal diamond-shaped blotches running the length of its spine mesmerizing.</p>
<p>“Shit!”</p>
<p>Everett jumped back as the snake lunged and its fangs nicked the heels of his boots as he landed.  The snake reloaded for another attack and Everett stomped down hard on its head, repeating this action until it thrashed in place and was no more.  He slumped back against the tree and breathed hard and loud, the adrenaline momentarily taking over the pain that spouted from the wounds he suffered.  He bent down and sawed the snake’s head off with the pocketknife and then unfurled it lengthwise and marveled at its span and girth.</p>
<p>He waited until dusk and he scouted the area on foot until he could no longer take the pulsing of his hurt leg and he returned to the oak and felt comfortable that he hadn’t been followed.  He set to making a fire and skinning the snake, slicing the meat into finger-length strips, and then cooked the flesh in a small and near-smokeless blaze.  He ate until he felt fat and bloated from the stringy meat and gathered a handful of acorns still clinging to the tree and cupped them between a set of limestone bricks that ringed the fire until the outsides of the nuts had seared.  The roasted perfume reminded him of his youth and he peeled the largest of the acorns and bit into it, finding it sour and tough.  He finished it for the nourishment and pocketed the rest.</p>
<p>He limped around the camp to keep the blood flowing regular and he found a snapped bough nearby that split at the ends.  He inserted the sheath of the knife into the split and held the blade out into the fire until it glowed whiteyellow around the edges.  He hopped back to the saddle and took out a small tin flask and sloshed it around.  It was nearly empty and he took it back to the fire and opened the tear in his trousers wider with his hands, pouring the liquid over his wound and he growled at the twinge.  The knife had cooled some and clenching his teeth he began digging into the flesh of his thigh until he had carved his way around the expanse of the lodged cartridge and he began prying the thing up until it popped out like a cherry pit.</p>
<p>Night had settled fast on the rangeland and he began to feel the faint of darkness approach him like a train.  He picked up the crinkled shell and examined it and chucked it out into the brush.  He then rewrapped his leg and piled a mound of sand on the fire to squash it out and he dropped into a deep and senseless sleep.</p>
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		<title>An ode to cowboys and serials: &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; Part 1</title>
		<link>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/02/an-ode-to-cowboys-and-serials-blood-quantum-part-1/</link>
		<comments>http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/2010/03/02/an-ode-to-cowboys-and-serials-blood-quantum-part-1/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Mar 2010 03:42:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert James Russell</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blood Quantum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[westerns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.robertjamesrussell.com/?p=248</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Not sure why, but I&#8217;ve always been been a big fan of Westerns (both films and literature &#8211; I&#8217;m quite fond of Elmore Leonard&#8217;s work in the genre, as well as the undisputed master himself, Louis L&#8217;Amour).  I don&#8217;t exactly know what hit me a few years back, but for about a year and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Not sure why, but I&#8217;ve always been been a big fan of Westerns (both films and literature &#8211; I&#8217;m quite fond of Elmore Leonard&#8217;s work in the genre, as well as the undisputed master himself, Louis L&#8217;Amour).  I don&#8217;t exactly know what hit me a few years back, but for about a year and a half, all I could do was write Westerns.  My love is still there, although I tend to write in different directions these days, but something about the alluring American West will always sit deep within me.</p>
<p>Thus, I&#8217;ve decided to serialize one of my favorite Western short stories, &#8220;Blood Quantum&#8221; (circa 2007). The story follows Everett Root as he makes his way through the barren countryside with a bleeding wound in his leg and a piece of silver ore the size of his head, all while out-maneuvering a mysterious assailant who seems to be on his heels the whole time. It&#8217;s simple in it&#8217;s premise (survive and cash in), and I went for a very Cormac McCarthy-esque route here, as far as the sparseness of the dialog and the setting itself goes.</p>
<p>At any rate, I quite enjoy this story, and, again, being a fan of old-timey serials, thought it might be fun to offer this story as one.  I&#8217;m not sure how often I&#8217;ll post a new segment, perhaps every other day, perhaps once a week, but make sure you stick around til this one ends. I promise it&#8217;s good fun. (Ap0logies for any formatting issues &#8211; Wordpress doesn&#8217;t play nice sometimes.)</p>
<p>&#8212;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>Blood Quantum</strong></p>
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<p>Bob Antrim felt a cold steeled barrel matt his thick hair down and wedge into the back of his skull.  He heard the hammer click back metallically and in that moment recalled his wife dying of consumption, spittles of blood curtained along the contours of her sunken face and chest, and then he mulled on his boy who had died in infancy.  His hands gripped the splintered haft of the pick and for a minute further he dreamt of spinning in place and lodging the wedged spade into his attacker but amid the hallucinated escapades a shot thundered out like drums.  The bullet churned down the barrel of the spunked and dusty revolver and it crushed through Bob’s skull and out his right eye socket as fluids sprayed like some geyser and his body fell to the ground sharp like stone.</p>
<p>Everett Root rolled the dented .44 caliber Dance revolver around his index finger and holstered it as if he were some dashing and wily roughrider that had been wrangled into a Wild West Show.  He coughed a bit and waved the smoke away from his face with his hands and then set his eyes on the heaped body, smiling crookedly and scratching his chin. The ache in his leg gathered up again like a fist and he snorted out a dollop of snot from his nostrils and lowered himself carefully to the floor of the gritty mine.  He set his feet up on the twin timber planks that bridged across mud and wet recessed puddles in the rock.  The air smelled like sulfur.</p>
<p><span id="more-248"></span>He unwound a piece of stained-red cloth from around the upper part of his left thigh and he dropped the saturated tourniquet into a soaked pile beside him.  Then he took two fingers and peeled an opening in his gray trousers that sat dark like cotton flesh and beneath the opening laid a bullet wound that fizzled deep, the opening lipped out as if it had been disturbed by some plated tremor deep below.  A glossy covering of black-red blood formed at the surface and he thumbed at it curiously as if he had previous familiarities with human anatomy, then recoiled from the shocks of pain that shot back.  He coughed deeply and squinted his eyes at the gaping hole, imagining he could see the top of the stunted round poking out and he wished he had dug the thing out in San Augustine.</p>
<p>He scooted himself along the ground to alleviate the pressure on his hurt leg and kept at it until he reached the miner’s boots and he stopped.  He sized them up mechanically and concluded they were too small and then he wormed his way along the body further, grimacing with hurt at every length he moved.  He stopped again at the miner’s waist and breathed hard and squinted his eyes again into the dark and smiled at the smoking wound lodged in his pale face.  Then Everett took a smudged hand and turned the man’s head from side to side, gripping it along the jaw with the charm of a grandfather admiring a boy.</p>
<p>&#8220;Sunnuvabitch!”</p>
<p>He guffawed and looked around for encouragement as if he had hallucinated an audience that likewise enjoyed his clowning and then let the head flop back with a heavy bump.</p>
<p>“From the right angle, boy, you look like my brother Jesse.&#8221;</p>
<p>He coughed again and rummaged through the large denim pockets of the man&#8217;s overalls and pulled out a small pocketknife with a pewter handle that it folded back into.  He unfurled the blade and it was dinged around most of the edge but the tip still pricked hard into the whorl of his thumb.  He collapsed the knife and slipped it into his shirt pocket and kept digging.  He pulled out a piece of folded paper that had browned along the edges.  He placed it into his teeth and bit down to keep it in place and the prospect of something other than his tongue taking up room in there caused him to slobber a bit around the corners and wet the edge of the note.  He then pulled out another folded and waxed piece of paper and he unfolded it.  He examined it and it appeared to be a map of the area with hashes penciled in and around the mountains he was currently in, possibly marking failed claims and there was a longer scratch that portended to what might be a homestead a few miles off.  He laid the map down and then dug through the remaining pockets, pulling out a length of twine and he pushed it aside.  He noticed the claw hammer slung along a leather belt askew along the miner’s hips and he fingered the splintered handle and the iron cheek felt cool against his skin.</p>
<p>Everett sighed loudly and fisted the map and with the note still tucked between the bite of his misaligned teeth he squirmed his way backward along the ground until he was again propped against the rock next to his used dressing.  He extended the map, running his index finger along the creases until it laid flat and he set it at one side then took the note from his mouth and wiped it along the seam of his shirt to take the moisture.  He then reexamined his bullet wound and grunted at the shoot of pain and rested his head back again and he wished for a drink of water.  His eyes began to glaze over and he slapped himself awake again and then turned onto his side with the map spread before him.  He traced his finger along a ridge of the Organ Mountains then down through the scrublands until he hit Mesilla and he tapped it twice as if to make sure it was no phantasm of his mind.  The edges of the map flayed and he took his thumbnail and chipped off dry mud from the lower left corner which revealed the words <em>Johnson&#8217;s California, Territories of New Mexico and Utah by Johnson and Browning</em> <em>1860. </em>He stroked his hand over the dulled reds and yellows and greens that covered it and imagined they had been brighter once.</p>
<p>He sat back up and another surge of pain shot up and he crossed his legs at the ankles.  He unfolded the note and turned it in his hands, fascinated by the theatrics of it and he held the paper close and squinted at the longhand words.  He lowered the note and looked around and spotted a thick and white candle wedged onto an iron rod that had been wedged into the working face beyond the body, the flame nearly wicked away.  Then he angled the paper in such a way that the remaining flicker of yellow-orange light illuminated the page.  He licked his lips and ran a hand through his greased hair and glanced to the entrance of the shaft a ways to his right and the sun had yet to recede.  Then he focused on the extravagant loops staring back at him and enunciated with all the precision he could afford.</p>
<p><em>My dearest Bob,</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>I knowd you aint seen me for a while now but I just wanted yuh to know I’s doing alright.  And I’s really proud of how good things are going for yuh now that yuhs working the land for the colors. </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>I don’t know if yuh forgot or not, but my berthday was last week.  And now that I’s fifteen years old Ma’s making me work down at William’s store when I can.  I’m meant to earn some extra money because of Pa’s arm being shot off by the Mexicans.  I hope yer still planning on saving up to come marry me and build me that house you told me of.  And I never did tell anyone what happened between us and I never would either.  I wouldn’t risk getting yeh in trubble because of me nohow. </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>I hope this letter finds yeh well and I hope yeh can take me far from here soon and we can live forever together.</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>Signed with great love, </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>Charlotte</em><em> </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p>Everett found himself smiling at the very notion of the correspondence and he carefully folded the note back up and set it aside and exhaled loudly.  He looked up to the jagged ceiling which sat serrated by erosion and the hands of man and then counted the lateral wooden girts that had been placed at intervals of the shaft, bracing between walls and doused in runoff that seeped from some unknown source above.  Everett then tried to calculate how long Bob had been working the coyote-hole and his leg resounded with another flirt of sharp hurt and he took the knife out and opened the blade.  He looked back to the candle and thought maybe he would try to dig the bullet out now and he saw how infection had spread up his thigh and neared his groin, the skin tender and yellowblack.  He grunted and rested a hand on the rock behind him and rose carefully without putting any pressure on his left leg.</p>
<p>Everett panted for a moment with the knife still poised and he turned toward the body and then heard a thunderous recoil echo back from somewhere outside, bouncing off the walls of the mine until the sound hit him fierce.  He stopped and arched his back and the hair on his neck stood and he pursed his mouth so as not to produce any sound and he waited and blood pumped to his leg and it ached.  The reverberation had deteriorated to a faint nothing and he couldn’t quite decide if it was thunder or a rifle shot.  He thought he had lost him days ago.</p>
<p>He felt his nerves give way and his heart raced and thumped erratically and he hobbled to the body ignoring any better judgment to rest.  He bent down and took the man&#8217;s sweat-stained shirt and ripped a thick strip off, cutting the end free with the pocketknife and he tied a new tourniquet tight around his thigh.  He winced as he double-knotted the bandage and then he noticed a tin ore bucket resting beneath the candle soaked by shadows.</p>
<p>A piece of loose rock stripped from the walls somewhere behind and he anxiously stared back to the entrance of the angled shaft that glowed white from sunlight and then back to the body.  He swallowed hard and his throat was dry and the new bandage provided a bit of release from the pain as he lurched forward.  Then he reached into the dark tin bucket and pulled out a large and blocky hunk of silver ore that fizzled in parts from the candleglow.  He took his thumb and scraped dust off the surface and deliberated on the worth of the ore then reached back in the bucket and pulled out a Colt 1851 Navy.  The grip had been worn away and the steel of the frame and barrel had been dulled and tarnished.  He broke open the cylinder and counted two full chambers and then jammed the gun into his belt.</p>
<p>Everett stood there over the body a moment longer and breathed hard. He detailed the scene as he lingered and noticed an iron chisel peeking out of a fissured line of rock and an old shovel lying near.  Finally satisfied he had scavenged anything of value from the place he hopped on his good leg along the planked runners.  They creaked and swayed in addled piles of mud as he moved awkwardly and he emerged along the entrance of the cave and pulled his Dancer out.  The flat and polished-silver frame sat in contention to the pieced walnut grips and the brass trigger guard glistened in the afternoon sun as he knelt and rested it along the ground next to him in preparation for some ambush he figured was imminent.  He squinted his eyes as they adjusted to the flood of light and surveyed the scrubland then slowly stepped onto the graveled slope that ran down to his horse that sat posted where he left it.  He stood tense until he was sure nothing had stirred in the distance, musing that maybe he had been on the run for too long, and he distracted himself from the specters he created by looking at the ore heavy in his hand still.  He rubbed his forearm against his cheek where sweat beaded and there was dried blood thick like jam along his brow.  He smiled crookedly at the ore and rubbed the surface clean and he began shoveling his way down the steep slope past a bouquet of mesquite.</p>
<p>He reached his sorrel-hued Morgan horse and he placed the silver ore in a thick leather haversack that slapped against the animal’s loins and he gripped the horn and pulled himself up.  He took a double-breasted butternut frockcoat lying flat along the rear housing and placed it over his shoulders and it hung long and tattered at the cuffs.  He then reached forward to a black fur-felt Kossuth whose hat-cord was tied to the front rigging ring and he placed it on his head.  He scratched his chin and balled up a wad of phlegm he intended to spit and suddenly a rifle-shot rifled past him and struck the gravel slope to his left, catapulting pieces of stone and dirt up and out.</p>
<p>Everett heyawwed and clicked and dug his heels deep, slinking low in the saddle as he fled.  He rose up a winding path back into the mountains and looked back only once to see where he was but the glare of the fading sun was strong in his eyes and he couldn&#8217;t see his attacker as he raced further into the hills.</p>
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