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The others giggled. Fallon remembered that he was still deaf and dumb.
By the time the wagon pulled away from the Natchitoches depot, the lanterns on the front had been lighted. By the time they reached Justice’s plantation, supper had already been consumed, and Fallon was taken to the bunkhouse, where men snored, sweated, farted, and stank.
A wiry man, muscular, sweaty, and missing two fingers on his right hand, met Fallon at the door.
“Shhhhhh,” he whispered. “Boys are sleepin’. I’m Cody. Don’t know if that’s my first name or last. See, I wasn’t supposed to get born. Ya need somethin’, you ask ol’ Cody. What’s yer name, kid?”
Kid? Fallon had ten years on the boy.
“Alexander. Harry Alexander.”
“You’ll bunk below me.” Cody led the way, the boards creaking under his brogans, and Cody weighed less than a fart.
The guards closed the door behind them.
Fallon recalled something the warden at The Walls had read to him, something about having all bedding washed as well as all workers getting regular baths. Apparently, that looked good in black and white but wasn’t always followed to the letter 315 miles, as the trains moved, away.
“What you want to know?” Cody asked, his voice a little less forced now that the guards had left the prisoners alone.
“How many prisoners?” Fallon asked.
“Thirty. Forty. Depends.”
“Guards?”
“Twelve. Two sergeants. Two camp guards. The rest are day guards.”
“And the work?”
Cody snorted. “Makes a white man wish the South hadn’t lost the war, pard. Now I know why them slaves wanted to get their jubilee.”
He was laughing, but it stopped instantly, and Fallon saw the towering figure before him.
“Who’s the fresh fish?” the voice asked.
“Tom,” Cody said, pleadingly, “you best take it easy, man. Sunday morning’s comin’ ’round, and you know how the Colonel want his Sundays to be quiet.” Cody spun, probably grinned, though Fallon couldn’t see that well in the darkened confines of the bunkhouse. “The Colonel, I ain’t sure he’s that God-fearing, but he don’t like nothin’ to bother him on a day of worship. Which suits us. We gets Sunday off. Nothin’ to do but relax, maybe throw a ball around, pitch horseshoes. Gives us a day of rest of six days of nothin’ but hell.”
“I said,” the monster called Tom repeated, “who’s the fresh fish?”
“Harry Alexander,” Fallon answered. “If it’s any of your damned business.”
A giant arm knocked Cody halfway across the room.
The snores stopped. Fallon could make out the squeaking of bed slats and sheets being tossed aside as the men sat up. A match flared. A candle was lighted, casting a golden glow that didn’t brighten the room, but at least gave Fallon a chance to look into Tom’s face.
Prisoners were required to be clean-shaven at The Walls. Apparently, the guards and Colonel Justice overlooked that rule when it came to convict labor at his Natchitoches plantation. Tom’s beard was thick, likely filled with bugs, and came down to about where his heart would’ve been located. Had he ever gotten a heart.
“I’m makin’ it my business, fish.”
Fallon saw the thick, brutal fingers close up as Tom tightened his fist.
But big Tom never got a chance to bring that fist up. Fallon hit him in the jaw with a quick right, brought his left around almost instantly, and that punch sent the leviathan’s head banging against the hard cedar post that held up the bunk beds. By the time Tom realized what was happening, Fallon had brought a knee into the man’s groin, and then he reached out with both hands and pushed as hard as he could.
Tom stumbled onto the floor, breaking one of the floorboards.
He started cursing, but those were drowned out by the shouts of encouragement from the thirty-plus other prisoners now sitting in their beds.
Tom was wailing, trying to push himself back to his feet, but as he rose, his left leg went through the busted floor. The building—more dismal shack than any solid structure—was propped up by mortared bricks and a cypress tree stump, maybe a foot off the rotting, stinking Louisiana land. Tom gripped his leg, groaned, cursed, spat out blood, and tried to pull it back into the building.
Fallon glanced to his right, saw something on the floor, and he raced to it, grabbed the cold brass, turned, and emptied the spittoon’s contents into Tom’s ugly face.
The man screamed in rage, tasting the foulness of tobacco juice, spit, the well-chewed remnants of tobacco, and maybe fifteen dozen soggy nubs of cigarettes. He probably swallowed some of the juice, as well. Tom gagged, coughed, twisting his head this way and that like a dog shaking himself dry. He cursed and worked those big fists against his eyes, trying to paw away the wretchedness. When he looked up and his vision cleared, Fallon slammed the spittoon into the man’s face. Cartilage broke. Blood spurted. The nose had been flattened, and down went the tough man, twisting, falling, one leg still stuck in the busted flooring.
He landed with a cry and an oof. Tom tried to push himself back up, but Fallon still held the spittoon. He lifted it over his head, waited until Tom’s ugly head, the mane of hair now dripping with tobacco juice and blood, was above the flooring. He slammed the heavy brass onto the man’s skull. His hands slipped from under him, and Tom’s bloodied face crashed into the floor.
“That ain’t fair!” A leathery figure leaped from a bunk to Fallon’s right. Fallon heard the sound of a knife blade being unfolded. “You son of a whore!” The figure came at Fallon, who saw the reflection of candlelight from the shiny blade.
“I’ll skin you like a catfish,” the man said, and added a few curses in his own language.
Fallon still held the spittoon, and he slammed it into the charging man’s face. The man fell back against a bunk, and the bed kept him upright. But not for long. Fallon slammed the brass cuspidor again into the man’s face. The blade fell to the floor. Fallon stepped closer, kicked the knife away, and brought the stinking vessel up. That caught the bottom of the attacker’s jaw, wrenched his neck up, and Fallon slammed the heavy container against his head. This time the convict fell into a heap.
Turning, Fallon saw that the giant named Tom had managed to free himself from the flooring and shake some senses, some feeling, and a bit of consciousness back into his very being. He saw Fallon and roared like a grizzly as he charged.
This time Fallon let go of the spittoon. He sent it sailing like he was rolling tenpins, and that brass caught the big galoot’s feet and sent him sailing onto the floor. No wood broke this time, but the man rolled over onto his back, cursed, and wound up lying between two bunks.
As he tried to push himself up, Fallon lunged forward and leaped. He caught hold of the top bunks and saw the occupants scurry back toward the wall, like children waking from a nightmare and pulling back the covers toward them in abject fear.
Fallon brought both legs down into Tom’s face. The force drove the giant back, and Fallon let go, dropping his feet into the big man’s gut. That cost Fallon his own footing, and he slipped, landed on the floor, rolled over, jumped up, and looked at Tom.
Tom wasn’t moving anymore. He was bleeding. And he was breathing. That was about it. Fallon turned around, made sure the man who had opened the knife remained out of the fight. No worries there. The man had regained consciousness, but he was whimpering and had pulled himself into a ball like a newborn baby.
Fallon sucked in the stinking air of the bunkhouse, held it, let it out. He made sure the knife remained on the floor. Fallon looked around and stared at shadowy faces.
“Anybody else want to take a hand?”
In answer, the front door of the shack was jerked open.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
“Which one of you yellow-bellies thinks he can ruin my supper party?” a voice drawled.
Fallon saw the figure, like a white knight in the doorway. He saw the bright flash of flame and the roar
of a cannon as a pistol—the loudest he had ever heard—sent a round that knocked out a good portion of the ceiling.
Torches flared behind the man. A guard—at least Fallon assumed it was a guard—ran up behind the man in white, and brought a lantern with him. Whoever had fired up the lantern shook it out, and by the time Fallon’s eyes had adjusted to the new light, every one of the men in the bunks had pulled the covers up, a pillow—at least those fortunate enough to have a pillow—over his head. A few pretended to snore.
“Well?”
The man in white stared directly at Fallon.
Fallon figured he had no choice. He pointed at the man he had smashed to near oblivion with the empty spittoon, the man who still lay curled up in a ball and quivering on the floor.
“Him,” Fallon said.
* * *
The man Fallon figured had to be none other than Josiah Jonathan Justice glanced at the man, then back at Fallon, and chuckled. “I dare say.” His accent was a mix of sugar-thickened tea and cane syrup. His suit was white. It might have been from the yellowy glow of the lantern, but he looked bronzed from the sun, with a well-groomed white mustache and goatee, white hair, white sideburns. His shirt was white, underneath a white vest. Even the tie was white. The buttons—on shirt, jacket, and vest—were mother-of-pearl. The man’s eyebrows were white and thick. Fallon figured everything about the man was white, except his heart. And his soul.
“Dave,” Josiah Jonathan Justice said in that slow drawl. “Take this reprobate out to the whippin’ post. Lash him to it.”
“You want to whip him, Colonel? At this time at night?”
Justice sighed. “Did I say whip him, Dave? Heavens to Betsy, man, if we were to whip him at this time of night, we’d wake up my coonhounds, all the frogs and gators in the swamp, and half the population of Natchitoches. I said lash him to the post. We’ll whip him in the mornin’, boy. Now, get to it.”
The man called Dave muttered something that might have been Yes, sir, and he snapped his fingers. Two men rushed inside, grabbed the whimpering man, and dragged him toward the door. When he began screaming, one of them stopped, stomped his head with a boot heel, which either knocked the pitiful man out or at least stunned him into silence. By the time he recovered or regained consciousness he would not be able to yell and wake all the animals and neighbors, for the second guard had stuffed a bandanna into his mouth and tied it around the back of his head.
The Colonel stepped aside to let them drag the poor convict to the whipping post.
“And what about that big monkey lyin’ over yonder?” Colonel Justice pointed at the unconscious figure of Tom.
Fallon said, “I wouldn’t know.” He had not counted on his comment getting a poor fellow whipped, even though Fallon wasn’t going to lose any sleep over that. The thug had intended to spill out Fallon’s guts onto the floor.
“No?”
Fallon shook his head. “Maybe he likes to sleep on the floor. I’ve known some good old boys who did.”
“You reckon?”
Fallon shrugged.
“And what about you? Why are you out of bed?”
Fallon nodded at the door. “I heard you knocking. Came to open the door.”
Colonel Justice’s grin widened.
“I don’t recollect your face, son. You been hidin’?”
“Just arrived.”
“I see. From Rusk?”
“Huntsville.”
The man nodded. “The Walls, eh. You like it here?”
“From what I’ve seen.”
The man grinned again. “I don’t think you’ve seen a whole lot. This time of night. New moon an’ all.”
Fallon shrugged.
“You got a name, boy?”
“Alexander. Harry Alexander.”
“Oh yes. Harry Alexander. They tol’ me you was comin’. Needed a replacement. One of our ol’ boys got hisself bit by a cottonmouth. You know about cottonmouths, Harry Alexander?”
“I do.”
“Nasty snakes. Meaner than rattlers. Maybe not as deadly as copperheads. But mean, mean, mean old reptiles, cold-blooded as they come. Almost as cold-blooded as some Yankees I’ve known.”
“I see.”
“Then the poor lad, God bless ’im, fell into the swamp. A big ol’ alligator come alon’, and, well, gators got to eat, too, and maybe that gator, drownin’ the po’ lad, maybe that was a blessin’, you see. Drownin’ is a better way to die than all that p’is’n shuttin’ down yer organs an’ all. Don’t you reckon?”
Fallon held out his palms in defeat. “I wouldn’t know. Never drowned to death. Never died from snakebite.”
“Do you like bourbon, Harry Alexander?” the cotton magnate asked. “I mean, Kentucky bourbon. Bona fide. Not Pennsylvania bourbon. We don’t drink nothin’ from Yankee land down here. Ain’t that right, Dave?”
Dave had returned from lashing the unconscious man to the whipping post.
“That’s right, Colonel. Right as rain.”
“Well.” Justice grinned. “Do you like bourbon?”
Fallon thought about lying, but instead his head shook.
“No? A strappin’ young fella like you. You don’t care for good Kentucky bourbon?”
“A promise”—Fallon had made—“to my dyin’ mother.”
The man cocked his head to one side, unsure what to make of Fallon’s answer.
“Honest?” he said.
“I haven’t touched an ardent spirit in more than ten years,” Fallon said. Which was true. “God bless her soul.” He hadn’t tied on a good drunk since he had married, either, but he had sipped a bourbon, or a rye, or a beer before he had been arrested. But to drink now, after years of abstaining not by choice but by prison regulations, could compromise him. Fallon was on shaky footing all the time. Getting light-headed from whiskey could get a man like Fallon killed in a hurry.
“Well.” The man bowed his head, shook it, and raised it. This time he pushed up the straw hat he wore. It was flat crowned, with a flat brim, and what looked to be a red satin band around the top. “That’s admirable. I dare say, Mr. Alexander, that I don’t meet too many workers from Rusk or Huntsville that I could say have admirable qualities.”
“I’ve got some unadmirable qualities, too.”
“I’m not sure unadmirable is a word, Mr. Alexander. But even if it’s not, name one of them, if you don’t mind.”
Fallon shrugged. “I don’t drink.”
Now Colonel Justice laughed heartily, slapped his thigh, and nodded with pleasure. “You must join my dinner party, Mr. Alexander. Dave. Clean him up some. Give him a jacket to wear. Bring him over to the parlor in ten minutes.”
Justice turned around, moved to the door, stopped, and looked back. “And the rest of you low-down asses-dogs, stay asleep, and stay quiet, or you all might find yourselves bitten by water moccasins and et up by hungry gators.”
The door closed behind him.
* * *
“Do you drink coffee, Mr. Alexander? Chicory. From New Orleans. Finest you’ll find. Or did you promise your late ma that you’d abstain from that, as well?”
The Colonel sat in a rocking chair on the porch. The porch was screened in. On a night like this, hot, humid, still with mosquitoes and flies as thick as grasshoppers in a plague, a man needed a screened-in porch.
“Coffee’s fine,” Alexander said, and a moment later, a black man in a white jacket and crisp black pants came out of the main house with a china cup of steaming black coffee. Fallon thanked the old man and sipped the coffee.
“Benjamin,” Colonel Justice called out, “have Grandma Tatum warm up a beignet for Mr. Alexander. You haven’t had supper, have you, Mr. Alexander?” He did not wait for an answer. “But tell Grandma Tatum not to put on too much powdered sugar, for I dare say that Mr. Alexander promised his late mother that he wouldn’t rot his teeth out with all them sweets. If y’all got some cracklin’s left, warm some of those up, too. And maybe a bowl of gumbo. You like gu
mbo, Mr. Alexander?”
“We never got that in Arkansas,” Fallon told him.
“It’s real tasty, suh. Tasty, indeed. Spicy, too. But I got to think a little hot action won’t bother you too much. Am I right, Mr. Alexander?”
Fallon fanned himself. “It’s a little hot in here.”
“Bourbon would cool you off, suh.”
“Like you said, Colonel, a little hot action won’t bother me too much.”
The man leaned in his wicker rocker and lighted a cigar. Fallon sipped the strong Louisiana coffee.
“Nice turnout for your dinner party,” Fallon said.
“I think so,” Justice said. “The sergeant brought me a copy of your record. Lucky, isn’t it, that a life sentence got reduced to ten years? You wouldn’t be here if that were not the case. Would you?”
“That’s the way the warden explained it to me,” Fallon said. The black man returned with a tray of food. He set it at a table to Fallon’s right, and left.
“Sit, Mr. Alexander. Sit.” The Colonel waved his cigar. “Eat. We’ll have a nice little chat while you eat.”
Once he was seated, Fallon spooned in a mouthful of the gumbo. He had never tasted anything like it. Spicy. Warm. Absolutely wonderful. Flavors assaulted his senses. Hell, he thought, maybe he should have taken up the Colonel’s offer of Kentucky bourbon.
“From the record the warden sent along, Mr. Alexander, you have been a rather naughty, naughty man.” He clucked his tongue and shuffled some papers before laying them on his lap.
Fallon shrugged. “Courts have one way of looking at things. I have another.”
“You don’t seem to like the Yankee government.”
Fallon swallowed more gumbo and sipped coffee. “I probably wouldn’t have cared for the Confederate government, either,” he said. “On some things.” He lifted the coffee. “Or the Creoles. Or the French.”
The Colonel made himself smile.
“You got in some trouble in Arkansas.”
Fallon pretended to ignore the statement. He tasted the sugary beignet.
“And a most dreadful act of violence in some place way up in the Panhandle of Texas.”

Riding Shotgun
Bloodthirsty
Bullets Don't Argue
Frontier America
Hang Them Slowly
Live by the West, Die by the West
The Black Hills
Torture of the Mountain Man
Preacher's Rage
Stranglehold
Cutthroats
The Range Detectives
A Jensen Family Christmas
Have Brides, Will Travel
Dig Your Own Grave
Burning Daylight
Blood for Blood
Winter Kill
Mankiller, Colorado
Preacher's Massacre
The Doomsday Bunker
Treason in the Ashes
MacCallister, The Eagles Legacy: The Killing
Wolfsbane
Danger in the Ashes
Gut-Shot
Rimfire
Hatred in the Ashes
Day of Rage
Dreams of Eagles
Out of the Ashes
The Return Of Dog Team
Better Off Dead
Betrayal of the Mountain Man
Rattlesnake Wells, Wyoming
A Crying Shame
The Devil's Touch
Courage In The Ashes
The Jackals
Preacher's Blood Hunt
Luke Jensen Bounty Hunter Dead Shot
A Good Day to Die
Winchester 1886
Massacre of Eagles
A Colorado Christmas
Carnage of Eagles
The Family Jensen # 1
Sidewinders#2 Massacre At Whiskey Flats
Suicide Mission
Preacher and the Mountain Caesar
Sawbones
Preacher's Hell Storm
The Last Gunfighter: Hell Town
Hell's Gate
Monahan's Massacre
Code of the Mountain Man
The Trail West
Buckhorn
A Rocky Mountain Christmas
Darkly The Thunder
Pride of Eagles
Vengeance Is Mine
Trapped in the Ashes
Twelve Dead Men
Legion of Fire
Honor of the Mountain Man
Massacre Canyon
Smoke Jensen, the Beginning
Song of Eagles
Slaughter of Eagles
Dead Man Walking
The Frontiersman
Brutal Night of the Mountain Man
Battle in the Ashes
Chaos in the Ashes
MacCallister Kingdom Come
Cat's Eye
Butchery of the Mountain Man
Dead Before Sundown
Tyranny in the Ashes
Snake River Slaughter
A Time to Slaughter
The Last of the Dogteam
Massacre at Powder River
Sidewinders
Night Mask
Preacher's Slaughter
Invasion USA
Defiance of Eagles
The Jensen Brand
Frontier of Violence
Bleeding Texas
The Lawless
Blood Bond
MacCallister: The Eagles Legacy: The Killing
Showdown
The Legend of Perley Gates
Pursuit Of The Mountain Man
Scream of Eagles
Preacher's Showdown
Ordeal of the Mountain Man
The Last Gunfighter: The Drifter
Ride the Savage Land
Ghost Valley
Fire in the Ashes
Matt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man The Eyes of Texas
Deadly Trail
Rage of Eagles
Moonshine Massacre
Destiny in the Ashes
Violent Sunday
Alone in the Ashes ta-5
Preacher's Peace
Preacher's Pursuit (The First Mountain Man)
Preacher's Quest
The Darkest Winter
A Reason to Die
Bloodshed of Eagles
The Last Gunfighter: Ghost Valley
A Big Sky Christmas
Hang Him Twice
Blood Bond 3
Seven Days to Hell
MacCallister, the Eagles Legacy: Dry Gulch Ambush
The Last Gunfighter
Brotherhood of the Gun
Code of the Mountain Man tlmm-8
Prey
MacAllister
Thunder of Eagles
Rampage of the Mountain Man
Ambush in the Ashes
Texas Bloodshed s-6
Savage Texas: The Stampeders
Sixkiller, U.S. Marshal
Shootout of the Mountain Man
Damnation Valley
Renegades
The Family Jensen
The Last Rebel: Survivor
Guns of the Mountain Man
Blood in the Ashes ta-4
A Time for Vultures
Savage Guns
Terror of the Mountain Man
Phoenix Rising:
Savage Country
River of Blood
Bloody Sunday
Vengeance in the Ashes
Butch Cassidy the Lost Years
The First Mountain Man
Preacher
Heart of the Mountain Man
Destiny of Eagles
Evil Never Sleeps
The Devil's Legion
Forty Times a Killer
Slaughter
Day of Independence
Betrayal in the Ashes
Jack-in-the-Box
Will Tanner
This Violent Land
Behind the Iron
Blood in the Ashes
Warpath of the Mountain Man
Deadly Day in Tombstone
Blackfoot Messiah
Pitchfork Pass
Reprisal
The Great Train Massacre
A Town Called Fury
Rescue
A High Sierra Christmas
Quest of the Mountain Man
Blood Bond 5
The Drifter
Survivor (The Ashes Book 36)
Terror in the Ashes
Blood of the Mountain Man
Blood Bond 7
Cheyenne Challenge
Kill Crazy
Ten Guns from Texas
Preacher's Fortune
Preacher's Kill
Right between the Eyes
Destiny Of The Mountain Man
Rockabilly Hell
Forty Guns West
Hour of Death
The Devil's Cat
Triumph of the Mountain Man
Fury in the Ashes
Stand Your Ground
The Devil's Heart
Brotherhood of Evil
Smoke from the Ashes
Firebase Freedom
The Edge of Hell
Bats
Remington 1894
Devil's Kiss d-1
Watchers in the Woods
Devil's Heart
A Dangerous Man
No Man's Land
War of the Mountain Man
Hunted
Survival in the Ashes
The Forbidden
Rage of the Mountain Man
Anarchy in the Ashes
Those Jensen Boys!
Matt Jensen: The Last Mountain Man Purgatory
Bad Men Die
Blood Valley
Carnival
The Last Mountain Man
Talons of Eagles
Bounty Hunter lj-1
Rockabilly Limbo
The Blood of Patriots
A Texas Hill Country Christmas
Torture Town
The Bleeding Edge
Gunsmoke and Gold
Revenge of the Dog Team
Flintlock
Devil's Kiss
Rebel Yell
Eight Hours to Die
Hell's Half Acre
Revenge of the Mountain Man
Battle of the Mountain Man
Trek of the Mountain Man
Cry of Eagles
Blood on the Divide
Triumph in the Ashes
The Butcher of Baxter Pass
Sweet Dreams
Preacher's Assault
Vengeance of the Mountain Man
MacCallister: The Eagles Legacy
Rockinghorse
From The Ashes: America Reborn
Hate Thy Neighbor
A Frontier Christmas
Justice of the Mountain Man
Law of the Mountain Man
Matt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man
Burning
Wyoming Slaughter
Return of the Mountain Man
Ambush of the Mountain Man
Anarchy in the Ashes ta-3
Absaroka Ambush
Texas Bloodshed
The Chuckwagon Trail
The Violent Land
Assault of the Mountain Man
Ride for Vengeance
Preacher's Justice
Manhunt
Cat's Cradle
Power of the Mountain Man
Flames from the Ashes
A Stranger in Town
Powder Burn
Trail of the Mountain Man
Toy Cemetery
Sandman
Escape from the Ashes
Winchester 1887
Shawn O'Brien Manslaughter
Home Invasion
Hell Town
D-Day in the Ashes
The Devil's Laughter
An Arizona Christmas
Paid in Blood
Crisis in the Ashes
Imposter
Dakota Ambush
The Edge of Violence
Arizona Ambush
Texas John Slaughter
Valor in the Ashes
Tyranny
Slaughter in the Ashes
Warriors from the Ashes
Venom of the Mountain Man
Alone in the Ashes
Matt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man Savage Territory
Death in the Ashes
Savagery of The Mountain Man
A Lone Star Christmas
Black Friday
Montana Gundown
Journey into Violence
Colter's Journey
Eyes of Eagles
Blood Bond 9
Avenger
Black Ops #1
Shot in the Back
The Last Gunfighter: Killing Ground
Preacher's Fire
Day of Reckoning
Phoenix Rising pr-1
Blood of Eagles
Trigger Warning
Absaroka Ambush (first Mt Man)/Courage Of The Mt Man
Strike of the Mountain Man