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Authors: William J. Cobb

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The Bird Saviors (17 page)

BOOK: The Bird Saviors
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    You always wear a new hat to a bushwhacking?
    Ezra frowns and settles the hat back in place. It's not new.
    Right, says Mosca. I bet you've had it at least two weeks.
    They climb into the cab without another word. Ezra drives. He looks to be no older than nineteen or twenty. You sure you're old enough for this? says Mosca. I mean, you do have a valid driver's license, don't you?
    I'm old enough, don't you worry, says Ezra.
    Mosca stares out the window, his pinched face stiff, eyes squinting out at the rocky canyon walls. A half mile down the road he says, Fucker better watch who he calls a Mexican.
    Ezra grins. You're the one who should watch what you say.
That's Porter you're talking about. I wouldn't fuck with him, no way nohow.
    I'm just saying—
    I know. Just leave me out of it. Let's just do this and make a ton of money, okay?
    The sky fades to violet and lavender, then deep purple, with a stencil silhouette of the Sangre de Cristo mountains to the south. Mosca watches the taillights of the pickup ahead and imagines bushwhacking Porter, having George Armstrong Crowfoot hold him down as he cuts out his tongue. That would be hard to do, to grab a squirmy thing like that and cut it free. Maybe his ears would be a better target. Smug sumbitch. He thinks he can make fun of
mi familia
he's got another thing coming.
    Mosca chatters to pass the time. He says he's heard some ski resorts might close this year. Frankly, I don't give a shit. I mean, what's the point in skiing? A sport for rich assholes. Sliding down a mountain on a couple skinny boards? Sounds pretty damn silly if you ask me.
    The Lord is punishing the rich for their hedonism and profligate ways, says Ezra. That's why the cost of everything is so high. It's a great reckoning. It is. You mark my words. This is just the beginning.
If this is just the beginning I'd hate to see the fiery
adios.
    You will. A time will come when the one true prophet will emerge and all the evils and sins of the world will be made right.
    Except for this fuel appropriation, right? Mosca grins.
    It's not a sin to take what doesn't belong to anyone to begin
with. It's our right and ability. The oil lay below the holy land, occupied by sand monkeys.
    The headlights shine on jagged cliff faces that loom over the road. Highway 50 follows the Arkansas River like an asphalt shadow. Mosca says this is a famous stretch of road. Stagecoaches had regular routes here in the 1880s. I'm a history buff, he adds. I like to know where we been and where we're going. I won the head of Black Jack Ketchum in a card game. I might auction it off to the highest bidder sometime, if you know anyone might be interested. Aren't you Saints keen on the past, Brigham Young's wives' petticoats and all that?
    Don't blaspheme the worthy.
    I was just saying.
    Some things you don't kid about.
    On State Highway 69 south of Texas Creek they wait at a tight bend on an uphill slope. Porter calls on his cell to tell them the turkey is on its way.
    Mosca rolls his window down and smokes a cigarette. The night air is cool and smells of pine and juniper. He says he loves this country and can't imagine living anywhere else. He doesn't blame the other Mexican migrants for wanting to come north. I mean, there's work here for them. Everybody wants to make a living, no matter where they might be born.
    That head you say is Black Jack Ketchum's. You say you won it in a card game, right?
    It's the Lord's truth. I had two aces buried in a hand of Texas Hold 'Em. I was sweating it all the way till the last man called. I figured someone might have a full house.
When was that?
Two months back.
    Had a big mustache, didn't it? Funny because I knew of a Saint by the name of Morris Dinwoody who had a bad car wreck about a year ago. Decapitated, he was. Ezra smiles. Can't get any worse than that.
    Mosca jabs out his cigarette. And the point is?
    I'm willing to bet more money than you won at the card table the head was Morris Dinwoody's, formerly of Florence, Colorado.
    Goddamnit. No one believes me. When Black Jack Ketchum was hanged in 1901 his head popped clean off. The man I won it from said he knew some archaeologist types who dug up the coffin to do some kind of DNA test and—
    You weren't playing a man named Curtis, were you? Red- haired son of a bitch? With a high voice?
    Mosca doesn't answer. He flicks his cigarette out the window. Fucking DNA test proved it was Ketchum, he says. I don't give a shit what you say. I know what I got and that head is worth some money.
    Curtis works for the mortuary that handled Dinwoody's corpse. He didn't have any people who cared for him and he was a turncoat polyg, so they'd just as soon spit on his grave. I heard Curtis had the head dried and cured as a joke.
    Mosca says, That trucker should be coming soon.
    Well, not a joke, adds Ezra. More like a curiosity object I suppose.
    Long as we're shooting the shit, what happened to
your
head?
    Ezra takes his time answering. What happened is not the question. Or the issue, you might say. What's going to happen when I catch that redskin motherfucker, that's the issue.
    In the dark he can't see the smirk on Mosca's face.
    A cell phone buzzes on the dashboard. Ezra answers it and listens. Okay, we're ready, he says. He folds it shut and digs under his seat for a machine pistol. Lock and load,
amigo.
It's showtime.
    They pull the truck into the middle of the road and cut the wheels hard to the left, getting the front wheels just off the edge of the shoulder, blocking the way of both lanes with the hay trailer. Mosca jumps out of the cab and climbs onto the flatbed, kicks off a stack of hay bales. A few minutes later they see the headlight beams of the fuel tanker shining on the pines and junipers. Ezra tells Mosca to stay on the flatbed trailer and don't do anything stupid. They pretend to be reloading the hay as the tanker approaches.
    Remember, says Ezra, I'm in charge here. Got it?
    
No problema
, says Mosca. You the man.
    From their spot in the middle of the road all they can see of the tanker are two bright headlights. Ezra waves his hands for it to stop, a machine pistol tucked into the back of his jeans. He smiles as he walks up to the cab, the diesel engine throbbing above him, and as he steps in closer he realizes he's forgotten to grab his flashlight. He can't see the trucker behind the wheel. He stands there ready to give his spiel about it being just a minute while they load the hay back onto their trailer. The cab door does not open.
    The semi's diesel engine throbs and rattles. The headlights shine on Mosca in the flatbed of the hay trailer. He holds his hands up to block the blinding light.
    Knock on his door! yells Mosca. He sees Ezra lean in to bang on the side of the cab door, and in the same moment it swings open. Ezra snaps back and falls to the shoulder of the road.
    The gears shift and the engine throb drops to a deeper growl. The truck starts to reverse.
    Mosca jumps down from the trailer and lands badly, feeling a lightning bolt of pain shoot up his ankle. He cusses and limps forward. Ezra is getting to his knees now, his machine pistol in his hands. Behind the truck are two pair of headlights, blinding Mosca. He limps forward a few feet, stops, and takes a shot at the receding truck headlights. He misses. In the red glare he sees the two pickups park sideways. The truck doesn't stop or slow, smashing the passenger- side door of the first truck and knocking it backward.
    Ezra runs and shoots at the cab windows. The bullets spiderweb glass. He keeps shooting and black holes of broken windshield appear, sparks flying where bullets hit metal. The truck slows and jackknifes. The cab door opens, the driver jumps down, backlit by the pickup headlights. He runs for the pines beyond the road shoulder, tumbles into the ditch, scrabbles up the rocky embankment.
    Stray bullets kick up dust around him. He slips and grabs at his back, flinches, and stumbles. He turns and in the headlights his face is clearly visible, looking back. Mosca and Ezra come up with their guns drawn and pointed.
    The trucker is a heavy man with a beard and black- framed glasses. You had no cause to shoot me, he says. You did that just out of meanness, didn't you?
    You started it, says Ezra. You're the one who smashed that door into me. I bet you anything I'm having a black eye and bruises in the morning.
    The trucker coughs raggedly and struggles to breathe. Mosca tells Ezra it looks like he's lung- shot. If he don't get to a doctor fast he's a goner, he says.
    Shut your trap, hisses Ezra.
    The trucker inhales raggedly to speak, spits up blood.
    Porter and the others approach, casting long shadows across the embankment as they pass before the headlights. They wear hats and bandannas. Porter walks up to Ezra and stands close. Who did the shooting? he asks.
    Boy genius here, says Mosca.
    Who are you sonsabitches? wheezes the trucker. I didn't do anything to you. I'm just driving a goddamn truck and you fucking shoot me.
    Ezra shakes his head and says, You started it. All I was trying to do was—
    Porter cuffs his ear. Goddamn you. That man's blood's on your hands.
    Listen, says the trucker, I'm getting cold here. Just take me—
    He stops in midsentence and slumps, his body settling into the dead grass.
    Goddamnit to hell, says Porter. He cuffs Ezra again. You stupid, stupid son of a bitch.
    Jack Brown is busy tossing the hay bales off the road. He shouts that they need to get a move on, cars could come by any minute.
    Ezra stands dumb, staring down at the dead trucker and wiping his hands on his jeans. Porter turns and jabs a finger against his chest. Enough of this, he says. You drag his body into the woods, then drive the flatbed home. And don't you say a fucking word to a soul, you got that?
    Ezra nods, stumbling as he climbs up to the road, falling to his hands and knees for a moment, then getting up and brushing himself off.
    Porter points at Mosca. You, drive the rig and follow me.
    Okay, boss.
    Mosca climbs into the cab of the big rig. Taped to the dash is a photograph of a baby wearing a cowboy hat several sizes too big, smiling and holding on to the brim, one eye obscured by the shadow of the hat. A plastic tray near the shifter holds a thermos of hot coffee. Mosca shakes his head and puts it into gear, moves slowly through the litter of hay where they had blocked the road. The night air is cool but he can feel himself sweating. Now that the rig is on the move, he doesn't like the idea of stopping anywhere the Saints want. They have just killed a man and there's going to be hell to pay.

O f f i c e r  I s r a e l  J a m e s has no jurisdiction in Fremont or Custer county but when he hears of a fuel tanker hijacked and a body discovered he drives to the site south of Texas Creek. The road through Bighorn Canyon snakes beside the Arkansas River, undercutting sandstone and granite cliffs. It's summer monsoon season. By the time Elray nears the crime scene, it's afternoon and the sky darkens with cloud shadows. The jagged sierra horizon turns black over the Sangre de Cristos.

    The road turns in a sharp uphill curve and he pulls off on the rocky shoulder to park behind two state patrol cars. Lightning cracks overhead and it thunders so loud he can feel it in the dash. Hail rockets off his windshield. He waits it out, wind rocking the tiny car and pea- sized hail coating the black asphalt with a crust of white. After a while it dwindles. He's waiting in the driver's seat when both state troopers get out of their cars and come back to tap on his window and ask to see some identification.
    He shows the Mounties his badge. I've got a gut feeling this is the work of polyg squatters in Little Pueblo, he says.
    The troopers frown like he's speaking Russian. One of them is young and blond and has the air of a fool who thinks he knows everything. You're telling me Christians did this?
    The other one grins. Or is that your gut doing the talking?
    Well, they're not Christians like most people think of. You know, with all these nutcase Saints moving in, seems like Colorado has become Utah's prettier sister.
    Saints? The blond one grins in an ugly way. I'm Mormon, he adds. It's the Church of Latter- Day Saints. We believe in Jesus Christ. Much like any Baptist.
    And we enforce the laws, says the other. We don't break them.
    I know, I know.
    Sounds like we got a case of religious discrimination here to me.
    Listen, I'm not trying to argue over God here. These aren't your average Mormons. They're a low- life splinter group of fundamentalist types who see this as the end times. As far as they go all bets are off, and anything that has to do with the government or big business is ripe for picking. They're scam artists mainly.
    And you think scam artists shot this man in the back? And stole an entire fuel tanker?
    Elray shrugs. They make up their own rules as they go along. They're not church ladies, that's for sure.
    He walks away from the troopers and approaches the dead man. Flies buzz the corpse covered with a blue plastic tarp.
    One bullet wound in the side and a smaller wound in the back. The embankment is muddy and goldenrod grows knee- high in the ditch. Elray can hear the state troopers talking into the radio behind him. The blond one says it looks to him to be the work of Mexican drug gangs. Maybe they're targeting fuel tankers now. Maybe the money is better than drugs. I don't know. Illegals are taking over the southern half of the state, says the trooper. It's getting to be a white man can't drive the road without a gun and the will to use it.
BOOK: The Bird Saviors
9.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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