And Kill Them All

And Kill Them All by J. Lee Butts Page B

Book: And Kill Them All by J. Lee Butts Read Free Book Online
Authors: J. Lee Butts
Ads: Link
instantly recognizable sound of gunfire crackling through the early morning air. The sound vaguely echoed along the river’s placid surface, climbed up the steps, invaded the house, and set my teeth on edge.
    Pistols. Somebody was firing off their pistols out there. No mistaking that sound. Strange. Couldn’t figure for the life of me who would be blasting away like that so early of a morning. And what in hell would they be shooting at anyway? For the most part, was still darker out yonder, in the briars and brambles, than a boxful of black kittens.
    A prickling sensation of the sinister and unknowable kind crept up my pain-tinged spine again. I ran fingers through sweat-dampened hair. A widening, wavelike patch of lumpy, bristling flesh crawled up my spine and settled between pinched shoulder blades. An eye blink later, the crickets came back to life.
    â€œWho on earth?” I said to the dimness of advancing dawn, then rubbed a chin that needed serious attention from a well-stropped razor.

6
    â€œ. . . MURDERED A BOATLOAD OF INNOCENT FOLKS . . .”
    I CAST A sharpened gaze into the reddish-gray gloom of rapidly fleeing darkness. Could hardly see the dog, but I knew ole Bear was there. Knew it as surely as I knew the sun would soon climb over the rugged hills and turn our Devils River patch of west Texas into an earthen, nigh on devilish oven.
    Ever watchful, Bear rarely left the front stoop at night. Dog wasn’t mine, of course. He’d come along with the house. A wayward animal might draw the brute from his guardian’s perch once in a while, but not often.
    The massive creature sat at attention on the creaking porch’s top-most tread and gazed into the northern distance. I knew his wet, shiny nose twitched and sifted through all the air it could take in. Brute’s inquisitive snout always snuffled and snorted for anything unfamiliar, out of place, or strange. His mottled, ragged, cocklebur-infested rope of a tail was surely wagging from side to side. I could hear the brushlike appendage sweeping a clean spot on the splinter-riddled, rickety step.
    He twisted his battle-scarred head to one side and seemed to cut a questioning glance over a hunched shoulder at me. Thick-muscled and dangerous beyond most men’s understanding, the hairy brute, conceived of indeterminate wolf and canine parentage, appeared to flash a menacing, barely visible smile.
    Fight-notched, pointed, ever-shifting ears flicked from side to side, gathering the minutest of inconsistent noises. The vigilant canine easily took in the most obscure of sounds for miles around his carefully guarded domain. Anything that didn’t belong in the dog’s personal realm would bring an immediate, and dangerous, reaction.
    I could hardly make out the hand-sized tongue as it lolled out one side of the dog’s mouth and dripped slobbers. Beast cast another panting gaze up at me. He flashed a wicked set of canine teeth the size of a highwayman’s trigger finger, as if to say, “You’re damn right I heard all that shooting, Dodge. Wake yourself the hell up. Get a move on, man. Let’s go have a look-see. Chase down the skunks making all that needless racket. Let’s knock ’em over. Bite ’em in the ass. Drag ’em around in the mesquite. That’ll show ’em not to roust us from our much-needed nighttime devotions.”
    Boz limped up out of the darkness from his crude quarters in the barn’s cluttered tack room down the hill. He was all got up in nothing more than a pair of oft-patched drawers, a pistol belt, .45 Colt, run-down boots, and a knife-ventilated, palm-leaf sombrero. I’d tried to get him to sleep in the main house, but he steadfastly refused. Man preferred the ground to a real bed. Near as I was ever able to determine, my friend could sleep like a newborn babe atop a roll of rusted barbed wire and liked it that way.
    A mist-like cloud of fine-powdered earth trailed

Similar Books

Savage Instinct

Leila Jefferson

The Score

Howard Marks

consumed

Sandra Sookoo

Forevermore

Cathy Marie Hake