Read A Time For Hanging Online

Authors: Bill Crider

A Time For Hanging (3 page)

"All right, I'm a-movin'," Harl said.
 
"We got to spread out anyway, if we're gonna find anybody around here.
 
Myself, I think we're chasin' all over the territory for nothin'.
 
That girl's got clear of this town and her daddy, and I don't blame her."

"Damn right," the first man said.
 
"He's had her on such a tight rein, I expect she's hightailed it.
 
Wouldn't be surprised to find out there's some young fella missin', too.
 
Hell, if I was young enough, I'd've run with her myself."

"That'd be the day, Jack Simkins," a third voice said.
 
"Even if you was young, you're so ugly a blind mule wouldn't run off with you."

There was the sound of laughter.

"On second thought, maybe I could be wrong about that.
 
A blind mule might be 'xactly the kinda thing that'd catch your eye."

Paco knew Jack Simkins, or knew who he was.
 
He was the sheriff's deputy, a big, lazy man with a glass eye and a scarred face.
 
He was ugly, all right, but everybody liked him.
 
He was easy-going and good-natured, but that didn't matter to Paco right then.
 
He didn't want to be found by anybody, no matter how good-natured.
 
It was easy-going men like Simkins who had stood by when his father was killed and let the gambler go free.

He heard the men crashing through the brush as they continued to call back and forth to one another.
 
He thought that maybe he could make a run for it.
 
They were making so much noise that they weren't likely to hear him.

He didn't know for sure how many of them there were, but he figured that there were about six.
 
Five for sure.
 
He moved stealthily from the shelter of the tree trunk, bending low to the ground and staying in the shadows.

He had not gotten far when he heard someone cry out.

"Jesus Christ a'mighty!"

"What is it, Len?" Harl yelled.
 
"What's the matter?"

"I found her, fellas.
 
God a'mighty, I found her!
 
Get over here, quick!"

The sounds of the crashing around increased as the other men ran to where Len Hawkins was.
 
Hawkins was the owner of a hardware store, a rail-thin man with no hair at all on his head.
 
Paco had often wondered just how old Len Hawkins was.
 
His wrinkled bald head made him look ancient, but his eyes were young, and the skin of his face was like that of a young girl.

Paco began moving faster.
 
There was no way, in all their excitement, they could hear him now.

But suddenly everything grew quiet, and Paco had to halt.
 
The men had come to the body, and Paco could hear them cursing under their breath.

Finally Len Hawkins spoke aloud.
 
"I can't believe this, I just can't believe it," he said.
 
"It's Lizzie Randall, sure as hell.
 
Who'd do a thing like this, fellas?
 
Who?"

No one answered him for a while.
 
Paco knew what they were feeling, the same mixture of fear and awe that he himself had felt not so long ago.

It was not so much that the woman was dead.
 
The men could have accepted that, as could Paco.
 
Death was a fact of life that all of them had come to accept early on.
 
Too many babies died, too many men got snake-bit, or thrown from bucking horses, or shot in saloons for death to be frightening in itself.

It was the way of this death that was shocking.

Women were, for the most part, respected and honored by all the men.
 
Paco knew that there were exceptions, like the women that worked for Mr. Danton in the saloon, but the dead woman was not one of those.
 
Even those women were treated with a kind of special deference by most men of the town.

So to find a woman like this, dead in the trees, obviously killed by someone strong, probably in a hard struggle, was shocking.

It was even more shocking to the men who gathered round her now than it had been to Paco, for they knew who she was.

"It's the preacher's daughter, all right," Jack Simkins said.
 
"I'd know that red hair of hers anyplace."

"What the hell's she doin' out here, anyways?" Harl Case wondered.
 
"Woman's got no business wanderin' off into a place like this."

"Well, she's been here before," Jack said.
 
"That's why Sheriff Vincent sent us out here in the first place.
 
He said somebody'd seen her walking this trail more'n once."

"What're we gonna do?" Len Hawkins asked.
 
"Who's gonna tell her pa?"

"Seems to me that's the sheriff's job," said a voice Paco did not recognize.
 
"I sure as hell ain't gonna be the one."

"We'll let him decide that," Jack said.
 
"The rest of you men stand guard here.
 
I'll go back to town and let the sheriff know about this."

"You better tell him to get a rope ready," Harl said.
 
"Whoever done this is gonna swing for it, and that's the truth."

Paco didn't wait for Jack's reply to that.
 
He started making his way through the trees again.

He might have made it to safety if he hadn't hooked his foot in a sharp-thorned vine that grew near a tree.
 
He fell forward, trying to stifle the yell that escaped his lips as the fire raked his shins through the worn jeans.

"What the hell's that?" Jack Simkins said.

"Somebody's out there!"

"Let's get the sonofabitch!"

There was more crashing and thrashing of tree branches as the men began storming toward the spot where Paco lay.

He tore his way free of the vine and got to his feet.
 
His head was throbbing again; he could feel the blood pounding in it.
 
The fall had not done him any good.

He could hardly move, much less run.
 
He put out his hands and stumbled blindly forward.

Shots rang out and he could hear the bullets clipping the branches nearby.

He stopped in his tracks and turned to face the charging men.
 
"It is only me, Paco Morales," he called out, hoping that he could avert their fury by letting them know that he was harmless.

They did not care who he was.
 
They were horrified by what they had seen, and they were not thinking rationally at all.
 
They wanted to hurt someone, to make someone pay, and Paco was there.

He was going to pay.

They stopped shooting when they saw that he was not going to run, but when they caught up with him they began raining blows on him, smashing his face with their fists, mashing his lips and causing the blood to fly, breaking his teeth, hammering his chest and sides until he fell to the ground, and then kicking him repeatedly after he had fallen.

Fortunately for Paco, he did not know most of what was happening to him.
 
He had screamed at first and tried to defined himself, which was futile, but after the first few fists had struck his head like blocks of wood he had lost consciousness.

After a few minutes the men stopped beating him, tired and out of breath from the effort.
 
They looked at one another, their heads hanging, somewhat ashamed of what they had done, but nevertheless sure that they had been right.

"He's the one that done it," Len Hawkins said, panting slightly as he massaged his left hand with his right.
 
He thought he might have broken a knuckle.
 
"You think we killed him?"

"Naw, he's alive," Harl Case said.
 
"He won't last long, though, when folks find out what he's done."

"We don't know for sure he done anything," Jack Simkins reminded them, a little worried about the beating.

"Now wait a minute," Turley Ross said.
 
His had been the voice Paco had not recognized.
 
He was short and stocky, with broad shoulders and long arms.
 
He had gotten in a number of good licks on Paco, and he knew the boy deserved them.
 
"We know he done it.
 
He killed that girl back there, and no tellin' what else he done to her."

They all thought about that for a minute.

"Well," Simkins said slowly, "he was here, all right.
 
But that don't mean he done anything."

They looked down at the boy who lay at their feet.
 
He was breathing, but that was all they could say for him.
 
One of his arms looked funny, probably broken, and he had been kicked plenty hard.
 
Maybe a few ribs broken, too.

And his face wasn't going to be pretty.
 
Even in the dark, they could see that it looked like a side of raw beef.

"Hell, he done it.
 
Why else would he be here, and then try to sneak off?" Len Harper asked.
 
Harper was the fifth man in the group, a bartender in Danton's Saloon.
 
He was a big man with a black mustache and thinning black hair that he combed in long strands across his balding skull.

Simkins tried to think, which was not his strong point.
 
But he was the representative of the law here, and he wanted to do things right.

"He could've done it, that's for sure," he finally said.

"Could've, my ass," Harl said.
 
"He's the one done it, and that's that.
 
We practically caught him in the act, and we captured him.
 
Hell, folks are gonna thank us for what we done when we bring him in."

"Paco Morales, is who he is," Harper said.
 
"It was his daddy that got shot over that card game a few years back.
 
A cheatin' greaser.
 
Things like that run in the blood.
 
Now his boy's turned killer."

The men remembered the card game.
 
They also remembered that there had been some talk around town that Roberto Morales, Paco's father, had not been cheating at all.
 
In fact, so the talk had gone, it was that tinhorn gambler -- Hank something or other -- who had done the cheating and Morales had called him on it.
 
But it was Morales who ended up dead, and there wasn't much more said about it, Morales being a Mexican.
 
And the men certainly weren't going to bring up the question of his innocence now.
 
It was best that no one mention it.

Paco stirred.

"He's comin' around," Simkins said.
 
"We got to do something with him."

"We got to take him to the damn jail, is what we'll do," Hawkins said.
 
"Then he'll get a fair trial before we hang him.
 
Least he might get a trial.
 
There'll be some want to hang him sooner."

Simkins still didn't like it.
 
He knew that there was the little matter of proof, of evidence, of which they had none except for Paco's presence there, but the others all seemed convinced that Paco had to be guilty of the girl's death.

If he wasn't guilty, would they have savagely beaten him the way they had done?

Of course not.

They had half killed him, so he must be guilty.
 
That was the only way to justify their actions.

"All right, then," Simkins said.
 
"A couple of you can stay here with him, and the other two can go stand by the body.
 
Turley, you and Harl can do that.
 
I'll go tell the sheriff what's happened and get a wagon so we can take 'em back to town."

"Maybe we oughta just hang him ourselves," Turley said.

"What?" Simkins said.
 
"Hang him?"

"Why the hell not?"
 
He done it."
 
Turley was defensive and angry.
 
"Goddamn meskin killin' a white woman like that.
 
I say we get a rope and hang him right here on the spot."

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