Chapter 7: The Enemy Within
When the Kid woke up he was laying in the middle of wreckage, what an awful dream he thought.
Sundance had always been a pacifist, he shyed from conflict. Now he watched buildings burn as vaugly familiar faces grinned from horses, sometimes up to three women tied and bound to the horse. What they planned he couldn't imagine, being an innocent outlaw.
"What the f*ck?" he muttered, watching San Fransisco burn. This was his city, he couldn't stand for this.
But you will a voice within echoed. Sundance fell, convulsing. Cutting himself on rocks in his violent internal struggle. crawling up he heeard the voice no more. He must have won, for now.
The Kid marched into the city. A man stood, a torch in his hand before a shabby wooden building. The dust was so thick in the air, Sundance seemed to appear from nowhere.
"Hey boss." the black clad man offered his hand. Sundance pushed it aside.
"Gimme that," he said, grabbing the torch. the other man seemed frightened and the pacifistic Sundance shouted," There ain't room enough for the both of us, get the hell outta Dodge!"
The other man seemed genuinely terrified now, and he dissapeared into the darkness of the dustcloud.
Sundance peered into the torches flames, a face seemed to take form,
Throw me, Burn, Kill Loot, it uttered as he stared dumbly into it's radiance.
"N, N..No" he stammered. The convulsions took him again, he rose, fire in his eyes now, and tossed the torch into the granary. Laughing as the flames rose, an offering to insanity, but insufficient as to elect mercy from it.
Sundance cackled long into the night. He would unite his army, they would take the West by force. Maybe one day he would write a book about it all. He'd definately name it, How the West was Won.
-
"Sic Semper Tyrrannis"
Henry had heard it a million times on his flee from Richmond, the slaves were rising. Such chaos was painful to the CSA as it tried to fight a war against the Union to the north. He felt no pity for the generals of the south. Fires raged as plantation after plantation burned to ash. He wept the first time he saw it happen, hidden in the carriage.
I am father to that he thought. The beast seemed more than could have come from him. The son, the hate of revolution, was so much greater than the father.
His tears did not put out the fires, though. He was but an idle spectator, fleeing the nation he hated, and returned his hatred threefold. New York, as he imagined it, was a magical city, where a man could become a god in a matter of weeks, his accomplice was a living testament to that. Sam smiled most of the time, he was returning home, both men had accomplished great missions against the slaveholders, together they had brought forth war.
"What will i do, when we reach New York."
"You won't stay." Sam stated the obvious.
"I have nowhere to go..." Utter despair showed in Henry's eyes.
"I'm sending you to Ottowa, i've wanted a branch there for a long time."
Hope ruled the day, as Henry crawled on his knees to freedom, and prosperity.
When the Kid woke up he was laying in the middle of wreckage, what an awful dream he thought.
Sundance had always been a pacifist, he shyed from conflict. Now he watched buildings burn as vaugly familiar faces grinned from horses, sometimes up to three women tied and bound to the horse. What they planned he couldn't imagine, being an innocent outlaw.
"What the f*ck?" he muttered, watching San Fransisco burn. This was his city, he couldn't stand for this.
But you will a voice within echoed. Sundance fell, convulsing. Cutting himself on rocks in his violent internal struggle. crawling up he heeard the voice no more. He must have won, for now.
The Kid marched into the city. A man stood, a torch in his hand before a shabby wooden building. The dust was so thick in the air, Sundance seemed to appear from nowhere.
"Hey boss." the black clad man offered his hand. Sundance pushed it aside.
"Gimme that," he said, grabbing the torch. the other man seemed frightened and the pacifistic Sundance shouted," There ain't room enough for the both of us, get the hell outta Dodge!"
The other man seemed genuinely terrified now, and he dissapeared into the darkness of the dustcloud.
Sundance peered into the torches flames, a face seemed to take form,
Throw me, Burn, Kill Loot, it uttered as he stared dumbly into it's radiance.
"N, N..No" he stammered. The convulsions took him again, he rose, fire in his eyes now, and tossed the torch into the granary. Laughing as the flames rose, an offering to insanity, but insufficient as to elect mercy from it.
Sundance cackled long into the night. He would unite his army, they would take the West by force. Maybe one day he would write a book about it all. He'd definately name it, How the West was Won.
-
"Sic Semper Tyrrannis"
Henry had heard it a million times on his flee from Richmond, the slaves were rising. Such chaos was painful to the CSA as it tried to fight a war against the Union to the north. He felt no pity for the generals of the south. Fires raged as plantation after plantation burned to ash. He wept the first time he saw it happen, hidden in the carriage.
I am father to that he thought. The beast seemed more than could have come from him. The son, the hate of revolution, was so much greater than the father.
His tears did not put out the fires, though. He was but an idle spectator, fleeing the nation he hated, and returned his hatred threefold. New York, as he imagined it, was a magical city, where a man could become a god in a matter of weeks, his accomplice was a living testament to that. Sam smiled most of the time, he was returning home, both men had accomplished great missions against the slaveholders, together they had brought forth war.
"What will i do, when we reach New York."
"You won't stay." Sam stated the obvious.
"I have nowhere to go..." Utter despair showed in Henry's eyes.
"I'm sending you to Ottowa, i've wanted a branch there for a long time."
Hope ruled the day, as Henry crawled on his knees to freedom, and prosperity.
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