The following is a work of fiction consisting of adult concepts and 
possibly sex.
Do not read if you are not legally permitted. I don't want the police 
on my front doorstep.
You are welcome to read but please don't distribute without my 
permission.
Feel free to make any comments to the author.
Send E-Mail to dalech33@hotmail.com

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This is a western in the style of Sergio Leone and Clint Eastwood.
Gunfights, horses, mysterious strangers and the women that fall in 
love with them. The strangers that is, not the horses.
I would like to thank Ruthie for her invaluable help in getting 
Charity completed. As usual Ruthie, I couldn't have done it without 
you.
Thanks as well go to Dr Spin for encouraging me to do it.
I hope you enjoy this story as much as I enjoyed writing it.
; )
Mr Slot
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Charity: A Western. 


The stranger came in from the desert and death rode with him.

Young Billy Blakelock sat in the street of the small town of Charity, 
population 105, licking a lollipop. He had spent all of yesterday 
working in his father's blacksmith shop and the lollipop was his 
reward. Billy studied its swirl of colours, and then licked it again. 
It was a good lollipop.

He looked around at the town where he was born. Most of the buildings 
were only a few years old but the desert had not been kind to Charity. 
The desert storms had sandblasted the wood into splinters, and paint 
hung in strips from the walls.

And then there was the sand. It got into everything, into people's 
houses and shops, in their clothes, and even their food. To the desert 
sand, the town was only a temporary obstacle. Eventually, Charity 
would disappear beneath it. The townspeople knew this, but still 
persevered, sweeping the sand from their homes, washing it from their 
clothes, and picking it from their food.

Suddenly a shadow fell over the boy and he looked up in surprise. He 
watched the stranger ride by, shoulders slumped forward, hat pulled 
down over his eyes. Although he was covered in desert dust it was easy 
to tell his clothes were dark, as was his horse. His spurs jingled 
lightly with every step his steed took, but it was a sound that was 
far from merry. His guns, slung low on his hips, brushed against his 
saddle, and the boy could see his holsters were well oiled. If Billy's 
poppa was here he could tell him what type of man wore guns like that. 
Billy felt apprehensive as he watched the stranger ride by. He had 
never seen this man before, but he knew instinctively he was a bad 
man. Billy decided to finish his lollipop inside his father's shop.

The stranger rode along the main street, attracting covert glances as 
he went. He rode up to the saloon and stopped. Passersby noticed that 
the man made no noise, gave no indication to his horse to stop there. 
His horse seemed to know his master's wishes without a signal of any 
kind. The stranger swung one leg over the saddle and slipped 
noiselessly to the ground. Without a backward glance he strode up the 
steps and entered the dim saloon.

A woman in a green taffeta dress with a tousle of red hair stood 
there, her elbow resting on the bar. She watched the stranger enter 
and moved her hand to her breast. Her eyes went to his face, trying to 
see under the brim of his hat, but all she could see was an unshaven 
jaw and sun bleached hair clinging to the back of his neck. He wore a 
faded old poncho pulled back over one shoulder to reveal his dust 
covered shirt and trousers. Even under all that dust she could tell he 
was no trail bum. He walked with confidence, striding across the 
wooden floor with long, measured steps.

He made his way directly to the bar, passing a table where a group of 
gamblers were involved in a game of cards. He brushed against one of 
the players, causing him to drop the chips he was about to place in 
the kitty. The chips bounced off the surface of the table and 
scattered across the floor. The angry cowboy stood up quickly, 
knocking his chair back with a thump. The red-haired woman knew what 
was coming and moved to the far end of the room, never taking her eyes 
off the newcomer.

The stranger propped his boot on the foot rail at the bar. He slid his 
hand across the bar then removed it, leaving a nickel behind. The 
bartender, a black man with a rapidly greying beard, slid a glass of 
whiskey in front of the stranger before making the nickel disappear.

"Hey you!" the cowboy yelled, staring at the stranger. He looked mean 
as a rattler about to strike, and his hand went straight to his gun. 
It was clear that the thought of gunning someone down was more 
tantalising to him than gathering up some dropped gambling chips.

The stranger ignored him, choosing instead to fondle the cool glass of 
cheap whiskey. His hat, still pulled down over his eyes, hid what he 
was thinking.

"I'm talking to you, stranger. You dropped my chips." The cowboy's 
hand slowly caressed the handle of his Colt .45.

"I think you better leave this one alone, Leroy," the bartender said 
to the cowboy, his voice slow and measured. He had seen something in 
this stranger, something about the way he walked. Crossing this man 
would be a big mistake. He valued Leroy's business, he spent most of 
his pay here, but Leroy couldn't do that occupying a plot in the 
Charity cemetery.

"Keep your nose out of this, Zeus," Leroy snapped. "This here's 
between me and him. Now turn around and face me, stranger. Turn around 
by God, or I'll shoot you where you stand."

The stranger slowly turned to face Leroy, his mouth drawn into a thin, 
cruel smile.

Leroy had seen a few gunfights in his time, and one thing he learned 
early on was that the man who walked away at the end was usually the 
man who went into the fight with an edge. Lots of things can give a 
man an edge. The sun in your opponent's eyes, a sudden noise from 
behind, even the intimidation of a well-chosen word. Leroy always 
looked for an edge and this time he thought he had found one. 

The stranger's hat.

The brim was still pulled down over his eyes, blocking his vision. 
Leroy had often found that a gunfighter's eyes would give away his 
movement. A glimmer in the eye just before a man drew was enough of a 
warning for Leroy, and he figured the stranger would be the same. But 
the stranger's hat was pulled down so far he couldn't see Leroy's 
eyes, which gave Leroy the edge he was looking for.

"Reach for em, stranger," snarled Leroy, as he slapped leather. His 
gun had just cleared his holster when two bullets crashed into his 
chest, throwing him back over the table behind him. As he died in a 
scattering of cards and poker chips he realised he couldn't see the 
stranger's eyes either.

The stranger slowly slid his smoking guns back into their holsters and 
turned back to the bar.

Zeus looked over the man's shoulder at the carnage he had caused, 
noticing that at least two of the gunfight's eyewitnesses had already 
left. It didn't take a genius to figure out where they were headed. 
"Stranger," he said, "I think you better drink up and leave."

The stranger picked up the glass from the bar and knocked back the 
cheap whiskey, then calmly placed it back down on the bar. "Reckon 
I'll stay here and wait for the sheriff. I don't want a posse riding 
after me." His voice was low and deliberate. It was a voice you took 
seriously.

The woman in the green taffeta dress now spoke, "Well, you won't have 
to wait long, stranger. That sorry son of a bitch you just killed was 
the sheriff. And those boys who lit outta here so fast were his 
deputies."

The stranger glanced at her, noticing she was a woman of uncommon 
beauty, hair as red as fire and eyes of pure jade. The clothes she 
wore were colourful and neat, not a thread out of place. She had an 
air of confidence about her, a rarity in these desert towns where the 
constant heat and dryness wore people down faster than the heels on a 
cheap pair of boots.

"And who are you?" he said to the woman.

"My name is Ariel Goodson and this is Zeus, my partner and friend." 
She placed a hand on the bartender's shoulder. "We own this place, or 
we will, once the mortgage is paid." Ariel placed her hands on her 
hips, adopting a stern demeanour as she addressed the stranger.

"This is our only livelihood and I would appreciate it if you moved 
on. We don't want any trouble here."

The stranger glanced at Leroy's body lying behind him on the floor. 
"Any trouble you might have had, Ma'am, died with him."

The woman was about to open her mouth when the bartender interrupted 
her.

"Ariel," he said, the warning in his voice obvious.

"Now don't you hush me, Zeus. He has a right to know just how much 
trouble he's caused." She turned to the stranger.

"Those two men that ran outta here? They're headed out to the Double D 
ranch to see Mr. McKenna. Take my word for it. He owns this town, 
lock, stock and barrel. You killed one of his best men, stranger, and 
he won't take kindly to that."

The stranger lifted up the brim of his hat, finally exposing his sun-
ravaged face. He looked at the pair with eyes as blue as new denim and 
as cold as a December morn.

"I can take care of myself," he drawled, as he pointed to his empty 
glass.

"Against fifty men? Take my advice stranger, get out of town while you 
can," Ariel replied, ignoring his unspoken request for another drink. 
She wanted the stranger to go, but something in her wanted him to stay 
too. She shivered as the stranger turned his eyes towards her.

"Later." He turned back to the bartender. "Are there rooms upstairs? I 
need to rest."

"Sure," replied Zeus, "they're all empty so take your pick."

"Now hang on one damn second." Ariel was obviously unhappy with the 
thought of this killer staying the night. "You can't give him a room, 
Zeus, he just killed the sheriff for God's sake."

"He drew down on me, ma'am." The stranger refused to be ruffled by 
Ariel's onslaught, which merely served to infuriate her more.

"I don't care if he dropped his pants and wiggled his ass at you. I 
want you outta here."

The stranger refused to move. Ariel came around to the front of the 
bar and tried to shove him, but he was too quick for her and grabbed 
her by the wrists.

"Let me go, dammit." Ariel struggled in his grasp but his grip was too 
strong. She swung a foot at him, trying to connect with his shin. The 
stranger responded by holding her in a bear hug, then bent down and 
kissed her roughly on the lips. She broke free and looked at him, a 
blush rising on her cheeks.

"How dare you." She was outraged at his behaviour, and yet something 
deep inside her responded to his roughness. She went to shove him 
again, and again he grabbed and kissed her. She melted inside but 
continued to resist.

"You fucking animal," she screamed and swung an open handed slap at 
his face. He ducked beneath it and moved forward in a crouch, grabbing 
her around the waist and lifting her up and over his shoulder. He made 
his way towards the stairs.

"No, wait," shouted Ariel. "Zeus, stop him."

Zeus smiled. He could see the flush on her face and bosom, and he knew 
it was not all outrage. He had been around for a good many years and 
seen a good many things. Ariel didn't fool him in the slightest.

The stranger carried her upstairs and kicked open the door of the 
first room he came too. He walked over to the bed and dropped Ariel 
onto it, watching as her body first bounced and then settled into the 
covers.

"You bastard," she said, but all the fury had left her voice. Ariel 
could feel warmth growing in that special place. He lay down on top of 
her and kissed her again, not roughly this time but long and 
passionately. Ariel wrapped her arms around his neck and returned his 
kiss.


Lucas McKenna was a big man, 6 feet 4 inches of solid muscle. Over the 
years he had bought up all of Charity by fair means or foul. He had 
torn down and rebuilt with his own hands, shed his own blood and sweat 
and the blood and sweat of everyone else. He was mean and he was 
hated. The townspeople were terrified to cross him. That kind of power 
could be addictive, and McKenna was hooked

Right now he was about to reap one of the benefits of that power. 
Abigail Jones had just turned 16 and now she was kneeling before him, 
fumbling with his fly. She was a gift to McKenna, torn from her 
sobbing mother, an interest payment on the Jones family farm. Or, to 
be more precise, her virginity was. And now it was time to collect. 

He looked down at the inexperienced girl trying vainly to release him 
from his pants. She had been at it for several minutes and had gotten 
nowhere. He reached down, grabbed her by the hair, and shoved her back 
onto the floor.

"Stupid bitch. How hard can it be to open a man's pants?"

He quickly unbuttoned his fly and shoved his trousers down his legs, 
exposing his member to the air. He smiled when he saw the look of 
shock on the girl's face.

Lucas McKenna was a big man indeed.


Ariel gasped as the stranger entered her. She might have protested 
about the idea of sleeping with this man, but by the time he slid into 
her she was as wet as a spring thaw. She reached up and ran her hands 
over his muscular chest, tracing her fingers over every ridge and 
hollow. She felt four small, round, scars. Old bullet wounds, no 
doubt. 

The stranger pushed himself deeper, causing Ariel to bite her lower 
lip. She could feel every inch as he plunged into her, and it felt 
like heaven. He started to pump rhythmically, causing her to grunt 
with every thrust. Ariel wrapped her arms around him, running her 
fingers up and down his spine, scratching him as she came.

Afterwards she lay beside him, gazing at the ceiling and basking in 
the warmth of the bed. She wondered who this man was, a man with no 
name that she knew, a man who lived by the gun.

"Who are you? I mean, what is your name?"

"Does it matter?"

"It does to me."

He didn't answer her, choosing instead to light up a cigarillo that he 
pulled from his crumpled shirt.

"Okay then, where do you come from?"

"The desert."

"But you weren't born there. Where did you come from before that?"

Silence greeted her question.

"You don't say much, do you?"

Silence again.

"Well then," she said, rolling on top of him, "at least show me what 
you can do."

He showed her.


McKenna poured himself a drink and glanced at the huddled girl lying 
next to him in the bed. She had been reluctant but McKenna was not 
about to take any lip from a mere slip of a girl. After a quick, 
severe beating she was more cooperative. He taught her what she needed 
to know to satisfy him, and she learned quickly under his fist. When 
he finally took her she bled.

A lot.

He was grateful she had at least stopped that infernal sobbing. 
McKenna was about to roll her over for another lesson when Seth Green 
burst into the bedroom.

"Mr. McKenna…" He stopped when he saw the shotgun McKenna had pulled 
from under the bed and levelled at him.

"Talk or die," he growled.

"Mr. McKenna, it's Leroy."

"What about him?"

"He's dead."


Ariel reached out in the darkness, looking for her lover, noticing 
that night had fallen as they slept. She felt him sitting up in bed, 
his muscles taut as steel cables.

"What's wr…" She felt his hand clamp over her mouth and heard him 
quietly shush her. Something was badly wrong here. She heard a faint 
sound from outside, the noise of a creaking floorboard. Ariel glanced 
at the gap under the door and saw a shadow formed by the light from 
the main room of the saloon. The shadow was moving. Suddenly she felt 
the stranger push her out of the bed just as the door flew open. 
Thunder roared and lightning flashed in that small room. Ariel 
screamed as she heard the wet sound of hot lead punching into soft 
flesh, then more thunder, more lightning, and the sound of glass 
shattering.

And then silence.

Ariel was tangled in the sheets from the bed, a cocoon of cotton 
fabric, and she wanted more than anything to stay hidden in there 
until the hell that was outside it left. She felt a strong hand on her 
shoulder and yelped in fear.

"Come on." It was his voice. Her heart leapt and she scrambled out of 
the sheets, grabbing for him.

"What happened?" she asked.

"No time. Grab your clothes, we're leaving."

She saw he was naked and for a second remembered how his body felt on 
top of her, inside her. She shook her head, clearing her thoughts, and 
picked up her dress. Ariel tried to slip it on but he grabbed her arm 
and dragged her out of the room past a body slumped across the 
shattered windowsill. Once outside, she saw a splatter of blood on the 
wall across from the doorway with another body slumped beneath it. She 
was about to protest when she heard his guns roar again. Instinctively 
she clamped her hands over her ears and watched as someone slowly fell 
backwards down the stairs, somersaulting like a child's discarded rag 
doll. Then that strong hand was pulling her down the stairs after it. 

They reached the ground floor and she looked around for Zeus. Zeus, 
who had taken her in when she had needed a roof over her head. Zeus, 
who had given her a room upstairs and food in her belly, and never 
once asked for money, had never asked for anything but friendship. 
Zeus, who had offered her an equal partnership in the saloon when she 
inherited money from a deceased relative back east. Zeus, who was now 
lying behind the bar, blood streaming from an ugly head wound. She ran 
to him to see if he was still alive. As she rolled him over he groaned 
and her heart leapt again. Without a word she ripped a strip of fabric 
from the green dress she carried and used it to bind his wound. Zeus 
looked up at her gratefully, then down at her naked breasts.

"Well I guess I know what you were doing up there now," he said with a 
lopsided grin.

"Sure looks like that blow to the head didn't knock any sense into 
you," she replied with her own smile. She was overjoyed that her 
friend was still alive and able to joke.

"When you two finish gabbing," the stranger growled, "I'd like to get 
out of here before we're trapped with no place to go."

Ariel looked over and was secretly disappointed to see he had managed 
to put his pants and boots on. He was just pulling on his shirt and 
still clutching his hat. When had he found time to grab all his 
clothing? All she managed to grab was her dress. She slipped it over 
her head and smoothed it down over her breasts and hips. 

"Let's go," she said to Zeus.

"One second." Zeus reached under the bar and pulled out an old 
Winchester rifle. He cocked it, loading a bullet into the breach. 
"Right behind you."

The trio rushed outside and into the maw of hell.


Lucas McKenna had listened to Seth Green ramble on about the gunfight 
in the saloon, about the stranger who had blown Leroy clean out of his 
boots. McKenna was proud of his town and the last thing he wanted was 
some trail bum coming out of the desert and shooting his sheriff. He 
told Seth to take two ranch hands into town and deal with the trouble. 
After Seth left, McKenna got to thinking about something the 
frightened man had said about the stranger. The way he described him 
was familiar. An old memory rose in his mind, a memory about a dead 
man. McKenna made a decision there and then, a decision that had him 
standing outside the saloon with 50 armed men as the trio burst out 
through the batwing doors.

The stranger took one look at what lay around him and instantly knew 
it was over. He could probably unload both guns, taking down 12 of 
them, Zeus might be able to get a half dozen more, but there were far 
too many for them to take on and win. He watched as the reason he came 
to town separated from the crowd and walked towards him.

"Hello Lucas," said the stranger through gritted teeth.

McKenna stared at him for a second, trying to remember who this was, 
and then his eyes widened as it struck him.

"You!"

"Are you ready to die, Lucas?" The stranger levelled his gun at the 
rancher but McKenna refused to back down.

"I have 50 guns trained on you right now. Do you really want to pull 
that trigger?"

The stranger just glared at him, his finger tightening on the trigger.

"Okay, let me put it this way. Do you want the girl to die?" He nodded 
toward Ariel. Lucas smiled as he saw uncertainty cross the stranger's 
face.

"Drop your guns." McKenna turned towards the bartender. "You too, 
Zeus."

Reluctantly the two men dropped their weapons into the dust.

"That's much better. It's been a long time, hasn't it?"

"Too long." The stranger's voice was full of menace but McKenna was 
not the slightest bit intimidated. He knew he held all the cards.

"You're supposed to be dead. I put four bullets in you myself. I saw 
your body tied to your horse and sent off into the desert. No one else 
would live through that. What makes you so different?"

The stranger glared at McKenna. The hate he felt for this man was 
palpable.

Ariel watched the standoff between both men, a meeting of iron wills. 
But she needed to know something more and it looked like McKenna had 
the information she so desperately wanted.

"Do you know him?" she asked McKenna.

"Sure do," said McKenna, turning to her. "He's my son." He turned back 
to his men. "Take the girl inside, I need a little entertainment. Do 
what you like to him," he pointed over his shoulder at the stranger. 
"Just don't kill him."

"What about the bartender?" came a voice from the crowd.

McKenna looked at Zeus. He never liked black men, especially ones who 
thought they were good enough to own property in a town like Charity.

"Nail him to his precious saloon."


The stranger looked around at his opponents. They were armed with pick 
handles, some slowly slapping them into the palms of their hands. No 
one had pulled out a gun and the stranger took this as his edge. Now 
all he had to do was arm himself. One of the mob walked towards him. 
This one didn't bother with anything as clumsy as a lump of wood. 
Instead he brandished a large hunting knife.

"I reckon I'm gonna carve me some pig." He deftly tossed the knife 
from hand to hand, trying to catch the stranger off guard.

"You're going to look pretty silly with that knife sticking out of 
your ass."
 
The cowboy stopped for a second, momentarily intimidated by the 
stranger's words, then lunged at him.

The stranger easily slipped out of the way and grabbed the man by his 
knife hand, snapping the wrist with uncanny ease. The cowboy howled as 
he clutched his broken hand and fell to his knees. The stranger swiped 
at the next attacker, cutting him deeply across the face, then spun 
into the crowd before slamming the knife into the chest of a third 
attacker. He grabbed the pick handle of the man as he fell and smashed 
it into the stomach of another man.

It was a heroic effort but he was outnumbered. He dealt with another 
two men before the blows started raining down on his head and 
shoulders. He stumbled to his knees and grabbed a knife from a nearby 
boot, but before he could use it an axe handle struck his hand, 
breaking two of his fingers. He tried to stand but the effort was 
beyond him. He fell under the battering and felt no more.


McKenna dragged Ariel up the stairs towards one of the rooms. She 
could hear the shouts and pounding noises from outside. Ariel wondered 
how badly her lover, the stranger, was being beaten. She shocked 
herself by thinking that no matter what they did, she didn't want them 
damaging his beautiful face. She soon had other things to worry about. 
McKenna kicked open a door and for the second time that day Ariel 
found herself flung onto a bed. Only this time it wasn't a romantic 
scene. This time she was going to be raped.

McKenna reached down, grabbed her dress, and with one deft movement 
tore it from her body, exposing her nakedness beneath.

"Nice tits for a slut," he said as he began to undress. "I always 
wanted to fuck you, Ariel, but I reckoned you would never give it up 
willingly. I knew I'd have to take it from you. And if there is one 
thing I like taking, it's sex." He finished undressing and turned 
towards her, showing her what he had in store. If he was hoping for 
shock he was disappointed. All he saw in her eyes was defiance.

Ariel looked at McKenna and saw his size down there. His cock was so 
big and heavy that it couldn't stand up on its own, he had to hold it. 
She knew he was going to hurt her with it, but she didn't care. No 
matter what he did to her it couldn't possibly be as bad as what her 
lover was going through. And there was no way he could touch the part 
inside her that the stranger had touched. She braced herself as 
McKenna climbed on top of her, trying to stop him from entering her 
but he was used to women resisting him. He placed his hands between 
her thighs and pulled them apart. Then with one quick thrust he was 
inside her.

Ariel screamed.


McKenna walked out of the saloon two hours later. He had taken his 
time with Ariel, savouring every little bit of his conquest. He lit up 
a cigar and walked down to the street, looking around at the men 
surrounding him. He noticed a half dozen bodies lying in a pile across 
the street.

"Sanchez," he called. Sanchez was his second in command, an ex-
comanchero that McKenna had rescued from a posse. He was a loyal 
employee and quite possibly more brutal than McKenna himself. The 
Mexican half-breed walked up to stand in front of him.

"Yes sir, Senor McKenna?"

"My son better not be one of those bodies," he barked as he motioned 
to the pile in the street.

"No sir, he is over there," said Sanchez, pointing to the blacksmith's 
shop.

McKenna walked to where his son was hanging, bare-chested, by his 
hands from the main support beam of the blacksmith's roof. His body 
was a mass of bruises and cuts, and his right hand had several oddly 
bent fingers.

"You shoulda stayed dead," he hissed. "Why couldn't you just die like 
anyone else? What makes you so special?"

The stranger lifted his head and spat in his father's face. That was 
his only response, no words, no explanations, no ranting or raving. 
McKenna was quietly proud of the steel his son had developed. Shame 
he'd have to die. But he couldn't have just anyone riding into town 
and making a mess. It was his town, dammit, and an example had to be 
made. He wiped the bloody spit from his face and walked back towards 
the saloon. Sanchez walked beside him.

"Senor McKenna, what happened between you and your son? Why did you 
try to kill him?"

"I didn't try to kill him, I did kill him. He's just too stupid to lay 
down."

"But why, Senor McKenna?"

"Over a woman."

"And you both loved this woman?"

"In a way. It was his mother. She…died. And he blamed me. So he came 
after me with a gun. He was young, too young to use it right. But I 
knew I couldn't let him live so I killed him and sent his body out 
into the desert."

"When did this happen?"

"Ten years ago today. Ain't that ironic, amigo?"

Sanchez looked nervously over his shoulder at the stranger hanging 
from the beam.

"Today? This is the tenth year of his death?"

"Yeah, sure is." McKenna looked at his senior ranch hand, and saw his 
apprehension. "He's not a ghost Sanchez. Ghosts don't bleed." 

"I hope you are right, Senor McKenna," mumbled Sanchez, not entirely 
convinced this was a real man.

McKenna laughed at Sanchez' superstition. He finally reached the 
saloon to find the barman, Zeus, crucified on an upturned hitching 
rail. He looked at the large nails hammered through the black man's 
wrists.

"Oh, that's got to hurt," he chuckled, and drew deeply on his cigar. 
Out of the corner of his eye he saw Ariel appear at the saloon doors. 
She had wrapped a bedsheet around her body and was leaning against the 
doorjamb for support. She looked over at McKenna with hate in her 
eyes, and then she saw the bartender.

"Oh no, not Zeus." Ariel rushed to his side, momentarily forgetting 
the bedsheet, which fell to the ground. She placed her hands on him 
and was rewarded with a groan from her dear friend.

"Oh, thank God you're still alive," she whispered to Zeus, then turned 
to the man who had caused so much pain in one night. He looked at her 
naked body with the same brutal lust she had seen earlier. She 
clutched the bedsheet around her again.

"Get him down from there, you bastard." Her eyes burned with a fire 
that matched the colour of her hair.

"Such a defiant young lass," McKenna responded. "I'll tell you what. 
If your newfound friend," he nodded down the street to the stranger, 
"can beat me in a gunfight, then you can all go free. But if he 
doesn't…well…we are going to have ourselves a little celebration 
barbeque." He looked past her to the saloon. "An old tinderbox like 
this would burn easily, don't you think, Ariel?"

He turned back to his men and waved at the figure down the street.

"Cut him down." The men raced to do his bidding. One of the Mexicans 
produced a large cane-cutting knife and severed the rope with one 
swipe. The stranger fell to the ground in a tangle of limbs. Two men 
grabbed him under his arms and dragged him up the street, the toes of 
his boots carving narrow furrows in the dirt. They stood him in front 
of McKenna and tried to hold him up, but it was difficult because he 
was unconscious. Someone produced a bucket of water and they poured it 
over him, snapping him back to the land of the living.


"Well, son, looks like you finally get the chance to throw down 
against your father. Someone get his guns." The stranger's guns 
magically appeared from the crowd of men and in no time they were 
buckled around his hips.

"Let me see those things," said McKenna, reaching into one of the 
holsters to drag out one of the Colts.

"That's a mighty fine piece you have there. What's the trigger pull 
like?" He pulled the trigger and shot the stranger through the back of 
his left hand. The stranger's eyes rolled back in their sockets but he 
didn't utter a word.

"Gee, I'm sorry about that, son. Damn thing just went off. Well, this 
is what happens when you fool around with guns." He turned to face his 
men. "I hope we've all learned a valuable lesson here. Never fool 
around with a loaded weapon." His men nodded in sage agreement, 
playing along with him. McKenna leaned down and whispered in the 
stranger's ear.

"The trigger pull on these pieces is pretty heavy. I hope you will be 
able to fire them, what with your broken fingers and all."

He stepped back, and then seemed to change his mind about something. 
He pulled out the gun from the stranger's left holster and dropped it 
in the dust.

"There, that's a bit better, no point in carrying around all that 
extra weight. But I think we can do better." He pulled out the 
remaining gun and emptied all but one bullet.

"A master gun fighter like yourself needs only one bullet to get the 
job done. The rest is just extra baggage." He slid the piece into the 
holster and patted the stranger on the head.

"Goodbye, boy." He turned to his ranch hand. "Sanchez, take him down 
there," he said pointing. Sanchez signalled one of his men and 
together they dragged the stranger down the street, turned him to face 
McKenna, then moved to the side out of harm's way.

McKenna walked out to the middle of the street.

"Where are my guns?" A small form detached from the crowd, carrying 
the guns in her arms. It was 16-year-old Abigail Jones.

"Ah there they are. It's about time you came in useful. After I clean 
up this mess let's you and me head on back to the Double D where we 
can continue your studies." He took the guns and strapped them on, 
then took them out one by one and opened the chambers to check that 
they were loaded. Satisfied, he re-holstered them and turned to face 
his son.

"Now, how should we start this? Oh I know, let's get a pretty lady to 
drop something. When it hits the ground, we draw. Now where can we 
find a pretty lady?" He turned slowly towards Ariel, who was still 
standing beside Zeus.

"How about it, my dear?" he said with a large grin on his face. "Want 
to volunteer?" He didn't expect an answer, but he got one anyway.

"Go to hell." Tears welled in her eyes and she clenched her fists with 
rage.

McKenna turned to a young man standing near Ariel and Zeus. "Tommy?"

"Yes, Boss?"

"Kill the bartender." He watched as Tommy drew his gun and aimed at 
Zeus.

"No, wait. All right," yelled Ariel. "I'll do it. Just leave him 
alone." She walked towards the centre of the street, stopping short of 
getting in the line of fire.

"I don't have anything to drop," she said coldly.
 
"The bedsheet will do." McKenna was enjoying himself immensely.

"You bastard."

"Oh just shut up and do it," McKenna had lost his patience with her. 
"I've got things to do."

Ariel looked at him then turned to look at her lover. Her heart sank 
when she saw him. He could barely stand. Try as she might, she could 
see no hope for him at all, he was going to die. But he would not be 
alone. She would soon be with him. She would make sure of that. Maybe 
in death they would be together.

And then he looked at her. 

His cold blue eyes burned into her very soul and suddenly she knew 
everything would be okay. She unclenched her fists and let the 
bedsheet fall. It sank to the ground leaving her naked before 
everyone, and at that moment the final chapter began.

The stranger stood tall and waited.

McKenna slapped leather and fired, the recoil pulling his arm up, the 
smoke from the discharge blocking his vision. He aimed true, squarely 
at the chest of his opponent.

"And that's that." He turned to his men but didn't expect the look he 
saw on their faces. It was one of shock. He spun back to where his son 
should be lying in the dirt.

The stranger was still standing.

McKenna shook his head and aimed again. "I must be getting old," he 
thought to himself. He fired again, and again the stranger remained 
standing.

"What the…" Again he fired, again with no result.

The stranger started to advance.

McKenna fired bullet after bullet at his son, each time aiming true, 
and each time missing the mark. He kept firing until the hammer fell 
on an empty chamber. With a yell of frustration he threw the useless 
gun at his adversary, striking him on the shoulder. The stranger 
staggered, but continued to advance.

"Fantasma el vegarse," whispered Sanchez fearfully. 

"Ningun fantasma! He's not a fucking ghost!" screamed McKenna and drew 
his second gun. He fired again and missed again. He was yelling at the 
form before him now, counter-punching his words with every shot.

"Why…"

Bang!

"Can't…"

Bang!

"You…"

Bang!

"Just…"

Bang!

"Fucking…"

Bang!

"Die!"

Click!

It was the loudest sound of all. The sound of the hammer falling on a 
spent bullet. A sound that echoed off the buildings of the town around 
him.

His town.

McKenna looked down at his empty gun, then back at his son who now 
stood before him. McKenna's mouth hung open in shock. He wasn't, 
couldn't be a ghost. It just wasn't possible. 

The stranger reached forward, grabbed McKenna by the back of the head 
and pulled his face down over the muzzle of his own weapon.

"Goodbye, father," he whispered through clenched teeth.

He pulled the trigger and extinguished the life of Lucas McKenna.

The stranger pushed the corpse away, and sank to his knees. Ariel, 
naked and shaking in the noonday sun, raced to him, catching him as he 
collapsed. She pulled his head to her breast and held him, gently 
rocking his inert form.

Sanchez, who now found himself in charge of forty confused and nervous 
men, decided that some things were better off left alone. He walked 
quickly to his horse, saddled up, and rode as fast as he could back to 
the Double D, his men close behind him. In less than a day the ranch 
would be looted and burned, the men scattered to all points of the 
compass.

Some of the townsfolk who had been watching from the shadows came 
forward and cut Zeus down from his makeshift crucifix. The women 
produced cotton bandages and poultices and tended to his wounds.

Ariel rocked the man lying in her arms, not knowing if he still lived, 
not wanting to find out. She cried quiet tears for a man whose name 
she didn't know. A small figure moved before her and Ariel looked up 
to see Abigail Jones, the young girl who had given McKenna his guns. 
The girl stretched out her arms to the older woman and opened her 
hands, allowing twelve bullets to fall to the dust of the reborn town.

… Twelve bullets that should have been in McKenna's guns, instead of 
the twelve blanks that she had replaced them with.

… Twelve blanks that were secretly made in Joseph Blakelock's 
blacksmith shop while the townspeople looked on.

… Twelve blanks that were given to Eli Jones, Abigail's father, just 
after young Billy Blakelock told his poppa about the stranger who rode 
into town.

… Twelve blanks that a father gave his only daughter after she 
returned battered and bleeding from the bed of Lucas McKenna.

A crowd gathered around the couple huddled in the dirt of a desert 
town, a town that had finally freed itself from a tyrant. Someone 
threw a shawl over naked Ariel.


Over the next two weeks, Ariel tended the wounds of the stranger, 
nursing him back to health. Outside, the town came to life, no longer 
under the heel of the brutal McKenna. A new sheriff was voted in and 
peace finally came to Charity. But there was still one thing left for 
the town to do. And that one thing was lying in Ariel's bed. On the 
evening of the fifteenth day the new sheriff, Joseph Blakelock, father 
of Billy, came to see Ariel.

"How is he?" he asked

"He'll live," she replied.

"Look I hate to do this Ariel, I know how much he means to you and all 
but…"

"He's leaving tomorrow. Will that make you and this spineless town 
happy? He saved your worthless lives and now you want him gone." She 
looked the new sheriff up and down. "What's the matter, Joe? You look 
a little tired. Having trouble sleeping at night?"

"Now come on Ariel, that's hardly fair. Charity is a new town now, we 
don't have room for a hired killer."

"You had plenty of room for him when you wanted your dirty work done," 
she hissed. "And now you want to boot him out. Such courage!"

Joe slowly shook his head. There was no point in arguing with Ariel 
Goodman, most of the town knew that. The townsfolk had been hoping and 
waiting someone would come along to free them. Those blanks had been 
carefully hidden in the blacksmith shop for a long time. The stranger 
happened by at just the right time, and they took advantage of it. Any 
remorse they might feel for him was overcome by their new sense of 
freedom and a need to start fresh.

"One thing I want you to know, Joe. He's twice the man that you or any 
other poor son of a bitch in this shit hole is. Get out, Joe, get the 
hell out of my place."

Joseph started to leave but turned back for one last word. "Tomorrow, 
Ariel. If he is still here after sundown tomorrow…"

"You'll what, Joe? Throw down against him? Or will it be a bullet in 
the back while he's walking down the street? You people make me sick." 
She slammed the door in his face, and turned to the bed where her 
lover was watching her. 

Ariel knew she loved this man, more than her own life. But she also 
knew he was leaving tomorrow and she was not going with him. His life 
was one of danger, travelling from town to town and never settling 
down. There was nothing she could do to change him, and she didn't 
think she would want him if he did change. He had his life and she had 
hers, in this town, running the saloon with Zeus. She slid her dress 
from her shoulders and stood before him, naked in body and soul. She 
had given herself completely to this man, hiding nothing from him. He 
held his hand out to her and she went to him.

They made love until the early hours, and, in the morning when she 
turned to face him in her bed, he was gone.

End.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
The Author wishes to thank Clint Eastwood, Sergio Leone, Ernest 
Tidyman and Dean Reisner for making his childhood just that little 
more interesting.