Steve Vernon Special Edition Gift Pack, Vol 1

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by Vernon, Steve




  STEVE VERNON SPECIAL EDITION GIFT PACK – Volume 1

  LONG HORN, BIG SHAGGY

  ROADSIDE GHOSTS

  TWO FISTED NASTY

  By Steve Vernon

  Digital Edition published by Crossroad Press

  Copyright 2012 / Steve Vernon

  LICENSE NOTES

  This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to the vendor of your choice and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Meet the Author

  First and foremost Steve Vernon is a storyteller. He’s written traditional folklore collections such as Halifax Haunts and Haunted Harbours for Nova Scotia press Nimbus Publishing. Steve has been published over 60 short horror stories which can be found in the pages of Cemetery Dance and Tor’s Year’s Best Horror; his first YA novel, Sinking Deeper is described as a touching tale of sea monsters and caber tossing. He has released fifteen e-books – including a dark superhero collection entitled Nothing to Lose and a full length novel of scarecrow horror entitled Tatterdemon.

  Find out more at Steve’s blog

  http://stevevernonstoryteller.wordpress.com/

  Book List

  Bad Valentines

  Devil Tree

  Fighting Words

  Gypsy Blood

  Halifax Haunts

  Haunted Harbors

  Long Horn, Big Shaggy

  Midnight Hat Trick

  Nothing Down

  Nothing to Lose

  Roadside Ghosts

  Sinking Deeper

  Sudden Death Overtime

  The Lunenburg Werewolf

  The Weird Ones

  Two Fisted Nasty

  DISCOVER CROSSROAD PRESS

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  CONTENTS

  Long Horn, Big Shaggy

  Roadside Ghosts

  Two Fisted Nasty

  LONG HORN, BIG SHAGGY

  DEDICATION

  I’d like to dedicate this yarn to my mother – Madge Chatelois – the storytelling Lady of Yarmouth; to my grandmother Judy Vernon who let me stay up and watch the all-night horror festivals, and as always this book is dedicated to my sweet love Belinda, my beacon in the darkness, my lady, my wife.

  I would also like to thank the folks at Crossroad Press for giving me the opportunity to get this book out there in e-book format

  *Bone Bits, Boogers and Walking Bastard Haunts *

  The bullet chewed into the meat of Jonah Walker’s dust gray horse long before he heard the shot. Jonah kicked free of the stirrups as the horse dropped. He tried his hardest to land on his feet, but didn’t quite manage the trick. He hit the ground like a sack full of busted bricks, smack dab in front of parched out buffalo skull. His ankle twisted and his knee sang out like a freshly skinned Siamese cat.

  He stared down at the buffalo skull.

  Big ugly thing.

  He could have sworn the dead hump bones were laughing at him.

  “Shut up skull. You’re dead and I ain’t.”

  If they were laughing, he was outnumbered. There was nothing out here but dead humps, as far as he could see.

  Dead buffalo, blown down to nothing but shiny white bones.

  Skulls and rib cages.

  Whole damn skeletons.

  Yes sir, the buffalo hunters had picked this range clean a long time ago. They had ridden through this country like a herd of gun toting locusts. They took the skins, and some of the bones that were close enough to the railroad tracks to sell for fertilizer. But way out here, this far from nowhere, in the shadow of the distant mountain that men call the Devil’s Anvil, they just shot the big humps dead and left them right where they fell. Which was probably what the booger that had just shot Jonah’s horse had in mind for him.

  At least he was still alive.

  The way he figured it, that put him way ahead of the hump skull.

  At least for now.

  He touched his knee, ginger-like. It felt spongy and warm. It was already swelling up, soft under his fingers, like the bone was wet and rotting. He didn’t think anything was broken. At least he sure hoped not. That horse wasn’t going anywhere too fast, and civilization was one hell of a long hobble-hop-walk away from where he was to.

  The horse kicked at the air and snorted red foamy snot.

  It wasn’t pretty.

  Jonah touched it with a fingertip - a thick pink gumbo of tissue and blood and half breathed air.

  Damn.

  It was a lung shot. That meant slow death and no coming back. He ought to finish the dang thing off, but he didn’t have that many bullets left.

  “I may need these last couple of bullets,” Jonah told the horse.

  The horse snorted.

  Kicked again.

  More horse snot.

  Maybe he could use his knife to open its throat. I could save on bullets. I wonder how long it’d take a horse to bleed out dry? Damn thing would probably kick him to death, halfway through dying.

  The horse stared up at him with eyes as black and flat as Apache tears.

  The damn thing was begging to die.

  Shit fire and save on matches.

  The beast had been a damn good horse. He’d stolen it three towns back. Horse stealing was pretty bad trouble, but need makes want when the devil rides for home, and at that time he’d needed a horse real bad.

  This was all that fat old sheriff’s fault, damn it.

  If that old badge holder hadn’t caught that bullet in his gullet in the middle of that bank hold up, Jonah wouldn’t have needed that horse so bad. Then that fool kid got himself shot, too bad to ride and fell off in the street with the money bags in hand, hanging head down from his horse, his ankle hooked like grim death into the stirrup socket. The kid’s damn horse had panicked. It took off, riding hard for hell’s far gate, bouncing the kid behind him, scattering nuggets of skull bone and brain gunk and all that Jesus dying money from one end of the street to the other, until Jonah had turned and plugged three quick shots into the thick of the horse’s screams. The townsfolk rose up like cat bit mad dogs, rooting in the street for the brain stained chunks of dirty gold and folding cash.

  Jonah tried hard not to think about any of those bullets pissing through horsemeat and into the boy. He tried not to think about what he might have been aiming for. Some things just weren’t worth the ponder.

  To hell with that raggedy rat shit.

  A man does what he has to. He takes what he needs, and eats what he can get, and tries not to ask too many damn questions in the doing of it.

  It was truth in spades.

  It was better to be the jaws than the meat, every time.

  “Feed and need,” Jonah said aloud, damn near scaring himself to death with the sound of his own voice. “Need and feed.”

  The horse snorted again.

  Damn it.

  This was no time for poetry.

  A decision needed to be made.

  He looked at the dying beast.

  It had been a damn good horse. It had only threw him the once. It didn’t eat much and the owner never came looking for it. Jonah guessed that whoever the owner was - he was too busy sifting through the brain bits and pocketing messy gold.
>
  What was the dead boy’s name anyway?

  Billy?

  Jesse?

  Jonah couldn’t remember. He was too busy trying to remember how many bullets he had left in his pistol. He never was much good at counting. He lost track at somewhere about four. And wasn’t that the sorry truth. It was the reason why he’d robbed the bank in the first place. He’d needed money. If he’d had some cash in his pockets before, he might have been able to afford the little luxuries that made life feel easy.

  Things like a fresh horse.

  Or extra ammo.

  Maybe arithmetic lessons.

  The horse whinnied, soft and wet, like its lungs were blowing through a thick red mud.

  It was in pain. Real bad pain.

  Hell.

  Jonah sympathized. His own knee was burning like fresh caught sin.

  The horse kept staring. The buffalo skull stared. Even the dirt stared.

  To hell with it.

  He drew the pistol and put it up against the horse’s skull. Just about three inches left of the ear. One shot ought to do it. He held the pistol there for a long silent minute. He tried to think of something holy to say, before putting the horse down. Then he let his breath slide out in a whistling sigh. He wondered who the hell had fired the shot that had crippled his horse.

  He wondered just when he would catch up with the drygulching bastard.

  And he would catch up with that dirty damn hard shooting bastard - come hell or gully high water.

  And then, because he was thinking of something else beside what he needed to say, the words rose up.

  “Good bye you brainless sack of windy oats. If I get half a chance, you know I’m going to avenge you.”

  That seemed holy enough.

  He squeezed the trigger. The shot rang out, damn near deafening him. The horse didn’t hear a thing.

  Another bullet whizzed home, tumbled and popped through the big horse’s gullet, splashing Jonah’s face with a slurry of dead raw meat.

  “Damn.”

  The raw meat didn’t feel nor even taste good. He spit and sputtered and rubbed his face into the chewy Texas dirt.

  Damn.

  He could have saved his bullet.

  That was an insult salted down on to injury – an insult that hurt worse than his busted up knee. Another shot whipcracked down from above. The shot slammed into the horse’s gut.

  Whoever was up there was making damn sure the horse stayed dead.

  Jonah flattened out like a fresh laid shadow. He belly crawled for the nearest bit of shelter. He spotted a couple of tombstone shaped boulders and middling sized saquaro, cacti, standing in the shade of a snarling old pizon tree.

  It wasn’t much as shelter went, but he made for it, cursing all the way.

  “Juniper britches hurlberry running trots!”

  Half way there the fourth bullet hit. It damn near took his nose off. He got a squintful of sand back-sprayed into his eyes. He didn’t stop crawling, just cursed a little louder.

  “Hell’s ringing bells, louder than dirty assed angel farts!”

  But he was grinning. Sand in his eyes, and Jonah was still grinning.

  He was hurting worse than heart broke pain, but at least he had something to look forward to.

  Revenge.

  He’d seen where those shots were coming from.

  A cloud of gun smoke drifted up from out of a patch of shadow halfway up the mountain, like the shade was stretching itself out. It looked to Jonah like the mouth of a cave, a long way off. Whatever that pigheaded booger was firing had a strong streak of cannon in its bloodline. A Sharps, maybe, or could be a trapdoor Springfield rifle – which would account for the slow rate of fire.

  “You pigfucking, dogassed, boogerhead. I’m going to get you,” Jonah promised himself. “And I won’t be polite about it.”

  Of course he knew that he didn’t have a sinner’s hope of knowing how he was going to get the booger. The booger had all the advantages: height, cover, and a bigger gun. Everything a man needed in this life.

  But Jonah was going to get that booger, just as sure as shit grew maggots.

  Still, he didn’t have anything that could match that range. Everything he was packing was built for close up work. The only iron come close was his Winchester rifle and that was piss poor at best. Not enough throw power, by half. At this range he might as well be chucking dried beans.

  But he had to do something.

  He unlimbered his Winchester. He checked it quick for dirt or dust. It wouldn’t do to have the darned thing blowing up in his face while he was getting set to take the distance shot of the century.

  He tipped the sight up. He thumbed a little spit on to it, making sure a chunk of road dirt didn’t frig up his aim. Then he settled his aim in on the cave hole.

  High and far above him.

  Maybe too far to hit.

  Or maybe not.

  If he took a straight shot he’d just plunk it somewhere halfway down the mountain.

  He tilted the barrel up, like he was aiming for ducks on the wing. If he could loft the bullet high enough in the right direction, it might make up for his lack of shooting power. It was an old buffalo hunter’s trick. He could walk his shots up the side of the mountain and with a little horseshoe luck, put it squat in the cave hole.

  He waited, hoping for the sign of another shot.

  Nothing.

  There was something moving out there. In fact, there were a whole lot of somethings by the look of it. He saw them out there, crawling out of the foot of the mountain like a line of drunk-drawn ants. It looked like bodies, like they were walking down towards him.

  It looked like maybe a half a dozen, maybe more.

  Hell.

  Jonah saw the plan, clear as the wart on the nose on his face. The cave booger’s long rifle killed his horse and would keep him pinned down long enough for the foot soldiers to come get him.

  He spat in the dirt.

  “Nothing I hate worse than organization,” he griped.

  The army of walking bodies was getting closer. They looked like Indians, maybe, only he’d never known any of the desert tribes to go afoot like that. It didn’t even look like they were walking right.

  Actually, they were sort of hobbling, like an army of lepers.

  Sick lepers.

  To hell with it.

  He stood up straight, snugged his rifle to his shoulder bone, and popped one off. If he was dying, he was going down trying.

  These at least were targets he could hit.

  Except he must have missed, because the figures just kept on coming. The one in front had flinched a bit, as if he’d been shot but it didn’t seem to slow him down any.

  Jonah dropped his sights a tad more careful, sizing up the one in front.

  “You’ll fall this time,” he promised.

  Jonah tacked the barrel up a half a bull hair to allow for the range.

  He let his breath ease out from between his lips, calm and slow.

  “Piss in a fish barrel,” he softly swore.

  He let fire.

  He knew he’d hit this time. When you hit you can feel it, if you’re firing right.

  Only the one in front kept on moving. His arm being blown to the ground didn’t seem to trouble him at all.

  He was a God awful tough bastard, or too stupid to just lie down.

  “Damn.”

  Jonah stared at his rifle. Whatever was in these bullets of his was firing shotgun hard and cannon wide. There was no way a rifle bullet could do that to ordinary human flesh. Knocking limbs off was shotgun territory, for certain sure, and bastard luck at that.

  By why didn’t the bastard fall?

  “To hell with it.”

  There was no way Jonah was going to let himself worry about them not falling, either. He’d shoot them to pieces without a hindsighting compunctional regret in the world. He leaned his squint a little to the right. He felt the rifle barrel shifting inside itself, like it was c
entering home.

  He let one more fire.

  He felt the hammer dry click on a dudded-out shell.

  “Shit knickers on a squawling, halfbreed pissant.”

  He fumbled the rifle, trying to clear the jam.

  While he was fumbling with his rifle the cave booger fired again.

  Only not at Jonah.

  The bullet took the walking bastard’s head clean off at the throat. The head bounced, like a tumbleweed full of ugly. It bounced and rolled into a patch of jumping chollo and stopped moving hard.

  Damn!

  “Whose side is that booger on?” Jonah wondered aloud. “And what’s he firing?”

  The walking bastard was dead for sure. Losing a head will do that, every time. Only the walking bastard kept on coming. Stumping along like a riderless horse. Head or no head, the walking bastard just wouldn’t die.

  Shit.

  That went beyond tough. Whatever these bastards were made out of, it sure wasn’t dying fast.

  To hell with it.

  Jonah shifted back into his aim. He leaned his Winchester right back, aiming for the booger hunkered down in the cave hole. That’s the booger that wronged him. That was the booger who’d shot a hard-stole horse half way in the middle of an emptied out nowhere and dumped him in this mess.

  To hell with those walking bastards. You could only shoot one bullet at a time. The first thing he figured he had to do was to find out if the booger died any easier than them that were walking at him.

  He’d deal with the walking bastard leper army when they marched on up to him.

  He squeezed the trigger. It felt good to do something, even if it was next to nothing.

  Mind you, it was a hell of a good shot. It nearly made it half way there, which wasn’t saying much. The booger was hiding somewhere close to the mountain’s kneecaps, and all Jonah was hitting was the mountain’s big toe.

  He leaned back, tilted the rifle further and took another shot. He had time to spit while waiting for the bullet to hit home.

 

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