A madman. Some crazy old coot who had been tortured yet had escaped the fate of the others. Slaughter stood over him wondering if he was too far gone.
The old man stopped singing and said, “You, oh it’s
Slaughter had a lot of questions, but all he said was, “What in the hell happened here? Who did this to you?”
The old man laughed uncontrollably and it was a hideous sight with no skin and no lips…just that peeled anatomy, the yellow teeth jutting from the gums. When he stopped laughing he started singing again:
“Stop it,” Slaughter told him. He’d had enough and he wasn’t in the mood for any grade school graveyard poetry. He was barely holding himself together by that point and he intended on having answers one way or another. The old man had been badly used and was out of his head from it, but that didn’t mean he would go easy on him if it came to that.
Because right about then all that fear and weird terror had built up in him and broke open like a boil and he was feeling dirt mean. He was feeling capable of just about anything if he didn’t get what he wanted.
“I’m going to ask you again: What happened here and who in the fuck did this?” he said.
The muscles of the old man’s face hitched up into something like a grin.
“Who?” Slaughter heard himself ask.
But the old man just shook his head as if he dared not say.
“Who was he?”
“Tell me.”
The old man began humming and Slaughter realized it was some sort of Sunday school hymn he’d probably learned as a child. He was crazy. His mind had been laid bare…yet, Slaughter knew that what he was saying was essentially true. It was Black Hat. It could be no other.
“His name,” Slaughter said. “Tell me.”
“I asked him…I sure did…I asked him…”
“And?”
The old man began to shake.
Then the old man fell over, going face-first into the grass. He shuddered and died. Slaughter stared down at him, hearing the carrion birds feeding and cawing and hissing. The old man said
It made no sense.
It covered nearly his entire back and was seared black to a depth of half an inch into the flesh there. Some kind of stylized word and accompanying symbol that looked cabalistic and mystical and made Slaughter tremble. He told himself it made no sense and yet it made all the sense in the world if he could only figure out what it all meant. The altar. The sacrifice of the people of Victoria. Black Hat who carried a branding iron and the Book of Hell (as the old man called it). Black Hat who called himself Nemesis who, Slaughter knew, had been a Greek goddess of revenge and divine retribution but was sometimes referred to as the Christian devil himself.
Was that what this was about?
The Devil?
Slaughter could not be sure. It seemed both a possibility and a complete absurdity. Too simple. Too pat. Maybe Black Hat was not the devil, but if he wasn’t then he was surely something like that.
“All right,” Slaughter heard his own voice say. “Enough. Now get on out.”
He jumped on the hardtail and blew on out of Victoria until he was eating pavement again and the wind was fresh and the sun was warm and that awful fetid stink was blown off him and the defiled atmosphere of the town was out of his head.
Chapter Eighteen
Slaughter took it slow in granny gear, trying to think and afraid to think at the same time. He thought about his brothers, the Disciples. They were probably worried sick about him by this point and he hoped they wouldn’t do anything rash like trying to take on the Red Hand on his behalf. But Apache Dan would be running the show and he was nothing if not a cool head. And as Slaughter thought about these things he wondered what in the Christ he had gotten them into here because this whole fucking thing was getting more complex by the moment, like a great jigsaw puzzle with thousands of pieces. It would come together, he knew, sooner or later and maybe that’s what he feared the most.