He turned his head and saw Mike's arm go up into the air, the long black whip rising with it.
He screamed as the snake tore into him again.
Sometime early the next morning, the sheriff and his deputies came across a body lying at the side of the road.
During the night, someone had torn the bars from the window of the jail's only cell and Max had escaped.
One of the deputies saw the body first. He wheeled his horse over beside it and looked down.
The sheriff and the other deputy wheeled their horses.
For a long while, they stared down at the mutilated body. Then one of them took off his hat and wiped the cold, beaded sweat from his forehead.
"That looks like Banker Reeves."
The sheriff turned and looked at him. "That was Banker Reeves," he said. He, too, took off his hat and wiped his face. "Funny," he added. "The only thing I know of that can do that to a man is a Louisiana prison snake."
14.
THE NAME OF THE VILLAGE IN SPANISH WAS VERY long and difficult for Americans to pronounce, so after a while they gave it their own name. Hideout.
It was a place to go when there was nowhere else to turn, when the law was hot on your neck and you were tired of sleeping nights on the cold prairie and eating dry beef and cold beans from a can.
It was expensive but it was worth it.
Four miles over the border and the law could not reach you.
And it was the only place in Mexico where you could always get American whisky.
Even if you had to pay four times the price for it.
The alcalde sat at his table in the rear of the cantina and watched the two americanos come in.
They sat down at the table near the door. The smaller one ordered tequila.
The alcalde watched the two with interest.
Soon they would be going away.
It was always like that.
When first they came, they'd have nothing but the best. The finest whisky, the best rooms, the most expensive girls.
Then their money would run short and they'd begin to reduce their expenses.
First, the room would be changed for a cheaper one; next, the girls would go. Last, the whisky. When they got down to drinking tequila, it meant that before long, they'd be moving on.
He lifted his glass and drank his tequila quickly.
That was the way of the world.
He looked at the smaller man again. There was something about him that had caught his eye. He sighed, thinking of his youth.
Juarez would have liked this one: the Indian blood in the Jefe told him instinctively which ones were the warriors. He sighed again.
Poor Juarez, he wanted so much for the people and got so little.
He wondered if before the Jefe died, he had realized that the only reason for his failure was that the people didn't want as much for themselves as he had wanted for them.
He stared at the americanos, remembering the first time he had seen them.
It was almost three years ago.
They had come into the cantina quietly, weary and covered with the dust of their travels.
Then, as now, they had sat at the table near the door.
The bottle and glasses were on the table when the big man at the bar had come over to them.
He spoke to the smaller man, ignoring the other.
"We don't allow niggers in this here saloon."
The smaller man didn't even look up. He filled his friend's glass first, then his own. He lifted it to his lips.
The glass shattered against the floor and silence abruptly fell across the cantina.
"Get your nigger outa here," the big man said. He stared at them for a moment, then turned and strode back to the bar.
The Negro started to rise but the smaller man stopped him with a gesture from his eyes. Slowly the Negro sank back into his chair.
It was only when the smaller man left the table to go to the bar that the alcalde realized that he wasn't as small as he had first thought. It was only by comparison to the Negro that he seemed small.
"Who makes the rules here?" he asked the bartender.
The bartender gestured toward the rear.
"The alcalde, senor."
The americano turned and came toward the table.
His eyes surprised the alcalde; they were a hard, dark blue.
He spoke in Spanish, with a trace of Cuban accent.
"Does the swine speak the truth, senor?"
"No, senor," the alcalde replied. "All are welcome here who have the money to pay their way."