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(Aloes, French Joe Canyon, Whetstone Mountains, Arizona)
Glanton would not turn back. His calculations concerning the enemy included every duplicity. He spoke of ambushes. Even he in all his pride could not have believed that a company of nineteen men had evacuated an area of ten thousand square miles of every living human.
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(Transmountain Expressway, looking down into Texas, Mexico and New Mexico, El Paso, Texas)
Two days later when the scouts returned in the afternoon and reported finding the Apache villages abandoned…They dismounted and moved among the shelters…the hovel doors were waist high and faced the east and few of the shelters were tall enough to be stood in.
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(Apache wicciup, Apache Pass, Arizona)
Two mornings later the Delawares returned from their dawn reconnaissance and reported the Gilenos camped along the shore of a shallow lake…They saw to their arms, drawing charges from their pieces and reloading them…The party was crouched in a stand of willow half a mile from the fires of the enemy…Glanton addressed them. We got an hour, maybe more. When we ride in it’s every man to his own. Don’t leave a dog alive if you can help it…Don’t waste powder and ball on anything that cant shoot back…the riders put rowels to their mounts and lined out for the camp behind the dogs with their clubs whirling and the dogs howling in a tableau of some hellish hunt, the partisans nineteen in number bearing down upon the encampment where there lay sleeping upward of a thousand souls…Within that first minute the slaughter had become general. Women were screaming and naked children and one old man tottered forth waving a pair of white pantaloons. The horsemen moved among them and slew them with clubs or knives…The dead lay awash in the shallows of the lake…They moved among the dead harvesting the long black locks with their knives and leaving their victims rawskulled and strange in their bloody cauls.
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(Seasonal Lake, near Wilcox, Arizona)
One evening almost within sight of the town of El Paso they looked off toward the north…They camped that night at the Hueco Tanks…Two nights later bivouacked in a pass in the mountains they could see the distant lights of the city below them. 
(Looking down on El Paso from the Transmountain Expressway, the only pass through the Franklin Mountains)
They entered the city haggard and filthy and reeking with the blood of the citizenry for whose protection they had contracted. The scalps of the slain villagers were strung from the windows of the governor’s house and the partisans were paid out of the all but exhausted coffers…Within a week of quitting the city there would be a price of eight thousand pesos posted for Glanton’s head. They rode out on the north road as would parties bound for El Paso but before they were even quite out of sight of the city they had turned their tragic mounts to the west and they rode infatuate and half fond toward the red demise of that day, toward the evening lands and the distant pandemonium of the sun.
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(Sunset, Deming, New Mexico)
1 comment:
looks like home dammit.
nic e work.
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