stump beside the front door, he drank only one cup of coffee and forewent his customary wood-chopping session. In its stead he hastily gummed down two Piggly-Wiggly tortillas wrapped around some tiny Vienna sausages, made sure a full book of food stamps was stashed safely in his inside breast pocket, and then from a peg driven into the mud wall over his bed he removed a cracked leather gun belt and holster, which he buckled around his skinny waist.
From a tin box on whose cover fading blue asters had been painted Amarante then removed a well-oiled revolver, an old, very heavy Colt Peacemaker. His father had given him the gun eighty years ago: it was the weapon heâd carried as sheriff of Milagro. Amarante had never discharged it at anybody; in fact, the gun had rarely been used, even for target practice. But it had always been, and yet remained, his most cherished possession.
The old man fitted this monumental weapon into the holster, made certain his sheriffâs badge was pinned correctly to his suit lapel, and hit the road.
Shoulders hunched, leaning way forward, Amarante stomped with a rickety bowlegged gait along the potholed dirt path, eyes fixed straight ahead, absolutely determinedâonce in motionâto let nothing break his feeble rhythms until he had arrived where he planned to go.
He stopped once, however, near Joeâs beanfield, swayed uncertainly for a moment before leaving the road, climbed up the Roybal ditch bank, and carefully picked his way over stones and dry weeds to where water left the ditch and entered the field.
He waved at Joe, who was leaning against his shovel, and Joe called, âHowdy, Chief. Whatâs with the pistol this morning?â
Grinning toothlessly and gesturing with his hand, Amarante offered Joe a shot of cheap brandy. So Joe splashed over and fastened onto the bottle, tipping it to his lips while the old man squinted his eyes and watched eagerly, nodding happily as the young man drank.
âAi, Chihuahua!â Joe said. âWhat is this crap, burro piss?â
Amarante cackled and sucked off a swallow for himself, then patted his gut. âItâs good for you,â he said. âKeeps you warm.â
âSo how come the hardware?â Joe asked again.
Winking conspiratorially, Amarante put his bottle away and laid a hand on Joeâs shoulder. âIâll be back soon,â he said. âIâll take care of you. Iâll take care of this field.â
âSure, you do that for me, Chief.â Gently, Joe cuffed the old manâs face. âYou and me together, friend, weâll keep those bastards at bay, qué no?â
Abruptly, Amarante plunged toward the road. But he halted a couple of times, and, looking back, muttered, âIâll be right backâ¦â
In town a few minutes later, instead of heading as usual for the bar, he hoofed it directly into Raelâs General Store and, pulling the gun from its holster, laid the weapon atop the rubber change mat on the counter in front of Nick Rael.
âHello, Pop,â Nick said, wondering, what in hell is this old looney up to now?
âWhat kind of bullets does this take?â Amarante asked. âI forget.â
After Nick had turned the gun admiringly over in his hands once or twice, he set it back on the rubber mat again.
âWhy buy bullets?â
Amarante was a little confused; he could hardly hear anyway. âWhat kind of cartucho?â he asked again. âI want to buy some shells.â
âSure.â Nick swung out from behind the counter, ambling across the store to his ammo shelves. âBut what for?â
Following Nick, the old man watched with interest as the storekeeper, after searching among the ammunition for a moment, selected a box of .45 shells, which he slapped into Amaranteâs hands. Back at the counter the old man asked, âHow much?â
âThree dollars and twenty-nine cents, plus fourteen pennies for the
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