Been thinking about Wicked Wednesday lately. Well, maybe
about wickedness in general. I’ve been working on my WIP, which doesn’t seem to
move along in the same manner as a manuscript does for James Reasoner, for
instance, or for Bob Randisi. But I plug on, and eventually the MSs get
finished. Problem is, the bad guys are not too upfront about it, nor to they go
blazing out in a flame of glory (or was that gory?). Still, someone made off
with Real Lee (Gabriel Winston Lee, if you think the moniker doesn’t sound
quite right), marshal of Payson.
Real Lee’s deputy, an eighteen-year-old youngster named
Lightning of God Brewster, is left to take care of the town. Many think he
can’t, a few think he can. Still, someone has made off with Real Lee, so
Lightning needs to find him.
King Elliott’s the bad guy, but not the gunman. He’s got
money, and he thinks it allows him to do anything to get power. As it says in
the Writer’s Digest Book, Characters and Viewpoint (Orson Scott Card), If you
want to bring the point home, “focus on a ‘bad guy’ who thinks of himself as a
good guy.”
Elliott’s bringing a lot of money to Payson, but he thinks
his way is the only way, and he hires real bad men to make things happen.
I went back to an old favorite author of mine, Cliff
Huffaker. I’ve got some Pocket Books of his that cost me $1.25 back in the day,
and I thought I’d take a look at the bad guys in some of his books.
Cowboy
Remember the movie? It starred Glen Ford and Jack Lemmon.
Lemmon played the hero, if there is a hero in Cowboy. He wanted to be a cowman,
and when Tom Reese, the legendary cowman, came to Chicago, Lemmon’s
character—Frank Harris—caught him down on his luck and lent him $3,800 to get
back in the game. With the loan, Harris bought a partnership in Reece’s cattle
drive business.
Next morning, Reece tries to give Harris his money back.
Harris won’t take it. So he’s on his way to Texas with Reece to get more
cattle. The book is about Harris’s road to becoming a cowman. Every tough spot
teaches him something else. And often the toughness comes from Tom Reese. But
Reese doesn’t think he’s being mean to Harris, he thinks he’s making a cowman
out of him.
They bought a herd in Mexico and one of the cowboys got to
drinking in a cantina with a good chance of getting in a knife fight. Harris gets
ready to ride to the cowboy’s rescue. Here’s the scene.
“Well, I’m leaving!” Frank faced the other men. “If Charley
has any friends in this outfit they’ll come with me. Otherwise I’ll go back
alone!”
“Nobody’s goin’ anyplace,” Reece repeated, his voice
dangerously low.
“I am.” Frank turned his back on Reece and walked quickly
toward his horse.
“Harris!” Reece said angrily. When Frank didn’t stop, the
cowman reached down and grabbed a crowbar from near the chuckwagon. He threw it
and the spinning iron bar hummed across the camp and slammed into the back of
Frank’s knees. Before Frank could get up, Reece was on him.
Needless to say, Harris didn’t go help the cowboy Charley
(don’t know why I feel for that cowboy), and he boiled at the tough lessons
Reece taught him. Down the road a ways, out of Mexico and into Texas, Indians
show up. Harris is out with a bunch of cows, between the main herd and the
Indians. Reece decides to stampede the cattle into the Indians, which works,
but gets Harris upset. Reece gets shot in the leg, and Harris, as partner,
takes over.
Problem is, the herd is scattered and the men must round
them up. Harris goes 72 hours without sleep. He pistol-whips a wayward cowboy.
Reece calls him over.
From where he sat in a folding chair with his leg propped on
a log before him, Reece said, “Come here, Harris.”
Standing before him, Frank said, “What you want?”
“Better slack off. Boys are getting’ mean.”
“I’ll slack off. The roundup’s finished as of this
afternoon. Only got eight steers today. Not worthwhile to go on any more.”
“How many you figure got lost?”
“Better than three hundred.”
Reece shook his head. “A lot of cows.”
“Yeah. Too bad. Too bad for you, that is.”
“What about you?”
Harris shrugged. “We found all my cows. Turned out all the
ones that ran off were yours.”
“Oh?” Reece frowned up at Frank. “That’s very interesting.
How did you go about separating mine from yours?”
“Easy. I used a crowbar.”
Harris and Reece, of course, settle their differences and
become true partners in the end.
Badge for a Gunfighter
Cash Jefferson takes on the job of sheriff at Yellowrock at
the behest of Whitey Hall. Here’s how.
“The men you’ve killed so far have been gunfighters
themselves. Our of curiosity, if the bet was, say, shooting a man in the back,
would you take it?”
Cash grinned. “Just simpler to win. I don’t reckon the other
fellow’s much happier one way or the other. Forward or backward, he’s just as
dead.” He poured another drink. “Want a refill?”
“Yes.” Whitey watched as the steady, bronzed hand poured a
second tumbler of gold-brown liquid. “I like to see a man who hates people.
That’s a man you can count on.”
“Why, I don’t hate anybody in the whole wide world, Whitey.
I just don’t give a damn about them. Let’s cut out all this palaver. What’s the
deal?”
“I’m figuring on making you sheriff of Yellowrock.”
Cash gagged slightly on his whiskey and put the glass down
sharply. “You’ve got a sense of humor after all,” he said, and coughed.
“Nothing funny about it. I’d like to have Duke in the job,
but everyone knows he’s my man. I imported you because no one knows you around
here. You can take over, and the town will be tickled pink. But you’ll enforce
the laws the way I want them enforced and you’ll gun anyone I want you to
gun—and always perfectly legally.
“The job pays one-fifty a month. I’ll match it with
one-fifty on my own payroll. The job pays two dollars a head for any cowboys or
miners you jail in the line of duty. Just to encourage you to look like a
conscientious officer, I’ll match that money, too. We want you making plenty of
arrests. But make sure you don’t bother me or my men or anyone who’s spending
his pay in one of my places. And, from time to time, you’ll get a bonus for
special jobs.”
“What sort of special jobs?”
Whitey leaned back in his chair and put his hands behind his
head. “Remember the three men who were here when you came in? They did a little
extra work for me today. So they’ve got a thousand dollars to split up between
them.”
“For that kind of money I’m your sheriff. What job did they
do?”
“Fine. You’re one of us.”
So we’ve got a hero who’s playing a bad man. Not in the
undercover sort of way, but in a way that in the final analysis does not match
his character. Whitey’s methods gradually get under Cash’s skin, and he makes a
turn.
“I heard what you did for Virginia today,” Cash said.
“Always admired a man who’d tackle somebody Ben’s size.”
“That little incident wasn’t all it took to turn you around.
There was a lot of thinking building up to that” Williams coughed and spit
blood. “Believe me, the town will be behind you. You’ll have all the help
you’ll need cleaning up.”
“I’m not looking for help.”
“But Hall’s got a fair-sized army behind him.” Williams
chocked and more blood trailed from his lips.
“He’s got plenty of errand boys around town. But only four
dangerous men. Garf and Saul, and Ben and Duke.”
“That makes five with Whitey himself. You tackle them alone
and you’re a dead man.”
“That’s the way it’s got to be.”
Williams noticed Cash’s arm for the first time. The shirt
was torn, the arm bleeding. “You’re hurt.”
“Not much. Not nearly as much as you are after playing
sheriff at Clymer’s today.”
“I played sheriff because we didn’t have one in town. I’ll
never try a stunt like that again—now that we have got a sheriff.”
That scene comes about 80% toward the end of the book, and
the final standoff between the reformed gunfighter sheriff and Whitey Hall’s
minions comes in the last few pages, and a young boy saves his bacon on the
next to the last page.
Clair Huffaker’s books are slim. A hundred fifty pages or
so. No space for unnecessary words, and he doesn’t use any. Other than his
name, there is hardly any description of Whitey Hall. Here’s the only
description we get of this bad man:
At the ornate desk in the center of room sat a blond man
with hard brown eyes and a scar that ran along his cheek and up to the bottom
of his right ear. This, Cash knew, was Whitey Hall.
There’s an old saw: Actions speak louder than words.
Huffaker’s baddies can be spotted by what they do.
One of the plotting tools listed by David Farland in his
book Million Dollar Outlines is the Time Bomb. Farland says: A time bomb is
really just a time limit, a deadline, by which some action in a story must fail
or succeed.
And farther on down the page, he says: Whatever your time
bomb, make sure that the time limit seems realistic, that it puts extreme
stress on the characters, and that the consequences of failing to meet the
deadline are devastating.
Guns of Rio Conchos
In Huffaker’s Guns of Rio Conchos, there’s a time bomb.
Here’s where it is set. First Riot Holiday gets an arrow in the chest.
At the edge of the plateau he ran almost head on into one of
the Indians on patrol. The brave had heard him coming in the dark and was
waiting, almost invisible in the deep shadows of a huge rock. Riot saw a flick
of movement and felt a savage pain in his chest, although he heard no shot. He
raised his revolver and fired twice into the shadows, and heard the sound of a
body thudding to the ground. Then he was free and galloping over a smooth
gentle rise. The only trouble was that his head felt hollow, and he was very
tired . . . .
Later, after he’s found by a rancher:
Closing his eyes, Riot drifted out into space, and when he
came back to the solid world once more there was an elderly tight-faced soldier
standing a
“Mister Holiday. I’m Dr. Gates, Army surgeon from Fort
Davis.”
Mildly surprised at his own clarity of mind, Riot said,
“What happened to Dr. White?”
“He’s been and gone. Thaddeus McCallister rode to the fort
to bring me over here. Mr. Holiday, you’re in trouble. No point beating around
the bush.”
“Trouble?”
Gates nodded. “You’ve got a steel arrowhead lodge next to
your aorta—the large trunk artery directly above your heart. As I say, the
arrowhead is steel, and it comes to a fairly sharp point. At least we can
assume that. The arrow entered your chest, glancing slightly off one rib and
entering deeply. Right now it’s located above the right ventricle.” He
hesitated and rubbed his jaw, avoiding Riot’s eyes. “Reason I’m explaining all
this is because . . . and
operation to remove that arrowhead would be impossible.”
“So?”
“Mir. Holiday, both Dr. White and I are veterans of the Civil
War. We’ve each seen cases to one degree or another similar to yours. We are in
agreement. Any attempt to remove the piece of steel would be fatal to you. You
should be dead right now, by all rights. Moreover that steel will not remain where
it is. It will move within you. And since it seems to be pointing toward the aorta,
it will eventually pierce that vessel. Muscular exertion could cause it to move;
so could a sharp blow above the arrowhead. The amount of time you have left is
partly up to you. Dr. White and I agree—as a rough estimate—that if you don’t strain
yourself too much, you should with luck, live about six months.
The time bomb is set. And the wicked one is the steel arrowhead
next to his heart. For the next six months, we follow Riot through violent times.
You see, he doesn’t care. He’s about to die anyway. But he doesn’t. And I’m not
going to tell you what happens. But really, that steel arrowhead raises its painful
head at the most importune times.
I’d picked The War Wagon from my Huffaker collection, too.
But word count tells me I should put it off until another day. Have a great Wednesday,
and may it be truly wicked to you.
You have to love the 'bad' guys, they drive the stories. I enjoyed your snippets to illustrate. I also remember reading or seeing the movies for these. Doris (Does that age me or am I just spending too much time reading and watching tv?)
ReplyDeleteLOL Doris, I was thinking the same thing! The WAR WAGON! Oh my gosh, who could forget that theme song for the movie! LOL "Look at them horses, what're they draggin', WAR WAGON, WAR WAGON!" LOL
ReplyDeleteCharlie, I just love these "wicked" posts of yours. You've always got the perfect snippet to illustrate what your point is, and I appreciate that. You always give so much thought to these posts. (Is there another side to you we don't know about, Mr. Whipple?????)LOL
Just excellent, as always!
Cheryl
Chuck,
ReplyDeleteI really liked Jack Lemmon turning into a hardened cowboy and trail driver. COWBOY the movie was great.
Proves to me, although maybe an extreme example, that a cowboy is not born into the role, but can be formed and made by his or her experience.
Doesn't matter if that person is young, middle aged, or even an older person, he or she becomes what they do.
Charlie
Charlie, I completely agree, which means that every one of our stories can (should be) a coming of age story. I can't tell you how many times I've gone back to Cowboy, just to read, and a DVD of it is on my shelf. Need to watch it again.
ReplyDeleteCheryl, you know that I squeeze Charmin on the side.
Charlie, I completely agree, which means that every one of our stories can (should be) a coming of age story. I can't tell you how many times I've gone back to Cowboy, just to read, and a DVD of it is on my shelf. Need to watch it again.
ReplyDeleteCheryl, you know that I squeeze Charmin on the side.
Another great post, Charlie. The bad guys are fun to read and fun to write as well.
ReplyDeleteKeith