Art by @ mothiepixie
After much waiting, I have finally finished the First Chapter of my outlaw story and the first pair of surprises!!!!! It was inspired by @venesins art and their Lonesome West AU. This story doesn't follow their AU, but I cannot deny how much they and it made me want to write!
I Hope You all enjoy!!!
Outlaw Master Grand Master Comic
Lonesome West at an Outlaw's Resquest
Chapter: 1 First Meetings
You were weeding the garden when you heard the far-off shots, only glancing for a moment before turning back to pulling the intrusive plants. It wasnât uncommon to hear such things out by your quaint little homestead. There was plenty of game over the hill near the river, but there were also tracks that ran through there. You couldnât count the number of times passengers from the nearby town took shots from the passing train.
However, at the sound of thundering hooves, you stopped and stood to look over the sunbaked field of grass past your little grove of trees.
Your stomach clenched at the sight of a small group of riders barreling over the ridge, one man clearly draped over the back of one of his companions. Behind them, several riderless horses followed laden with saddlebags and gear.
Unconsciously, your hands gripped into the folds of your dress. You hoped the group would continue to the road leading into town or turn toward the desert wilds. But when the head rider turned the steeds towards your haven with a flourish of a blackened glove, your soul dropped.
You couldnât hear the shouted words clearly over the wind, but you didnât need to. You were alone. There would be no help should you need it this far from town.
By the stars, please donât let it be the Moore brothers.
You shifted further into the garden and closer to the house. Though small and useless against anything larger than a dog, your picket fence gave a certain sense of safety. It was a barrier between you and those to come and could at least buy you some time if needed. And though it did little to quell your growing anxiety, it felt like something.
Rooted in place you waited, eyes straining to focus. The pounding of galloping horses continued closer, eventually allowing their raised voices to carry over with their advance.
It wasnât long before your soul completely dropped.
Through the dust, four skeleton Monsters made their way to your gate, clumps of dirt and grass kicking up from their speed. Outfitted in high-quality leathers, they all sported their fair share of firearms, two openly brandishing revolvers.
They were, in fact, not the Moore brothers, their lack of physical skin was more than enough proof of that. Even so, you didnât have to look too closely to know they were just as dangerous, if not more so. Then, on top of it all, the fourth and largest skeleton of the group lay over the thirdâs back, long arms limp as a large hole in his skull bled magic and dust down the front of his partner. The bandana around the riderâs face was caked in the powdery substance.
Your stomach rolled, legs going weak at the sight. You couldnât look away, even as unrecognizable shouting filtered through the pulsing water in your mind and their words grew more intense. Time stretched as if it could go on for an eternity as you stared at the powdery remains.
It took the firing of a single jarring shot to finally snap you out of your trance and get you back to the, if hazy and buzzing, present.
âAre you with me now! How many of you resideââ
You gasped for breath, lurching forward to run toward the gate. You didnât so much as let the black-as-pitch skeleton at the front finish.
âPut those stars forsaken guns down and get him inside!â Your voice was already breaking. âThere might not be much time!â
Throwing open the gate, you ran to help get the strangers off their horses, paying little mind to the revolvers pointing your way. A skeleton with black oozing sockets and an erratically pulsing red target above his chest managed to dismount at your approach, barring your path with the cocked barrel of his gun. His leader, using his horse to do much the same, snarled above, its deep timber rumbling through your chest.
âI wonât ask again, woman! How many!â
All but slapping the closest barrel out of your face, you pushed past the skeleton on the ground to glare up into a single cyan eyelight.
You needed to keep moving. Had to keep going before it was too late.
âWe are wasting time! I live alone! It is more important to get that man aid and threatening me isnât helping! So, you can shoot me, or help me. Either way, something needs to be done, and soon!â
A glove gripped your shoulder. âBoss I canââ
Another frustrated growl gave the hand pause, though its biting grip stayed the same. You felt it in your core as precious seconds ticked by with the Bossâs tense deliberation. Their boss's horse mirrored their ownerâs energy, flicking its head while restlessly stepping about. Then with a jerk of his head, the man motioned for the others.
âKiller, go check the Barn. Dust, hold tight until I can assess the house and we get Axe inside. Keep an eye out for any followers.â
A grunt and a yes sir were all that it took for the hand to disappear and the skeleton in front of you to dismount. Breaking your glare, you called after the now retreating outlaw behind you.
âBring water back from the well while youâre at it. We are going to need it.â
There wasnât time to dwell on whether he would or not, or the rather scathing scowl the blackened skeleton sent your way. Experience and instinct overrode self-preservation.
Turning on your heel, you lead the way toward the door. Cursing and heavy footsteps let you know they were following. At least, you had assumed. So, when a rather agile tar-like tendril tightly wrapped around your upper arm and almost pulled you off your feet, to say you were surprised would have been an understatement.
Dread and hopelessness poured into your soul like a waterfall filling a glass. The heavy suffocating energy sapping any warmth you had and turned your skin clammy and cold. Your knees threatened to buckle beneath the building pressure, eyes widening. Not even your old training helped through the sheer flaunting of power surrounding and consuming you. All you could do was stare at the Monster responsible.
Blazing cyan light glowered back, three more tendrils waving impatiently behind their snarling ownerâs back. His words were little more than a hiss through the rumbling of his throat.
âI donât much care to be ignored or blatantly disrespected. Much less so when one of my own is Falling on the Line. So listen and listen well. Should there be anything untoward inside this house or if my right hand should run into any trouble, I will make sure there is nothing left of you or this place after we leave. Am I understood?â When your voice refused to work, he pulled you closer to his face. âDo, you, understand!â
You gasped through the sludge that was your failing words. âY-yes sirâŠâ
âGood.â He took a step back and released you, the overwhelming negativity slipping away with it. âThen by all means.â
With a very pointed gesture, he motioned toward the house. You wanted to collapse, just managing to stay upright using all the tricks from your previous employ. Then, hesitating, you glanced over at the injured rider.
âYour friendââ
âNOW!â
You didnât want to admit to yourself that you had flinched, quickly ducking your head to shoot past him. You tried to be light on your feet, not daring to look back. The awful twist in your guts didnât help. And even though the feeling of grinding teeth was uncomfortable, you used it to ground you enough to focus on the task at hand.
One moment at a time.
Passing the garden, your heels clicked on the few steps up your covered porch, a chipped piece of the whitewashed paint falling from the railing in your haste. Sweat beaded on your neck. The door had been getting more finicky lately, years of wear warping the wood just enough that it tended to stick. Combine that with a tight semi broken knob, you tried but failed to get it open on the first push. Your hands shook, grip failing to turn the smooth metal far enough to unlatch and it certainly wasnât going unnoticed.
A snarl was your only warning before the familiar black tentacle and a leather-bound glove lunged past you, snapping the hinges off the door from the force with which they pushed it open. Then, for the second time that day, you found yourself being grabbed.
Your cry did little to stop the larger man from dragging you through the splintered opening, an added sensation of cold steel digging painfully into your side.
Hot breath brushed your ear. âIâm running out of patience, little hare. Should there be any more inconveniences, I fear there is no other reason other than my self-control, for which you remain alive.â
You were fearful yes, but something inside of you stirred at his words, fear giving way to your indignation. Heat boiled within your chest, the lingering cold of his energy and tentacle fading with it. It was getting harder to tell if your lingering tremors were from the fear or your newfound anger as you took a breath.
Clenching your fists, you tried to focus on the bite of your nails to keep your tone even and calm. âShoot me all you like if it makes you feel better. I will not apologize for an old sticky door. This is nonsense. I've already told you I live alone, and I donât have any reason to lie. You are wasting time your companion doesn't have.â
Hard metal pressed deeper into your side. âSo you say. But people lie. Inherently so. And I wonât be taken for a fool. Is it not suspiciously strange for one such as yourself to be alone this far out? This land seems remarkably established if so, does it not?â
âI am perfectly capable and allowed to own this land. Despite anyone who might say otherwise. And yes, it was established beyond my own means. Not that any of that is your business.â
 âFor your sake, I beg to differ.â
You refused to cry in front of this man. From anger or fear. You refused to show him, or anyone else your weakness, no matter how long of a pause it took to temper down your pain and control the quake you knew would be in your voice.
Pulling every ounce of righteous anger you stored in your soul, you allowed yourself to snap. âI was married! Heâs dead. My husband is dead, you ignorant jackass. That is why I live alone. That is why things are the way they are. And that is why you, are, wasting, your, time. But since I know you donât believe me,â you pointed across the modest living room to an open door next to an entryway and a set of stairs, âThat door leads into my sleeping quarters, the entryway goes into the kitchen and dining area, and there are four rooms up those stairs!â
It wasnât hard to feel the ill intent rising just from his grip, his breath hot through a growl. âThere is an awful lot of space for a single woman whose husband is dead.â
He was insane. You hadnât been this close to tears since the incident at the Ebbot courthouse. It made you want to strangle the man. If he didnât have a gun to your side, you most likely would have at least slapped him. Instead, you had to bite your tongue, physically and metaphorically.Â
It was all beyond exasperating.
âIâm older than I look and we wanted a family. If it wasnât forâŠâ Subconsciously, your head turned to the side as your eyes briefly clamped closed, a calming breath following. âIf you wish to check, then I suggest you hurry. For all your caution, it will all be for naught if that man dusts.â
It was by pure divine intervention that the void socketed skeleton stepped through the broken door at that very moment, stealing whatever words the man holding you at gun point may or may not have wanted to say. Black ooze seeped down the bony arches of his cheeks as he rolled the cuffs of his white shirt further up his arms. The eerie red of a target-shaped soul hovered dangerously above his vest.
âBarn and surrounding area are clear, boss.â He set what you assumed was your bucket down on the wood floor. âShould I bring the others in, orâŠâ
You were not expecting the forceful shove or the abnormally monstrous snarl. You would have fallen flat on your face had it not been for, âKillerâsâ, sturdy arms catching you.
âWatch them.â
Without another word, the tentacled beast stormed over and up the stairs, gun ready and cautious. You bit your lip, Killerâs twitchy bouncing soul far too close for comfort.Â
The day was proving to be more than you had bargained for.Â
Carefully pushing away, you righted yourself, taking a moment to smooth the wrinkles in your dress to hide your growing unease and stress. Killer let you, the grin on his face straining at the edges as he stared. You could hear the loud footsteps of his âbossâ through the boards of the ceiling.
Raising your head, you did your best to seem as unbothered and professional as possible. âIt would be wise to warm the water you brought on the stove. It will be most useful after a good boil. I have some in the reserves already, but I doubt it will be enough alone. I can help youââ
âWeâre not movin, till weâre told.â
Killerâs fingers twitched near his side, but you pressed on, ignoring the way your own soul writhed in annoyed anger.
âIt is just in the kitchen. Your companionââ
âBoss.â
ââWhoever he is, had to pass it before continuing up. Besides,â You gave him a stern look. âHe said to watch me, not stay in place. The risk of your friend dusting is getting worse the longer everyone uselessly dawdles and does nothing.â
Red light flashed uncomfortably in your eyes as the floating mass above his chest spasmed and jerked. As the seconds ticked by, more black spilled from his empty sockets. Everything else remained unnaturally still.
You hated it.
Going against all rationality, you took matters into your own hands once again. Glancing past him, you scooped up the damp bucket and headed into the kitchen, grumbling over your shoulder as you went.
âA fine lot of help all you are...â
He didnât step in your way or stop you as you clomped through the entryway to your modest little kitchen. You did note, however, that the sound of footsteps followed you and his shadow stayed within the framework you had passed through. While you busied yourself with pouring the water into a larger pot and stoking the wood beneath the burners, he remained quiet but painfully present.
You continued. Years of notes and learning were pondered as you went, using what little you saw of the injured man to make the best inferences as you could. Trudging quickly from cabinet to cabinet, you moved on to then find everything that would best aid the injured skeleton waiting outside.
Healing herbs were placed into a bowl next to a pestle, extra cloth gathered from a drawer for cleaning. The horde of tonics locked in a chest on the counter were carefully looked through, and finally, your half-forgotten magic powder was retrieved from the back of the old storage supplies.
You held it close to your chest to keep your hands steady, inspecting it for any outside contaminants. The tin was older, the once blue painted exterior faded with some scuffs and a small dent marring the lid, but otherwise still in good shape. You let your thumb gently run over the raised metal of the brand, steadying your beating heart as you wentâŠ
Shuffling and the murmur of low voices caught you off guard. Turning, dark bones and curling tentacles leaned close to Killer, an exchanging of words passing quietly between them before they parted to lock eyes with you. It was clear by his stance, that the boss was far more composed than when he initially left you to Killer.
âSeems you were indeed telling the truth. I trust you know what youâre doing then?â
For the hundredth time today, you stifled your annoyance, trying in vain not to let it show. âI wouldnât have been so insistent otherwise.â
He simply hummed, subtly tilting his head. You couldnât help the shiver that ran down your spine at the unnatural way his single eyelight shone, but you refused to look away. Then, without a word, he turned and headed for the door.
Killer stepped forward.
âBoss is bringing the big guy inside. You really think you can help him?â
You nodded, slowly moving to gather your haul and follow his boss towards the main door. âI used to be a nurse. If heâs not too far gone, Iâll do my best to fix what I can.â
Grunting, he folded his arms almost protectively over his chest as you passed. âGood.â
* * *
You had them bring the injured giant, Axe, into your bedroom instead of sending them precariously up the narrow flight of stairs. He was too large to manage safely, his broad shoulders taking up much of your double-sized bed. And while the group as a whole were impressive in stature, you doubted any good would have come from trying. It also made all the difference to be able to assess him quickly without any added effort, accidents, and wasted time.
The flower embroidered quilt you had sewn yourself was left beneath him on the dark wood framed bed. No one had thought to remove it before carefully placing Axe on top, and you were too worried to think much of it. Even the dust trailing over your knot rag rug went without comment. Instead, you took your time drenching a clean cloth in one of the bowls with the prepared hot water, avoiding wetting the medicinal herbs sitting on the humble little dresser at the head of the bed. Your desk would have been a more suitable place for them, but it was in the opposite corner and currently housed your prized sewing machine along with all your unused fabric.
It didnât take long to wipe and clean away most of the clumping, dusting magic for better access around the wound. Once complete, you really roll up your sleeves, moving closer to the head of the bed and braced for the more difficult work that was ahead. Green magic pooled at the tips of your fingers. Picking up the healing herbs, you infused them with the intent to heal and placed them into the second bowl of the hot water you had brought with you. It briefly swirled and lit up the water as it entered before you quickly soaked and rang out the excess water of your cleaning cloth.
Pushing your tendrils of green magic against the spilling agitated red of Axeâs, the heat and added components helped disinfect and sanitize the ragged dusting bone with easing your magic into the wound itself. Once it was established, you were able to toss the rag aside to push more of the raw green glow down into his damaged mana lines. All of this made it possible to start stopping the leakage and ultimately, his dusting.
Deep breaths and concentration on these first few steps were vital.
You had been grateful that his skull had not been entirely caved in on his left side as you had first thought. Yes, there was a sizable hole in his skull, enough so that you could easily put a fist through it, but with the oozing magic and dust out of the way, it left the majority of bone around it intact. Nevertheless, it only gave you so much extra hope and it didnât take him out of the metaphorical fire. Any head trauma was bad trauma. Even with magic. Especially for Skeleton Monsters.
Gently but firmly, you pressed and worked your hands around the wound, falling back into forgotten routines of pushing green magic through the most obvious mana lines with a hiss.
âŠ
Something was off.
Everything was in no small amount, a mess. Instead of his magic compressing deeper into the skull or scrambling like what you would see with a normal head wound, his magic pushed outward with several severed connections attempting to trail out of the bone. It made it seem as if the head wound came after whatever caused the magic to âpopâ. It brought up a lot of questions, experience telling you to look deeper.
Whatever had happened, it wasnât contained to the edges of his cranium.
Though muted from your concentration, your voice carried through the room. âIs there anything I should know about concerning what happened? Anything at all about how the wound came to be? The more I know, the better I can help what has been injured and hopefully prevent any dusting caused by complications.â
Nightmare, the one you now knew was their âbossâ, watched from the corner near your dresser, frowning but saying nothing. Killer shuffled from foot to foot near the end of the bed, growling and elbowing Dust, the last of the four skeletons, in the side.
Dust grunted but was otherwise withdrawn and mostly quiet. His eyelights, one red with the other a red ring around blue, brightened beneath the brim of his dusty hat.
âFellâŠâ
You werenât convinced in the least. Eyes furrowing, you moved one hand to the back of your chargeâs cracked skull while simultaneously pressing the other on his forehead closest to the hole. âFalling certainly wouldnât have helped, but I can already tell that was not the main cause of this injury. His magic is spiraling and pooling in a way that makes it seem like it burst out, not caved inâŠâ
With your back facing them, you couldnât see the hesitation that went through the group, but you could almost âfeelâ the tension going between them from the subtle shifting. You were about to ask again for more clarification, but Dustâs same quiet, husky voice was the one to finally speak up.
âThere was a⊠scuffle. The fish Biââ Something slapped against bone, making him pause with another grunt before continuing. âHe was engaged with someone when there were shots. Didnât think anything of it at the time, but after we were able to⊠lose them, he collapsed.â
Things were starting to make a little more sense. âAlright. And when you said he âfellâ, were you standing, orâŠâ
There was a sigh, the other two skeletons leaning to hear as well. âWe fell out of the train.â
Your head whipped around to face him, eyes wide. The green magic pouring from your hands stuttered. Nightmare blanched, his words mirroring yours.
âWhat?!â âWhat?!â
He refused to look at anyone, choosing instead to turn his head with a dip of his hat and tuck his crossed arms closer to his body. âWe were trying to get to the horses. He collapsed before we could mount. Thought he⊠hit his skullâŠâ
You donât know why you were surprised. Being shot and falling off a train certainly fit with what you were seeing and how the bunch had been acting.
âAlright⊠Alright.â
Shaking your head with a long exasperated deep breath, you forced yourself back around. An onslaught of scolding beratement and quiet mumbling quickly ensued, but you ignored it to return your focus to the task. You needed to push and maneuver your magic through the chaos to find the actual pathway of damage. Closing and rewiring the mana lines near the surface of the hole would do absolutely nothing if you missed any or all the, âinternal bleedingâ, within his skull. If it didnât outright kill him, it would certainly cause major mental and physical health problems afterward. While more durable to having their magic and forms be manipulated by natural forces, Monsters were glass cannons when any outside damage with intent occurred. You just hoped it wasnât too late and that the bullet didnât carry or linger long enough to be too potent.
Sweat beaded on your neck as faint green light continued to slip from your fingers and curl around swirling, agitated red. At least there were good signs that your patient was fighting and not falling down. The color of his magic was bright and moving, willingly pulling and connecting with yours to try and fix itself. And the deeper you pushed, the stronger it pushed and gripped.
If only you had another nurse or doctor with you. They could have checked and kept an eye on his statsâŠ
Luckily, after you pushed past the initial mess of connections and mana lines, you found what you were looking for. A perfect void, narrow and humming with strong intent stemming from his right empty socket. Branching out to fill and ease it, you couldnât help but notice the eerie green glow flowing and filling the inside of said socket in places it shouldnât.
You cursed, mumbling under your breath before shifting one of your hands to hover over the new area.
âWhat is it?â
You tried not to flinch from the sudden proximity of Nightmareâs voice. âHis socket is damaged. I canât locate the bulbus oculi⊠the structure of his eyelight.â You shifted some more, shoving several of your fingers into the void to delicately swipe around the damaged area. Negative intent slowly burned at your skin and magic. âThereâs been too much intent focused into this area. It no doubt corrupted the magic. Thereâs not enough there for me to bring back.â
The air cooled. âWill it dust him?â
Pulling your fingers out, you again placed a palm over the socket to counterbalance the healing green magic from your hand near the cracked skull. âItâs hard to tell. I donât think so. The socket and eyelight themselves arenât the main issue. Itâs the damaged mana lines between thatâs more worrisome. However, due to the nature of bullets and how small they are, I am fairly certain I will be able to mend that damage. I will not be able to save his actual eyelight.â You took a breath, calming your fractured nerves. âIn a way, heâs lucky. It seems like that was the area that was hit or injured first. For you skeletons, the oculus is almost its own entity within the skull. The spread of intent mostly stopped with its destruction.â
You could feel the air get warmer with his displeased hum, but surprisingly, Dustâs voice cut through the following silence as he punched the wall and left through the open bedroom door.
âSure⊠LuckyâŠâ
âŠ
No one else spoke much after that unless necessary, not even when, after an hour of working, your charge gained enough consciousness to fly into a roaring blind and panicked rage. The others simply rushed to hold him while you forced him back into a calming unconsciousness and finished your work.
They hovered and fidgeted, helping only when needed as the air grew more charged the longer it took you. It was more than a relief when, after a couple of hours passed, the deed was done. The large skeletonâs magic was once again stable and no longer leaking from their various damaged lines.
You could have collapsed then and there were it not for the enthusiastic consumption of processed liquid magic during your endeavors. You left the boys and their boss to their own, despite how utterly exhausted you were, to wash up from your efforts and make your way to a favored apple tree next to the barn.
Pinks and oranges danced across the open horizon with the lazy lull of the sun and breeze settling to a slight hum. A larger purple, ripped, and faded neckerchief hung from a branchlet of one of the lower main branches. Every once in a while it would flutter with what little wind remained this late in the evening. The leaves whispered and danced, echoing the rattle from the grove across the way and bringing a wave of comforting relief. Dust and drying magic clung to the edges of your sleeves, apron, and hem of your dress, but the crisp fresh air soothed the ache your efforts had made.
Bark scraped against your back as you allowed your body to carefully slip down to the drying grass below. Leaning your head back, you let your shoulders droop and eyes close with a sigh.
âI still donât know what Iâm doing here. Iâm not⊠Iâm not as strong as you.â You let the natural sounds around you take over for a moment as you rested and let your mind spin. Clasping your shaky hands in your lap, you looked up at the tattered bit of cloth. âI know I should be more cautious. They arenât my soldiers during the war. But I couldnâtâŠâ You refused to let the tears fall after so long of holding it inside, your breath taking on a tale-tell whispered shake. âI canât just stand by and let that man dust. Not after⊠not after everythingâŠâ
Somewhere a cricket began to chirp, announcing the end to a very long day. Your throat and eyes burned. The world had changed so much, and you were desperately trying not to drown. Despite everything, you wanted to prove that you could continue to go on.
âŠ
Movement near the barn had you wiping at your eyes and patting your cheeks. You expected to see one of the skeletons, but when you turned, nothing was there. Rising, your eyes found the neckerchief one last time. You were tired but not yet broken.
âThrough thick and thinâŠâ
The walk back didnât seem as daunting as when you walked away. You had things to do and not enough time to waste. If your guests hadnât killed you yet, they most likely wouldnât. Besides, everyone was no doubt hungry and in need of a place to sleep. They werenât your soldiers at the old nursesâ tent, but you reckon theyâd act just the same. Youâd kill them with your stubborn kindness if you had too.
It certainly wouldnât be the first time youâve done so.
Outlaw Master Grand Master Comic














