h his scope, he watched the disorder spread. Clansmen fired at movement in their own ranks, trust dissolving into paranoia.
Sheriff Halverson tried to restore order, standing up to rally his men. His hood slipped, exposing his face to anyone watching. Eli’s shot exploded the ground at his feet, driving him back to cover. The sheriff’s authority evaporated as he scrambled away on hands and knees. “Fall back!” Pastor Crow called out.
“Everyone fall!” Eli’s bullet caught him in the thigh. The pastor’s hood came off as he fell, his face contorted in pain and fury. Several men ran to help him, but accurate fire forced them back. The pastor lay exposed, his true identity visible to all. More hoods came off in the chaos. William Tate, the hardware store owner, George Preston from the feed store, faces that smiled at Eli in town now twisted with fear and hatred in his fields. “It’s a trap!” someone shouted.
“They planned this!” The accusation sparked immediate argument. Groups turned on each other, decades of hidden grievances erupting in the stress of combat. Two men grappled briefly, their hoods falling away to reveal brothers from a prominent family. By mid-morning, the cotton fields had become a graveyard of white robes stained red.
Four men lay dead, their bodies unclaimed by their retreating companions. Others crawled or limped through the rows, trying to reach safety. The sound of sporadic gunfire mixed with groans of the wounded and shouts of accusation. “Who’s really shooting?” Deputy Denton’s voice cracked with fear. “This ain’t right!” More shots answered him, from the Klan’s own ranks.
Trust had completely broken down. Every movement drew fire. Every shadow held potential betrayal. Men who had arrived as hunters now fled like prey, unsure who was friend or foe. Eli maintained his precision throughout, his shots serving as punctuation to their chaos. He picked his targets carefully.
A knee here, a shoulder there. Each bullet a reminder of skill they had chosen to forget. The retreat became a rout. Small groups broke away, abandoning their wounded. Some threw off their robes entirely, running openly through the fields. Others crawled through the cotton rows, trying to stay low. The proud unity of the night before had shattered into every man for himself.
Sheriff Halverson made one last attempt to organize a withdrawal. “Fall back to the road! Together!” But there was no together left. His men were already running, their formation destroyed, their confidence shattered. Some fled north, others south. Decades of racial solidarity crumbled under the weight of fear and exposed faces.
Through his scope, Eli watched them scatter. The morning sun was merciless, illuminating every stumbling retreat, every abandoned companion, every moment of cowardice. The mighty Klan had become nothing more than frightened men in dirty white robes, fleeing from shadows of their own making. The late morning sun beat down mercilessly on Eli’s fields.
The air hung thick with gunsmoke and the metallic scent of blood. Where chaos had reigned minutes before, an unsettling quiet now settled over the cotton rows. Only the occasional moan of the wounded disturbed the silence. Eli moved cautiously through his house, checking each window with practiced efficiency.
His movements were precise, methodical, the same careful rhythm that had served him during the war. Four dead lay scattered across his land. More wounded had crawled away, leaving dark trails through the cotton plants. He found Caleb in the root cellar, exactly where he’d ordered him to stay. The young man’s eyes were wide, but steady.