and fear. Eli watched them regroup through his scope. He counted fewer than 60 now. The rest had fled into the night. Those remaining huddled in small clusters, their body language speaking of confusion and growing anger.
They had come expecting to find a helpless victim. Instead, they’d found the deadly marksman they’d tried to erase from memory. The eastern sky was beginning to lighten. Soon, darkness would no longer provide cover. Eli knew the night’s true test was still to come. The Klan’s humiliation would demand blood, but for now, he had shown them something they couldn’t forget.
The fat man they’d mocked was a phantom in the dark, a teacher of death they’d tried to forget. In the growing light, Eli reloaded his weapons with the same methodical care he’d shown all night. The morning would bring its own challenges, but he had made his point. They would never again mistake his patience for weakness.
The first rays of sunlight crept across Eli’s fields, turning the morning dew to gold. The change was sudden, darkness giving way to harsh clarity. White robes that had been ghostly in the night now stood out like targets against the green cotton plants. Through his scope, Eli watched the remaining clansmen shift uneasily. Their confident formation from the night before had devolved into scattered clusters.
Some pressed against trees, others crouched behind farm equipment. All of them knew that daylight had made them visible. “Spread out!” Sheriff Halverson shouted from behind a tractor. “Don’t bunch up!” Eli’s response was immediate. His first shot of the morning caught a man square in the shoulder as he tried to move between positions.
The precision of the shot, exactly where Eli had aimed, sent a clear message. The wounded man screamed, clutching his arm as blood stained his white robe. “Dear God!” Pastor Crow’s voice carried across the field. “Thompson’s down!” Two men rushed to help their fallen companion. Eli’s next shot kicked up dirt between them, forcing them to scatter.
His third shot clipped another man’s leg as he ran. The message was clear. Movement meant targeting. Panic spread through the Klan’s ranks. Someone fired wildly toward the house. Others joined in, their shots unfocused and desperate. Bullets thudded into wood or whistled harmlessly overhead. Eli remained methodical. Each shot placed with surgical precision.
“Watch your fire!” Deputy Denton screamed as bullets from his own side nearly struck him. “You’re shooting at us!” A bullet from somewhere in the chaos caught one of the clansmen in the back. As he fell, his hood came loose, revealing the face of Marcus Wheeler, the bank manager. Blood spread across his robe as his companions dragged him to cover.
“They’re shooting their own!” someone yelled. “There’s more than one shooter!” Eli switched positions, moving to another window. The sun was higher now, harsh light eliminating shadows. Throug