Bury 'Em Deep (2025) Movie Script
1
- Look there.
- So what?
It's just another saddle tramp.
- No, look here.
- Bosh!
Everyone knows Link Maddock
only works the Indian territory.
- Look again, you know it all.
- Well, I'll be.
What does that book say about him?
- It says all his blood money
is saved in a buried coffin
atop a derelict confederate graveyard.
- Where?
- No one knows.
But the book says he keeps it real secure
from those that do find it.
- My daddy said
he once saw Maddock shoot
a stray dog that pissed on
his boot, midstream too.
- Come on, let's follow.
I got me an idea.
- Deputy, I told you when you see these,
you tear them down.
I will not have my office being used
as a advertisement post
for these mud shows.
Donations for the widows and orphan fund
ain't till December.
You're a few months early, Mister?
All right, all right, all right.
Mister, I could have you shot for that.
I'm not doin' business with an armed man.
It's a town ordinance.
Don't worry, you'll get it
back after you leave my office.
I don't like bounty hunters
hangin' around my town.
So I suggest when we're done here,
you just keep on walkin'
outta Coffee Field, Mister?
What'd you say your name was again?
- I didn't.
- That an accent?
You're not American?
- Is that gonna buy?
- All right, see what you got here.
What of it?
That mess could be anyone.
I'll be damned.
You'll need to converse
with the county judge about your reward.
I can't help you.
- Courthouse is in Caulker City.
It's a day's ride.
- Yep.
So, I suggest you get gone
and get your quarry outta here
before it rots any further,
'cause in this town, blood is
thicker than this tin badge.
See, Pinto, Pinto Sykes,
is my deputy's second cousin.
That means son of a bitch that he was,
he's my first cousin, and
son of a bitch or not,
that makes him family.
And no matter what the law
says, I can't trade on family.
- Hm.
All the same, I'll take my money now.
- You stupid fool.
I'm giving you a chance
to walk outta here.
- In silver.
- All I got for you is lead.
- I'll save your burial costs.
- Jesus, you got him.
You were right.
He's got reward out for
him in Coachees County.
It says right here in your book.
You weren't joshin'.
We're gonna be rich!
- Three weeks.
It's how long you've been here,
if you were wondering.
I'm Sister Marie.
The bandage?
Before I devoted my life to the church,
my father was a horse doctor,
and he taught me his practice.
I always
suspected he wanted a son.
- Horses?
- Yes.
It does seem that man and beast
are quite the same on the inside.
- Jesus.
- I am so glad that you brought him up.
You see, it was Christ who saved you.
The Lord works through me, Mr. Maddock.
He is the one who saved you.
He is the one who gave you
a second chance, not I.
You see, I believe that the
Lord has a plan for you.
He wants to give you every opportunity
for you to be set on the
right path this time,
tempting you with ownership
of your previous weapon
would be unbearably cruel.
So, I sold your gun.
- What?
- It's all a part of the
Lord's plan, Mr. Maddock.
Do you not remember the burning?
For days it's all you would
talk about day and night.
All you would speak about are demons,
apostles of hell that were torturing you
with visions of what you would endure
in the devil's layer for the
mortal sins that you committed.
- I was sick.
- No, no.
It was not the delirium, Mr. Maddock.
Satan had a hold on you.
He had been waiting all your life
and for a brief moment he had you.
But that is in the past now.
He has a plan for you to
do better than you did.
Like, "Thou shalt not murder."
Well, Mr. Maddock, you must be starving.
You get dressed now and
I'll get you something.
So, you've seen the children.
Orphans, poor dears.
The parish runs the church.
The town orphanage, really.
To be honest with you,
we haven't had many donations lately.
So, we've taken to growing
and selling the harvest,
but no luck thus yet.
And the only donation we've had
so far this year was your
gracious contribution.
- Hm.
- Your sold gun, of course.
And the-
One moment, please.
I'm sorry.
That was Mr. Greeves, the bank president.
He has done everything he can
with the board of directors
and if they can't meet the required amount
of charity by the end of the month,
then the bank is gonna take
back the orphanage.
- Throw them back out on the street?
- They could stay here
for a little while longer,
but the parish does not have the funds
to feed the dozens of hungry mouths.
If there were some kind soul
who could make a sizable donation,
I'm sure we could keep finding them homes.
I'm so sorry.
I'm gonna let you enjoy your dinner.
- If someone were to?
- Yes?
- Saving those foundlings
would go a long way
for a man's salvation, wouldn't it?
- Well, yes, but...
- I'll be back before the
bank comes to collect.
- Mr. Maddock, thank you.
- The horses!
- Bastard's still alive!
- Sir, please.
- Where is he?
- Some woodsman.
Lives south of here.
But Grey Cloud knows no names.
He swears to the high spirit.
When Grey Cloud was ensnared
in his steel animals jaws
the other four left him to die.
- Where is the money?
- All around.
Difficult to see in shroud of darkness
and master spirit's anger.
Others left with gold.
No such luck for Grey Cloud.
In confusion, he came
across worthless paper.
Now, Mister, I must ask you,
in this day, in this age,
who the fuck keeps Confederate script?
- Call me sentimental.
Why'd you do it?
My people need money.
Man came.
A white eye like you.
Promised Grey Cloud you would lead
to money if he and the others followed.
- This man hired the others too?
- He was with us.
- The others, all strangers to this man?
- A stranger to Grey Cloud.
But he can only speak for himself.
- Why hire help when he could
have the whole pot to himself?
- That white eye was no fool.
He said you would be dangerous.
- He was right.
- "Thou shalt not murder.
Thou shalt not murder."
- Huh, leaves a lot of
room for self defense.
- Crazy white man.
Grey Cloud would like the
use of his leg again, please.
In return, he will help
you track down others.
- What words are these?
- Cherokee.
Or until we meet again.
Pray to your sky spirit we don't.
- But Grey Cloud is Mohawk.
- Thou shall not murder.
- We'll be nice and
warm tonight, won't we?
Toasty warm.
Daddy's home!
Anybody miss me?
Yeah.
Where are you goin'?
Ah, Toscanini, my old friend.
You need a little bit of
a touch up.
We'll be gettin' you fixed up soon enough.
And when you're good and
presentable with this.
I'll get a little place outside'a town.
Mm hm.
Where you-
Where all of you,
can be seen and admired.
No more cooped up
here in this wilderness
with me.
Damn deer.
- "Thou shall not murder."
- Oh, forgive me, Mister,
but as my old grande used to say,
"Only way to follow
one good practical joke
is with another."
And besides, I'm pretty proud of my work
and I don't often get to show it off.
Pretty good, eh?
I bet you'd look pretty good decoratin'
up on my wall you funny son of a bitch.
Why don't you toss me up them nuggets
and maybe I'll put you up outta that hole.
- You'll have to come down and take them.
- Is that so?
Ah.
Well, funny man, there's
something gotta happen first.
Shit!
God damn it to hell.
Reckon the jokes on me, eh?
I've been killin' critters my whole life
but I never killed a person before.
These ways, if you don't count Injuns.
But never no white man before.
- Hm.
You know, it's easy.
Just come down and I show you.
- Oh, yeah.
Yeah, you are funny.
No, no, no, no.
You wait right there.
Wait right there.
I got just the ticket for you.
This way, that way I didn't have to look
you in the face and I was...
There you go.
Not so funny are we now, Mister?
Gertrude?
What are you playin' at?
Mister, Mister, please.
- Names and whereabouts of.
- I would if I knew.
They just showed up at my place.
They said there was an organized posse.
They was after a bad man
and if I was to help 'em in their affair,
whatever spoils is to be had
when all was said and done,
and I'd get my share on
account of my courage.
It didn't seem on the up and up,
but I need the money.
I can't say as I got a very
good look at any of 'em,
but there was an Indian
and a Mex, and a woman.
Craziest lookin' bunch I ever seen.
Mister, you let me up outta this,
I'll hope you track 'em down.
You ain't gotta pay me or nothin'.
- Hey Bobby, why don't you go see
if we can salvage anything
outta that hovel over there.
I think we got this taken care of.
Mister, we don't know who you are,
but man, are we glad you came,
'cause this hillbilly pepperwood
is a tough nut to crack.
Now, as the saying goes
stand and delivered.
Well, I guess in your case
standin's outta the question,
so why don't we get right
to the deliverin' part?
What do you say?
Oh, shit!
God damn son of a bitch!
God damn it!
- Go to hell!
- Shit.
- Hey, Mister.
Glad to see you come out
the other side on that one,
but you may not be so lucky next time.
This place is crawlin' with opportunists.
Have you give anymore
thought to takin' me along?
Come on!
- God damn.
- Oh.
Gentlemen, I'm afraid you've
missed today's sermon.
You'll have to come back tomorrow.
- Sister, I heard you're
harborin' a fugitive,
a foreigner at that.
- Listening to idol town
gossip is as bad as sin.
- I don't deny bein' a sinner, Sister,
but today is not our day to confess.
It's yours.
- Why?
Why are you hidin' Link Maddock?
- I do not know what you mean!
- Who's sinnin' now, Sister?
My deputy can make it hurt more,
much more.
- My side of the family always
did have a strong grip
didn't we?
- Link Maddock is a bad man.
He's a very destructive man.
For the good of your
community and yourself,
tell me where he is.
- I don't know.
- Is he comin' back?
He'll come back.
- And we'll be watching anyone
who comes in and outta here.
- You're not the law
here in Junctionville.
You have no jurisdiction.
- You worry about God's law.
You leave earthly law to me.
- Come on out.
Bad things don't sing
dirty songs by themselves.
- You got that right, son,
no matter how the wind blows.
- You don't know how close
you came to dying just now.
- Oh.
You got that twisted, son.
You don't know how close
you come to dyin' just then.
- Could have given a man some warning.
- Now, if I'd
have given the game away,
you'd have been the man splattered
all over the ground instead
of that fella over yonder.
Nobody trounces through here on purpose.
Where are ya headin' to?
- Junctionville.
- Half a day's ride down that away.
Yeah, for you full day's walk.
I'd offer you my roan but you
know she died awhile back.
- Hm.
I wouldn't have asked anyhow.
- So, what?
Are you on some sort of a crusade?
- Something like that.
- Yeah , the Lord sure do pick
him some strange warriors.
- I'm obliged to you for
your help and conversation.
- Listen, soldier boy,
before you get goin' now,
that trail ,
it's the fastest way to Junctionville,
but it's full of highwaymen and Haints.
- Haints?
A little old to be
believing in ghost stories.
- Oh now, you got that twisted again, son.
Advanced age has offered me
the opportunity to see things
you ain't never gonna see,
things I don't understand
and I couldn't explain 'em
if I had a hundred lifetimes.
Now, as a smart fella once said,
"There are strings of things
in heaven and earth, Horatio,
than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
- Very obliged again.
- Hold up, soldier boy.
I'm the curious sort.
You mind tellin' me what's got
you on this mission of mercy?
- Would you believe keeping
a roof over babies heads?
Or making a pretty face smile?
Last but not least,
maybe keeping my vessel from burning.
- All noble causes, son.
And in order of importance.
- Forever and always.
- Son, nobody lives that long.
- Ah.
- Well, well.
If Grey Cloud had moment capturer,
this would make one pretty picture.
- You!
- Yes.
Grey Cloud.
- I'll be callin' you anything you like
if and you be gettin'
me up out of this sink.
- You left Grey Cloud to die then.
Why should he help you now?
- Because you won't be gettin'
very far on that piece of jerky
you got caught in that trap
back there all by yourself.
Now, come on.
- Where is government money
you took from burial suit?
Give to Grey Cloud, and he will spare you.
- You got the wrong white man.
That's son of a bitch.
He caught up to me and
he took it all back.
And the longer we're sitting
here crackin' walnuts
with our asses, the
further away he's gettin'.
- Sanchez, forgive me if I don't stand.
- We both had a ways to walk today.
- That we did.
- That's what I owe you.
I would like a receipt or some form
of paper proof that my
debt to you is done.
- That old goat didn't
have much left did he?
- Senor Greeves, please.
The paper.
- What's the matter, amigo?
Don't trust me?
- I don't like loose ends.
- Maybe you shoulda made
sure he was dead then.
- I don't know too many
men that could take
a spade to the head twice.
- For a man like Link Maddock,
I do not believe it's sufficient.
- You were there, too.
You could have been more thorough.
- That's what I hire you lot
for, to not dirty my hands.
- Sweet Jesus!
- Adios, Senor Greeves.
- What's your hurry, Sanchez?
Not in a hurry to gamble what
little you have left are ya?
Really should be more careful.
- What I have left is to
buy a new horse and wagon.
- Leavin' town?
- Yeah.
I suggest you do, too.
- I can't leave.
Not until I collect what Jennie owes me.
You know how females are.
No sense of direction.
Probably got herself lost
in that thicket somewhere.
- Well for your sake, Senor.
I hope she returns soon.
A storm is coming and I don't want
to be here when it arrives.
- Sheriff?
- Deputy.
- Why are we out here in this back water
huntin' down some man who killed
some other man who gave
our family a bad name?
- Hm, precisely because it would be worse
for the Sykes family
name if we didn't pursue
the man who killed the man
who sullied our family name.
- I don't follow that.
- That's 'cause you ain't
figure hard enough, Deputy.
You know what it takes to form a legacy.
- Children.
- Results.
The Sykes legacy like any other,
is dependent on results.
What pervasive law will
we be look upon decades
of centuries from now if
we neglected our duty,
and didn't pursue this Maddock
for pluggin' a blood
relations graveyard debt.
- How does a blood feud
secure a favorable legacy?
- The familial obligation is
a peripheral part of the debt,
you don't confuse yourself.
Maddock is one for crimes
against humanity in Coachees
or some such county.
We are on his trail
because he is a fugitive
and we will bring him to justice
as is our occupational duty.
We will assert that will,
it wouldn't reflect well
on the Syke family name
in years to come if we
spit in the collective eyes
of our daddies and our daddy's
daddies before.
- But we were the first
lawmen in our family.
- Oh, that's another thing about legacy.
It requires a foundation.
- Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
- Easy, ya old fart.
You give yourself apoplexia
if you strain too hard.
- Here you are, Jennie.
- Nice hardware.
- Nice shootin', Jennie.
- Unimpressed, Maddock?
- I expected more from Jasper Jennie.
- Woo!
Yeah, Jennie!
- Go Jennie!
Faster.
Woo! Good job, Jennie!
Yeah!
- Woo!
- So, you do know me?
- I've seen the flyers.
The Eagle-Eyed Jasper Jennie,
rifle maiden of the plains.
- Wonderful dead shot of the wing and run.
- Nothing but a bottle shooter.
No wonder Bill Cody ran
you out of his show.
You are not worth a damn.
- You assume much, Maddock.
- No, no, no, no!
- No, no, no!
- Why else would such a talent
have to steal from someone like me?
- It was never about the money.
When that Junctionville banker
came along offerin' up your bullion,
it was an opportunity I couldn't pass up.
- So, the same bank
foreclosing on the orphanage
is run by the same man who hired you?
- Talkin' don't suit you much, Maddock.
You make no sense.
- You are not stealing from me.
You are stealing from orphans.
- I already told you it
weren't about the money.
- You must catch horses.
- Bastard's still alive!
Take off.
I'll see to it he gets a bullet.
No, Sir.
It weren't about the money.
It was about you.
I just used your kilter
as bait to lure you here.
I figure killin' you in an aboveboard dual
would do so good for my rep
that that asshole Bill
Cody would have no choice
but to welcome me back
into his Wild West show.
- A duel with my hands tied?
- I've been waitin' for this all my life.
Finally throwin' down
a real frontier friend.
Link Maddock and Jasper
Jennie face to face.
Man to-
Get that cock sucker!
Link Maddock, I'm gonna kill you!
Fuck you!
I'm gonna get that cock sucker!
That bitch!
Get that God damn bastard!
Kill that cock sucker!
- Go on, get, get.
I got him, I got him!
- Trick-or-treat?
- I need to move
the table for Mr. Scott,
and then we'll leave.
- Welcome home, Pesos.
- Don't know what you mean, stranger.
- Funny, that.
- What is?
- Your resemblance.
- I guess I should have
changed more than just my name.
- Maybe stop your thieving altogether.
- I gave that life up.
I'm leaving town.
I'm here to let my boss know.
He'll be back any minute.
- Somebody told Pesos,
said there was Mexican among the bunch.
I have been looking for.
Not many of those in Junctionville.
Just you.
- Maddock, whatever anyone
told you, it's a lie.
- Okay, okay.
I was there.
It was blackmail.
That banker, Greeves,
he found out about my past
and said he would expose me
to the authorities if I didn't pay him.
I had no choice.
- I am going to
give you a last chance.
- Maddock, I can't.
- Hopefully you are equally
good with your left.
- This is as good as killing me.
- I'll let you duel first, okay?
- Papa!
Mama says to help you with the table.
- You've done enough
work for today, Juanita.
Now go to your mother.
I'll be over soon.
If I had any of your money
left, you could have it back.
I'm gonna turn around
and get on that wagon
and you'll never see me again.
- Hey, amigo?
- He keeps the money
in a safe by the desk.
Please take care of yourself.
- You too.
- And thank you.
I, we, owe our new lives to you.
- Don't mention it.
Ever again.
Hm mm.
When you bury a man, you
better bury him deep.
Toss it in with the rest.
Do it.
- Take it all.
Let me be.
- Not a chance.
We are off to make a donation
to Mother of our Redeemer.
Now, take the chest.
Do it.
Go, that way.
- God damn it.
- Trick-or-treat?
- Sister Marie, bring the
foundlings in from the field.
Mr. Greeves here is about to
put an end to the fundraising.
- Oh, please, Mr. Maddock,
no guns in here, please.
- I don't think the Lord will take offense
because this is a very dangerous criminal.
- I, uh...
I...
I insist.
- That's my gun.
- Yes.
I never sold it and there were never
any orphans either you dumb peckerhead.
Now listen, you like the candy, right?
There's candy if you look real sad.
You have to look real
sad for me, all right?
- And that horse shit story
was all it took to lead
us right to your holdings.
- Now, drop it.
Now.
Kick it over.
- We did it, Candace.
Pack your bags for Paris.
- What?
Where's the rest of it, Henry?
- In the forest somewhere
with that wanton tribe aid
and her gang of inverts.
We don't need their share.
- We don't need their share?
- No, we don't need their share.
We got all
- What are you talkin' about?
- the money we need.
We got all the money-
- Who did you tell?
- Look, Candace, you got to believe me.
I don't know how he found out.
- Oh, you stupid idiot.
I knew this was your dumb
idea from the very start,
and I knew it'd fail.
I knew this was a stupid idea
from the minute it left your mouth.
- It worked, didn't it?
- It did.
Maybe it has more to do with this getup
than it does with you
and your stupid idea!
Just the same, I'm glad to be rid of it.
Now, that thing was hotter
than a son of a bitch.
Now, it's time for you to go.
- Is this a joke?
- Why would I waste a joke
on you, you humorless oaf?
- You God damned trollop!
- Oh, don't take the
Lord's name in vain, deary.
- Candace.
Paris!
- "Paris."
Please!
I've had better from both of my uncles.
Now, you need to get out and...
- As a God fearin' man myself,
I hate to be shootin' holes
in a place of worship.
But my heathen associate over
there has no such qualms,
so you best be handin' us that money
and we'll keep everything all civil like.
- You all put your...
You all put your hands...
- You all are under arrest.
Reach for the ceiling,
and face the wall.
- Hey, Mister?
- Matilda, the gringo needs my help.
We wouldn't have this
opportunity without him.
- Look over there!
They're shootin'.
Look over there, they're shootin'.
- They're shootin' it out.
- Wow, look over there.
- Damn it!
- This ought to do the trick.
- I'm all right.
Oh!
No, I'm not.
- Did I get the son of a bitch?
- A little to the left, Jennie.
- I don't need your God damn assistance.
Help me, God damn it!
- Was that him?
Did I get him?
Did I get him?
- He's right there in
front of you, Jennie.
Right down on the ground.
You can't miss.
- Oh my God.
This is gonna hurt a bit, honey.
Sorry, honey.
- I have no gun!
I have no gun!
I have no gun!
I have no gun!
I have no gun!
I have no-
- Gracias, amigo.
- I thought I killed you, son of a bitch.
Go to hell.
- You got that right.
- You're Link Maddock, ain't ya?
- Hm, I think you are.
- I've read all
about you in them books
the kids pass around school
when the marm ain't lookin'.
- Hm.
- I'm thinkin' of takin'
up man killin' myself.
Wanna grow up to be just like ya.
Hell of a fight today,
from one of those books.
Folks will be talkin' about
today forever and always.
- Boy, nobody lives that long.
- Look there.
- So what?
It's just another saddle tramp.
- No, look here.
- Bosh!
Everyone knows Link Maddock
only works the Indian territory.
- Look again, you know it all.
- Well, I'll be.
What does that book say about him?
- It says all his blood money
is saved in a buried coffin
atop a derelict confederate graveyard.
- Where?
- No one knows.
But the book says he keeps it real secure
from those that do find it.
- My daddy said
he once saw Maddock shoot
a stray dog that pissed on
his boot, midstream too.
- Come on, let's follow.
I got me an idea.
- Deputy, I told you when you see these,
you tear them down.
I will not have my office being used
as a advertisement post
for these mud shows.
Donations for the widows and orphan fund
ain't till December.
You're a few months early, Mister?
All right, all right, all right.
Mister, I could have you shot for that.
I'm not doin' business with an armed man.
It's a town ordinance.
Don't worry, you'll get it
back after you leave my office.
I don't like bounty hunters
hangin' around my town.
So I suggest when we're done here,
you just keep on walkin'
outta Coffee Field, Mister?
What'd you say your name was again?
- I didn't.
- That an accent?
You're not American?
- Is that gonna buy?
- All right, see what you got here.
What of it?
That mess could be anyone.
I'll be damned.
You'll need to converse
with the county judge about your reward.
I can't help you.
- Courthouse is in Caulker City.
It's a day's ride.
- Yep.
So, I suggest you get gone
and get your quarry outta here
before it rots any further,
'cause in this town, blood is
thicker than this tin badge.
See, Pinto, Pinto Sykes,
is my deputy's second cousin.
That means son of a bitch that he was,
he's my first cousin, and
son of a bitch or not,
that makes him family.
And no matter what the law
says, I can't trade on family.
- Hm.
All the same, I'll take my money now.
- You stupid fool.
I'm giving you a chance
to walk outta here.
- In silver.
- All I got for you is lead.
- I'll save your burial costs.
- Jesus, you got him.
You were right.
He's got reward out for
him in Coachees County.
It says right here in your book.
You weren't joshin'.
We're gonna be rich!
- Three weeks.
It's how long you've been here,
if you were wondering.
I'm Sister Marie.
The bandage?
Before I devoted my life to the church,
my father was a horse doctor,
and he taught me his practice.
I always
suspected he wanted a son.
- Horses?
- Yes.
It does seem that man and beast
are quite the same on the inside.
- Jesus.
- I am so glad that you brought him up.
You see, it was Christ who saved you.
The Lord works through me, Mr. Maddock.
He is the one who saved you.
He is the one who gave you
a second chance, not I.
You see, I believe that the
Lord has a plan for you.
He wants to give you every opportunity
for you to be set on the
right path this time,
tempting you with ownership
of your previous weapon
would be unbearably cruel.
So, I sold your gun.
- What?
- It's all a part of the
Lord's plan, Mr. Maddock.
Do you not remember the burning?
For days it's all you would
talk about day and night.
All you would speak about are demons,
apostles of hell that were torturing you
with visions of what you would endure
in the devil's layer for the
mortal sins that you committed.
- I was sick.
- No, no.
It was not the delirium, Mr. Maddock.
Satan had a hold on you.
He had been waiting all your life
and for a brief moment he had you.
But that is in the past now.
He has a plan for you to
do better than you did.
Like, "Thou shalt not murder."
Well, Mr. Maddock, you must be starving.
You get dressed now and
I'll get you something.
So, you've seen the children.
Orphans, poor dears.
The parish runs the church.
The town orphanage, really.
To be honest with you,
we haven't had many donations lately.
So, we've taken to growing
and selling the harvest,
but no luck thus yet.
And the only donation we've had
so far this year was your
gracious contribution.
- Hm.
- Your sold gun, of course.
And the-
One moment, please.
I'm sorry.
That was Mr. Greeves, the bank president.
He has done everything he can
with the board of directors
and if they can't meet the required amount
of charity by the end of the month,
then the bank is gonna take
back the orphanage.
- Throw them back out on the street?
- They could stay here
for a little while longer,
but the parish does not have the funds
to feed the dozens of hungry mouths.
If there were some kind soul
who could make a sizable donation,
I'm sure we could keep finding them homes.
I'm so sorry.
I'm gonna let you enjoy your dinner.
- If someone were to?
- Yes?
- Saving those foundlings
would go a long way
for a man's salvation, wouldn't it?
- Well, yes, but...
- I'll be back before the
bank comes to collect.
- Mr. Maddock, thank you.
- The horses!
- Bastard's still alive!
- Sir, please.
- Where is he?
- Some woodsman.
Lives south of here.
But Grey Cloud knows no names.
He swears to the high spirit.
When Grey Cloud was ensnared
in his steel animals jaws
the other four left him to die.
- Where is the money?
- All around.
Difficult to see in shroud of darkness
and master spirit's anger.
Others left with gold.
No such luck for Grey Cloud.
In confusion, he came
across worthless paper.
Now, Mister, I must ask you,
in this day, in this age,
who the fuck keeps Confederate script?
- Call me sentimental.
Why'd you do it?
My people need money.
Man came.
A white eye like you.
Promised Grey Cloud you would lead
to money if he and the others followed.
- This man hired the others too?
- He was with us.
- The others, all strangers to this man?
- A stranger to Grey Cloud.
But he can only speak for himself.
- Why hire help when he could
have the whole pot to himself?
- That white eye was no fool.
He said you would be dangerous.
- He was right.
- "Thou shalt not murder.
Thou shalt not murder."
- Huh, leaves a lot of
room for self defense.
- Crazy white man.
Grey Cloud would like the
use of his leg again, please.
In return, he will help
you track down others.
- What words are these?
- Cherokee.
Or until we meet again.
Pray to your sky spirit we don't.
- But Grey Cloud is Mohawk.
- Thou shall not murder.
- We'll be nice and
warm tonight, won't we?
Toasty warm.
Daddy's home!
Anybody miss me?
Yeah.
Where are you goin'?
Ah, Toscanini, my old friend.
You need a little bit of
a touch up.
We'll be gettin' you fixed up soon enough.
And when you're good and
presentable with this.
I'll get a little place outside'a town.
Mm hm.
Where you-
Where all of you,
can be seen and admired.
No more cooped up
here in this wilderness
with me.
Damn deer.
- "Thou shall not murder."
- Oh, forgive me, Mister,
but as my old grande used to say,
"Only way to follow
one good practical joke
is with another."
And besides, I'm pretty proud of my work
and I don't often get to show it off.
Pretty good, eh?
I bet you'd look pretty good decoratin'
up on my wall you funny son of a bitch.
Why don't you toss me up them nuggets
and maybe I'll put you up outta that hole.
- You'll have to come down and take them.
- Is that so?
Ah.
Well, funny man, there's
something gotta happen first.
Shit!
God damn it to hell.
Reckon the jokes on me, eh?
I've been killin' critters my whole life
but I never killed a person before.
These ways, if you don't count Injuns.
But never no white man before.
- Hm.
You know, it's easy.
Just come down and I show you.
- Oh, yeah.
Yeah, you are funny.
No, no, no, no.
You wait right there.
Wait right there.
I got just the ticket for you.
This way, that way I didn't have to look
you in the face and I was...
There you go.
Not so funny are we now, Mister?
Gertrude?
What are you playin' at?
Mister, Mister, please.
- Names and whereabouts of.
- I would if I knew.
They just showed up at my place.
They said there was an organized posse.
They was after a bad man
and if I was to help 'em in their affair,
whatever spoils is to be had
when all was said and done,
and I'd get my share on
account of my courage.
It didn't seem on the up and up,
but I need the money.
I can't say as I got a very
good look at any of 'em,
but there was an Indian
and a Mex, and a woman.
Craziest lookin' bunch I ever seen.
Mister, you let me up outta this,
I'll hope you track 'em down.
You ain't gotta pay me or nothin'.
- Hey Bobby, why don't you go see
if we can salvage anything
outta that hovel over there.
I think we got this taken care of.
Mister, we don't know who you are,
but man, are we glad you came,
'cause this hillbilly pepperwood
is a tough nut to crack.
Now, as the saying goes
stand and delivered.
Well, I guess in your case
standin's outta the question,
so why don't we get right
to the deliverin' part?
What do you say?
Oh, shit!
God damn son of a bitch!
God damn it!
- Go to hell!
- Shit.
- Hey, Mister.
Glad to see you come out
the other side on that one,
but you may not be so lucky next time.
This place is crawlin' with opportunists.
Have you give anymore
thought to takin' me along?
Come on!
- God damn.
- Oh.
Gentlemen, I'm afraid you've
missed today's sermon.
You'll have to come back tomorrow.
- Sister, I heard you're
harborin' a fugitive,
a foreigner at that.
- Listening to idol town
gossip is as bad as sin.
- I don't deny bein' a sinner, Sister,
but today is not our day to confess.
It's yours.
- Why?
Why are you hidin' Link Maddock?
- I do not know what you mean!
- Who's sinnin' now, Sister?
My deputy can make it hurt more,
much more.
- My side of the family always
did have a strong grip
didn't we?
- Link Maddock is a bad man.
He's a very destructive man.
For the good of your
community and yourself,
tell me where he is.
- I don't know.
- Is he comin' back?
He'll come back.
- And we'll be watching anyone
who comes in and outta here.
- You're not the law
here in Junctionville.
You have no jurisdiction.
- You worry about God's law.
You leave earthly law to me.
- Come on out.
Bad things don't sing
dirty songs by themselves.
- You got that right, son,
no matter how the wind blows.
- You don't know how close
you came to dying just now.
- Oh.
You got that twisted, son.
You don't know how close
you come to dyin' just then.
- Could have given a man some warning.
- Now, if I'd
have given the game away,
you'd have been the man splattered
all over the ground instead
of that fella over yonder.
Nobody trounces through here on purpose.
Where are ya headin' to?
- Junctionville.
- Half a day's ride down that away.
Yeah, for you full day's walk.
I'd offer you my roan but you
know she died awhile back.
- Hm.
I wouldn't have asked anyhow.
- So, what?
Are you on some sort of a crusade?
- Something like that.
- Yeah , the Lord sure do pick
him some strange warriors.
- I'm obliged to you for
your help and conversation.
- Listen, soldier boy,
before you get goin' now,
that trail ,
it's the fastest way to Junctionville,
but it's full of highwaymen and Haints.
- Haints?
A little old to be
believing in ghost stories.
- Oh now, you got that twisted again, son.
Advanced age has offered me
the opportunity to see things
you ain't never gonna see,
things I don't understand
and I couldn't explain 'em
if I had a hundred lifetimes.
Now, as a smart fella once said,
"There are strings of things
in heaven and earth, Horatio,
than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
- Very obliged again.
- Hold up, soldier boy.
I'm the curious sort.
You mind tellin' me what's got
you on this mission of mercy?
- Would you believe keeping
a roof over babies heads?
Or making a pretty face smile?
Last but not least,
maybe keeping my vessel from burning.
- All noble causes, son.
And in order of importance.
- Forever and always.
- Son, nobody lives that long.
- Ah.
- Well, well.
If Grey Cloud had moment capturer,
this would make one pretty picture.
- You!
- Yes.
Grey Cloud.
- I'll be callin' you anything you like
if and you be gettin'
me up out of this sink.
- You left Grey Cloud to die then.
Why should he help you now?
- Because you won't be gettin'
very far on that piece of jerky
you got caught in that trap
back there all by yourself.
Now, come on.
- Where is government money
you took from burial suit?
Give to Grey Cloud, and he will spare you.
- You got the wrong white man.
That's son of a bitch.
He caught up to me and
he took it all back.
And the longer we're sitting
here crackin' walnuts
with our asses, the
further away he's gettin'.
- Sanchez, forgive me if I don't stand.
- We both had a ways to walk today.
- That we did.
- That's what I owe you.
I would like a receipt or some form
of paper proof that my
debt to you is done.
- That old goat didn't
have much left did he?
- Senor Greeves, please.
The paper.
- What's the matter, amigo?
Don't trust me?
- I don't like loose ends.
- Maybe you shoulda made
sure he was dead then.
- I don't know too many
men that could take
a spade to the head twice.
- For a man like Link Maddock,
I do not believe it's sufficient.
- You were there, too.
You could have been more thorough.
- That's what I hire you lot
for, to not dirty my hands.
- Sweet Jesus!
- Adios, Senor Greeves.
- What's your hurry, Sanchez?
Not in a hurry to gamble what
little you have left are ya?
Really should be more careful.
- What I have left is to
buy a new horse and wagon.
- Leavin' town?
- Yeah.
I suggest you do, too.
- I can't leave.
Not until I collect what Jennie owes me.
You know how females are.
No sense of direction.
Probably got herself lost
in that thicket somewhere.
- Well for your sake, Senor.
I hope she returns soon.
A storm is coming and I don't want
to be here when it arrives.
- Sheriff?
- Deputy.
- Why are we out here in this back water
huntin' down some man who killed
some other man who gave
our family a bad name?
- Hm, precisely because it would be worse
for the Sykes family
name if we didn't pursue
the man who killed the man
who sullied our family name.
- I don't follow that.
- That's 'cause you ain't
figure hard enough, Deputy.
You know what it takes to form a legacy.
- Children.
- Results.
The Sykes legacy like any other,
is dependent on results.
What pervasive law will
we be look upon decades
of centuries from now if
we neglected our duty,
and didn't pursue this Maddock
for pluggin' a blood
relations graveyard debt.
- How does a blood feud
secure a favorable legacy?
- The familial obligation is
a peripheral part of the debt,
you don't confuse yourself.
Maddock is one for crimes
against humanity in Coachees
or some such county.
We are on his trail
because he is a fugitive
and we will bring him to justice
as is our occupational duty.
We will assert that will,
it wouldn't reflect well
on the Syke family name
in years to come if we
spit in the collective eyes
of our daddies and our daddy's
daddies before.
- But we were the first
lawmen in our family.
- Oh, that's another thing about legacy.
It requires a foundation.
- Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
- Easy, ya old fart.
You give yourself apoplexia
if you strain too hard.
- Here you are, Jennie.
- Nice hardware.
- Nice shootin', Jennie.
- Unimpressed, Maddock?
- I expected more from Jasper Jennie.
- Woo!
Yeah, Jennie!
- Go Jennie!
Faster.
Woo! Good job, Jennie!
Yeah!
- Woo!
- So, you do know me?
- I've seen the flyers.
The Eagle-Eyed Jasper Jennie,
rifle maiden of the plains.
- Wonderful dead shot of the wing and run.
- Nothing but a bottle shooter.
No wonder Bill Cody ran
you out of his show.
You are not worth a damn.
- You assume much, Maddock.
- No, no, no, no!
- No, no, no!
- Why else would such a talent
have to steal from someone like me?
- It was never about the money.
When that Junctionville banker
came along offerin' up your bullion,
it was an opportunity I couldn't pass up.
- So, the same bank
foreclosing on the orphanage
is run by the same man who hired you?
- Talkin' don't suit you much, Maddock.
You make no sense.
- You are not stealing from me.
You are stealing from orphans.
- I already told you it
weren't about the money.
- You must catch horses.
- Bastard's still alive!
Take off.
I'll see to it he gets a bullet.
No, Sir.
It weren't about the money.
It was about you.
I just used your kilter
as bait to lure you here.
I figure killin' you in an aboveboard dual
would do so good for my rep
that that asshole Bill
Cody would have no choice
but to welcome me back
into his Wild West show.
- A duel with my hands tied?
- I've been waitin' for this all my life.
Finally throwin' down
a real frontier friend.
Link Maddock and Jasper
Jennie face to face.
Man to-
Get that cock sucker!
Link Maddock, I'm gonna kill you!
Fuck you!
I'm gonna get that cock sucker!
That bitch!
Get that God damn bastard!
Kill that cock sucker!
- Go on, get, get.
I got him, I got him!
- Trick-or-treat?
- I need to move
the table for Mr. Scott,
and then we'll leave.
- Welcome home, Pesos.
- Don't know what you mean, stranger.
- Funny, that.
- What is?
- Your resemblance.
- I guess I should have
changed more than just my name.
- Maybe stop your thieving altogether.
- I gave that life up.
I'm leaving town.
I'm here to let my boss know.
He'll be back any minute.
- Somebody told Pesos,
said there was Mexican among the bunch.
I have been looking for.
Not many of those in Junctionville.
Just you.
- Maddock, whatever anyone
told you, it's a lie.
- Okay, okay.
I was there.
It was blackmail.
That banker, Greeves,
he found out about my past
and said he would expose me
to the authorities if I didn't pay him.
I had no choice.
- I am going to
give you a last chance.
- Maddock, I can't.
- Hopefully you are equally
good with your left.
- This is as good as killing me.
- I'll let you duel first, okay?
- Papa!
Mama says to help you with the table.
- You've done enough
work for today, Juanita.
Now go to your mother.
I'll be over soon.
If I had any of your money
left, you could have it back.
I'm gonna turn around
and get on that wagon
and you'll never see me again.
- Hey, amigo?
- He keeps the money
in a safe by the desk.
Please take care of yourself.
- You too.
- And thank you.
I, we, owe our new lives to you.
- Don't mention it.
Ever again.
Hm mm.
When you bury a man, you
better bury him deep.
Toss it in with the rest.
Do it.
- Take it all.
Let me be.
- Not a chance.
We are off to make a donation
to Mother of our Redeemer.
Now, take the chest.
Do it.
Go, that way.
- God damn it.
- Trick-or-treat?
- Sister Marie, bring the
foundlings in from the field.
Mr. Greeves here is about to
put an end to the fundraising.
- Oh, please, Mr. Maddock,
no guns in here, please.
- I don't think the Lord will take offense
because this is a very dangerous criminal.
- I, uh...
I...
I insist.
- That's my gun.
- Yes.
I never sold it and there were never
any orphans either you dumb peckerhead.
Now listen, you like the candy, right?
There's candy if you look real sad.
You have to look real
sad for me, all right?
- And that horse shit story
was all it took to lead
us right to your holdings.
- Now, drop it.
Now.
Kick it over.
- We did it, Candace.
Pack your bags for Paris.
- What?
Where's the rest of it, Henry?
- In the forest somewhere
with that wanton tribe aid
and her gang of inverts.
We don't need their share.
- We don't need their share?
- No, we don't need their share.
We got all
- What are you talkin' about?
- the money we need.
We got all the money-
- Who did you tell?
- Look, Candace, you got to believe me.
I don't know how he found out.
- Oh, you stupid idiot.
I knew this was your dumb
idea from the very start,
and I knew it'd fail.
I knew this was a stupid idea
from the minute it left your mouth.
- It worked, didn't it?
- It did.
Maybe it has more to do with this getup
than it does with you
and your stupid idea!
Just the same, I'm glad to be rid of it.
Now, that thing was hotter
than a son of a bitch.
Now, it's time for you to go.
- Is this a joke?
- Why would I waste a joke
on you, you humorless oaf?
- You God damned trollop!
- Oh, don't take the
Lord's name in vain, deary.
- Candace.
Paris!
- "Paris."
Please!
I've had better from both of my uncles.
Now, you need to get out and...
- As a God fearin' man myself,
I hate to be shootin' holes
in a place of worship.
But my heathen associate over
there has no such qualms,
so you best be handin' us that money
and we'll keep everything all civil like.
- You all put your...
You all put your hands...
- You all are under arrest.
Reach for the ceiling,
and face the wall.
- Hey, Mister?
- Matilda, the gringo needs my help.
We wouldn't have this
opportunity without him.
- Look over there!
They're shootin'.
Look over there, they're shootin'.
- They're shootin' it out.
- Wow, look over there.
- Damn it!
- This ought to do the trick.
- I'm all right.
Oh!
No, I'm not.
- Did I get the son of a bitch?
- A little to the left, Jennie.
- I don't need your God damn assistance.
Help me, God damn it!
- Was that him?
Did I get him?
Did I get him?
- He's right there in
front of you, Jennie.
Right down on the ground.
You can't miss.
- Oh my God.
This is gonna hurt a bit, honey.
Sorry, honey.
- I have no gun!
I have no gun!
I have no gun!
I have no gun!
I have no gun!
I have no-
- Gracias, amigo.
- I thought I killed you, son of a bitch.
Go to hell.
- You got that right.
- You're Link Maddock, ain't ya?
- Hm, I think you are.
- I've read all
about you in them books
the kids pass around school
when the marm ain't lookin'.
- Hm.
- I'm thinkin' of takin'
up man killin' myself.
Wanna grow up to be just like ya.
Hell of a fight today,
from one of those books.
Folks will be talkin' about
today forever and always.
- Boy, nobody lives that long.