An Outlaw’s 
Compass                               Jamie 
Wills 10C Selborne  
The memory of the robbery is 
fresh in my head, we have taken the only witness as captive. We are 
moving camp so I have to survive the long hard journey through the 
desert on foot. The captive has my horse because I’m the new 
guy. “Let him have one last moment of dignity,” they had 
said.  
I’m in a world of orange, a 
world of fine orange grains and orange wind. Wind so savage it 
pounces at the first living thing it sees, whirling and whooshing it 
surrounds its prey and suffocates the unsuspecting target. And then 
as fast as it came, the wind goes, leaving a dusty carcass among 
tumble weeds and graves of other unsuspecting victims. There is 
no-where to run, but this is where everyone runs to. The only problem 
is, here there is little chance of survival. This is the Wild West. 
The robbery has left me an outlaw.  
 
  
My feet are getting heavy, it 
feels like the sand is trying to suck me into its depths. With each 
step the vacuum gets stronger. The sweat is dripping down my face, it 
tastes salty as the constant trickle drips down my throat. Even with 
the persistent drizzle of sweat, my mouth is still as dry as the 
landscape around me. The sun is beating down on me, the heat feels 
like a blanket of rays has just been thrown over me. Even the air is 
thinning as I trudge deeper and deeper into the desert.  
It’s been hours with no 
food or water. The prisoner keeps laughing at me while he rides 
behind on  
My horse. My legs cave in and I 
fall, face first, into the fiery sand. With handfuls of sand, I pull 
myself along. The sun is now just above the horizon, laughing at me, 
along with the men, as if it knows I’m suffering. My vision is 
becoming blurry. The last thing I see is a silhouette of a man and 
then my head hits the sand and I’m gone…  
 
  
I can hear crackling and 
spitting. I open my eyes and see the dancing flames of a fire, but 
still the air is cold. That’s what they say about the desert, 
its living hell. During the day it feels as if you have been thrown 
in a furnace but at night it’s as cold as the middle of winter 
in Europe. “Ey, Boss, ‘e’s awake.” Came a 
voice from behind and then a kick in the back. “Get up.” 
For a few seconds I didn’t move and with another kick in the 
back I realised it was me he was talking to. Slowly I pull myself up. 
The first thing I see is a pair of dusty leather boots at the end of 
shotgun chaps. The hilt of a shiny revolver was sticking out of a 
leather holster. He was wearing a white shirt and a beige fringe 
jacket. And finally, on his face a mask and on his head a pure white 
Stetson.  
  
 
  
“What happened new guy?” 
he said as I stood up and looked around, “Ye didn’t last 
out there.” The men started laughing. “I’m like 
you.” I said clenching my teeth. “Well then.” Said 
the boss, he took out his gun and handed it to me, “Pull the 
trigger.” He was looking in the direction of the laughing 
captive, “One of us was gonna shoot him anyway, why don’t 
you do the honours? Or else you will be joining him.” I had no 
choice, it was him or me. I know if I hesitate I won’t do it. I 
can feel my hands are already sweating. It’s now or never. I 
aimed, closed my eyes and fired. The trigger was easy to pull and the 
bullet left the barrel with a spark followed by smoke. I wasn’t 
expecting the force of the recoil. The gun gave one large jerk 
backwards and up as if struggling to escape, but I managed to hold 
on.  
 
  
After the bang the prisoner fell 
to his knees and lay lifeless on the sand. “It’s a tough 
life out here in the desert. This is where we here outlaws live. 
Every day we fight to survive.” The boss stared at the 
prisoner, “Fine we’ll see how long you last.” He 
slapped me on the back. The gun slipped through my fingers and fell 
on the floor. The men all started laughing and walked to sit around 
the fire. The gun was lying in a puddle of blood. I looked over at 
the dead man, the horror had been frozen on his face.  
 
  
I picked up the gun and wiped it 
clean then placed it in my holster which, up until now, had been 
empty. I smile, I am officially one of them. The compass of my life 
has been changed to point towards the outlaws.  
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