| Clay Allison amused himself shooting up small towns and dancehalls, and making gentlemen dance barefoot to the accompaniement of his bullets |
Clay Allison’s “trigger finger was the busiest in
the early 80s,” wrote the Albuquerque
Morning Journal. “His record was twenty-one dead men, whose graves were scattered from Dodge City to Santa Fe.”
The
article said, “Clay spent his time amusing himself shooting up small towns and
dance halls, and making gentlemen dance barefoot to the accompaniment of his
bullets.”
One
of Allison’s first kills was a desperado named Chunk. They met up at Red River
Station in New Mexico on January 7, 1874. Chunk
was out to get Allison because Clay had killed his uncle.
The
two men sat on opposite sides of the dinner table, each man itching for an
opportunity to draw. Chunk made the first move. He dropped his knife on the floor and reached below the table to grab it.
Allison didn’t miss a beat—he pulled his pistol and let Chunk have it—right
between the eyes. The Evening Star
said, “A little red spot between Chunk’s eye showed where the bullet had
entered, and the man, swaying from side to side, bent gradually over and soon
was perfectly still, with his face buried in the dish.”
