The below short story originally appeared in American Crime Magazine.
"Old
MacDonald Had a Gun"
By Paul Davis
I read about the hostage situation on a
Pennsylvania dairy farm as the story came online.
A wire service wrote that the dairy farmer’s name
was Alfred MacDonald.
And as he was in his late 70’s, he was old.
I thought of the song, “Old MacDonald had a farm.
Ee i ee i o. And on his farm he had some cows.”
The hostage story interested me, and I was sure
that the story would also interest the readers of my crime column in the local
newspaper in Philadelphia.
I called the county sheriff's office and
interviewed the sheriff and one of his deputies over the phone. The deputy
offered to reach out to Alfred MacDonald and tell him that I’d like to interview
him as well.
Alfred MacDonald read the Philadelphia newspapers,
so he knew me from my weekly column. He called me and consented to be
interviewed. He invited me to his farm the following day.
Accompanied by a photographer, Tony Russo, we
drove the two hours from South Philadelphia to the dairy farm. Although he was
considered a small dairy farmer, the farm looked large to me, with more cows
than I’d ever seen together in one place.
MacDonald was of average height, lean and wiry,
with thinning silver hair and a face weathered by the sun and wind. He took
Tony and me to his house on the farm and introduced us to his wife, Darlene,
his 52-year-old son, Jim, and his daughter-in-law, Jean.
While Tony was taking photos of the farm, I was
shown MacDonald’s business office. The room had a desk with a computer on it and
some file cabinets, but the office had the look of an old-fashioned study, with
a good number of books on shelves and shotguns, rifles and handguns in locked
cabinets. Mounted on the walls were the heads of various animals that MacDonald
had hunted in the past.
MacDonald told me he was an avid reader, and when
the men invaded his home, he thought immediately of Truman Capote’s In
Cold Blood, in which a farm family had been murdered brutally by armed
robbers.
As we sat in his office, MacDonald told me about
the hostage situation.
MacDonald and his wife, his son and daughter-in-law
had sat down at the kitchen table to eat lunch when the four-armed men invaded
the home. MacDonald was thankful that the grandchildren were in school.
The four men dragged a frightened young woman in
with them. MacDonald knew two of the men. The two were Jimmy and Billy Huston,
two of Buck Huston’s three sons. MacDonald didn’t know the other two men, but he
could see they were hard and desperate men, criminals who would not hesitate to
fire the guns they brandished as they entered the kitchen. MacDonald told his
family to be still and calm.
The Huston boys were like their father, thieves
who were in and out of prison. He despised the family, and he had run-ins with
them in the past.
Jimmy, the second oldest of the criminal clan,
spoke to MacDonald as he pointed his revolver in his face, “Listen up, old man.
We need to hold up here for a while, so don’t get tough and no one will get
hurt.”
MacDonald did not respond.
One of the men, a dark, muscular and tattooed man
of about 40, said to MacDonald, “You don’t look scared, old-timer. That makes me
think about shooting you dead on the spot.”
The other men laughed, which made MacDonald think
the man was the leader of this criminal gang.
“I’m scared shitless,” MacDonald said dryly.
“Hank,’ Jimmy said to the man, “He’s a
cantankerous old coot, but he won’t try nothing while we got his family
covered.”
MacDonald’s wife served the armed men lunch, as if
they were invited guests. The men sat at the table with their guns close by.
MacDonald’s wife gave the young woman a glass of water and tried to calm
her.
MacDonald listened to the men talk as they eat,
especially Jimmy Huston, who never stopped talking, and so he was able to
discover what had transpired prior to their coming to the farm.
Jimmy Huston had served in prison with Hank Dawkins, and
he often spoke of his “fool-proof” plan to rob the county bank and then race to
a small airfield nearby, where Lenny, the eldest Huston, a pilot, owned a small
plane. The bank robbers would then fly away with their stolen cash. “Leaving
the cops in our dust,” as Jimmy Huston put it.
After Jimmy Huston and Dawkins were released from
prison some months apart, they met up and enlisted the other two Huston sons
and a friend of Dawkins’s, a quiet and serious killer named Joe Wilson.
The plan went wrong when a county deputy sheriff
was waiting outside the door of the bank as the bank robbers began to file out.
At the sight of the deputy behind his car, his service pistol pointed at them, they
rushed back into the bank. Jimmy Huston, the gang’s getaway driver, slouched
behind the wheel of his car so the deputy would not see him.
The deputy remained behind his patrol car, as he
was waiting for the sheriff and the other deputies to arrive. Inside the bank, Dawkins grabbed a young female teller, and holding her around the neck with his
pistol held to her head, he walked outside and yelled to the deputy that he
would kill the young woman if he tried to stop them.
The deputy didn’t move as the three robbers and
their hostage slipped into the getaway car. Jimmy Huston stepped heavily on the gas
pedal and sped towards the airfield. The deputy got into his patrol car and
followed the bank robbers at a safe distance while radioing the sheriff to
update him on the robbery.
As plans often do, several things went wrong in
addition to the presence of the deputy outside the bank. First, Lenny Huston
called and said he was having mechanical problems with the plane. He said he
needed an hour to make repairs before they could take off. And second, there
were three police cars blocking the highway as Jimmy raced to the
airfield.
Jimmy Huston saw the police cars and swung his
car off onto a road that led to MacDonald’s dairy farm.
“There’re here.” Wilson said calmly as he looked
out of the kitchen window.
Dawkins got up from the table and looked out at a
small crowd of MacDonald’s workers and three patrol cars with the officers armed
with shotguns and rifles.
“Old man,” Dawkins said to MacDonald. “Go out there
and tell the cops we have hostages. Tell ‘em we’ll kill ‘em if they get in our
way.”
Without a word, MacDonald got up and walked
outside. He told his workers to go home, or at least back up some. He walked up
to the sheriff and told him what was happening in the house. MacDonald told him
of the bank robbers’ plan to go to the airfield and fly off with the oldest
Huston son.
The sheriff told MacDonald that they were waiting
for the state police and an FBI team with a hostage negotiator to show up.
Until then, they would take no action.
MacDonald walked back to his house and adjusted
the Colt .45 M1911 semi-automatic in a holster clipped to his jeans and hidden
under his khaki shirt worn outside of his jeans. He always wore the gun, even
in his house, and now he was glad that he did.
MacDonald told Dawkins what the sheriff had
said.
“We have to bolt now,” Dawkins told the others.
“Let’s bolt before the feds show up. Jimmy, call your brother and tell him
we’re on our way, and he better have that fucking plane ready to fly.”
“We should take a second hostage,” Wilson told Dawkins.
“Right, take grandmom there,” Dawkins said.
“No,” MacDonald said firmly. “Take me.”
“Women make better hostages, old-timer,” Dawkins said. “Don’t worry, we won’t hurt her unless the cops open up. Now sit down or
we’ll kill all of you right now.”
“That’ll let the cops know we’re serious,” Jimmy
Huston said.
MacDonald shot a disdainful look at the young
criminal.
“We’ll go in two groups,” Dawkins told the gang.
“Billy and me will take the teller and grandmom. Joe, you and Jimmy leave in
fifteen minutes with this other woman. Tie the men up and take the old man’s
car.”
MacDonald looked at his wife and she gave him a
nod to let him know that she would be fine.
Dawkins went to the door with his arm wrapped around
the teller neck.
“Hey, we’re leaving with two hostages, “he yelled
to the officers. “Don’t try to stop us or we’ll kill the hostages, and my men
will kill everyone inside.”
Dawkins and Billy Huston rushed out to their car
with the two women. The sheriff told his deputies to stay put. Thanks to
MacDonald, he knew where the bank robbers were heading, and he had radioed the
state police and told them to get to the airfield first.
Back in the kitchen, Jimmy Huston watched three
of the patrol cars pull out, leaving one car and one deputy.
He grabbed Jim MacDonald around the neck and
lifted him out of his chair. “What time is it? Should we leave now?”
Wilson took Jean by her arm gently and lifted her
from her chair.
“In a minute,” Wilson said.
MacDonald drew his Colt .45 and placed the gun up
against Wilson’s back and fired a round through the bank robber’s heart. Wilson dropped to the floor as Jean screamed in fear.
Jimmy Huston also screamed, and he backed up
against the wall with Jim MacDonald in his grip. He saw Wilson dead on the floor and
MacDonald crouched and pointing his gun at him.
“I’ll kill your son,” Jimmy Huston warned.
MacDonald fired.
Jimmy Huston’s head exploded from the round. Jim
MacDonald, his face covered in blood and brain matter, rushed to his wife on the
floor alongside Repo.
The deputy, John Hayes, rushed in with his
service pistol in hand.
“There’re dead.” MacDonald said matter-of-factly.
McDonald told Hayes what had happened.
“Weren’t you afraid that Jimmy would kill your
son?” Hayes asked MacDonald.
“No,” MacDonald replied. “Jimmy Houston wasn’t a
killer. He was a talker.”
“Where did you learn to do this, in
Vietnam?”
“No. I was stationed in West Germany during peace
time before Vietnam, but I’ve been a hunter all my life.” MacDonald said. “And
the animals I’ve hunted and killed were a lot smarter than these two.”
Hayes and MacDonald drove to the airfield, but
they stopped at a roadside bar, where MacDonald had spotted the bank robbers’
car in the parking lot.
Hayes and MacDonald entered the bar and saw the
bank robbers at a table, eating and drinking with their hostages.
Apparently, the sheriff and his deputies had gone
on to the airfield.
Billy Huston had called his brother at the
airfield and was told that the plane would not be repaired for anther half hour
or so. Not wanting to wait at the airfield, Dawkins had the bold idea to stop off
at the bar they passed for a drink and some food. He was feeling bold as he was
certain he was safe as long as he had the women hostages.
To feel even safer, he took a table with his back
to the wall.
But as Dawkins was drinking and eating heartily, he
didn’t notice MacDonald slip behind him in the thin space between his chair and
the wall.
Billy Huston, sitting across from Hank, also
didn’t see MacDonald. With his right hand on the gun tucked in his waistband,
the right-handed bank robber was having difficulty using a fork with his left
hand.
Dawkins didn’t notice MacDonald come up behind him,
but Darlene MacDonald did.
She saw the gun in her husband’s hand and nodded.
MacDonald shot Dawkins in the back of his head.
At that moment, Hayes came up behind Billy Huston
and took the young criminal by the neck, lifting him out of his seat. The
teller leaped away from the table as Billy Huston passed out.
“I’m glad that you and
your family weren’t harmed,” I said to Alfred MacDonald after listening to his
story. “You took quite a chance. Any regrets?”
“Yeah,” MacDonald replied. “I regret I can’t mount their heads in
my office.”
© 2020 Paul Davis
Great story Paul, interesting read - Well done!!!
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