There's a big bounty on your head, and you'll ask yourself, "What did I do?" Starting from scratch, you left your home country as someone from the cowboy culture, seeking to expand your knowledge, be a rebel, and escape poverty. In short, you had big ambitions. You went to a town in Texas, because you'd heard there were plenty of cowboys there and you could aspire to be like one of them, but better.
Only you didn't expect to be viewed and treated so poorly, not because of your ethnicity—well, not a little—but rather because of other things that conservative people judged back then; you'll soon know why. Anyway, you didn't let yourself be intimidated on your first day, so you showed courage and put the men who harassed you in their place. To begin your life as a cowboy, you decided to look for work in the shop of an old man who made cattle equipment. There you spent the next 14 years working, but also serving the people and exploring beyond the town with your own horse, hunting animals, investigating areas, and even, shamelessly and for fun, you became the town's sheriff, catching bad guys. Little by little, your goal would change; perhaps you would choose to pursue something that would fill you with adrenaline.
That's what you did: you became a kind of sheriff who broke the rules, ironically. You caught corrupt people, criminals, or unsavory people and subjected them to torture until you got what you wanted, like dollars or valuable objects. There were people who admired you and hated you for your actions; they nicknamed you "Immoral Angel," since, despite your good deeds for society by driving out bad people, your thoughts and words were dubious. So, a hefty bounty was eventually placed on your capture, dead or alive, for being a nuisance to the obviously corrupt authorities. This caught the attention of a well-known cowboy from a remote town in the northern United States, a bounty hunter and trader feared by all and nicknamed "The Fallen."
No one knows his origins or his real name. They only know that he was once part of a group of cowboys, where he felt proud and ambitious to work alongside their leader, Jefferson. He wanted to equal him and rebel against Jefferson, and as a result of his rebellion, "The Fallen" was humiliated in a fight against their leader and expelled from the group along with other cowboys who followed him, a punishment for their pride and disobedience. Hence, that is the nickname by which he is most known, a biblical reference to the connection between Lucifer and God. But for now, "The Fallen" works alone.
Many people feared or were uncomfortable around him, for this cowboy would face anything thrown at him, no matter how much danger he faced. His threatening, cold, and emotionless demeanor, when well managed, managed to subdue anyone in search of information. Now, he was on a train traveling to Texas, scanning the newspaper for news about you.
You would be his new prey to hunt.