illphated
The Last Cowboy on Mars
Published on illphated.com
They threw everything at him—lies, laws, lasers. But he kept riding.
His name? Doesn’t matter. Not in the databases. Not in the algorithms. The corps deleted him from history the moment he went off-grid. But out past the terraformed zones of New Houston, he was legend. A cowboy in a red dust coat, riding the edge of the solar frontier with nothing but a revolver, a rusted Bible, and a lifetime of grudges.
The suits in orbit thought they’d broken men like him a long time ago. Thought freedom was obsolete. Thought Mars could be bought, mined, taxed, uploaded, and branded.
They were wrong.
He wasn’t some rebel influencer or cyber-sellout with a sponsored manifesto. He was flesh, blood, grit—and he’d watched too many good people disappear into biometric vaults and “citizen reprogramming centers.” He knew what it meant when the corporations said safety.
The cowboy rode the red dunes like a ghost of Earth’s past, dodging tracking satellites, rerouting supply drops meant for blacksite facilities, jamming surveillance drones with antique tech they never saw coming. One time, they sent a bounty hunter AI—cost them 9 figures and a kill-switch payload. He took it down with a lasso, a wrench, and the kind of faith you can’t synthesize.
He didn’t ride for profit. He rode for truth.
The corporations tried smear campaigns. Labeled him a terrorist, a zealot, a relic. But the people whispered his name like a prayer in the Martian underground.
Every time they tried to erase him, he came back harder.
One day, he hijacked a transmission tower and broadcast six words across every corporate channel, every screen, every AI-assistant across Mars:
“God. Family. Country. You forgot.”
And then he was gone—vanished into the neon-lit dusk of the Martian wilds, where algorithms can’t follow and souls can’t be sold.
They never found him.
But his legend grew.
Because the last cowboy on Mars wasn’t fighting for himself.
He was fighting for a future they couldn’t own.