LOST AND FOUND – PART I
by Dawn F.
CHANCE MEETING
Chapter 1
Joe was bored and he was surprised that he was bored. San Francisco
had so much to offer a young man, but nothing seemed to be very interesting
anymore. His biggest problem was that he couldn’t get his older brother,
Adam, out of his mind. “Six years,” he thought, “it’s been six years.”
Adam had gone to Chicago with an old friend from college, Allan, who had showed
up at the Ponderosa asking him for help. Two weeks had gone by with
no word. Then another two weeks went by, and still nothing.
Extremely worried, Ben had gone to Chicago himself and when he talked to
the local authorities he had been horrified when he was told Adam’s friend
was dead; he had been murdered. As for Adam, no one had even heard of
him.
Ben had stayed as long as he could, but found no trace of his missing son.
He advertised a reward but no one with any legitimate information came forward.
Then he even went to a local detective agency run by a man named Pinkerton
and hired them to look. For a month the detectives tried to turn up
any information at all, but could not find a thing. Adam had just vanished.
They took it very hard that they couldn’t help and all promised to keep looking,
on their own time, right before they saw Ben off at the train station.
Those six years had gone by, but Joe somehow knew in his heart that Adam
was not dead; he clung desperately to that hope, they all did.
He was very deep in thought as he walked along so he almost didn’t glance
in the window of a gentlemen’s club as he passed. His brain didn’t register
the face he had seen until he was almost a block away. When it did
his heart started to pound and he turned and hurried back. He stepped
right up to the window and cupped his hands around his eyes to block out
any glare and saw from the side a tall dark-haired man working behind a bar.
The man was efficiently setting things up for the day with an economy of
movement. Joe stared intently, watching the way the man moved and his
heart began to beat even faster. The man then turned toward the window
and spoke to someone Joe couldn’t see. The other person must have said
something amusing because the man laughed, white teeth flashing in a dark
beard.
The pounding of his heart roared in Joe’s ears and he rushed to the door
and ran in. He was in such a hurry he didn’t notice the enormous, muscle-bound
man guarding the door until he was grabbed by the scruff of his neck by a
huge hand.
The doorman said, “You can’t come in here unless you got yourself a membership,
and I don’t think y’all do.” He started dragging Joe out saying, “Sorry he
almost slipped past me Mr. Eden, I’ll jest toss him out.”
“No, wait!” Joe pleaded trying to dig his heels in. “Adam, is that
you?” he pleaded in a last ditch attempt to get at the man behind the bar.
The bouncer stopped dead in his tracks and looked at the man he had called
“Mr. Eden.” He must not have liked what he saw because his expression
became almost fearful. Joe squirmed around and managed to take a brief
look and was shocked when he saw that the man he thought was Adam was furious.
Joe’s captor shook him and started to drag him out the door again when Mr.
Eden spoke, “It’s alright Charlie, you can let the kid go,” which the doorman
did immediately. Joe slowly turned and he saw the other man watching
him with narrowed, intense eyes – a look that was very familiar. “How
did you know my first name, kid?”
His mouth was so dry Joe couldn’t speak at first, but then he managed to
croak, “I know your first name because you’re my brother.”
This Adam named Eden rolled his eyes and the bouncer laughed nastily.
“How many people does that make claiming I’m a long-lost relative so far this
year, Charlie?” Adam said.
“Prob’ly ‘bout twenty.”
“I think you’re right,” Adam said as he cocked his head to the side and
looked Joe up and down. Then he addressed the bouncer again.
“Well, Charlie, I’m inclined to be in a generous mood this morning.”
He turned back to Joe, “Come here, kid, you can have a beer and tell
me your story.”
Joe glanced nervously at Charlie then moved slowly to the bar. He
sat down on a stool as Adam Eden placed a mug of beer in front of him.
“It’s not really my story, it’s more like your story.”
Adam continued working behind the bar, “Alright then, tell me my story.”
Joe was rattled and blurted out the first thought that came into his head,
“Aren’t you going to have one?”
Adam gave Joe a dark sideways glance, “No thanks, kid, I don’t drink.”
“You don’t drink and you work in a saloon?” Joe mentally kicked himself
and tried to organize his scrambled thoughts. Everything this man was
doing and saying was keeping him off balance.
“I don’t work here,” Adam said as he stopped moving around to lean against
the bar sideways on one elbow. He pulled out a narrow cigar and lit
it. “Get to the story, I don’t have all day.”
Joe opened his mouth to respond when he realized he just wasn’t sure what
to start with. When he met Adam’s eyes with a blank stare of his own
the other man shook his head and spoke, “So, you’re trying to tell me I’m
your brother. That’s hard to believe, son, I don’t look anything at
all like you.”
“We have different mothers.”
Adam raised one eyebrow, “Nice touch, that neatly explains the lack of resemblance.”
He looked at Joe expectantly.
“Our brother, Hoss, has a different mother too.”
Adam gave Joe a sardonic look, “Just how many of us are there?”
“Only us three,” Joe said, “Pa’s been married and widowed three times.”
“Well, at least he had enough sense to stop while he was behind,” Adam gave
a short, mocking laugh.
The younger man was starting to get a little irritated and his face turned
slightly red as he said, “Why don’t you tell me why so many people claim you
as a long-lost relative?”
“You play dumb really well, kid,” Adam said, then looked at the bouncer,
“tell him why Charlie.”
The bouncer laughed, “Mr. Eden’s jest ‘bout one of the richest men in this
here part of the state. Ev’ybody knows that.”
Joe’s mouth fell open, “Really? But why do you work here, then?”
“I told you before, kid, I don’t work here; I own this place.”
Someone came in then and all three men turned to the newcomer. He
was an average looking man with brown hair and eyes. He anxiously addressed
Adam. “I got here as fast as I could when I got your message, Mr. Eden.
Didn’t Bob show up this morning?”
Adam straightened up and put out his cigar as his face became serious.
“No he didn’t Jack,” he said as he came out from behind the bar and went to
the nearest table. “Come, sit down, there’s something I need to talk
to you about.”
When they were both seated Jack asked, “Did he get into another fight?”
Adam shook his head, “No, not in the way you mean. I’m sorry Jack,
but Bob is dead. He was murdered last night.”
Jack gasped and looked at his employer in shock, “But why? I mean, how?
What happened?”
“I’m not completely sure, but you can bet I’m going to find out.”
Adam crossed his arms and leaned back in his chair, “as far as I can see
it looks like whoever did it was a professional.” Jack still couldn’t
take it in, “But why would someone hire a professional killer to murder Bob?”
“Because he worked for me, Jack. All the harassment we’ve been dealing
with for the last six months hasn’t shut me down, so now the perpetrator has
upped the ante to murder.”
Appalled by what he was hearing, Joe turned around on his stool. Adam
looked up at him, “Did you get all that, kid? Still sure you want to
claim me?”
Turning back to Jack, Adam said, “I know you and Bob were close, and I was
pretty sure he didn’t have any family to notify. Do you know of any?”
The other man just shook his head, staring down at his hands in his lap.
“I didn’t think so,” Adam raised his right hand and smoothed down his beard.
“Someone has declared war on me and mine. I promise you Jack, when I
find out who did this I am going to take him down myself.” His employee
looked up at that, “What can I do to help?”
Smiling, Adam said, “You just keep your eyes and ears open and report anything
you hear to me.” He stood then, “I have to leave soon and make the arrangements
for Bob’s funeral. I’ve sent out notices letting all employees know
what happened. Every business I own, except the hotel, will close day
after tomorrow at one o’clock so anyone who wants to can attend the funeral
at two o’clock.”
He leaned down and looked Jack in the eye. “I need you to help spread
the word to all employees that if anyone threatens them, they are to come
immediately to me. And if anyone decides to leave my employ out of fear
I will not hold it against them.” Straightening up he continued, “I
have a lot of people coming from the agency in Chicago and they should be
here in a couple of days.”
Jack nodded his head, “I remember now, you used to work with Pinkerton didn’t
you?”
“That’s right, first in New York and then in Chicago. I’ve called
in a lot of favors and a lot of friends. Whoever did this is going
to pay.”
Adam looked at Joe then, “Come with me, kid. I have to get going,
but you can finish your story while I change,” he said as he went to a door
near the bar and went in. Joe was close behind. He walked into
a large office and Adam told him to have a seat as he pulled his shirt off
before going through another door. Joe couldn’t stop a gasp of horror
and the other man heard it. He came back and all Joe could do was just
look at him with wide eyes.
Adam laughed, “Sorry, Joe, I keep forgetting about these scars and how they
affect other people.” The mass of scars on Adam’s chest was just as
bad as what Joe had seen on his back. “What happened?” he finally managed
to say.
“Someone tried to beat me to death and when that didn’t work, they tried
to stab me to death. In fact, I was dead, at least for a while, and
when I came to I was on a table in a hospital morgue in New York. Fortunately
for me a very talented surgeon managed to put me back together. Which
brings me back to your story – everyone around here knows I woke up without
any memories at all. The only thing I knew for sure was my name is Adam.”
“What about the Eden last name?”
“Pinkerton gave me that last name when he hired me. He thought it
was a good joke. It stuck, and I didn’t really care. One name
was is as good as another when you don’t know who you are,” Adam shrugged
and went back through the other door.
Joe sat down and looked around the office, and spent some time considering
everything he had heard. “So you didn’t remember anything at all?” he
eventually called through the open door.
“No, not a thing,” Adam replied and came back into the office dressed in
an expensive dark-gray suit.
Joe stared at this elegant, well-groomed, yet powerful-looking man, from
his brilliantly polished boots to his closely clipped dark beard. And
then the importance of something this Adam had said came to him.
“You called me Joe.”
“What?”
“When we first came in here and I reacted to your scars you called me Joe.
I know I never told you my name.”
The other man stood very still, looking at Joe with hooded eyes. “You’re
right, I did and I’m sure you didn’t tell me your name too,” he turned away
to take a black hat down from a row of pegs on the wall, and then he turned
back to Joe. “Hmmm…I have to say this is getting much more interesting.”
He put his hat on with his left hand and that is when Joe noticed his wedding
ring.
“You’re married!?!,” he almost yelped.
Adam laughed, “Very close to five years now, everyone knows that.
Damn, you really are good at playing dumb, if you are playing dumb.
Where are you staying in town?”
“At the Eden House,” Joe said then realized who must own it. “Oh.”
“Perfect, and yes The Eden House is mine. Do you have anyone with
you?”
“Both Pa and Hoss.”
“Alright, I tell you what kid, you bring them to my office at three o’clock
today and we’ll see what happens. Just go to the front desk and they
will have someone show you up,” he was standing holding the office door open.
“So, what’s our illustrious last name?”
“Cartwright.”
“Cartwright,” Adam repeated, “well at least that’s a lot better than the
last one. I wouldn’t wish the last name of Winkleblech on my worst enemy.”
Joe laughed as he got to his feet and Adam smiled at him. “Well, Joseph
Cartwright, if you are telling me the truth that’s wonderful.” Adam
paused and his face became hard, his eyes intense, “but if I find you’ve just
been messing with me you will regret it.” He left the office then and
Joe trailed behind him until the two were standing on the sidewalk out in
front of the club.
Adam turned to him once more. “For both our sakes, Joe, I hope you
are telling me the truth,” he said then turned and walked away leaving Joe
with the strange feeling of actually being afraid of a man he had known and
trusted all his life.
******************************************************************************************************************************************
THE TRUTH
Chapter 2
At a quarter to three Joe was starting to panic; he couldn’t find his father
or his brother and time was almost up. He was standing in the lobby
of the Eden House when he caught a whiff of the food being served in the restaurant
to his right. That’s when he realized he hadn’t looked for Hoss there.
Slapping a hand to his forehead, he ran in and spotted Hoss immediately.
Darting past the host, he walked as quickly as he could up to his brother
and grabbed him by the arm. Hoss looked up at him with a frown, but
that changed to a smile as he recognized Joe.
“Come on,” Joe said, “we have to go.”
“What?”
“We have to go,” Joe repeated and started tugging on Hoss’s arm. “I
don’t have time to explain, we just have to go right now if you ever want
to see Adam again in this life.” At the mention of their older brother’s
name Hoss stood and followed Joe willingly, but then stopped saying something
about not having paid his bill.
“Don’t worry about it, we’re related to the owner.”
“What?” Hoss said again.
Joe sighed, “Look, all I can tell you is Adam owns this hotel and he goes
by the last name of Eden.”
“You ain’t makin’ any sense Joe,” Hoss said as they stopped at the front
desk.
Joe looked at the clock and was relieved to see it wasn’t quite three yet.
“Excuse me,” he said to the clerk, “we have an appointment with Mr. Eden.”
The man behind the desk turned a cold face toward him and said, “Mr. Cartwright?”
At Joe’s nod he motioned for them to follow. He went to a door behind
the desk and unlocked it. He opened the door and stood to the side as
they went in, came in himself, then closed the door and locked it behind them.
They now faced two doors in the wall directly ahead of them. The clerk
unlocked the one to the right and opened it to reveal a flight of stairs.
He stepped back and motioned Joe and Hoss through before he spoke.
“Please knock when you reach the top sir,” he said quietly then stepped back
and closed the door. Joe and Hoss had started up the stairs when they
heard the lock click behind them.
“This is just weird, Joe.”
“I know, you should have been there when I talked to him this morning.
I have no doubt at all that he is Adam, but it was like he was wearing a mask.
I could see the old Adam behind it, but he wouldn’t let it out,” he shook
his head, “it’s hard to explain, but you’ll see.”
They reached the top of the stairs and Joe knocked.
The door was opened by a huge, tall man who looked them over carefully before
stepping aside. Joe and Hoss passed through the door into a long hallway.
Their escort locked the door behind them and as they followed him down the
hallway they noticed that all the doors were shut, but they could hear activity
going on inside.
When they reached the last door on the right the huge, bald man knocked
then opened it, ushering them into an office. A small, frail-looking
black woman rose from her seat behind a desk and gave them a sweet, sunny
smile. She then turned her attention to the huge man still standing
in the doorway. “Thank you, Wes, I can take it from here.”
The human mountain gave Hoss and Joe a suspicious look then said, “I’ll
be right outside if you need me,” and he was gone, closing the door behind
him.
“Please excuse his unfriendly manner, Wes is very devoted to Mr. Eden and
takes his protection very seriously.” She smiled again, “We all do.
Please have a seat, Mr. Eden’s 2:30 appointment is running a little late.”
The two men settled themselves on a short sofa and she was about to sit
down again when a voice bellowed, “Marie!” from the inner office. She
laughed a little then went to the inner office door, opened it, and went
in. Joe and Hoss couldn’t help but notice that she had a pronounced
limp. The door opened again right after her and a short, painfully
thin man popped out. The door closed again and they could hear the
two voices talking quietly for a moment.
Marie opened the door and came out. She went to the hallway door,
opened it saying, “Wes, would you mind escorting Mr. Grunthaner out of the
building? Then Mr. Eden asks that you have a 24-hour guard posted on
the accounting office.”
The little man went pale at that, then completely white when Wes appeared
in the doorway. Putting his head down, he scuttled out and Marie closed
the door.
She looked at Hoss and Joe then and said, “Please go in now.” They
stood, went through the inner door, and she closed it behind them.
Adam looked up as he tossed a sheaf of papers into a basket on the edge
of his desk and said, “Well, kid, you made it. I wasn’t sure if you
would.” He looked up at Hoss who had stopped dead in his tracks when
he got a look at Adam. His open, guileless face had everything he was
thinking written plainly on it.
The man behind the desk cocked his head to the side and laughed, “I don’t
think the big guy here shares your certainty that I’m your brother.
But you weren’t kidding, we really don’t look anything alike.” He stood
and gestured for the two to have a seat, which they did in two leather armchairs
placed at right angles to the desk. A knock sounded then and the black
woman opened the door to look in.
“Yes, Marie?”
“Another Mr. Cartwright is on his way up.”
“Good, please send him right in when he gets here.”
“That must be Pa, but how did he know about this?”
Adam gave Joe a knowing smile, “I figured you might have a little trouble
finding both of them, so I had some of my people watch for him to send him
up if he returned.”
They heard Marie speaking to someone and the door opened. Ben walked
in with a puzzled look on his face, glanced at his two seated sons, but stopped
dead in the same way Hoss had when he saw Adam. He started to
speak, but Adam put up a hand to stop him, “Don’t say anything,” he said as
he slowly stood, staring at Ben with fascination.
He slowly came out from behind the desk, his narrowing eyes still locked
on Ben’s face. “Ash Hollow,” he said and stopped moving. Shaking
his head slightly as though trying to clear it he took a few more steps forward,
“You had black hair then.”
Raising a hand to rub his temple Adam clenched his teeth and closed his
eyes. “Someone had just died, a woman.” He raised blazing eyes
to look at Ben again and took a few more steps forward. “Her name was
Ingrid, no….no, it was Inger,” turning his head to the side he looked at
Hoss. “She was your mother,” he said then he grimaced, putting both
hands to his head. Ben stepped forward and took hold of Adam by the
shoulders to steady him. Now both Hoss and Joe were on their feet.
Adam stood there with his head hanging and his eyes closed as he shook with
pain. It soon eased and he opened his eyes to look at Joe, “Damn, kid,
you were telling me the truth. I can’t believe it.”
Ben still had a tight grip on Adam’s shoulders and pulled him into an embrace.
“Would someone please tell me what the hell is going on here?”
They were all startled when they heard Adam making an odd, choking sound
against his father’s shoulder. When he leaned back in his father’s arms
they could see he was laughing and shaking his head, “Now why does that sound
so familiar?” he said as he glanced at Joe. He stepped back out of
Ben’s arms and went behind the desk, took a piece of paper, and quickly wrote
on it as he bellowed, “Marie!”
The woman popped through the door and limped up to his desk. As Adam
handed her the folded note he asked, “Theodora does have hours at the hospital
today, doesn’t she?” Marie nodded. “Please ask Willie to take
this note over to her as quickly as his little legs can carry him, even though
it’s just across the street.”
She smiled then, gave the three other men in the room a curious look then
went quietly out the door.
Adam rubbed his temple again and came up to his father. He took Ben
by the arm and led him to a small sofa against the wall. Joe came to
sit next to his father so Adam could take the facing chair. Once he
was seated Adam rubbed both temples and said, “I can’t believe it, for six
years not a clue, not an inkling as to who I was, and now this.”
Ben looked at him with concern, “Is it that painful?”
“You could say that,” his eldest son said through clenched teeth and put
his head down to rub the back of his neck. In a minute he looked up
and took a deep breath. “And that was only a few memories. I think
my brain would have melted if it had been many more.”
Ben turned to Joe with a questioning look.
“Well, Pa, I just happened to be walking down the street this morning caught
a glimpse of a face through a window that looked familiar,” Joe gestured helplessly,
“and there he was.”
Adam sat up, seemingly almost recovered, when the door flew open and a beautiful,
black-haired woman rushed in. The four men automatically stood.
“What’s wrong? What happened?” she asked, grabbing Adam and started trying
to examine him where he stood.
“Nothing, I’m fine.”
“When I got your note I thought something had happened to you,” she said
anxiously as she tipped her heart-shaped face up to him.
“Something has, but it’s not a medical emergency,” he said then trapped
her hands in his. “Stop that. We have company,” he said as he
nodded toward the other men.
The glance she gave Ben turned into a double take; she looked back and forth
between the father and son a few times then slowly walked up to the white-haired
man, her eyes never leaving his face. When she reached him she gently
put a hand on either side of his head and moved it to one side, and then the
other.
“You’re his father, aren’t you?” she said.
He smiled, nodded down at her, and was almost knocked backward when she
burst into tears and threw her arms around him.
Adam was laughing as he came forward and pried his wife off his father.
He put his arms around her and stood there patting her on the back, giving
her a chance to pull herself together. When the storm seemed to be over
he reached into a pocket and pulled out a handkerchief, which he handed to
her. As he put his hands on her shoulders he looked down into her face
and asked, “Are you alright now?” She nodded then hid her face in his
chest, ‘I’m so embarrassed, I’ve never done anything like that before.”
“I know,” Adam chuckled as he looked at Joe. “In case you were wondering,
Joe, this is the talented surgeon I told you about who put me back together.
She’s also my wife, Theadora.”
All three men looked at her in surprise and when she looked up Adam turned
her around to face them, keeping his hands on her shoulders. “Thea,
this is my father Benjamin Cartwright.” She smiled sheepishly at him
and nodded. Ben smiled back.
Her husband turned her to the right, “And this is my brother Hoss Cartwright,”
she gave Hoss her hand and smiled up into his face, “You must have had a different
mother,” she said. “Yes, ma’am,” Hoss said shyly and she patted his
hand.
Adam turned her to the left, “And this is my youngest brother, Joseph Cartwright,”
he said leaning down and speaking low into her ear, “he’s the one who found
me.”
She moved away from Adam, stepped right up to Joe and put her arms around
him and squeezed him as hard as she could. Her grip was so strong she
startled a small grunt out of him. “Thank you, Joe, I’ll be grateful
to you for as long as I live,” she said then stepped back to stand next to
Adam. She smiled up into her husband’s face, but the smile faded when
she noticed how pale he was. He knew she was about to make another attempt
to examine him so he distracted her by saying, “Don’t you think it’s time
for you to head home?” His tactic worked.
“Oh, dear Lord, you’re right! I have so much to do before dinner.”
She rushed to the door, but looked back at Adam, “You are bringing them home
with you?”
“Of course,” he responded and she gave him a pleased grin, “Have they been
staying here?”
At his nod she said, “I’ll tell Marie to have their things moved to the
house,” then she slipped out the door. The room seemed strangely quiet
after she was gone.
“Well, that’s something I haven’t seen before,” Adam mused, stroking his
beard.
“What?” Joe asked.
“I’ve never seen her rattled.”
Ben couldn’t believe it, “Never?”
“No, never. I mean I’ve seen her cry before, but never lose control
like that,” he grinned wickedly, “I just might be able to have a little fun
with this.”
“How long have you been hitched, Adam?” Hoss asked.
“Five years as of tomorrow,” Adam answered, “and you arrived just in time
for the celebration.”
“Did you invite a lot of people?” Joe asked.
“Only everyone – employees, friends, business acquaintances. I think
everyone Thea has ever met. She’s big-hearted that way.”
“And enthusiastic,” Ben laughed.
“Yeah, that too,” Adam agreed. “I think it is safe for me to leave
now, Thea’s probably made it home already, so I don’t have to worry she’ll
throw me down on the floor and give me a complete physical.”
His newfound family members nodded, smiling at that mental picture and Ben
asked, “What did you mean when you said she was the surgeon that put you back
together?”
“Yeah, Adam, show Pa your scars,” Joe said, being helpful as usual.
“No, I’m not going to take my shirt off here. Marie would be scandalized
and she would know since she’s listening at the door,” he said and they heard
muffled laughter retreating.
Adam shook his head, grinning. “She’s a good secretary, but nosey,
as I guess all good secretaries need to be.” He opened the office door
to usher his family out. Marie was gone.
“I couldn’t help but notice the trouble she has walking,” Ben said.
“She’s been that way since childhood,” Adam responded, “I still can’t believe
no one would hire her just because of that. She’s highly intelligent,
a good worker, and very loyal. But their loss is my gain.”
As they left the outer office they saw Wes was still in the hall.
“Do you need anything Mr. Eden?” he said as he hurried up to lock the door.
Adam clapped the huge man on the back, “Wes, it looks like you won’t be
calling me Mr. Eden anymore. My last name is Cartwright and this is
my father, Ben and my two brothers, Hoss and Joe.”
The guard turned to Ben and gave him a surprisingly beautiful smile along
with his hand. “Pleased to meet you, sir,” he said and nodded at Joe
and Hoss. The ferocious look he had given them before was gone.
“I won’t be in tomorrow but you are coming tomorrow night aren’t you?”
Wes smiled, “You bet, I wouldn’t dare not come; your missus would track
me down and make me sorry. Especially since I’m bringing my intended
and Thea wants to meet her.”
Joe whispered to Hoss, “That I have got to see.” Hoss gave him a quick
frown of warning to behave.
“Did you escort Grunthaner out and put a guard on the office?” Adam asked.
“Yes sir,” Wes responded, “what did he do?”
“He’s been embezzling.”
“After everything you’ve done for him?” Wes’s ferocious look was back.
“I’m sorry to say he has, and there is no doubt,” Adam shrugged, “It took
me a while to find the evidence, but I did.”
“I never did like that weasel,” Wes said.
“I know, and it looks like your instincts were right, but I felt I had to
give him a chance. See you tomorrow night,” Adam said and led the way
down to that end of that hall until they were standing in front of a blank
wall. His family exchanged puzzled glances.
Adam grinned and moved a piece of the molding aside to reveal a keyhole.
When he inserted the key and turned it they heard a loud click and the whole
wall swung back. “This hotel is full of unusual features,” was all he
said by way of explanation.
He led them through then pushed the wall back in place. Standing on
a landing they could see a staircase that ended at another blank wall, which
also swung aside when Adam unlocked it. Then they entered a utility
area with an outside door. When they finally emerged on the side street,
a gleaming black coach pulled up in front of them.
Adam opened the door and waited while his family climbed in. He looked
up at the driver and said, “Straight home, please, David,” then climbed in
and closed the door.
******************************************************************************************
SURPRISE
Chapter 3
The coach pulled up in front of a huge, gray stone mansion a mere ten minutes
later and Adam was out before the driver could climb down to open the door.
He held the door open as his family descended and then grinned at their
expressions when they took in the house.
Joe was the last one out and he looked up at the house with his mouth open.
“Geez Adam, you could use this as another hotel. It’s almost as big
as Eden House.”
Adam chuckled as he closed the coach door and rapped on it to let David
know he could drive on. He didn’t respond to Joe’s comment, just led
the way up the front stairs to a double door set with panes of etched glass.
Entering a huge front hall with a raised area at the door, they followed
Adam down four steps and when he stopped in the middle of the hall he said,
“Cover your ears.” Of course, Joe had to ask why. “Don’t ask questions,
just do it,” his brother replied as he put two fingers to his lips and blew
an incredibly loud, ear-piercing whistle. All hell broke loose.
People and dogs came from all directions. A huge black dog of indeterminate
breed came bounding down a staircase on the right side of the hall.
Two small and equally ambiguous ones followed. The dogs all jumped on
Adam and he was almost knocked down, but managed to stay on his feet.
After giving their master numerous licks and sniffs, they turned to running
around the room and barking like they were lunatics.
Adam laughed as more people who were clearly domestic help came to stand
in the doorways to watch the circus. Two of the staff managed to capture
the dogs and they were taken away. Everyone looked up when they heard
a high voice carol, “Pa’s home!” A small child, a girl, was coming down
the stairs as fast as her little legs could manage. Adam started up
and when he was three steps away the child launched herself at him and flew
into his arms. He laughed again and shifted the child to his left hip
as he walked up to his father.
“Pa,” he said with pride, “I’d like you to meet your granddaughter, Annalise.”
Ben’s eyes were shining as the little girl looked up at him then put her
arms out. She closely resembled her mother, but with green eyes.
He took the child into his arms and she laughed up into his face as she wrapped
her arms around his neck.
Another young voice yelled, “Pa!” and they all turned to see a small boy
come running through the archway to their left. He barreled into his
father and shrieked with delight as Adam tossed him into the air then caught
him. He set the child down and took his hand to walk over to Ben.
When the two of them were standing in front of his father Adam grinned, “Pa,
I would like you to meet your grandson, Alexander.”
By this time Ben was a little overwhelmed. He looked down at the child
and was not surprised to see he looked exactly like Adam. The little
boy cocked his head to the side and grinned. “Up,’ he demanded, stretching
his arms up to Ben. His grandfather scooped him up with his free arm
and looked at Adam, torn between shock and happiness. His eldest son
grinned at him and said, “Surprise!”
Ben looked from child to child a few times then looked at Adam helplessly.
Laughing he said, “Yes, they’re twins,” then took Annalise back from his father
and carried her over to Joe. As he handed her over to his brother the
little girl giggled and went to him willingly. When Joe was holding
her she patted his face with her hands and said, “You’re pretty!”
Everyone laughed. Joe turned red with embarrassment and looked down
into her sweet face. “How old are you?” The little girl held up
one hand and folded down her thumb. “I’m this many,” she proudly said
and wiggled them at her new uncle. Joe chuckled and hugged her close.
Adam went back to Ben and took Alexander, set him down, and held his hand
as they walked over to Hoss. The little boy looked up at his uncle and
almost tipped over, but his father put out a hand to keep him from falling
over backward.
“Wow,” the child piped, “I bet you can see over anything!”
Hoss laughed and squatted down in front of the boy. “Would ya like
to come up and see fer yerself, young fella?” The boy looked up at his
father, “Can I, Pa?” Adam smoothed the boy’s hair back with a hand on
top of his head and said, “Sure, but just be careful you don’t hurt him.”
“Now how could a little bit of a thing like him hurt me?” Hoss scoffed.
His elder brother shook his head with a raised eyebrow, “You don’t know
Alexander.”
Hoss laughed and settled the small boy on his shoulder and stood, one arm
holding him by the legs. Alexander giggled with delight then sat there
quietly looking around from his new vantage point.
Adam went back to stand in front of his father. “Are you alright?”
he said, putting his hands on his father’s upper arms, concerned with the
shock he still saw there. Ben nodded, but said, “It’s all a little much
to take in at one time; finding you and getting a daughter-in-law and grandchildren
in the space of a few hours. I mean it’s wonderful, but hard to take
in.”
His eldest son put an arm across his shoulders and said, “Then let’s all
go into my office for a little peace and quiet. This way gentlemen,”
he said as he steered his father to a door under the staircase with Joe and
Hoss carrying the children following closely behind.
While the front hall seemed a little cold, being mostly stone and marble,
Adam’s office was warm and inviting, paneled with golden oak and furnished
with large, comfortable furniture. The room was actually huge and bore
a suspicious resemblance to the great-room at the ranch.
Joe, Hoss, and Ben looked around and then at each other with raised eyebrows.
Adam looked around too then shook his head. “Well, I guess I did remember
something after all. Have a seat and relax.”
Hoss plucked Alexander off his shoulder then set the child on his lap.
The boy looked at the three new family members with bright eyes for a bit
then climbed down. He trotted over to his father and tugged on his hand.
Adam stood and the child dragged him over to Ben then looked up at his father
demanding, “Who?”
Adam smiled and said, “Alex, this is your grandfather.”
“Oh,” the boy thought about this for a moment then said, “What’s a grandfather?”
His father sat down next to Ben on the sofa and plopped the boy onto his lap.
“You know that you are my son, right?” Alexander nodded, “You’re my
Pa,” he said, his eyes never leaving his father’s. “Well,” Adam continued,
“I am his son.”
“Oh,” Alexander said and thought about it some more. “He’s your Pa?”
he said uncertainly. His father nodded, “Right.”
The boy then turned his intent gaze to Joe and Hoss, but Adam answered his
question before it was asked. “You are Annalise’s brother, right?”
Alexander nodded. “Joe and Hoss are my brothers.” Alexander looked
at the two men and seemed to accept that without much of a problem.
“Are they twins, too?” he asked.
Everyone laughed, “No Alexander,” his father said and the child climbed
down. “Oh, that’s too bad. Being twins is fun,” he said as he
went to poke Annalise who had almost fallen asleep snuggled up to Joe.
“Hey!” he said. The little girl looked down her nose at him.
“What?” she answered.
“You know what a grandfather is?” the boy was puffed up with his new knowledge.
Annalise sat up with an annoyed expression. Pointing to Joe she said,
“Uncle Pretty, Pa’s brother.” She then pointed to Hoss and said, “Uncle
Horse, Pa’s brother” then she pointed to Ben. “Grandpa,” she said then
looked at her brother again. “Pa’s Pa,” she said with a nod of finality
and snuggled back into Joe’s arms.
“Oh,” Alexander said his favorite word then trotted up to his Grandfather,
climbed into his lap and snuggled in too.
“They’re both very intelligent, Adam,” Ben said with pride.
“I know,” Adam laughed ruefully. “Keeping up with them can be very
hard work.”
The back door to the office opened then and Thea came in. “I should
have known I would find them here,” she said smiling.
“Where else would they be?” her husband answered reasonably.
Thea nodded. “Well, dinner is ready if anyone is hungry.” They
all stood and she took Hoss’s hand. “You come with me young man and
I’ll make sure you don’t get lost in this huge place.” Hoss chuckled
and let himself be pulled along.
Joe went out next still holding the little girl. Ben with Alexander
and Adam trailed a little behind.
“Pa, we’ll come back here after dinner and talk. That subject isn’t
meant for little people.”
His father nodded, “I agree.”
“What’s a subject, Pa?” Alexander asked.
“Nothing you need concern yourself with,” his father said firmly.
“Oh,” the boy said, accepting his father’s edict without an argument.
Looking up at his grandfather as they entered the dining room he said, “I
know a secret.”
“You do?”
The boy nodded vigorously, “Yeah, Ma is going to have a baby in Demember.”
Thea clapped a hand over her eyes and said, “Oh dear Lord,” and fled the
room.
Adam bit back a laugh then looked at his brothers. “Don’t laugh,”
he warned them. “She has had enough embarrassment for one day.”
Hoss and Ben were managing to hold their laughter back with no trouble,
but Adam could see Joe was fighting a losing battle. He rushed up to
him, plucked his daughter out of Joe’s arms, handed her to Hoss then dragged
Joe out of the room and into the next room, and then into the room after
that. Just as Adam closed the door behind them Joe gave in and bent
over, he was laughing so hard.
Adam couldn’t keep his own back and the two of them laughed until they couldn’t
stand anymore. Both of them were sitting on the floor when they finally
stopped. Adam shook his head and wiped tears of mirth from his eyes.
“I swear, that boy is going to be the death of me some day,” he said and clapped
Joe on the back, knocking him over.
“Oh God,” Joe sighed and stretched out on his back, “I like that kid.”
“You should,” his brother cryptically replied as Joe was shaking his head.
“I just can’t believe this; finding you, alive and well. . . with a wife.
. . and children. I haven’t felt this good in a very long time.”
“I’m glad you feel that way, Joe, but we better get back before we both
end up in deep trouble.”
“OK,” his brother said and the two climbed wearily to their feet.
“I just can’t wait to see the looks on everyone’s face when you come home.”
Joe was in front of him so he couldn’t see his older brother’s expression.
Adam started to respond, but then stopped. That conversation would be
best if left until later; much, much later.
******************************************************************************************************************************************
DINNER CONVERSATION
Chapter 4
When the two men returned they found the rest of the family already seated
and waiting for them. Thea’s cheeks were still slightly flushed, but
a small smile lifted the corners of her mouth. Adam took his seat at
the head of the table, his father on his right, Hoss on his left, and Joe
next to his father. The children sat on either side of Thea in chairs
that were no different from the rest except for being higher.
Right after Adam and Joe were seated the door to the kitchen opened and
a line of servers came in. The number of dishes being offered was staggering
and when the last server escaped back to the kitchen Adam was shaking his
head at his wife. “It’s a special occasion,” she said in her own defense,
as her husband turned to his father. “We don’t usually do this, but
Thea is right, this is a special occasion.”
“So Adam,” Joe said getting right to the point, “just how many businesses
do you own here?”
Adam slanted a sideways look at his brother, “The hotel, the club, a shipping
company, and a publishing firm.”
Joe whistled and Thea gave him a chiding look, whistling was not acceptable
behavior at the table. “Sorry,” he said to her then turned back to Adam
to ask more questions, but stopped after he received another look, this time
from his father.
The children had been unusually quiet, mostly due to fascination with their
new family members; they were staring openly and when Thea noticed she told
them to stop, but she spoke so low no one else could hear her.
Ben turned to Adam; “I just realized you haven’t told us anything about
Thea’s family.”
Adam looked down the table at his wife, “I’m sorry to say there’s a good
reason for that, Pa, she doesn’t have any – something we had in common until
now.”
Her new family members turned to her with sympathetic expressions, and she
smiled ruefully, “It’s true, I don’t, not really. Sir Richard Westwood
took me in when my mother died during childbirth. He was the physician
who delivered me, but my mother had no identification and was gone before
he could find out who she was. No one came to claim either of us, so
he adopted me. I’ve traveled the world with him from the time I was
born.” She turned back to her daughter when the child dropped her spoon.
Hoss shook his head, “That’s just plain awful.”
“No, not really,” Thea said quietly, “I was very lucky to have Doc to take
care of me. A lot of children are left with no one,” she smiled at Adam,
“and I certainly received a complete education,” she laughed.
At that moment Alexander decided he had been quiet long enough, “Pa, what’s
a ‘bangtail’?”
The adults at the table, except his father, froze being shocked at hearing
a slang term for a lady of the evening coming from a four-year-old.
Adam looked down and his lips tightened. He cleared his throat then
looked at his son. “Alexander, where did you hear that word?”
“Clarence said it when a pretty lady was walking by,” was his young son’s
prompt reply.
Adam paused as his eyes narrowed. “And when did you hear this?”
“This morn…” Alexander started to say then stopped, his face paled and he
hung his head.
“You ran away from Leslie again today, didn’t you?”
The boy squirmed in his chair, but didn’t say anything.
“I’m waiting, Alexander.”
The boy spoke, “Yes, Pa.”
Adam drummed his fingers on his knee for a moment, “Alexander, go to your
room. I will be up later.”
His son looked up and his mouth opened, but Adam cut his protest off by
giving him a stern look and saying, “No discussion. Now go.”
Alexander slipped from his chair and slowly left the room. Immediately
Annalise spoke up, “May I be excused, Pa?”
Her father said, “Yes, you may,” and she quickly slid from her chair and
almost ran to the door.
“Annalise,” Adam said quietly, and she stopped with her hand on the doorknob.
“Yes, Pa?”
“You will not go to Alexander’s room,”
“Yes, sir,” she said defeated and left, closing the door behind her.
When he heard the door close, Adam looked up at the ceiling while deeply
sighing. He shook his head then looked at Thea. She was biting
her lower lip, but a small laugh still escaped.
“Do you see it too?” he asked.
“Oh yes, I noticed right away and it’s almost uncanny.”
“What?” Joe asked looking at Thea, but Adam had turned to his father, “Do
you see it, Pa?”
Ben nodded, trying not to laugh.
Hoss didn’t need to be asked, “I do, too.”
“See WHAT?” Joe was becoming exasperated, which only deepened when they
all laughed.
“Joe,” Adam said, “my son may look like me, but on the inside he’s you.”
“Well, I don’t see it.”
“Of course you don’t, you can’t see yourself the way we can.” Adam said
as the others nodded in agreement.
“Alright then, so how is he like me?” Joe insisted.
“His facial expressions,” Thea pointed out.
“His laugh,” Ben added.
Hoss spoke up, “The way he just says whatever comes into his head,” he turned
to his younger brother. “You were exactly like that.”
“And, last but not least, his talent for finding trouble,” Adam finished.
Joe was still shaking his head, ready to argue, when Thea brought up another
point.
“Tell me, have you always assumed that these characteristics of Joe’s came
from his mother?”
Ben nodded, “Yes, I believe we have.”
“Well, since we all basically agree that these characteristics came to Alexander
through his father, that would mean they came from a ancestor in common.’
She paused, bit her lower lip again and looked at Ben. “And since they
have different mothers, that ancestor in common would have to be… well …you.”
Hoss and Adam looked at each other in surprise, and then at their father
to gauge his reaction.
“Oh no,” Ben said.
“Oh yes,” Adam replied pleased with his wife’s astute observation.
“Those are the laws of nature and breeding, Pa, you know that.”
Hoss just sat there, smiling his widest smile.
Thea sighed and stood, signaling the end of the meal, “Why don’t you all
go into Adam’s office and have that private talk I know you have been wanting
to have all day.”
Adam nodded and stood, “I’m sure you three remember how to get there, so
make yourselves at home. I’ll be down as soon as I have a little talk
with Alexander,” he headed for the door, but Thea called to him.
“Adam, I’ll be in Annalise’s room getting her ready for bed, so please let
me know when you’re finished so I can do the same with Alex.”
Her husband just nodded and left.
The other three men looked at Thea expecting her to be upset at the idea
of Alexander being punished, but she said, “He won’t be long. If I know
my husband, and I do, this latest misdeed of Alex’s is going to call for
some serious thought on his father’s part to find a suitable punishment.”
She moved toward the kitchen door, “I’ll be sending a cart to the office with
coffee and desert, so just make yourselves comfortable,” she smiled at them
then disappeared through the kitchen door.
Ben looked at his sons, “Do either of you remember where it is?” Hoss
and Joe shook their heads. “Well, I guess we will stumble across it
eventually,” Ben laughed and the three went in search of the office.
When they finally made it there the cart was already in the room, so they
helped themselves and settled down to wait for Adam; Thea was right, he didn’t
take long. When he came in and saw the amusement on his father’s face
he rolled his eyes and gave an exasperated sigh, then settled himself into
the rocking chair next to Ben.
“Did you decide on a punishment yet?” Hoss asked.
“No, I left him thinking about what he thinks his punishment should be,”
Adam answered.
Ben laughed and his eldest son gave him a narrow look, “You’re enjoying
this, aren’t you?”
“Yes, I have to be honest and say that I am.”
Adam stretched his arms over his head and said, “Excuse me for a moment,”
moved to a clear space then bent over until his hands were flat on the floor
in front of him. He then astonished his family by doing an expert handstand.
He stayed that way for a moment then slowly lowered his head toward the floor.
As soon as his head touched he pulled his legs in and rolled, coming lithely
to his feet. He sat down in the rocking chair again saying, “Sometimes
that’s the only way I can get my back into alignment. Someday you’ll
have to tell me how I broke it, but not tonight. Tonight you get to
ask the questions.”
“How did you know you broke your back,” Joe said startled. His brother
gave him a look that said Joe was being dense. “Oh, right, Thea.”
Ben spoke next, “Just what did happen to you? We looked for you all
over Chicago and couldn’t find a single thing.”
“That’s because I was in New York. How I got there, I have no idea,
but that’s how I ended up in the morgue in the hospital where Thea was working.
I never did get the whole story and I don’t remember anything about it at
all. She’s the one who found me.”
“Found you?”
“She was the doctor who was to do the post mortem, and I was very lucky
that she didn’t wait like most doctors would. If she hadn’t gotten
to me when she did I would be dead. In fact, I was dead for a while.
But Thea brought me back and wouldn’t let me go.”
“What did she do?” Hoss asked.
“Chest compressions,” he said and his family looked at him blankly.
“It’s a technique that was used on Lincoln by a Union Army surgeon when he
was shot. You press on the chest near the heart to artificially pump
the blood,” he shook his head. “She also used some kind of drug she
learned about while in China, some kind of stimulant. All I know is
it worked and I woke up to agony.”
Ben sat forward, “Agony?”
Adam sighed then said, “I guess the best way for you to understand is to
let you see the scars like Joe did.” He stood and unbuttoned his shirt
then shrugged out of it. His chest and back were covered with thin,
white, smooth scars, almost too many to count. He turned around when
he heard his father’s quick intake of breath and saw him flinch. “Who
could do something so vicious,” Ben said.
Putting his shirt back on, Adam said, “I don’t know, and I don’t think I
ever will know. I have no clear idea as to why either.” He sat
back in the rocking chair and looked at Hoss when he spoke.
“I don’t know how that purty little thing you’re married to could have handled
something like that.”
“Don’t let her looks fool you, Hoss, she’s the strongest person I know,”
he smiled, “She put me back together, then hounded me, and nagged me, and
bullied me until I did what she wanted. And I have to say she came up
with some of the most unusual treatments,” and he laughed. “The scars
are bad enough, but I had quite a few broken bones as well, so I was a captive
audience.”
“Good God,” Joe breathed.
“What were these treatments you thought were unusual?” Ben asked.
“Well, for example, gymnastics for strength, flexibility, and balance.
I’m still surprised I didn’t re-break anything the way I kept falling down.
But it worked.” He held up his strong, long-fingered hands, “Can you
see how this one finger isn’t quite straight? My hands were badly broken
too and I hope I at least got a few good shots in before I went down.”
“I hope so, too,” Joe said loyally.
Adam smiled at him, “To get my hands back into shape the first thing she
had me do was squeeze things.”
“Squeeze things?” Joe laughed.
“Yep, balls.”
“What?”
“Leather balls. I don’t know how she made them, but every time I wore
one out, she made another one that was harder to squeeze. Then we moved
on to playing the piano - now that was painful, but worth it. Then I
learned how to juggle for hand-eye coordination.”
He looked around at his brothers and father and smiled at their wide-eyed
expressions. “But even with all the physical problems the worst thing,
the thing I had the hardest time accepting was forgetting how to read.”
“You couldn’t read!” Joe blurted out.
Adam shook his head, “No, not a word. I had taken a few severe blows
to the head and my brain swelled, but Thea believes that the problem with
my memory is just as much emotional as it is physical.”
“That must have almost driven you crazy,” his father said.
“Yes, and what was driving me even more insane was not knowing who I was.
But eventually I came to accept it and decided to go on and do something with
my future since that’s all I had.”
The four men sat silently for a minute and they heard a small knock at the
office door. Adam’s brow furrowed and he called, “Come in.”
The door opened and Alexander took a tentative step into the room and looked
at his father anxiously.
“What are you doing up? Couldn’t you sleep?” Adam asked him.
The boy shook his head, “I was thinkin’ about what you said.”
His father didn’t say anything for a moment as he studied his son trying
to figure out what he was up to. Then he patted his knee saying, “Come
here,” and Alexander rushed over to him. Adam lifted the boy into his
lap and put his arms around him.
“I know I’m not supposed to be up, but had to ask you something, Pa, and
I just couldn’t wait.”
“All right, ask your question.”
“Do you hate me?”
Adam stiffened, “What!”
“Do you hate me, Pa, because I’m bad?”
“Alexander, I don’t ever want to hear you say something like that again,”
he cupped a hand around the boy’s chin and pushed his head up until he was
looking Alexander in the eye. “You are my son, and I love you.
That is a fact, something that will never change. No matter what you
do, no matter where you go you will always be my son, and I would never, ever
hate you,” he paused, “Now, do you believe me?”
“Yes, Pa.”
“Good, because asking me if I hate you is an insult to me as your father,
don’t ever question it again.” He tightened his arms around Alexander
and began to rock, “But you have to learn Alexander, what you do does affect
other people. Because you insisted on disobeying me Leslie is going
to lose her job. Do you understand what I was trying to tell you now?”
The boy nodded.
“And I think first thing tomorrow you need to go and apologize to her.
What do you think?”
“Yes, Pa,” Alexander said with a huge yawn.
Adam looked down and saw the boy’s eyes were already closed. “Go to
sleep, Alexander,” his father told him and for once, his son did what he was
told.
Adam just sighed and kept rocking as the other three men stood.
When they moved toward the door Adam called, “Good night,” but his eyes
were still on his son. Joe and Hoss went through the door and Ben paused
for a moment to look back. He smiled when he saw his eldest son brush
Alex’s hair back with a gentle hand then lean down to kiss him on the forehead.
The boy snuggled closer to his father as Adam leaned back in the chair and
continued to rock.
Ben closed the door quietly as he left.
******************************************************************************************
CELEBRATION
Chapter 5
Late afternoon of the next day the four men were standing in the huge entrance
hall and Adam’s brothers were making fun of the fancy, black embroidered,
rose-colored velvet vest he was wearing with his black suit. He refused
to be offended and just smiled, saying, “You’ll understand in a minute.”
He had no sooner said that when they heard a woman’s voice saying, “Is everybody
ready?” They all turned and looked up the staircase.
Thea smiled down at them from the middle step, her long, curly black hair
loose and flowing down her back. A gold circlet came to a downward point
in the middle of her forehead and a matching gilded belt circled her hips.
The dress was made of the same material as Adam’s vest and was medieval in
style.
Her long sleeves hugged her slender arms closely and came to points on the
backs of her hands. The sweetheart neckline dipped low in the front
then rose up in the back, cradling her slender neck. The dress was form
fitting down to the girdle at her hips, and the skirt fell into graceful folds
with a small train in the back. Her smile was sweet and her fine hazel
eyes looked down at them all with true affection.
She continued down the steps and Adam went to meet her as the other three
men continued to stare. When Adam took her hand he said, “We all look
like rough peasants compared to you,” he bowed at the waist and kissed her
hand.
Laughing, she looked at his vest and said, “Alright, who couldn’t keep their
mouth shut? This dress was supposed to be a secret.”
He laughed, “Haven’t you realized yet that I know all and see all?” as they
came forward and joined the group. Ben took her other hand and said,
“My dear, you are absolutely stunning.” She flushed a becoming pink,
and taking her hand back from Adam she stretched up on her toes and kissed
Ben on the cheek.
As she stepped back and smiled up at him, her head cocked to the side.
“Would you mind if I called you ‘Pa’ too?” she said shyly.
Ben took her other hand then leaned down to kiss her on both cheeks, “I
would like that very much,” he said and saw the quick shine of tears in her
eyes before she put her arms around him. They stayed that way in each
other’s arms until they heard Adam clear his throat, “I hate to break this
up, but the great horde will be descending on us any minute.”
Thea stepped back and put a hand to her mouth. “Oh, you’re right,”
she turned away and noticed all the smiling house staff watching from the
two arches on either side of the hall. “Places everybody!” she laughed
then turned to Hoss and Joe. “You two will stand next to me and I will
introduce you, while Adam introduces your father.” She took them both
by the hand and pulled them toward the door where Adam and Ben were already
standing by the wall to the left of the raised entrance.
A young man stood at attention next to the door and Joe recognized him from
the front desk at the hotel. He had seemed extremely unfriendly, but
now he nodded pleasantly at Joe as a knock sounded on the door.
The influx of guests began, and the first to arrive were Wes and his fiancé’.
When the couple was standing in front of Thea, Wes said, “Mrs. Cartwright,
may I present my intended Dulcy Miller?” his face shone with pride.
Thea stepped forward and took both of the other woman’s hands in her own.
“I am so pleased to finally meet you,” she said as she smiled up into the
tall woman’s gorgeous face. Dulcy smiled back, “Thank you so much for
inviting me, Mrs. Eden, I mean Cartwright.”
Thea took stock of the other woman’s brilliant blue eyes, flame-red hair,
and beautiful figure. “Wes is part of our family and we think very highly
of him. That means you are family now too, so please call me Thea.”
Joe and Hoss exchanged looks; they were in agreement that Adam had chosen
well in his wife and their eyes shone with pride in their new sister.
Thea then introduced Dulcy to them and after the couple moved on Joe leaned
forward across Hoss and mouthed “Wow!” to Thea. She giggled, “She is
gorgeous isn’t she? But more importantly, I think she and Wes will be
very happy together.”
Hoss looked at her out of the corner of his eye, “If you say so, ma’am,”
and all three laughed.
A constant stream of people went past and an hour later, when it slowed
to a trickle Thea called a halt to the receiving line. Leaving Adam
to show Ben around, she took Joe and Hoss by the hand and pulled them through
the crowd. She didn’t give them a chance to ask where they were going
and in a moment she stopped in front of a willowy blonde with a pretty face
and sparkling gray eyes. “Michelle, I am so glad I found you,” Thea
said, pulling a smiling Joe forward. “Would you do me a huge favor and
show my brother-in-law around? He’s only been here for one day and
I don’t want him to get lost in this monster of a house.”
Michelle smiled at Thea then her laughing eyes went to Joe. “For you,
Thea,” she said with a slight French accent, “I would do anything, no matter
how difficult or painful.”
Thea grinned at her, aware that the girl knew what she was up to.
She took Michelle’s hand and placed it in Joe’s saying, “Thank you, love.
I won’t forget your kindness.” She took Hoss’s arm and started tugging
him away as Joe raised an eyebrow and nodded his thanks to her.
Hoss was chuckling, “So who did you pick out for me?” She looked up
at him, “You know,” and in a moment they stopped in front of a petite strawberry
blonde with a well-endowed figure, pink cheeks, and warm brown eyes.
“Cassandra! There you are, you’re the only one I know I can trust to show
my new brother-in-law around.”
The girl smiled up at Hoss shyly and her cheeks turned pinker. Hoss
nodded at the fresh-faced young woman, “Pleased to meet you ma’am,” and as
Cassandra took his arm he mouthed “Thank you,” to Thea. She winked at
him and hurried away to make her inspection of the house to be sure everything
was running smoothly. It took some time because everywhere she went
people wanted to talk with her, especially about the new family members, but
she kept managing to escape.
After she checked on the children in the playroom, she made her way to the
ballroom and found Adam standing exactly where she knew he would be, waiting
for her so they could start the show. She hurried forward, took his
hand and smiled up at him, her eyes glowing.
“You must be having a very good time.” She nodded and the two stepped
up onto a small raised area at one end of the ballroom. Adam went to
the piano and Thea picked up a violin. All conversation in the room
stopped.
Adam put his hands to the keys, but what he started to play sounded off,
unlike any recognizable tune. He stopped playing and gave Thea a puzzled
look, scratching his head. She came over, turned the sheet music right
side up, and then patted him on the head. The room erupted with laughter.
Ben was standing close to the stage on his son’s left and when Adam turned
his head to look at him he winked. His father nodded back, a pleased
look in his eyes at the new facets to Adam’s personality he was just beginning
to know.
Adam started playing what at first sounded like a light, classical tune
that eventually devolved into “Get Along Home, Cindy, Cindy.” By that
time Thea had stopped playing the “violin” and was playing the “fiddle.”
When the crowd finally recognized the tune there was more laughter and people
paired up to dance. Adam left the stage when that song was finished,
but Thea stayed to play an Irish jig with the musicians who had been hired
for the celebration.
She was smiling as she left the stage and came up to her husband and her
father-in-law. “Is anyone else hungry?” she asked and both men nodded.
As she took Adam’s right arm and Ben’s left she said, “Ooo, every woman here
tonight is going to go green with envy when they see I’ve got the two handsomest
men here all to myself.”
Adam laughed, “Just because you played an Irish jig doesn’t mean you have
to pile on the blarney now.” Ben chuckled and Thea slanted a sideways
look at her husband. “All right then,” she said looking at her father-in-law
and dropping Adam’s arm, “I have THE handsomest man here tonight all to myself,”
and she walked away with Ben, her nose in the air. Her husband shook
his head and followed closely behind.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
Two hours later Joe finally managed to talk Michelle into going into the
garden to walk with him. As they rounded a bend in the path they heard
voices coming from a gazebo that was covered with climbing roses. Joe
smiled as he recognized one voice as Adam’s. The smile was wiped off
his face when he heard a female voice with some kind of accent. He looked
down at Michelle, unsure about what to do. Then he made up his mind,
led Michelle away, and asked her to please wait for him on a bench under
a blossoming pear tree.
He marched toward the gazebo, but stopped when Adam said, “Joe, don’t you
dare come in here.” Joe put his hands on his hips and answered, “Who’s
in there with you?”
“Theadora.”
“That doesn’t sound like her.”
“Go away, Joseph, this is none of your business.”
“But….”
“Joseph, go.”
Joe clenched his fists in frustration then turned on his heel and walked
away, but did not go back to Michelle. Instead he doubled back and hid
behind some latticework near the gazebo. He didn’t have long to wait.
In a few minutes Adam appeared on the steps, putting his suit coat on, and
Joe could hear the female voice, “Coo, Milord, aye ain’t never seen a foiner
gentleman than yerself ,” and Thea appeared on the top step.
Adam looked up at her and took her hand, “One of these days you’re going
to get me into some serious trouble.” She just laughed, and Joe smiled
in relief. He stayed where he was and almost didn’t dare to breathe
as the couple went past. He decided to wait a few moments before coming
out and going back to the bench and to Michelle. But when he reached
the flowering pear tree he saw Adam sitting on the bench, alone.
“Where’s Michelle,” he asked, standing in front of his brother.
“I sent her inside with Thea.”
“Why?”
“So we could have a few words in private,” Adam answered and then stood.
He stepped up to Joe until they were almost nose-to-nose. Joe had to
stop himself from taking an instinctual step back.
Adam looked him in the eye, “I do not cheat on my wife, Joe, and I can’t
believe you thought I would.”
Joe kept his eyes on Adam’s, although he wanted to look down and away from
the expression in his brother’s eyes. He actually looked hurt.
“I may not remember a lot of things, but I’m sure I would never have done
something like that even as the ‘old’ Adam.”
His younger brother did look down then and hung his head. “You’re
right, I’m sorry.”
“Joe, when a man apologizes to another man he looks him in the eye.”
He looked up then and he could see Adam was no longer angry or hurt, just
exasperated. Looking him in the eye as instructed he said, “Please accept
my apology.”
Adam nodded and put an arm around Joe’s shoulders and started to guide him
toward the back door. “Joe, I know you have to have time to get used
to the changes in me, but my basic character has not changed. Being
a man of integrity is very important to me, so please remember that.
I don’t even want to hear anyone joke about it.” He stopped at the back
door and turned to look at Joe, “A man’s good name is the only thing he has
that is truly his own. Do you understand?”
Joe nodded and his brother smiled as he opened the door and motioned for
Joe to go in. “Oh, and by the way, I didn’t know you were hiding there
waiting for us to come out. Thea did and I think she’s a little irritated
with you right now, so you might want to avoid her if you can.”
Adam patted Joe on the shoulder, “Be afraid, young man,” then walked away
grinning. That’s when Joe decided it might be a good idea to hide in
Adam’s office for a while.
He carefully made his way there and heaved a sigh of relief as he backed
through and closed the door. He turned around then and nearly jumped
out of his skin when he came face-to-face with Thea. As he collapsed
against the closed door he put a hand to his chest. Thea looked at him
impassively with narrowed eyes.
“Having a heart-attack?”
Joe shook his head.
“Good, I don’t want to feel sorry for you right now.”
Joe took a deep breath, “Before you go any further just let me say I’m sorry,
I never should have doubted Adam, and I never should have stayed to spy on
you two.”
Thea put her head to the side and looked at him intently. Apparently
satisfied that Joe meant what he was saying, she relaxed.
“I’m sorry, too, Joe. But I can’t help being protective of Adam.”
She smiled ruefully, “I know it’s stupid, I mean he’s a big boy, he can take
care of himself, but I just can’t stop. It’s a habit hard to break.”
Joe nodded; glad they were on friendly terms again. “How did you know
I would come in here?”
“I knew Adam would warn you and I figured the logical place you would go
to hide out is here.”
“Do you want to go back to the party now?”
“No, I need a little time to myself. I love these celebrations, but
they are exhausting.” She turned away, “You go ahead and please do me
a favor? Ask your father to come see me.”
“Sure,” Joe quickly agreed and for once didn’t ask any questions as to why.
“Thank you,” she said as he slipped out the door.
Thea removed the gold circlet and gilded belt then curled up on the sofa
to wait.
Ben walked through the door about fifteen minutes later and came to sit
next to her. He took her hand saying, “Are you alright?”
She nodded and turned to him. “Ben, I mean Pa, I desperately need
someone to talk to about something. You know your son better than anyone,
you’ve known him his entire life, and I don’t think he has changed all that
much since you saw him last. Do you?”
He nodded, “Actually I think the changes I see in Adam are all mostly for
the better. But I guess what I really mean is that his personality has
expanded, adding on, but not really changing.”
The sighed in relief, “I’m so glad, that is what I thought.”
He laughed, “Is that all you needed me for?”
She looked down and said a faint, “No,” then she seemed to make up her mind
and looked at him with troubled eyes. “I believe I know who did that
terrible thing to Adam and why. What I am not sure of is whether or
not I should tell him.” A single tear trailed down her cheek, “It’s
going to hurt his heart terribly, but may help him with recovering his memories.”
She put her hands over her face, “I just don’t know what to do.”
Ben did not answer her right away; he was taking his time to think this
problem through.
“Well,” he finally said, “it seems to me that if you were to tell him, now
would be the perfect time.”
She dropped her hands and looked at him, startled.
“I mean he has recovered his family now and that has definitely eased his
mind. And I believe that helping Adam recover his memories is more important
than trying to shield him from a harsh truth. After all, what are we
without our memories?”
Thea nodded as she appeared to relax. “Thank you. I can see
where Adam got his intelligence.”
Ben gave her a dubious look, “I think the party has wound down and since
there’s no time like the present, do you want to tell him now?”
“Yes, while I still have the courage.”
“I’ll go send Adam in.”
“No, please, bring him in along with Joe and Hoss. You all deserve
to know what happened.” He patted her hand and went out the door.
She was shaking with nerves by the time they all came filing through the
door. Adam took one look at her and hurried over. As he sat down
next to her and took her hand he searched her face anxiously, “What is this
about Theadora?”
His brothers and his father settled themselves into chairs surrounding the
sofa and were quiet.
When she turned to look at him she was clenching her jaw so hard it shook.
Her throat worked convulsively as she lost the battle with her tears, so she
just let them flow.
“I believe I know who attacked you and why.”
He looked badly shocked by her words, “What?”
“I don’t have any proof, but it all fits with what I saw and what I heard
that night.”
Her husband just stared at her, more numb than anything else.
“Just please listen to what I have to say and then judge for yourself.”
She took a deep breath, “You and Allan were similar in build and coloring,
weren’t you?”
Adam shook his head to clear it, “Yes, but how did you know that?”
“Because I saw him. When I found you alive in the morgue Allan was
on the table next to you. And the man that did that to you was on the
other side.” She shuddered, “I was the one that performed the post mortem
and signed the death certificates after I had taken care of you.”
“So you saw the man who tried to kill me.”
“Yes, I saw both of them.”
“Both of them?”
“Yes,” she looked at Ben, “you understand now, don’t you?” He nodded.
She reached out and took her husband’s other hand. “Adam,” she said
as gently as she could, “Allan didn’t take you to Chicago to help him.
He took you there to take his place.”
His hands tightened convulsively on hers and she winced at the pain, but
didn’t pull away.
Adam looked around at his gathered family and breathed, “My God, that thought
never occurred to me,” he loosened his grip on her hands as he began to consider
all the ramifications of this revelation.
“It wouldn’t have occurred to me either if I hadn’t seen the two of you
laying side-by-side. And I recognized the other man. He was a
professional killer.”
“How do you know?”
“Even criminals go to the hospital and need doctors. The oath I took
wouldn’t let me turn them away.” She sighed, “I also called in a lot
of favors on the street and all the rumors I heard fit. Allan owed a
lot of money to some very seriously nasty people who were threatening to kill
him. Since the two of you looked so much alike he figured he could have
you killed by being beaten to death so no one could tell the difference.
Then he would leave his identification on you and dump your body somewhere.”
She rubbed a hand over her face, “Unfortunately for him, but fortunately for
you, the thugs caught up to him before they stamped out every spark of life
in you.”
“I find this so hard to believe.”
“I know, but I think I’m right.”
“I know you are right, but that doesn’t make it any easier.”
She put her head down and leaned into him, “I’m so sorry,” she said with
a choked voice. His arms came around her and he held her tightly.
“What are you sorry for? You didn’t have anything to do with it.
And I’m glad you told me, this straightens out a lot of things I just couldn’t
understand before.”
“But he almost destroyed you and you loved him like a brother,” she insisted.
He took a deep breath, “Sometimes you have to look evil squarely in
the face to take away the power it has over you.”
“Then I did the right thing?” she still sounded so unsure.
Adam leaned back to look her in the eye. “Yes,” he simply said then
gathered her even closer to him.
She hid her face in his chest and allowed herself to finally cry away the
anxiety she had carried for six years.
Adam looked up when his father stood. “Thank you,” he said as his
father came up to him and gave his shoulder a hard squeeze. Ben motioned
to his other sons to follow him, and they quietly left the room.
When they were on the other side of the door Joe spoke in a tight voice,
“If that monster wasn’t already dead I’d kill him myself.”
Ben clapped his youngest son on the back, “I think you would have to get
in a very long line to do that, Joseph.”
Hoss nodded in agreement, “But Thea would be first in line.”
The three went up the stairs and to bed, although none of them would get
much sleep that night. Neither would Adam.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
Thea had soon fallen asleep exhausted so Adam had stretched her out on the
sofa with her head in his lap. He was trying to stay still and not disturb
her, but memories had started coming back to him and the pain in his head
kept increasing. “Damn,” he said under his breath and started to rub
his temples. In a few minutes the flood slowed, but the pressure did
not ease. He shook his head as he sensed something coming and could
almost see it. Then the vision of Allan, holding a gun on him and smiling
with cold, dead eyes lanced through Adam’s brain with a white-hot jolt of
agony. Without making a single sound, he passed out.
The sun was just beginning to rise when he became conscious again and he
looked around the room for a moment trying to place himself. When he
put his hands to his face he realized he had bled from the nose. “Oh
no,” he slid carefully out from under Thea and went to a mirror that was hanging
by the door. The bleeding wasn’t bad, but he didn’t want anyone to
see it. He almost laughed as he looked at himself – he looked like he
had been on a weeklong drinking binge. He winced at a stab of pain then
slipped from the room and went down the hall to a water closet. He
filled the sink with cold water, then stuck his whole head into it and kept
it there for as long as he could, then came back up gasping for air.
Then he did it again. After the third dunking he started to feel almost
human again.
He pulled a towel from a rack and briskly dried his face, beard, and hair.
When he looked in the mirror again he decided he didn’t look good, but was
no longer in danger of frightening his children. He began to stroke
his beard saying, “Hmmm…” Maybe it was time to think about shaving it off.
After hanging the towel up to dry, he went to the front door and stepped
outside, closing it quietly behind him. He leaned back against the wall
to the side of the door, folded his arms and watched a gorgeous sunrise as
he realized he was finally whole again. All of his old memories had
come back and somehow meshed with the new ones. He didn’t know how,
he was just thankful to God that it had happened. His thoughts then
turned to Allan’s filthy betrayal and he actually smiled because he remembered
one of Thea’s favorite sayings. He said it out loud to himself, “No
good deed goes unpunished.”
The front door opened then and he glanced back to see his wife standing
there. She looked at him uncertainly until he held a hand out to her.
She took his hand and he pulled her in front of him and put his arms around
her as she leaned back against him.
They watched the rest of the sunrise silently and when the last of the brilliant
colors faded from the sky Thea sighed and said, “Umm…Adam, why are you all
wet?” He started laughing even though it hurt, and bent his head down
to rest his cheek on her hair.
Thea stretched, “I’m so sore from sleeping on that sofa, I think I’ll go
take a hot bath before everyone gets up.” She started for the door,
then paused and gave him a familiar look over her shoulder with a wicked grin.
She went inside. Adam was still leaning his shoulder against the wall
when Thea hurried back, took him by the hand and yanked him through the door.
******************************************************************************************************************************************
FUNERAL
Chapter 6
Joe came down late the next morning and when he went to the dining room
he was told that his brother and family were out in the garden, so he ate
quickly then hurried outside. The sky was a beautiful clear blue with
bright sunshine and a slightly cool breeze blowing. As he walked through
the flowers blooming all along the path he smiled to himself because he felt
so good. His missing brother was found and the family was whole again,
although now substantially increased.
He stopped walking when he faintly heard the sound of children’s laughter
coming to him on the breeze. Following the sound he soon came upon Thea
and her two children sitting on a blanket spread out on the springy grass
under an oak tree. When the children spotted him they came running and
each took a hand to drag him over to sit next to their mother.
Thea looked at him with a brilliant smile, “Good morning! We were
wondering when you would be joining us.”
“I guess I must not be used to staying up late celebrating.”
She laughed, “Did you have a good time?”
“Just about the best.”
“Good,” Thea said and bit back a giggle when an acorn fell right on top
of Joe’s head. The children felt no such constraints, laughing at their
uncle.
“Where’s Adam?”
“Oh, he’s around here somewhere,” she said vaguely, “He seldom takes a day
off so when he does we try not to monopolize all of his time.”
“You know if I hadn’t glanced in that window as I went by none of this would
be happening now. What do you call it when something like . . .” He
stopped in mid sentence; this time two acorns hit Joe in the head. Thea
looked away and picked up some sewing she had been working on. “I think
I know what you mean, it’s kind of like fate, but something more.”
“Right,” Joe said warming up to the subject. “I just can’t quite remember
the word. It sounds something like ‘serene’, but that isn’t it.”
Thea looked down at her sewing so he couldn’t see how the corners of her
mouth were twitching. “Could it be ‘serendipity’?”
“That’s it!” Joe chortled, then put his hand up to the top of his head.
Three acorns had fallen this time. “Ow,” he said and looked up into
the tree to see his older brother draped over a large branch way up in the
tree with both hands full of acorns. As soon as Joe spotted him, he
let them all fall.
Joe scrambled to get away, but Thea didn’t move. Adam had anticipated
which way the younger man would go so they only person they hit was his brother.
The children were rolling on the ground laughing now, and Thea joined them
in their laughter.
“Morning Joe!” Adam called down the tree, “that’s what we do to people around
here who oversleep.”
Joe looked up and shaded his eyes with his hands. “That was a dirty
trick!”
“Yes it was, and if memory serves you’ve pulled plenty of those on me.”
Adam began to come down, swinging and dropping from branch to branch.
In a moment he landed on his feet, right in front of Joe. He gave his
younger brother a menacing smile.
“Come on, Adam, that was a long time ago.”
“You better start running.” Adam said and started walking toward his
brother who was backing up as quickly as he could. When his older brother
lunged for him, he turned and started running as fast as his legs could go.
Adam just stood there watching for a moment then turned around and went
to the blanket to sit next to Thea.
She laughed, giving him a puzzled look,” What are you doing?”
“I just wanted to see how far he would go before he realized I wasn’t chasing
him.”
“You’re being awfully naughty this morning.”
“I know,” Adam said and stretched. “Look at him go! He’ll reach
the end of our property soon.”
Joe finally looked behind him and stopped running. They could just
barely hear his inarticulate cry of rage as he threw up his arms in exasperation,
and then he started jogging back.
“You know it’s not nice to be messing with your brother’s mind like that.”
“Believe me, he deserves every single little bit.”
“Oh, so that’s what this is about?”
“Yep, and I hope he‘s prepared for me to make his life a living hell for
a while.”
Thea shook her head, “You just be careful and don’t hurt him. Physically,
I mean.”
“I won’t, I just want to torture him for a bit.”
She laughed and Adam stood as Joe came up to them.
“What did you do that for?” he said, winded and definitely irritated at
his brother.
Adam shrugged his shoulders saying, “I don’t know,” then reached out and
shoved Joe in the left shoulder, hard. “Tag, you’re it,” he said and
ran toward his children.
“Look out, Uncle Joe is it!”
The children squeaked with delight and ran off in opposite directions.
Joe looked at Thea. “What is with him this morning?”
She shook her head, “’If memory serves,’” she quoted then raised her eyebrows
at him.
His mouth fell open, “You mean he’s got them back?”
Thea nodded, “Most of them and if I were you I would be very careful for
a while. To Adam it’s as if all these things from the past have just
happened. Including every joke you ever pulled on him.”
Joe paled for a moment, but then seemed to recover quickly. “Well,
at least he has them back,” he said and took off after Alexander who had decided
to try and dart past his uncle.
Thea watched for a bit, then jumped up and joined the game. The five
of them had a fine time playing, but Joe accused Adam of cheating by swinging
himself up into trees to avoid being tagged by Joe. The adults thoroughly
enjoyed a rare opportunity to be carefree.
They had all just collapsed on the blanket when Pa and Hoss came out to
join them.
The two men stood there looking down at the prone figures. “Looks
like they been run ragged.” Hoss said smiling, and Ben laughed.
Adam sat up abruptly, “What time is it?”
Ben pulled his pocket watch out, “It is twelve fifteen,” and his eldest
son got to his feet.
“We better get moving or we’ll be late to the funeral,” Thea said holding
her hand out to her husband who pulled her up. She said, “I still need
to find someone on the staff to watch the children this afternoon.”
Hoss spoke up, “We’ll watch ‘em for you.”
Thea smiled, “Are you sure?”
“Yep,” Hoss said as Joe and Ben exchanged a look.
Adam leaned down to say in Thea’s ear, “Just back away quietly and don’t
make any sudden moves. They might regain their sanity and change their
minds.” So she quickly said, “Thank you,” and the two of them hurried
off toward the house hand-in-hand.
The three men stood there looking down at the two small children.
“Oh, boy,” Joe said, “I have a bad feeling about this.”
“Come on, Joe, you ain’t tellin’ me the three of us cain’t handle two little
ones, are you?”
Alexander and Annalise exchanged a look then smiled angelically up at their
new family.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
Nearly every employee who was free came to the funeral and Adam and Thea
spent most of their time greeting those arriving. A few people were
still filing in when they had to rush off to take their places with the choir.
Adam stood in between Wes and Charlie while Thea was next to Marie.
The five of them were unobtrusively watching one man in particular; they couldn’t
believe he had come to the service. He sat in the middle of the first
row and nothing about him seemed remarkable enough for all this attention.
Until you looked at his eyes – they were cold and full of pride, arrogance,
and self-importance.
Thea had been watching the man so intently out of the corner of her eye
while the minister spoke that Marie had to poke her in the ribs to wake her
up. The choir had started to sing,
“I'm giving it all to You, Lord
For You I will always wait,
I'm giving it all to You, Lord
Until I pass through Heaven's gate.”
As the last notes faded away, Adam stepped down and came to the pulpit to
read scripture. He startled everyone by his choice of verse and by not
saying a word in introduction.
“Awake, my God; decree justice.
O righteous God, who searches minds and hearts,
bring to an end the violence of the wicked and make the righteous secure.
He who digs a hole and scoops it out falls into the pit he has made.
The trouble he causes recoils on himself; his violence comes down on
his own head.
I will give thanks to the Lord because of his righteousness and will sing
praise to the name of the Lord Most High.“
He turned away then and went back to the choir as they began to sing again.
Lord, there is no
Pain so sharp You can not ease
Arms so empty You can not fill
Place so dark You can not go
Voice so faint You can not hear
The choir filed out and once they were out of sight, Adam took off his choir
robe and went back in to be a pallbearer. Ten men, five on each side,
stood by the casket and at a signal from Adam they lifted it onto their shoulders
and began to walk out of the church and to the gravesite.
The graveside service was very brief and when it was over Thea came up to
Adam and put her arms around his waist, resting her head on his chest.
He looked down at her as he pulled her close, so neither of them saw Marie
stop and stand next to a tall man with iron-gray hair who had been sitting
next to the man they had been watching so closely.
“Tomorrow morning, nine o’clock, at the arena,” Marie said quietly to him
then limped away.
Adam and Thea climbed into their coach and headed home. The rest of
the mourners were on their way to the hotel where Adam had reserved the hall
and arranged to have the restaurant cater an old fashioned “wake.”
When the two came in the front door they heard a man shout from the back
of the house and the sound of a child crying. They looked at each other
then ran through the house and burst out the back door.
Joe and Hoss were each holding one of Ben’s arms and Annalise was wailing
with her brother’s arms around her.
“What happened?” Adam said coming to a halt in front of his father,
while Thea went to the children. His father just grimaced in pain.
“Now don’t get all excited Adam, it was just a little accident,” Hoss said
as he and Joe started helping Ben walk toward the house again. Adam
looked at Thea as they passed him and saw her eyes go wide. He turned
to look and saw a child-sized arrow protruding from his father’s backside.
He put a hand over his eyes; dear God, they had only been gone for two hours!
His father and brothers stopped when Thea rushed past Adam and stepped right
in front of them. She spoke with the voice of authority. “Stop,
don’t you walk anymore,” she said shaking a finger in Ben’s face, then turned
to Hoss. “Hoss, you pick him up and take him up to his room right now.”
Ben looked at her with his eyes snapping and a scowl. “I prefer to
walk.”
Putting her hands on her hips, she said, “I don’t care what you prefer,
you could do a lot more damage to yourself by walking with that arrow in
you.” She turned to Hoss again, “Do what you’re told Hoss, take him
upstairs now!”
“Sorry, Pa, she’s right,” Hoss said, picked his father up and carried him
into the house. Thea followed closely behind.
As soon as Ben was out of sight Annalise ran to her father and he scooped
her up; Alexander followed slowly. As Adam held his daughter close and
patted her on the back his eyes went to Joe.
“How did my children get their hands on a bow and arrows?” he asked in a
reasonable tone.
“Well, now, that was Hoss’s idea. He bought them yesterday and was
going to ask you about it first, but he forgot. And this seemed like
a perfect opportunity to teach the kids how to use them so…”
“And…?”
“And what?”
“And, how did our father end up with an arrow in his…well, in him?”
Joe’s eyes involuntarily went to Annalise, still sobbing in her father’s
arms.
Adam blinked, “Annalise did this?”
His younger brother nodded reluctantly and the little girl leaned back in
her father’s arms, her face shiny with tears, “Is Grandpa gonna die?” she
hiccupped. Adam put his hand on the back of her head and pressed his
forehead to hers, “No, honey, Grandpa is not going to die. You’re mother
will fix him up just like new.”
The little girl looked in her father’s eyes for a moment then seemed to
accept that he was telling the truth. She wearily snuggled up to her
father, her head pressed up against his neck.
Adam felt a tugging at his pant leg and looked down at Alexander.
“This time it wasn’t me Pa,” the little boy said. His father smiled.
“Yes, this time it wasn’t you,” as he reached down and put his free hand on
his son’s head. He smoothed Alexander’s hair then bent down to pick
him up too.
“I’m really sorry, Adam,” Joe said, looking at his older brother cautiously.
“Pa is the one who will be expecting apologies, not me.” They started
toward the house. “Do you think you can watch these two in my office
for a bit while I go up to help?”
“You don’t have any weapons in there, do you?”
“Yes, but even you wouldn’t be able to get at them.”
“I think I can manage for a while. You’d better go up, I’m sure Thea
will be needing your help.”
“I’m not worried about Thea,” Adam said when they reached the back door,
“It’s Pa I’m thinking of.”
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
After leaving the children with Joe in the office Adam quickly climbed the
stairs, but had to flatten himself up against the wall when people came running
with the things Thea no doubt had asked for. As soon as the hall was
clear he continued on to his father’s room, opened the door and went in.
Hoss turned toward him and his older brother nodded his head at the door.
The big man left quickly, relieved.
Ben was lying facedown on the bed and Thea was busily arranging things so
she didn’t notice her husband come in or Hoss leave at first. He went
to the head of the bed and looked down at his father. “Are you alright
so far?’
He turned his head to give Adam a desperate look, “Can’t you stop her?”
Knowing what his father was upset about he chuckled and shook his head.
“Nope. She’s right, it’s best to get that arrow out of you as quickly
as possible.”
Thea went to her doctor’s bag and pulled out a large, sharp knife.
“But she’s going to be putting her hands on…” he started to say then realized
Thea was slitting his pant leg up the back.
“Hey!” he started to protest and get up. Adam put a hand on his father’s
shoulder to push him back down. “Pa, she’s a doctor. She’s seen
it all before.”
Thea patted the prone man on the leg as she started to cut the cloth away
around the arrow, “Don’t worry Ben, if I see anything I haven’t seen before
I’ll shoot it.”
Her father-in-law just groaned in embarrassment and buried his head in the
pillow.
At a nod from his wife, Adam came over and picked up the chloroform mask.
He opened the bottle, expertly applied a small amount of the liquid to the
center then went back to the head of the bed.
His father turned toward him and Adam put a hand to the back of his head
and gently placed the mask over his mouth and nose.
“Just take a deep breath, Pa, don’t fight it.’
In a few seconds the prone man went limp and Thea went into action while
Adam checked his father’s pulse.
She picked up her scalpel and with quick, short strokes cut an “X” shape
with the arrow in the center. After pulling it out, she reached for
a jar of clear liquid, a mixture of hot water and carbolic acid. She
dribbled the mixture into the wound and swabbed it out until she was satisfied
it was clean. Then she reached for an already threaded, curved needle.
A few stitches in each layer and she was done, so she began to clean and bandage
the wound.
Ben was still out when she turned to Adam and smiled. “All done,”
she said and laughed. “Now I see something else you and your father
have in common. Except yours doesn’t have an ‘X’ on it.“
He slanted a sideways look at her, “If you are finished ogling my father’s
backside you can wait out in the hall while I get him settled.”
She left the room laughing and he shook his head.
A few minutes later Adam opened the door and Thea came back in to look at
her patient. She checked his pulse and pulled his eyelids back.
“Everything is normal, he should be coming out of it soon, so I’ll just clean
this mess up then sit next to the bed and wait,” she said and began to gather
her things up.
Adam said, “I’ll be right back, I want to check on the twins and arrange
for a tray to be brought up here later.”
Thea just nodded as he left.
When she finished straightening up the room, she curled up in the wingchair
by the head of the bed. She sat there quietly, taking the opportunity
to study her father-in-law’s sleeping face.
He soon opened his eyes and she smiled down at him with affection, “How
do you feel?”
After blinking a few times and clearing his throat he said, “Fine,” as though
he was surprised.
“I just want you to stay in bed for the rest of today and tomorrow you can
do what you want. Just be careful you don’t pop any of the stitches.”
He refused to meet her eyes, so she leaned down and whispered, “It’s ok
Pa, I kept my eyes closed.”
Ben looked up at her quickly; she grinned and waggled her eyebrows at him.
That won a small smile from him, which turned into a much wider smile as
he started to laugh. “I guess that was rather foolish of me to be bothered
by you…seeing part of me unclothed. I’m sure once you’ve seen one, you’ve
seen them all.”
Thea shook her head, “No, not really, darlin’” she said and gave him a wink.
He turned red and laughed.
Adam walked in as his father said, “Don’t make me laugh anymore, that’s
starting to hurt.”
She immediately became serious, “Do you need anything for pain?”
“No, I’ll be fine,” he assured her so she leaned down and kissed him on
the forehead. “Well, if you gentlemen will excuse me, I think I will
go and get my children ready for dinner.” She ran her hand down Adam’s
arm and then gave him a sharp thwak on his backside as she left the room.
“Hey!” her husband protested as she hurried away giggling.
When he turned to his father he was relieved to see him smiling. “That
woman is getting to be entirely too cheeky…and I can’t believe I just said
that.”
His father shook his head still smiling then his expression became serious.
“Adam, I’ve been thinking about you two and I’ve realized something - Thea
is just right for you. All the women you had in your life before would
have bored you to tears within the first year of marriage.”
“I know,” Adam said and sat down in the chair by the bed. “Of course,
I only know that since I recovered most of my memories last night.”
“You did!”
“Yes I did and I have some questions for you,” he leaned forward, “so tell
me Pa, what’s this about Hoss and Leprechauns?”
******************************************************************************************************************************************
ROUNDUP
Chapter 7
When Ben, Joe, and Hoss came down for breakfast the next morning, Adam was
ready to leave for the day, dressed in another immaculate, expensive suit,
this one dark blue. He stayed for a few minutes to say good morning,
and to ask his father how he was feeling. Ben shifted in his chair and
just gave his son a look.
Adam laughed and told them he would be in meetings away from the office
most of the day, but would see them around four o’clock. Then he left.
The three men took their time over breakfast and discussed their plans for
the day. They would be leaving in a few minutes to attend a cattle auction,
one of the reasons they had come to San Francisco to begin with.
They were at the front door when Thea came bustling into the hall.
She rushed up to them and kissed each one on the cheek saying, “I’m so sorry
I wasn’t there this morning, we’re still cleaning up from the party.”
Opening the front door for them she said, “and when may I look forward to
seeing you gentlemen again today?”
“Probably about the same time you’ll see Adam again today,” her father-in-law
said as he and his sons went out the door.
“I’ll be there, I mean here,” Thea said distractedly as she followed them
outside and watched them go down the front steps. When they looked back,
she waved and kept watching until they were out of sight.
She went slowly back inside, shut the door, then picked up her skirts and
bounded up the stairs two at a time. In a few minutes she hurried back
down, dressed in male clothing with her hair tucked up under a hat.
She picked up her bag and slipped outside, shutting the door quietly behind
her.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
The three Cartwright men arrived early, but the auction yard was already
packed with people. Ben took the lead and Hoss brought up the rear with
Joe in the middle as they worked their way through the crowd. Hoss
stopped for a second when he thought he heard someone calling his name.
He looked around then spotted Marie, Adam’s secretary, beckoning to him from
a door near the entrance. He turned back the way he had been going,
hoping to see Ben and Joe still within hailing distance. He saw no sign
of them. Shrugging his huge shoulders he hurried up to Marie.
“Hoss,” she said and stepped through the open door, “Adam sent me to get
you; he needs your help.”
“What happened?” Hoss said as he came through the door.
Marie turned around and gave him a strange look as the door closed behind
him. Four men who had been lined up behind the door threw themselves
on Hoss and wrestled him to the floor. Before he could even start to
fight back an acrid-sweet smelling cloth was slapped over his mouth and nose.
In a moment he was unconscious.
The four kidnappers began tying up the unconscious man and Marie slipped
back into the arena.
She didn’t have to go far to spot Joe, it was obvious he was looking for
Hoss.
“Joe,” she called and waved at him. The young man immediately hurried
over.
Before he had a chance to ask any questions she turned and led him to the
room where Hoss lay. She opened the door and he went in. This
time she stayed outside and listened to the thuds and grunts, as Joe was subdued.
Marie just continued to wait by the door; she knew Ben would be showing up
soon.
Sure enough, about ten minutes later she saw him coming in her direction.
She waited until he spotted her, waved to him, and went through the door,
leaving it open halfway. He followed her in.
A few minutes later she came back out accompanied by a tall man with iron
gray hair. They went out of the arena and up to a boxed-in wagon waiting
next to the outer door to the room where the three Cartwright men were lying
unconscious.
The man opened the back door to the wagon and the outside door to the room
opened. All four men carried out something very large wrapped in a tarp.
Marie cautioned them, “Be careful!” The four men nodded and finally
managed to get the bundle into the wagon. They had less trouble with
the other two. Marie waited until the wagon pulled away before heading
home.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
Three hours later Adam returned from a meeting. He had just taken
his seat behind the desk when a knock came at the door. “Come in,”
he called.
The door opened and Wes appeared in the doorway looking somber, “Adam, this
note just came for you,” he said as he walked forward and handed it over.
His employer unfolded the paper quickly; it read:
Go home
NOW!!!!
Pink
Adam handed the note to Wes saying, “Send the police to my house!” and he
bolted from his office, running for the end of the hallway where the secret
entrance was, hoping he wouldn’t be too late.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
The stranger carefully opened the door that led from the basement to the
first floor and looked around. He didn’t see a soul, so he carefully
consulted the map of the house he was carrying. He knew the boy would
be in his room because he was confined to the house as a punishment for running
away, so he traced the route with a bloodstained finger three times before
he started to move again.
He quietly climbed the back stairs to the second floor, not encountering
anyone. His heart was pounding in his chest, knowing what would happen
to him if he were caught. He counted the doors as he went down the hall
and stopped in front of the fifth one.
Glancing around he put a hand on the doorknob, silently turned it then pushed
on the door. It slowly opened a crack without a sound and he poked his
head into the room. The boy was sitting at a child-size desk drawing.
He never heard the man come in and didn’t see him until a big hand covered
his mouth and he was plucked from the chair.
The man stopped for a moment as he headed out of the bedroom to shift his
hold on the child when he heard a low growl behind him. He turned around
and saw a shaggy, black head with yellow eyes rise over the boy’s bed; he
took a step back. The head seemed to float down to the end of the bed
and as the hound turned toward him the thug nearly shrieked in fright.
The dog’s head had been just large – the rest of him wasn’t.
The animal’s massive, black body rippled with muscle as he slowly began
to stalk the stranger as he backed away. He went through the doorway,
down the hall, and then down the front stairs carefully, not wanting to make
any move that might make the animal attack.
When they reached the bottom of the stairs the dog padded toward the door
and stood in between it and the man holding the boy. Then when the kidnapper
tried to go through one of the archways, the hound cut him off there too.
Eventually he was pressed up against the right-hand wall of the hall.
Sitting in front of them, the animal continued to growl, his lips rippling
over long, white fangs. The thug pulled his knife out, just in case,
as the dog looked at him with contempt.
The animal did not attack he just would not let the stranger leave with
the boy. Any movement on the man’s part caused the dog to snap at him,
but when he stood still the hound just sat there watching them and growling.
He didn’t even move a muscle when his master crashed through the front door.
Adam skidded to a halt then stood in the raised entranceway for a moment
to catch his breath and assess the situation. To his mind he was holding
all the cards. He walked across the hall to stand behind the dog opposite
the man holding his son. “Balor, down,” he told the dog who lay down.
He then pinned the man who was up against the wall with an icy stare.
“Put the knife down, let my son go, and I promise I will not kill you,” he
said through clenched teeth.
The thug was distracted then by Alexander when the boy began squirm in his
arms. “Be still Alexander,” his father ordered and the child did as
he was told.
Adam then slowly repeated himself, “Put the knife down . . . let my son
go . . . and I promise I will not kill you.”
The desperate man put the knife to Alex’s throat. The boy’s eyes were
huge in his small face and he began to cry. Adam steeled himself, he
couldn’t let anything distract him from getting Alexander back unharmed.
“If you so much as prick his skin I will make you wish you had never been
born, right before you die.”
The kidnapper looked the other man in the eye and what he saw there must
have made the decision for him. He slowly moved the knife away from
the child’s throat and dropped it to the floor.
“Now kick it over here,” Adam ordered, and the man did. Adam picked
the knife up, looked at it then snapped the blade off the handle. The
kidnapper’s eyes went wide and Adam said, “That’s is what I’ll do to your
neck if you don’t let him go this second.”
Trying to keep his eyes on Adam as well as the dog, the man slowly bent
over and carefully put Alexander down on his feet. As soon as he let
go the child ran for his father, wrapped his arms around his leg and began
to sob with his face buried in his thigh.
Adam picked Alexander up, and then kicked the pieces of the knife out of
the way. “It’s alright son, you’re safe now.”
Holding the sobbing child as close as possible he let the full extent of
his fury show on his face. “You have no idea how close I am to telling
Balor to attack.”
“But you said I wouldn’t be killed!”
“No, I said I wouldn’t kill you. I didn’t say anything about him.”
He looked down at the dog. “Balor”, he said and saw the thug’s face
turn completely white. “Guard,” he said, looking at the man with contempt
as the hound sat up and began growling again.
When Adam turned around Thea, holding Annalise ran through the front door
with Charlie right behind her. Her eyes immediately went to Alexander
in Adam’s arms and she put a hand to her mouth to cover a sob. He walked
up to her and put his free arm around her and his daughter, while she put
her free arm around his waist. The two of them stood there in the hall,
holding on to each other as tightly as they could. Adam raised his head
when he heard men coming up the front steps. He bent and kissed each
one; wife, daughter, and son then told Thea to take the children into his
office.
As she left, Adam glanced at the kidnapper and saw that Charlie had decided
to guard him too, and he almost smiled at the picture of the large dog and
huge man, both growling and staring intently, but his own rage had not cooled
at all.
He called, ‘Balor, come.’ The dog immediately stood and came up to
him. He said, “heel,” and went to the office door, the dog close by
his side. Adam opened the door and told Balor to go to Thea. The
huge dog bounded into the room and jumped up on the sofa. All three
threw their arms around him as Adam shut the door and went back to the hall.
The first policeman through the front door went right to Adam and held out
his hand. “I see you’ve been having a bit of trouble today, Mr. Eden,
I mean Cartwright,” he said as they shook hands.
“Yes, as you can see Lieutenant Tolson.”
“What happened?”
“Well, all I can tell you is I came in and found this man trying to kidnap
my son. Then he held a knife to Alexander’s throat.” Adam was
still having a little trouble tamping down his anger. “Balor had him
pinned right where he stands now.” He refused to look again, knowing
if he did he might do something violent.
As if he knew what Adam was thinking the policeman said, “Why don’t we get
this piece of human trash out of here and down to the station? Then
we can get a statement from everybody and take it from there.”
Adam nodded, “I just don’t know how he got in, I’ve had guards around the
house twenty-four hours a day.”
“You have?” the policeman said then turned looking for the nearest underling.
“Brennerman,” he called and a young, freckle-faced man came running.
“Search the house and grounds and instruct anyone guarding the house to come
here.”
The young man just nodded, then hurried off to organize the search.
“My wife and children are in my office. Why don’t we go in there and
you can take our statements.”
“Just what I was going to suggest myself,” the Lieutenant said then Charlie
interrupted them. “Adam? I think you need to take a look at your
missus – someone tried almost the same thing with her and Annalise at the
gardens today.”
“What!” Adam ran for the office. Lieutenant Tolson followed walking.
Thea looked up startled as her husband burst through the door. He
went directly to her then went down on one knee in front of the sofa.
When he looked at her face he could see her bottom lip was split and what
would turn out to be a huge bruise beginning to darken one side of her face.
“What happened?” he said and turned to look at Annalise. The little
girl’s lips began to tremble as she held her arms out to her father.
Adam sat down on the floor and pulled her into his lap. She clutched
at him and began to shudder. He held his daughter with a fierce grip,
and then looked up at Thea, but her eyes had gone to the door as Tolson came
in.
He sat down in a chair opposite the family, “Please, go ahead Mrs. Cartwright.”
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
Thea and Annalise had come to their favorite part of the gardens, the section
reserved for roses. They were walking along, hand-in-hand and thoroughly
enjoying themselves when a man stepped up beside them, grabbed the child and
tried to take her from her mother. Thea refused to let go so the man
smashed his elbow into her mouth, knocking her down then ran away clutching
the squirming child. Thea pawed at her skirt, finally reached the knife
in the sheath inside her boot, got to her feet and raced after them.
She stopped at an intersection in the path and looked frantically around,
not knowing which way to go. Then her sharp ears heard a faint cry and
she turned to her right and ran, following the sound she knew was her daughter.
When she rounded the next bend she saw the man holding her child looking
for some way out of the cul-de-sac in the boxwood hedges that were as dense
and thick as a wall.
He turned, saw her, and put a hand on Annalise’s chin. “Come any closer
and I’ll snap her neck,” he warned. Thea stood there, eyes wide and
shining with hatred.
“I mean it lady! Back up.’
Thea stared at him for a few seconds more then hung her head, shoulders
sagging with defeat. She began to turn away and saw the man relax out
of the corner of her eye. She turned back and threw the knife so quickly
he didn’t even see it coming; the knife sang through the air and buried itself
to the hilt in his left shoulder. His arm instantly went numb and he
dropped the child. The little girl landed on her feet and ran to her
mother who snatched her up and ran away as fast as she could.
Thea did not stop until they were on the sidewalk next to the street and
she looked around for a policeman, but couldn’t see any. Then she remembered
the club was only two blocks away. “Charlie,” she said under her breath
and walked the two blocks as quickly as she could, clutching her daughter.
She looked through the glass in the front door but couldn’t see anyone inside,
so she began to pound on the door and call for Charlie. He came running
and threw the door open. “Mrs. Cartwright, what’s wrong?” he asked as
she stepped right up and leaned into him.
He awkwardly put an arm around the two and pushed the door shut. Both
the mother and child were shaking violently as he guided her to the nearest
chair. He had to push on her shoulder to get her to sit down then he
bent over in front of her. “What happened?”
She tightened her arms around her child and tried to pull herself together.
“Charlie, someone tried to take Annalise away from me in the gardens,” she
said then a horrifying thought occurred to her. “Oh my God, if they
sent someone after Annalise, they’ll be sending someone after Alexander too!
I’ve got to get home right now.” She started to stand up.
“Hold on, Thea, I’ll get you home a fast as quick as I can, but first I’m
sendin’ someone to the station to get the police out to your house.”
She nodded, still shaking.
He went to a door at the back of the room, opened it, and spoke to someone.
He was back in a moment and said, “Let’s go!”
Standing on the sidewalk out front, Thea couldn’t see any empty cabs; they
were all occupied. Charlie walked out into the road and stepped in front
of one holding his hands up. When the cab stopped he went to the door,
opened it, reached in and pulled the passenger out. The smaller man
was sputtering with indignation until Charlie gave him a dark look and simply
said, “Emergency.”
The little man stopped complaining and backed away as the huge man picked
up Thea, who was still holding her child, and handed them into the cab.
After shutting the door, he climbed up to the seat, pushed the driver to the
side and took the lines into his own hands. He slapped the reins on
the horses’ backs and bellowed, “Hyah!” The horses took off at top speed.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
While telling the story, Thea had reached out for her son and now had him
in her lap, holding him as close as she could; he had fallen asleep.
Annalise was still in her father’s lap as he sat on the floor, but she had
stopped shaking and her eyes were closing too. The children were recovering
more quickly than the adults.
Brennerman came into the room then and said something low to Tolson.
The Lieutenant’s face went grim. “Could we see you out in the hall for
a moment, Mr. Cartwright?”
Adam stood then handed his daughter to her mother. Somehow Thea managed
to get both children into her lap. Balor lay watching them from the
other end of the sofa.
After they stepped out into the hall the Lieutenant led the way out to the
gardens and into the gazebo. A man lay on the floor in a huge pool of
blood. Adam stood as close to the body as he could, staring at the face.
He turned his head to look at the Lieutenant, “This is one of my guards,
Brian Kestler,” he said sickened. The young man’s throat had been slashed.
“We thought as much,” the Lieutenant replied.
“He was supposed to be watching my son.”
“I see,” Tolson said and was silent for a moment, deep in thought, then
shook his head, “Well, I believe that is all we will need you for; I’ve got
both your statements and I don’t believe we will ever need to ask anything
of the children since you and your wife can identify the assailants.”
Adam nodded, looked at Brian one more time then turned and left the gazebo,
already having made up his mind to have it destroyed.
When he returned to the office not only were his children asleep, their
mother was also. He sat down in the chair opposite them and just watched
them sleep for a while, knowing how close he had come to losing all of them.
The more he thought about it, the angrier he became. Balor jumped down
off the sofa and came to sit next to his master. Adam absently stroked
the dog’s shaggy head. White-hot rage burned in his intense stare and
when he looked up at Wes who came to stand over him, the larger man took a
step back.
“We have to stick with this afternoon, this can’t go on any longer,” Adam
said. Wes nodded. “We’re ready, what time have you decided on?”
“Four o’clock,” Adam answered, “After you deliver the message, I want you
back here to guard my children. You’re the only one I can trust to do
it right.”
“Yes, sir, with my life,” Wes headed for the door.
“Thank you,” Adam said and the guard just smiled as he left his employer
watching over his sleeping family.
******************************************************************************************************************************************
SHOWDOWN
Chapter 8
The four men who had knocked them out and kidnapped them were standing,
two on either side, of the man who had ordered Bob’s murder, the man who
had sat in the middle of the first row at the funeral. Hoss was still
unconscious and Ben was just starting to come out of it. Joe, however,
was wide-awake. His eyes kept scanning the almost empty warehouse,
looking for any opportunity, anything he could use to his advantage as he
struggled against the ropes. Ben had just opened his eyes when they
all heard footsteps coming up the wooden stairs and someone whistling.
The footsteps weren’t particularly hurried or heavy, they sounded calm and
purposeful. Joe and Ben recognized both the whistle and the song –
there was no doubt that Adam was coming.
The door opened and Adam walked in. He kept walking to the center
of the room without breaking stride or glancing at his family. He was
heading for a chair that had been placed precisely in the center of the room
facing the five standing men. Hoss still slept, but Ben was now sitting
up.
Adam sat down, stretched his legs out in front of him, pulled out a narrow
cigar and then lit it with a match. He crossed his arms and lounged
back in the chair, his narrowed eyes looking intently at the man directly
in front of him, still flanked by the four hired guns.
“So, Jackson,” he said with a dangerous smile, “as you can see I received
your invitation.”
Jackson showed his annoyance, “Who told you that you could light up a cigar?”
“Oh, pardon me for being rude,” Adam said mockingly as he reached into his
pocket and pulled out another cigar, “care for one?”
“No,” Jackson’s eyes went to the door; Adam put the cigar back in his breast
pocket.
“If you’re looking for that goon you sent after me, I can assure he won’t
be showing up,” Adam said. He lifted the cigar to his mouth again and
Joe noticed some blood dripping down his hand; the knuckles were a raw, bloody
mess.
Jackson’s eyes returned to the man sitting in front of him and his mouth
opened, but Adam interrupted him.
“I just have one question for you Jackson. . . were you born this stupid
or is it something you have to actually work at?” he said in a serious tone.
The other man’s mouth dropped open, “You must not understand the situation
here with an arrogant attitude like that.”
Adam raised his eyes toward the ceiling. “No. Wrong again.
You’re the one who doesn’t understand.” He pinched the cigar out with
his fingers, and then said, “Gentlemen, would you please enlighten Mr. Jackson?”
The four henchmen immediately turned their guns on the man in the middle
and four hammers clicked back. The two closest to Jackson each grabbed
one of his arms when he tried to reach for his weapon, a third took the gun
off of him, and the fourth pulled a wooden chair away from the wall and shoved
it under the man as he was forcefully pushed down into it.
Adam still lounged back in his chair, but was now shaking his head.
“You idiot, did you really think I was just going to sit back and let you
do this? You don’t understand who you’re dealing with. I’ve had
people inside your organization for the past year. And as for these
four, didn’t you stop to think for one minute about why four well-qualified
criminals just showed up on your doorstep looking for employment?”
Jackson did not respond, he just sat there with his mouth still hanging
open.
“I was betting your gigantic pride would get in the way of seeing anything
clearly, and I was right. You had no idea, did you?” The other
man shook his head, bewildered.
“I didn’t think so,” Adam continued, and turned his head to look at his
family for the first time. He gave a sideways nod in their direction
saying, “Nate, would you mind untying my family please?”
The tallest hired gun, blond and blue-eyed said, “Sure, should have thought
of that myself,” as he hurried over and pulled a knife out to cut the ropes
instead of untying them. In a few minutes Ben, Hoss, and Joe were free,
but Hoss was still sleeping peacefully. Adam addressed the two that
were awake. “Pa, Joe, these four men are very good friends of mine,
Pinkerton’s best,” he smiled, “why don’t you fellows introduce yourselves?”
The most muscular one identified himself as Mike and the average-looking
one in the bunch said his name was John. The last was a tall, older
man with iron gray hair and cool gray eyes; his name was Jerry. They
already knew the fourth man’s name.
Jackson finally spoke, “So what now?” he said keeping his eyes on the floor.
“Well, the original plan was to just take you in, but that changed when
you made that one fatal error in dealing with me.”
“Fatal error?”
Still looking intently at Jackson Adam said, “Tell him what my one rule
is, boys.”
All four hired guns spoke together, “Business is business, but never touch
my family,” and they all grinned.
“Right.”
“But I didn’t kidnap them,” Jackson nodded at the men up against the sidewall.
“Your friends brought them in.”
“I know,” Adam said, “I asked them to, it was the only way I could think
of to keep them safe. I couldn’t be sure you wouldn’t send someone besides
these four after them.” He stood, walked slowly up to Jackson and leaned
down to look him right in the eye.
“You tried to take my children, you bastard,” he ground out as his arm shot
forward and he seized the other man by the throat. He lifted until Jackson’s
toes almost left the ground and he let him hang there choking for a few moments
then abruptly let go when Nate said, “Adam.” The other man fell back
onto the wooden chair. Adam turned and paced a few feet away, cracking
his knuckles and rolling his shoulders as Jackson bent over retching and
trying to breathe.
“No one, no one, ever touches my children,” Adam shouted as he turned back
to Jackson. “You are the worst kind of coward – trying to get at me
through my people. If you have a problem with me, you come to me.
If you hate my guts, tell me to my face. You want to hurt me, come take
a shot at me, not my family.” He moved a little closer, “We are going
to settle this grudge you have against me right now – I’m going to give you
the chance to have a free shot,” he put his hands on his hips and stuck out
his chin. “Come on, show me what you’ve got, you poor excuse for a
man.”
Jackson didn’t move.
“Come on,” Adam said in a soft tone as he moved forward again until he was
almost right on top of the seated man, “you can’t pass up this chance.
You’ll never be offered it again, and I swear to you my family and friends
will not interfere, they understand that this is personal.”
Jackson still didn’t move.
Adam leaned over him, “JUST DO IT, JACKASS!” he shouted in the other man’s
face, and stood his ground when Jackson popped up out of his chair and put
everything he had into an uppercut.
Everyone else in the room flinched at the sound, but then looked on in shock
to see that Adam had not been moved at all. Even a couple of his friends
shuddered when they saw the way he smiled into Jackson’s eyes.
“I do believe you are in deep trouble now,” Adam said with a smile, “my
wife hits harder than that.”
The other man tried to back up, but the chair was in the way, and when Adam’s
fist connected with his chin he fell into it, over it, and went rolling across
the floor to stop in front of Nate.
As the tall man knelt down to look at Jackson, Adam asked, “Is he down for
the count?”
Nate nodded, “Yep, I think you broke his jaw.”
“Damn,” Adam complained, “I was looking forward to beating the crap out
of him.” He shook his head, “Theadora!” he shouted and she came hurrying
in followed by a short, red-haired man.
She came up to her husband and said, “You bellowed?” He nodded toward
Nate, kneeling at the unconscious man’s side. “Oh dear Lord,” she sighed
as she moved forward to kneel on the other side of the unconscious man.
“Nate, help me turn him over or he’s going to drown in his own blood.”
As they were turning him she said, “I am not going to be the one to set THIS
jaw. I’d be too tempted to set it badly so he’d talk funny for the rest
of his life.”
When she stood up and looked at Adam he said, “I swear to you I pulled the
punch. I just don’t understand why there seems to be a connection between
a swelled head and a glass jaw.”
As she just looked at him skeptically he laughed and tried to distract her.
“Isn’t Hoss awake yet?” As usual, it worked.
She turned toward the family group, saw Hoss on the floor still sleeping
peacefully, and rushed over to examine him. Adam caught his father’s
eye, winked, and the two men grinned at each other over Adam’s tactics.
After looking Hoss over, Thea sat back on her heels. “He’s fine, I
can’t see why he hasn’t woken up yet. Maybe he just doesn’t want to,”
she stood, “but I think it would be a good idea to get him home as soon as
possible.”
“I agree,” Adam turned to the red-haired man. “Bob, would you please
drive my family home? I have to stay for a while.”
“Sure, Mr. Eden, I mean Cartwright.”
“Bob isn’t dead?” Joe said, confused.
“Of course he isn’t dead, Nate talked Jackson into letting him do the killing.”
Adam looked at Nate, “Personally, I think we did an excellent job faking the
murder and the funeral.”
“Ah, a well thought out plan is a thing of beauty!” Nate said and he laughed
with the other three detectives, as Adam looked disgusted. He turned
to Joe and his father, “They’re having a good time making fun of me.
I only said that once, but they refuse to let me forget it.” He came
over to where Hoss was still lying on the floor and signaled the detectives
over to help. “Just give me a hand lifting him.”
They draped Hoss over Adam’s shoulders and he stood, walked up to the door,
opened it, and went down the steps.
Ben looked at Joe and they stared at each other in disbelief. Thea
laughed, “You keep forgetting Adam is a man in his prime right now, he’s the
strongest he’s ever been.”
The detectives were standing around Jackson as Thea, Ben, Joe, and Bob left.
When the four of them reached the bottom of the steps Adam had already put
Hoss in the wagon and he lifted Thea into the back, too. She immediately
went to Hoss and sat down, putting his head in her lap. She looked up
at her husband, “I don’t want his head to get banged around during the drive
home.” She looked down at the sleeping man, pulled up an eyelid and
bent down to look. “I think he just might be starting to come out of
it.”
“Good,” her husband said as he looked over the side of the wagon.
“If he’s not awake by the time you get him home, just wave a steak under
his nose. That’ll wake him up.”
Joe and Ben laughed a little as they climbed up on the seat next to Bob.
They were still a little shaky.
“How long do you think you’ll be?” Thea asked.
“Probably only a couple of hours. Jackson is the last one to be taken
in, we’ve already gotten the rest.” He started back up the steps as
the wagon began to move. “See you at home when I’m finished.”
“Tell the boys they have to come home with you,” she called and he
waved in acknowledgement from the top of the stairs as he opened the door
and went in.
******************************************************************************************
CONFRONTATION
Chapter 9
When Adam returned to the house he had the four Pinkerton detectives with
him as ordered. He led them into the house and to his office, where
the rest of the family, except the children, was gathered.
Thea jumped up and ran to Adam, throwing her arms around him. He staggered
back a bit, but then hugged her tight. “I told you not to worry, the
roundup went without a hitch. Didn’t it boys?” he said to the four Pinks.
“You better believe it.” Jerry said.
“Damn straight,” Mike said then flushed a bit as he glanced at Thea who
only smiled at him, then winced at the pain in her jaw. She let go
of her husband and went to answer the knock at the back door to the office.
John just laughed and Nate came to slap Adam on the back as a server entered
the room with a cart holding champagne and glasses.
“Thank you, Seth,” Thea said, “that will be all.” The young man gave
her a shy smile and left the room.
Adam opened the champagne and poured while Thea distributed the glasses.
After everyone was served Adam raised his glass to make a toast to his four
friends, “Here is to the best team of detectives to ever walk the earth and
thank God you are all on the side of the law!” The four detectives laughed
and drank the toast to themselves as Adam came to shake the hand of each
one.
Then Nate raised his glass, “And here is to the most stubborn, brilliant,
devious, royal pain in the ass of a United States Marshall ever to wear the
badge.”
Thea, and the Pinks had to laugh when they saw the astonished look Joe and
Hoss exchanged.
“You?” Joe sputtered.
“Yeah, want to see my badge?”
“Sure!”
Adam pulled a leather wallet out of an inside pocket of his suit coat and
tossed it to Joe. As his brother opened it, Thea glanced at her husband
and caught him giving his father a strange, dark look. But when he turned
back the look was gone. She frowned slightly, puzzled.
Hoss came up to Joe to look at the badge and he whistled. “That thing
is solid gold, ain’t it, Adam?”
“Yes it is Hoss.”
“Why didn’t you tell us any of this?” Joe said with a bewildered look.
“Because if I had, and you had told anyone, I would have had to throw you
in jail for obstruction of justice,” his older brother said as everyone took
a seat. “And we all know how good you are at keeping secrets.”
Joe frowned, but didn’t comment.
“Anyway,” Adam continued looking at Joe, “did you know the Marshals were
created in 1789?”
Joe shook his head.
“The duties of a US Marshall haven’t really changed all that much since
then, but there is a little known division that handles special assignments
on a national scale. That is what I do.”
“In his ‘spare’ time,” Thea laughed and Adam grinned at her. “I guess
I should be more accurate and say that is what I used to do. I’m semi-retired
from the division now. I only get involved when they need me.”
“Two years we’ve been working to bring that monster, Jackson, down and now
it’s finished,” Jerry said.
Adam nodded, “You know, they weren’t particularly bright, but they more
than made up for that with viciousness.”
“Two years?” Hoss asked, “Why’d it take so long?”
Adam smiled at Hoss as he answered, “We wanted to take everyone involved
down, not just his people. There were quite a few corrupt officials,
both high and low, who were brought in today. And we had to take our
time to gather the evidence so there would be no chance of anyone getting
off on a technicality.”
Adam then turned to Joe again, “And you have no idea how much you messed
everything up by finding me. You could not have had worse timing.”
“Dear God, did we have to scramble and bang our heads on the wall to think
up new angles,” John said.
Nate smiled, “We were having a hell of a time trying to figure out how to
keep you three out of danger, but not do anything that might tip our hand
and make Jackson suspicious. Then Adam came up with that brilliant idea
of me talking Jackson into letting us kidnap you.”
Joe gave his oldest brother a disgruntled look and Adam held up his hands,
“Sorry, but it was the only way I could be sure you would all be safe,” he
said in his own defense.
“Well, why couldn’t you have just told us?” Joe objected.
“It had to look real to everyone but us, Joe,” Thea said. “Everything
had to be above suspicion to keep Jackson in the dark.”
Hoss looked at Thea, “Us? You’re a part of this?”
“Of course, who do you think knocked you out? But you never saw me,
now did you? The only one you saw was Marie, the turncoat that lured
you in,” she said and grinned.
Hoss and Joe started to laugh, hard, and when Thea looked at Adam she caught
that same darkness in his eyes as he glanced at his father who had remained
strangely quiet.
“So what do you think of all this, Pa?” Joe asked as Hoss continued
to chuckle.
“I’m stunned,” his father said. Thea watched Adam’s face tighten as
he looked away.
Hoss looked to Adam, “So what now?”
“Well, that is a good question. I have also been working on a project
that involves opening a regional office of the special division as a test.
I have been offered the position of being the first regional director,” he
paused, “And I’m hoping if I do accept the position that John, Mike, Jerry,
and Nate will come with me.”
“So you haven’t made up your mind, yet?” Ben asked. Adam answered
without looking at him. “No, I haven’t. I need a chance to clear
up one more problem before I can commit to it.”
Joe asked anxiously, “So where will this office be?”
Adam looked right at his father as he answered, “It was supposed to be in
San Francisco, but strangely enough the location has changed overnight to
Virginia City.”
Hoss and Joe exchanged excited looks. “So you’d be movin’ to Virginia
City if you took that job?” Hoss asked.
“Yes, yes we would.” Adam said quietly, still staring at his father.
When Ben finally met Adam’s eyes, his eldest son nodded toward the door
to the hall, stood and went out.
His father followed and no one in the office really noticed except Thea.
Adam led the way to a small parlor off the hall, opened the door, ushered
his father in then followed, closing the door behind them. “Have a seat,
please,” he said to his father, but remained standing as he pulled a piece
of paper out of his pocket, a letter he hadn’t opened until an hour before.
He stood looking down at the letter in his hand for a moment then turned
his deep, dark eyes to his father. “How did you find out? Who
do you know? And how did you get to them so fast?” Ben looked
away from his son’s intense gaze.
“Don’t get me wrong, I do understand your motives; I’m a father too so I
can understand what prompted you to want to do this. What I can’t understand
is your giving in to that impulse,” Adam said as he began to pace. “Do
you have any idea what you’ve done to me?” He shook his head and stopped
pacing. As he turned to his father hurt, anger, and pain looked out
of his eyes for a second, but were quickly veiled.
“I gave two-and-a-half years of my life to this project; two-and-a-half
years of planning, decision making, and worst of all, dealing with bureaucrats.
Then you make a few suggestions to someone and all of it is gone, overnight.”
Adam cracked his knuckles and rolled his shoulders, two signs his father now
knew meant Adam was furious.
“How did you find out? Who do you know? And how did you get
to them so fast?” His son repeated and began to pace again.
Without looking at him Ben said, “I had lunch with and old friend of mine
who just happened to be in town.”
Adam stopped pacing in front of his father, “An old friend who just happened
to be…oh no, please don’t tell me you mean the Vice President.”
His father nodded as his son put a hand to his forehead.
“That man has the biggest mouth in Washington and no brains to back it up.
He just told you everything, didn’t he?”
Ben nodded again.
“Damn,” Adam said as he wearily dropped into the chair opposite his father.
“I’ve got to say that I just can’t believe you did this to me. Not only
have you rendered all that work useless, you have seriously undermined my
authority.” He put his head down to knead the back of his neck.
“I was dealing with these people on an equal basis until now. By tomorrow
it will be all through the organization that my father pulled some strings
so I could be assigned near home. The whole time I’ve been working on
this I have emphasized to people that there would be no favoritism, no politics,
and no influence would be tolerated in my office. Thank you very much.”
His father started to speak, but Adam held up a hand to stop him, “Don’t.
Let me finish,” he said in a tightly controlled voice. “Believe me,
I don’t mean any disrespect and I don’t want to hurt you. You took a
calculated risk, because you knew how much this project meant to me, but I
think it’s about to blow up in your face.” He raised his head saying,
“Look at me,” and Ben did.
“My hair is starting to turn gray. I have a family, numerous businesses,
and a huge load of responsibility. I am not a child, or even a young
man anymore. I have managed my life quite well without you for six years
and I am just about as grown up as any man can be.” Adam’s voice had
become rougher with suppressed emotion.
“But we have to come to an understanding, Pa. Either you swear to
me, with God as your witness that you will never meddle in my life like this
again, or I will walk away from this project and I will no longer be a part
of your life.”
Adam pushed himself up and stood, head down. He went to the door,
opened it then stopped as he raised his head and his shoulders stiffened.
“You have a decision to make; let me know when you’ve made it,” he said quietly
and closed the door behind him as he left.
When he entered the office again he went directly to Thea, sat next to her
on the sofa and held her hand. The detectives were entertaining Joe
and Hoss with stories from their assignments.
Thea put her head on Adam’s shoulder and whispered in his ear, “Did you
give him an ultimatum?” She had figured out what happened.
Adam nodded and she squeezed his hand, “He’ll do the right thing, I know
it.”
“I certainly hope so, but he’s awfully proud.”
“I know, that’s another thing you two have in common. But he’s also
not stupid.”
Mike broke into their conversation. “Hey Adam, do you remember the
name of that weird little guy? You know, the expert pickpocket in New
York?”
Adam laughed, “His name was Tony Gettaboney.” The others laughed.
“He was the best I’ve ever seen. He could take everything you’ve got
while looking you right in the eye. And you would never know until it
was too late.”
“Except for you,” Jerry said.
“I only ever caught him once, and for some reason that impressed him so
much he decided he was going to teach me everything he knew, from picking
locks to spotting scams.”
“Hey,” Joe said, “can you teach me how to pick a lock?”
“Sure,” his older brother was saying when the office door opened and Ben
came in. Adam stood as his father walked right up to him. Looking
his son in the eye he said, “You were absolutely right, I shouldn’t have interfered.
Please accept my apology and my word I will never do anything like that again.”
Ben held out his hand and Adam blinked, taken aback at first. He slowly
took his father’s hand and said, “You really mean that don’t you?” His
father nodded, so instead of shaking his hand Adam pulled him into his arms
for a backslapping hug and said low, “Believe me, Pa, you will never regret
this.”
“I know I won’t,” Ben said, “but is there anything that can be done to restore
your original plan?”
“No, I know these people and it wouldn’t be any use. Besides, my original
plan had been Virginia City all along.” When he saw the look on his
father’s face Adam grinned. “Hey, I didn’t say your suggestions weren’t
good. It was your motives for making them I objected to.”
Ben shook his head in disbelief and Thea said to him, “Nate wasn’t kidding
when he called Adam devious.” He looked carefully at his eldest son,
taking in the hooded eyes and raised eyebrows then realized there was so much
more to him now than he had even suspected. He began to chuckle appreciating
Adam’s masterful handling of the situation.
“Yeah, he’s sneaky,” Mike agreed.
“I don’t lie,” Adam objected.
“No, but somehow you usually manage to leave a few major details out,” Jerry
said.
“I prefer to call that being circumspect. If you want the right answers
you have to learn to ask the right questions, and the first thing you learn
in dealing with the criminal element is to never give any information not
necessary.”
Nate changed the subject to what was on everyone else’s mind, “So what’s
it going to be boss? Are we all going to Virginia City or not?”
Adam looked at Thea and she gave him a look that said it was up to him,
“’Where you go I will go, and where you stay I will stay,’” she quoted from
scripture.
He looked at his smiling wife and again thought about how lucky he was.
Then he shot a look at his father out of the corner of his eye, “Well, Pa,
it looks like you’ll be getting your way after all. Yes, we are moving
to Virginia City and God help those poor, unsuspecting people. They
have no idea what’s coming.”
TO BE CONTINUED…
The End
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