ALL IN A DAY’S WORK
This one is for John - Who puts up
with a lot!
All in a Day’s Work
by
Jenny Guttridge
A Tale of Birth and Life and Death
Adam stretched himself carefully in
the bed. To be able to stretch without pain was a luxury he had not been able
to enjoy for a long time and he made the most of it, working on one limb at a
time and pushing out each finger and toe as far as it would go. Then he lay for
a full minute, relaxing, listening to the beat of his own heart, strong and
slow and steady. He’d been confined to this bed for more weeks than he’d cared
to count. He hadn’t been allowed up to cater for even the most personal of
bodily functions, and he’d hated it. Then there had been more weeks when he had
been allowed only to sit, at first in the chair in his room and then, after
endless pleadings and arguments and, he had to confess, what amounted to no
less than a full scale temper tantrum on his part, downstairs in his favourite
chair with his feet propped up and cushions tucked all round him. The worst of
it, once the pain of his wound had started to fade, had been watching his
family suffering right along with him.
Adam was not an easy man to live with
when he was ill. He had always been active and the moment he’d started to feel better
he wanted to get up and start moving around. Both his father and his doctor had
sat patiently and explained to him very carefully how close his brush with
death had been. They’d told him how cautious he had to be not to over exert
himself, first for fear of reopening the wound and then of exhausting himself
and leaving himself open to other illnesses. So he’d sat until he was sore from
sitting. He’d read twice through every book in the house and he’d become
irritable and snappy. Adam, when he put his mind to it, had a bitingly
sarcastic tongue.
Today all that was coming to an end.
Just yesterday he’d had an hour long session with the doctor. Paul Martin,
after giving him the most painstaking physical examination he’d ever had, had
finally pronounced himself satisfied. Adam had been given the all clear to take
up his life again, even if at the moment that did involve no more than a gentle
stroll round the yard and absolutely no work what so ever.
Adam sat up and swung his legs just a
little gingerly over the edge of the bed. He pulled his night shirt off over
his head and looked down at his body. It had changed little during his enforced
idleness, broad shouldered, broad chested, lean hipped, well furred from
shoulder to groin with dark hair. The tan embedded in his arms and legs had
faded a bit and his normally iron hard muscles had lost just a little tone, but
there was nothing that exercise wouldn’t quickly put right. Once he was able to
get back on a horse he would soon get properly fit again. All he had to show
for the ugly gunshot wound that had very nearly killed him was a puckered
purple scar marring the smoothness of his belly. The scar, of course would fade
eventually to silver, but the puckering would be with him for life.
He stood up, still moving with
something of the exaggerated care that he learned early on in his recovery, and
went over to the dresser. The face in the mirror looked much the same as well.
A strong face with brown, heavily hooded eyes, a firm mouth and chin, now
wearing a full days growth of beard, and a hairline that, whether he liked it
or not, was starting to recede. There were laughter lines around his eyes and
mouth and some other lines as well, lines that were new, born of pain. He ran a
hand through his raven black hair, longer now than he normally liked it, and
decided that, for sure, he would have to get one of his brothers to do some
barbering for him. Preferably not his youngest brother, who had a bizarre sense
of humour and was not to be trusted with the scissors. The beard was something
he thought he's better deal with right now. If he was going to put
convalescence behind him he would have to put in a appearance at the breakfast
table and his father was a bit of a stickler when it came to the proprieties.
Shirts in the house at all times, jacket and tie at dinner, and beards, even
embryonic ones, were not on the list of acceptability.
Adam lathered up his face and reached
for his razor. At least now he was able to shave himself. In the early days of
his illness his father or one of his brothers had done the job for him, and
having someone else, even someone he trusted with his life, near his throat
with an open cut throat blade made him sweat.
Once his face was clean, Adam found
himself some socks and reached for a favourite black shirt and a pair of pants
that, while old and worn almost to destruction, were supremely comfortable. And
then came the symbol of his return to health. Instead of his house slippers, he
pulled on, with some difficulty, his stiff leather boots. Now he looked like
himself again and if he still felt a little sore here and there, well, he
certainly wasn’t going to tell anyone about it.
He stood for a moment and looked
around the familiar room. For a while it had become his prison but now it was
just a bedroom again, comfortable and comforting, his own personal space filled
with treasured belongings and fond memories. His handsome face quirked in a
little smile and he reached for the handle of the door.
Adam was not the only Cartwright in
the house to sit on the edge of their bed that morning and critically examine
the state of their body. Jenny Cartwright perched on the edge of the massive
four poster she shared with her husband and looked down at hers in despair. The
neat pert bosom and tiny waist of which she had always been justifiably proud
had disappeared as if they had never been. Now, as she sat, her lap was filled
with the huge bulge of her belly. Beneath the ruffled cambric of her nightdress
the proportions of it seemed huge. It was hard and hot and the child inside
wouldn’t stay still for a moment. Even as she watched what was obviously a
small elbow thrust itself out from inside and stayed there, adding to her
discomfort.
She felt huge and unlovely and so
very tired, and by her own reckoning she still had two whole weeks to go. With
a small sigh she hauled herself up onto her feet and waddled - she could think
of no other term for it - over to the dresser and sat down in front of the
mirror. She looked as tired as she felt. Her sea-green eyes were infinitely
weary, and there were lines of fatigue etched in a face already too narrow in
the jaw to be truly beautiful.
The reflection of her husband
appeared behind her in the looking glass. Ben had risen before her and was
already shaved and resplendently dressed in silver grey broadcloth with
matching waistcoat, white shirt and black ribbon tie. He rested his fingertips
lightly on her shoulders and lowered his silvered head to kiss the back of her
neck. Although past middle age Ben was still a handsome, powerful, charismatic
man. A big man in every sense of the word, tall, broad shouldered and barrel
chested he had a deep booming voice that could lift the roof when raised in
anger, or, as now, purr as softly as a kitten into her ear. "Good morning,
my dear love."
Jenny closed her eyes and just for a
moment allowed her head to rest against him, drawing strength from the power of
his love. Ben, it seemed, never noticed how gross and cumbersome she had
become. She put up her hand and gently touched the side of his face. When she
opened her eyes again he was looking at her in the mirror. The irises of his
eyes were such a deep brown they often appeared black, as they did now. They
were eyes that could pierce a man to his very soul, but now they were softened
with concern.
"Are you ill?"
"No, my dear." She shook
her head with a little laugh, and to him her voice was like music. "Just
tired. I might need to sleep but I think our beloved child has other
ideas." She took his hand and placed it palm down against her belly where
the baby was turning round yet again.
"If our son has been keeping you
awake." he said with mock severity "I shall have to have serious
words with him at the earliest opportunity."
She smiled into the mirror. "It
might be a daughter."
Ben shook his head. "It’s a son.
Believe me. I am a man of considerable experience when it comes to sons."
He kissed her again and moved away from her, picking up bits and pieces from
round the room, a handkerchief, his wallet and some small change from his bureau.
Jenny turned to watch him. First and
foremost Ben was a rancher and a timber baron, but lately his interests had
expanded to include mine ownership and a partnership in a freight business, and
his sphere of influence was increasing in both the business and political
worlds. His forthright manner and basic Christian values made him popular, but
not with everyone, and his wealth made him powerful. Jenny was delighted to see
him happy and successful, but sometimes she worried about him, especially on days
like today when he was going away.
From across the room he smiled at
her. "I’ll see you at breakfast, my love." and with that he was gone
through the door.
It was time to get another day underway,
but each day it was becoming harder and harder to get started. Jenny brushed
out her long dark hair and wound it swiftly into a loose coil that approximated
the fashion in the latest
Hoss stifled a mighty yawn. He had
been up this morning before it was even light, sneaking down the stairs in his
stockinged feet to avoid waking the household, averting the awkward questions
that he knew would be asked, especially by his father, and the ribbing he would
have to endure from his brothers. He knew that he would have to pay for it
later, but what with all the extra work around the place lately and his brother
being laid up sick for so long, it was hard for a man to get any free time to
himself. At the moment, a visit to the barn in the early morning was about the
best start to the day there was.
Added to which, the pain that had
been bothering him off and on for some days had taken a hold with a vengeance.
It was centred somewhere low down in his right jaw, and it was taking on an
insistent, nagging quality. It had kept him awake most of the night, and first light,
and the chance to get up and do something to take his mind off it, had been a
relief.
Hoss looked at the little bundle of
fur in his big hand and smiled a big soft smile. It was worth being a little
tired to spend some time with these cute little critters. A huge powerful man,
as tall as his father and much further around, Hoss had a heart as big as the
world. Nothing pleased him more than to hold the little scrap of newborn life
close to his cheek and hear its soft mewling noises as it sought blindly at his
fingers.
He spoke gently to the little kitty,
soft nonsense words, and put it back down besides its mamma. She had six tiny
little kittens nosing up to her. All black and white ones like herself. She
licked over the one Hoss had just put back and nuzzled it back into line with
the others.
The big man straightened up and
yawned again. While he appreciated that the kitties purpose was to keep the rat
population to manageable proportions and they had to get used to being outside,
it seemed awful hard on the little family to make it live out in the barn like
this. He would have kind of liked to have had them over in the house but he
knew his father would never have allowed it. While Ben acknowledged willingly
enough that his sons were all grown men now, he still frequently treated them
just like they were children. Hoss sometimes wondered why. He put a bit of
extra bedding in the box for the mamma cat and started to think about the other
thing that started the day really well - breakfast.
He gave the horses theirs first, so
that they got to eat before they were bridled, and then set off across the yard
towards the house. There were some mighty interesting smells coming from the
kitchen. Smells kind of like bacon, frying, and they were just the sort Hoss
liked best.
Joe Cartwright was the last of Ben's
brood to emerge, blinking, into the light of day. He hit the top of the stairs
in a flat run, boots in hand, and just saved himself from going headlong over
the edge. It wasn’t that Joe was lazy or workshy. Quite the opposite in fact.
That summer, while his brother had been laid up, he had taken on more than his
share of the extra duties and worked many of the established hands to
standstill. It was just that Joe had a problem with getting up in the morning.
From the landing at the turn of the
stairs he made a quick survey of the living room. His father was down already,
dressed to kill and over at the desk putting the last of his papers in order
for his meeting later in the day. His eldest brother Adam was in the middle of
the room, book in hand as usual, arrested in mid-pontification by Joe’s
arrival. Adam still showed an unhealthy pallor lurking beneath his tan, but Joe
was glad to see that he was standing upright at last, and not hunched up around
his wound as he had been for such a long time. Though they squabbled and argued
and even fought on occasion, Joe adored his brother and was delighted to see
him on the road to recovery at last. Joe noticed that Adam had on his outdoor
clothes and flashed him a broad grin.
"I see you finally got your
runnin’ boots on brother. Shame you ain’t up to usin’ ‘em."
There wasn’t much Joe enjoyed more
than baiting his brothers and Adam, with his more volatile temper, was easy
prey. Even now, Joe could see his face tighten. "Just you wait up awhile,
Little Joe, an’ I’ll race the hide off of you." Adam stressed the word
little, because he knew it would irritate, but Joe just grinned at him.
"Any time you’re ready, Adam.
Any time."
Adam half raised the book to throw it
at him and then thought better of it, more for the sake of the book than his
brother.
Ben came through from the office area
alerted by his son’s voices. He looked from one to the other, immediately
protective of his eldest. "That’s enough boys."
Joe sat on the second step and pulled
on his boots. Knowing his father’s foibles as well as Adam, he had managed to
grab a shave and in lieu of a comb he ran his fingers through his brown curls.
Jenny appeared at the top of the
stairs and came carefully down them. Balance these days, was getting to be a
bit of a problem. Ever the gentleman Joe offered her his hand as he wished her
good morning and helped her down the last flight.
The front door opened and Hoss came
in from the yard. He sniffed appreciatively. The house was filling up with the
savoury smell of bacon and biscuits.
Ben looked at him, "You’re up
early son."
"Just checkin’ up in the barn,
Ben hesitated just a fraction. He knew
full well where his son had been, and why, but just at that moment he wasn’t
prepared to make an issue of it. Instead he spread his arms to encompass the
whole of his family and started to herd them towards the breakfast table.
"Come along then. Let’s eat."
Ben sat himself down at the head of
the table, and the others took their accustomed places around him, Jenny and
Joe on his left and Hoss to his right, and Adam right across from him at the
far end of the table. He looked round at their familiar, loved faces, feeling
proud of them and, this morning, very pleased with himself. His wife, he
noticed looked tired and pale. Only to be expected, he supposed. Joe’s wayward
brown curls were getting a bit ragged, yet again. Ben wondered why it was that
boy’s hair grew so fast! Adam’s too, was a bit longer than Ben would have
normally approved of, but then he hadn’t been able to get to a barber for a
while. The patriarch decided to say nothing to either of them for the time
being. Adam looked as if he could do with getting out into the sunlight and
fresh air. Ben recalled the long conversation he’d had with Paul Martin the day
before and a slight frown of concern appeared between his eyes. Paul was still
concerned about Adam’s injury and had only reluctantly, under pressure from
Adam himself, agreed to allow him limited freedom outside the house. Hoss was
quieter than his usual boisterous self - not so ready to exchange insults with
his brothers. Ben recalled that he hadn’t eaten more than half his second helping
at supper last night and wondered if he could be sickening for something, or
was just plain not hungry.
Hop Sing, bobbing and muttering away
in Chinese, started bringing in dishes from the kitchen, plates of bacon and
eggs and hot corn bread. The family bowed their heads and Ben gave thanks to
his God for the meal and for the new day. As soon as he was done, the men
around the table shook out their napkins and started on the food.
Ben’s eyes settled first on his
youngest son. "Joseph, you have the money I gave you for Kingdom Jones put
away safely?"
"Sure,
If Joe had been paying attention to
more than the eggs he was piling on his fork, he might have realized that that
had not been the wisest thing to say. Ben had heard it before. Nothing Joe
might have said would have ensured better that his father did start worrying,
right then.
"It’s a lot of money for you to
be carrying."
"It’s a whole lot of money for a
mare, Pa," Adam put in from the end of the table. "You sure she’s
gonna be worth it?"
Ben harrumphed "From what
Kingdom Jones tells me in his letter, it’s a whole lot of mare." Privately
he wished that his eldest son were fit enough to ride up to Sparks with Joe, just
as a sort of steadying influence, but there was no way he was going to say so.
Instead, he said to Joe, "You make sure you look that animal over properly
before you decide to buy."
Joe spoke with his mouth half full.
"Kingdom Jones says she’s a half bred quarter horse. If we put her up to
Monarch we should get us some stock that heavy enough for ranch work, but real
quick too..."
"Joseph!" Ever careful of
his wife’s sensibilities Ben scowled, "Not at the table."
"Sorry,
"Joseph!"
"You just make sure you check
her legs out." Adam said. "Quarter horses can get themselves some
real bad legs if they haven’t been treated right."
"I’ll check! I’ll check!"
Joe sighed. They’d already had that conversation.
Ben was resigned to letting Joe have
his head. He looked down the table at Adam, "I’m sure your brother knows
what he’s doing."
Adam made a dismissive gesture,
"Well, I sure hope so."
"Pa said I was to take care of
the horse breeding programme!" Joe glared. He was getting himself all
riled up.
"Enough!" Ben raised his
voice above theirs. "Joe is the one going to
Ben thanked heaven that Adam was
finally going to get out of the house for a while. As his health had improved he’d
become steadily more irritable and short tempered. Arguments had been flaring
more and more frequently, especially between him and his volatile youngest
brother. Getting outside for a bit might burn some of the fire out of him.
He poured coffee into his wife’s cup
and she smiled at him. He noticed that she wasn’t eating much, just nibbling on
a bit of dry toast. "Would you care for some eggs, my dear?"
"Thank you, no." She put
down her toast and her napkin, "I’m not really hungry."
"You must keep you strength
up."
Jenny touched his arm gently.
"I’m well enough."
Ben looked to the other side of the
table, expecting, by now, to find his other son eating his way steadily though
his second, or third, helping. To his surprise Hoss was merely picking at his food
with his fork. "What is it, son? I thought you were hungry?"
"Yeah,
Ben thought he looked pale and a bit
peaky. He frowned. "You’re riding up to the north quarter today, aren’t
you?"
"Yes, sir. I was gonna take a
turn around Possum Creek. We seem to be down some cows up in that corner
section. Thought I might be able to find ‘em and check along them fences up
there at the same time."
"Good idea. While you’re riding
through there, you might go on up into the hill country, check that there’s no
cat sign about."
"I’ll do that,
Forgetting himself, he put a chunk of
crisp, fried bacon into his mouth and bit down hard. "Ouch!" The cry
of pain was involuntary. Four pairs of eyes gazed at him in some concern.
Ben asked the question, "What is
it son?"
"I don’t know,
Joe grinned at him cross the table,
"That's what you get for eatin’ all them sweetenin’s. We done told you
they all ’d rot your teeth."
"I ain’t got no tooth rot."
Hoss looked more miserable than ever. "All I got is a face ache"
"The one almost certainly
indicates the other." Adam said cynically from his end of the table. Hoss
glowered at him. "I said I ain’t got no tooth rot!"
"You eat enough of that candy to
rot out every tooth in your head."
"Candy don’t rot your
teeth!"
Adam put down his fork, "It’s
been proved..."
"That’s enough!" Ben said
firmly. The family this morning was proving altogether too quarrelsome.
"Hoss, if the pain doesn’t go away by tomorrow, you’ll have to go into
town and see that new tooth doctor."
Hoss mumbled something that his
father didn’t quite catch, but which earned him a dark look anyway. Whatever
happened, he had no intention whatever of visiting the tooth doctor. He and Joe
had been in town the day the new dentist had moved into a second floor office
in main street, and they had seen some of the tools of his trade.
Jenny looked across the table with
sympathy. "I’ll get you some whiskey to rub on it before you go out. It’ll
help with the pain."
"Thank you, ma’am." Hoss
pushed his food around some more and finally lay down his fork with a sigh. He
was still hungry, but his face was paining something awful.
Ben looked round the table. Everyone
seemed to have finished eating except Joe, who was munching on biscuits
smeared, rather too thickly, Ben thought, with molasses. Adam had sat back in
his chair and was sipping at his second cup of coffee. He had eaten a little,
but since being relieved of his milk-sop and gruel diet, his normally robust
appetite had not recovered. Ben worried about the weight he had lost. There was
still a lot of food on the table, and Ben knew that wasn’t going to please the
Chinese cook. Hop Sing took it as a personal affront if there were more than a
few crumbs left. Well, this morning that couldn’t be helped. He put his napkin
down on the table and got to his feet, a general signal for them all to rise.
Joe and Hoss headed for the barn to
start saddling horses. Ben folded his sheaf of papers and tucked them into his
inside pocket. Then he started putting other bits and pieces into his
saddlebags. Adam wandered over to the desk, coffee cup still in hand, "I
wish I could go with you,
"That’s as may be. The question
today is, how far are we prepared to go to accommodate the steam engine, in the
shape of the locomotive, in
"It’s progress,
Ben glared at him; "I think
progress is in serious danger of running rough shod over everything that’s fine
and beautiful in this country. You’ve seen those open cast mines up north -
great gaping wounds in the landscape. They’re an offence to the works of
God!"
Adam sighed, "I have to agree
with you there,
Ben straightened up and looked at
him, scowling, "That’s another thing! You’ve been reading that Charles
Darwin’s book again, haven’t you?"
Adam had the grace to look defensive,
"A lot of it makes sense,
"So you’re prepared to believe
that we’re descended down from monkeys?!"
"Not exactly,
"That’s the Book you should be
reading!" Ben pointed with an authoritative finger to the huge family
Bible where it sat on the shelf. "Get yourself a little humility in the
sight of God!"
Adam sighed. This was an argument he
was not going to win. "Yes,
Ben gathered up his saddlebags and
started for the door. Halfway there he turned back, "Now you remember what
doc. Martin told you yesterday. You can stroll around the yard an’ the barn but
you’re to get plenty of rest, and you’re not to do anything what-so-ever in the
way of work. You hear me?"
"I hear you,
Ben looked at him a moment longer,
wondering, not for the first time, just how much of what he said his son really
did hear.
He strapped on his gun; the ornately
tooled holster looked somewhat incongruous against his suit pants leg, and
picked up his hat.
Jenny was waiting out on the porch.
She looked strained, with dark shadows under her lovely green eyes. For one
moment Ben considered putting off his trip to
Hat and saddle bags in one hand, he
tipped up Jenny’s jaw with the fingers of the other and brushed her lips with
his.
"You take care of yourself. I’ll
be back tonight."
She raised her face for a more
thorough kiss. "You shouldn’t really ride both ways in one day. Why don’t
you stay in
"My place is here with you. I’ll
be back before
"Don’t worry. I’ll be all right.
What can happen? Any way, Adam will be here."
Ben glanced back at the house and
lowered his voice, "Jen, don’t rely too much on Adam. He’s not as nearly
as strong as he likes to think he is." Jenny drew back, looking at him in
sudden concern. Ben hastened to reassure her. "I don’t mean he’s going to
bust loose inside again. Paul says he had to take it real easy, or he’s going
to exhaust himself and make himself ill all over again. He wouldn’t have let
him out of the house for another month yet, but Adam’s going just plain crazy
cooped up the way he’s been."
"I’ll keep an eye o him and make
sure he takes a nap after lunch."
The thought of his diminutive,
heavily pregnant wife packing his hulking great son off to bed struck Ben as funny.
He kissed her again and turned as Joe and Hoss came up leading his horse and
their own. Ben slung his saddlebags over the big buckskins’ saddle.
Joe and Hoss were already mounted up
and were waiting for him. He kissed his wife again and stepped up onto the
horse.
The last of the autumn mist was
burning off the land with the promise of another hot day to come when Ben and
Joe pulled their horses to a halt at the crossroads. They sat for a while
letting them blow. They both had a long way yet to ride, and there was no point
in getting the animals all lathered up ahead of time. This was arid,
inhospitable country with dust for dirt and nothing but scrub brush for cover.
Ben sat back in his saddle and looked
across at Joe, "There’s your road to
"I'll be sure to do that,
"Oh, and Joseph," Ben
called after him, "While you’re in
"Yes, sir!" Joe wondered
why his father insisted so often on treating him like a child.
Ben sat and watched him until he was
out of sight before turning his own horse the other way and moving off.
Joe kicked the piebald mare into an
easy ground-covering canter. He wanted to get some substantial distance behind
him before it really got hot.
Joe, on this particular morning, was
a contented man. He was young, healthy and carefree doing the job he wanted to
do in the place he loved best. He liked to visit the cities well enough, to see
the sights and mix with people, especially young ladies, many of whom his
father would not have approved. He liked to drink, and play cards, and visit
the dance halls and saloons On occasion, he even allowed his big brother to
drag him to a museum or gallery. The last one, he recalled, had been an
enlightenment, both to Joe’s experience and of his brother’s erudition, the
pictures being entirely of ladies in the ultimate stage of undress. The memory
brought a smile to Joe’s lips as he rode.
As always, the lure of the wild
So it was that Joe had his head up
and his eyes on the horizon when the biggest green-backed brush lizard either
he or the horse had ever seen shot out from almost directly under the mare’s
hooves. She squealed and shied, skewing sideways. Joe came out of the saddle,
somersaulting over the horse’s shoulder to land flat on his back in the dirt of
the road. The mare shied again at her fallen rider and galloped off down the
road with the reins flying.
Joe sat up and looked after her,
cursing.
The mare didn’t stop. She kept on
going until she was out of sight. Carefully, Joe got up and explored his abused
rear end. He was going to have some real juicy bruises right where he sat. He
bent down painfully and picked up his hat, dusting it off against his pants
leg. He was afoot and alone in unforgiving country. There was little choice but
to start trudging determinedly after the mare.
Hoss had parted company with his
father and brother before they crossed the boundary of the Ponderosa, turning
off to take the high trail towards the north corner of the range. The big man
had been feeling untalkative and morose, but out here in the wilds, with the
open country and the scattered woodlands spreading themselves before him like
the open pages of a book, ever changing and always beautiful, his spirits began
to lift. Every so often he would stop in a thicket, or by a tree, and just sit
quietly for a bit listening to the unquiet silence and watching the small
wildlife that soon emerged from hiding to take up small lives again. At each
such stop he would unstopper the bottle of whiskey his stepmother had given
him.
Now, Hoss wasn’t a hard drinking man.
He liked a beer or two well enough, especially if the weather was hot and the
company was good, but corn liquor was not really to his taste. This however,
was not run of the mill saloon rotgut. It was his Pa’s best sippin’ whiskey and
Hoss could appreciate the difference. He rubbed generous measures of the potent
alcohol onto his gums round about where the pain was. It helped a bit for a
while.
Hoss moved his big, black, raw-boned
horse on, steadily making higher and higher ground until he reached the line
where it was too dry and windswept for the grass to grow well. Here, there were
sand lizards, and gopher holes, and the trail switched back and forth between
huge rocks that looked like the roots of the earth itself, washed out by a
rainstorm.
Hoss studied the ground for signs of
the big cats that loved this high dry country. There were no paw prints and no
fresh scat, nothing at all to indicate that a cougar had cubbed in these hills
that summer. Hoss rubbed his jaw with more whiskey and moved on.
It was Jenny that had to placate Hop
Sing. The Cartwright’s Chinese cook had been with the family for more years
than anyone cared to count, but he was not above putting on his coat and hat,
and heading for the door with his carpet bag in his hand whenever he felt
himself slighted. This morning he felt himself very slighted. In his book it
was a mortal insult if every crumb he prepared was not devoured at the table,
the only excuse being if someone were ill, or, presumably, dead. Even Adam had
now lost his privileged status as an invalid and was expected to clear his
plate on cue. This morning Adam had not been the culprit.
The Chinaman had cleared the table
with a loudly voluble stream of insults, most of which, fortunately, no one
could understand. He scraped the remains of the meal, which were considerable
it being Hoss that hadn’t eaten, into the pig bin, piled the plates, unwashed,
into the sink and started to pack the venerable bag.
Jenny reasoned, cajoled and finally
begged. Hop Sing became suddenly deaf to American English. Jenny spoke no
Chinese. The resulting confrontation, while loud and prolonged, was
unproductive. Jenny prevailed, finally, by standing in the doorway and refusing
to move until Hop Sing ran out of steam and threw up his hands in despair.
There were times when being huge had its advantages.
Adam crossed the yard at a leisurely
pace. He had all but forgotten how pleasant it was to breath air that was
moving and alive, freshly scented with pine and late roses. The sun was warm on
his face and bright in his eyes. He felt, unfairly, as if he were a man freshly
released from prison.
Old Charlie was mustering the hands
down in the corrals, getting them mounted up and dispatched to various parts of
the ranch. The autumn gather was in full flow, the cattle being driven towards
the feeding stations where hay, and grain, could be distributed to them in the
short days of winter when the grass would be too deeply buried in snow for them
to dig out. He looked up as Adam came up, nodding his head in respect, but his
washed out eyes appraised the younger man keenly. He didn’t miss the fact that
Adam was thinner, and paler, and had new pain lines in his face.
"Adam."
"Charlie," Adam nodded
back, "How’s it going?"
"It’s going." Charlie said.
He didn’t need to tell Adam that the work was hard, and long, and that they
were short handed and falling behind schedule.
Adam looked a little wistfully at the
men riding off, "Wish I could ride with you."
Charlie eyed him up and down, then
turned his head to the side and spat tobacco juice. He’d known this young
Cartwright since he’d been a boy and he knew how to handle him. "Well, you
can’t. You know danged well you can’t get up on no horse. You jist get yorsel’
well ag’in so’s you kin help wi’ the round up next year."
"I’ll be back on a horse a long
time before that."
"Don’ you go countin’ no
chickens. Them belly wounds c’n take one hell’ve a long time t’ heal over. You
git yorsel’ all over excited ‘n’ bust yoursel’ open all over ag’in ‘n’ yo’re
Pa’ll have yo’re guts fer garters ‘n’ ours ‘n’ all fer lettin’ yer do it."
Adam smiled ruefully, "I imagine
he’d do just that."
Charlie prepared to mount up, then
changed his mind and turned back as a thought struck him.
"What you gonna do wi’ yorsel’
now you up ‘n’ ‘bout? Ain’t your Pa left you none ‘o that fancy book keepin’ ta
keep you busy?"
Adam replied with a laugh."I’m
sure he has. If I spend any more time in that house I’ll just go plain loco. I
thought I might go later and look over those new foals of Little Joe’s. I
haven’t got to see any of them yet."
Charlie chewed thoughtfully.
"They’re down on that lower pasture land. That sure is too far fer you ta
walk. You want I should have one o’ the hands t’ hitch up the buckboard ’n
drive you down there?"
"We can’t afford to waste a
man’s day driving me about, Charlie."
"I know it," Charlie eyed
him shrewdly, "‘N’ I know what yo’re Pa done tol’ me. You ain’t supposed
ta do nothin’, ‘n’ we ain’t supposed ta let ya do it."
Adam gave a small sigh. He could
imagine the instructions his father had left behind him. Even when Ben was
away, he was still right there watching over him. This time he knew his father
was right. He conceded the point, "All right, Charlie. I’ll stay
home."
Charlie looked him up and down,
reading his body language with an experienced eye, "Glad ta hear it."
He said, satisfied and turned back to his horse.
Adam stood back watching as he
climbed into the saddle. Charlie swung his pony round on a dollar and looked
down at him. Despite his gruff manner Charlie had a liking for this young man
and his eyes were amiable. "You take it real easy now, Adam."
"Like I have a choice?"
Adam asked wryly.
Charlie raised his hand in farewell
and moved off, following the last of the hands out of the yard.
The sun was well up and it was
getting hot. Joe had taken off his coat and was carrying it slung over his
shoulder. It was starting to get heavy. Now he took off his hat and wiped his
sleeve across his forehead. His brown curls were already damp with sweat. He
limped over to a convenient rock and sat, rubbing the pain out of his foot
through the leather of his boot. He had covered several miles since the mare
had dumped him in the dirt, and the stylish high heeled riding boots he
favoured were certainly not designed with walking in mind.
The countryside around him all looked
very much the same. One clump of scrub was much like another. For all he could
tell he might have been walking round and round these same two hills for an
hour, and the sand coloured soil and the sage brush were starting to lose their
attraction. He was beginning to wonder just how far that danged onery mare
might have run. He squinted up at the sun, which was burning bright and brassy
now, and climbing the side of the sky; and he looked at the road, long and
dusty with a heat haze just starting to shimmer. He shook his head and replaced
his hat. There was no help for it. He simply had to keep walking.
Jenny prowled the living room of the
ranch house. The huge living space had been designed years before her arrival
by Adam and his father and built with their own hands. It combined sitting
room, office space and dining area in one. It served the family as library, gun
room, music room and games room. Lives were lived out here. A log fire burned
in the stone built hearth, its heat dissipated by the sheer size of the room.
Insulated from the extremes by the doubly thick split pine walls it was neither
hot nor cold in summer or winter.
Jenny’s loom stood in one corner,
unused at present. She was too big in the belly to sit behind it. Her spinning
wheel and work box were not far away. A half played game of chess sat on the
round table, waiting for Ben and Joe to return and finish it.
She lingered by Ben’s desk, her hand
on the back of his chair. Her eyes rested a while on the faces of the women she
shared her husband with. She felt no jealousy for she knew that he loved her
unreservedly, but she was curious. These three women and Ben’s memories of them
were as much a part of the man she adored as was his love for his sons, and for
the land that he called his own. Each of the women was different, individual
and striking, and each in her own way was remarkably beautiful. In each face,
softened by femininity, she could see the strong features of her stepsons. The
face in the fourth frame was her own.
She took a book down from the shelf
and opened it at random. It was a dry and dusty history. She sat in Ben’s
armchair beside the fire, unable to tuck her legs up because of her size, and
attempted to read. The words seemed to run together, and she read the same
paragraph three times over without learning anything.
She put down the book and picked up
her needlework, but her concentration was lacking and she had not the patience
to finish the intricate embroidery on the skirt of the baby’s dress.
The child moved languidly, unhappy
that she was sitting down and not standing. To placate it she got up and walked
about some more.
Hoss stepped from the saddle and
hunkered down to get a better look at the ground. There was some sign here, but
it was not fresh and that made it difficult to read. A little frown formed
between his eyes, and he rubbed his sore jaw thoughtfully. Looked at one way, it
seemed as if some large pawed animal had passed this way several days ago, but
it wasn’t cougar spore. The pads splayed out further, and there was evidence of
claws extended even as the creature walked.
Hoss straightened up and stroked his
horse’s soft muzzle, puzzling at the problem. "Ain’t no tellin’,
fella," he said softly, "But I reckon that there’s a varmint for
sure. Can’t tell which way he went." The horse snorted and nuzzled at his
hand for a candy. Hoss found him one in a pocket and let him snuffle it out of
his hand. "Don’t reckon it’s gonna give you no tooth rot, eh?" The
horse agreed. Hoss gave him a pat and went to get the whiskey bottle out of his
saddlebags.
High above in the deep shadows of a
rocky cave two enormous bright green eyes slowly opened, and slitted pupils
closed up tight against the brightness of the sunlight. A huge, black-furred
body stretched, cat-like, in the darkness. A soft sensitive nose sniffed at the
air. Something new had entered a circumscribed world. Something sensed, until
now, only at a distance. Curiosity stirred in a very alien mind. Powerful
muscles rippled beneath the ebony dark hide. The cat-like body moved stealthily
to the cave entrance and the green eyes looked out.
Below, for the creature had some
concept of up and down, were two creatures of the lower, wetter lands. A four
footed one, prey, fleet footed but nothing like fleet footed enough if the
creature were hunting; and the other, stranger, standing erect on two legs,
soft yet somehow a threat. A rumble sounded somewhere deep down in the
creature’s throat, half roar, half purr. The jaws opened to reveal black gums
and sharp black teeth. The both of them were such easy, easy prey!
But the creature was not hungry, only
interested.
Hoss took a sip of water from his
canteen and winced as its coolness touched the soreness in his mouth.
"Danged tooth!" he muttered holding his jaw.
The black horse threw up its head,
nostrils flaring as it caught the scent of something on the air. It whinnied an
alarm call, shrill in the silence of the hills, and it started to dance
sideways as it sensed the presence of a predator. Hoss managed to grab the
reins before the animal ran off and left him afoot.
"Easy now! Easy." Hoss put
his hand on the horse’s nose to quieten it and spoke softly. "There ain’t
nothin’. Nothin’ at all." His sharp blue eyes searched the rock formations
around and above him for signs of movement, but he saw nothing. All was quiet
and still.
Under his hand the horse settled
again. Hoss shook his head, puzzled. He took a small sip of the whiskey the for
the sake of his tooth and climbed back aboard.
As he moved off the curious green
eyes watched and after perhaps a minute, the varmint began to stalk.
In a gentle stroll Adam completed his
circuit of the ranch buildings and corrals. It had been a journey of
re-familiarization. Unlike most complexes of ranch buildings, which tended to
evolve and spread as necessity demanded, those of the Ponderosa had been
carefully planned. Adam had designed them himself and then helped build them
with his own hands and back. That’s not to say there was nothing he would have
liked to change. The outhouse arrangements for instance, were now, to his mind,
decidedly primitive. His lips quirked in a smile as he thought how bitterly his
father complained, daily, each winter. He decided he would have to investigate
the modern methods of sanitation being developed in
Only details had changed while he’d
lain ill, but those details told him a lot about the function of the ranch and
how well it was doing.
Generally speaking the structures
were in good repair. Adam would have expected no less of his family. He noticed
only one shingle on a shed roof that needed a nail. Winter feed and bedding for
the stock had been gathered into the barns. While the quality of the sweet hay
was good enough the quantity, in his opinion, was barely sufficient. If it
turned out to be a typical Nevadan winter with blizzards all the way from
November clear through to March, they were going to have their problems. He
made a mental note to speak to his father about making some extra provision.
On his way back to the house he
stopped by the barn to fuss the mother cat and introduce himself to the
kittens. He would never have said so, but he could see the attraction the
little blind fur balls had for his big, softhearted younger brother.
He hadn’t realized that just a short
walk could take so much out of a man. He was plumb tuckered out and very glad
Charlie had talked him out of the trip to the lower pastures. In fact, he was
so tired a wave of weakness threatened to overwhelm him as he stood up. His
eyelids were displaying an alarming tendency to droop, and it was a temptation
to stretch out on the straw for a little rest. Determinedly, he shook off the
fatigue and headed for the house, one hand pressed hard against his newly
healed scar in a gesture that had become habitual in recent weeks.
At first it had seemed such a good
idea, to sit at the spinning wheel and spin the soft cream wool of her Jacob’s
sheep into fine woollen thread. The rocking motion of the treadle and the
gentle clacking of the machine often lulled the restless child. Indeed, it was
quieter now, but as she straightened, Jenny gasped aloud at the sudden pain
across the middle of her back.
She stood up carefully, both hands
behind her and stretched herself. The pain eased, settling into a nagging ache,
low down. She felt so very tired and wanted nothing more in the world to lie
down for a bit.
Tackling the staircase on her own was
just too daunting a prospect. The long sofa, on the other hand, was much more
inviting. Awkwardly she walked over and lowered herself down. The irate
rattling of pots and pans from the kitchen had abated, and, except for the
slow, steady ticking of the long case clock, the big house was quiet.
Jenny lay on her back with her hands
resting lightly on her stomach. For once the child was quiescent as if it were
asleep, or pondering upon some deep enigma. Jenny’s eyes closed and her
breathing steadied and she slept.
Hoss pulled his horse to a halt and
shifted his butt around in the saddle. He had ridden down now, out of the
hills, and from this final bend in the trail he could over look a good section
of the north quarter.
The high pastureland was lush with
grass, sere and tussocky now after the summer’s heat, and it sort of rolled,
building itself up in a series of slow waves into the foothills of the Sierras.
Here and there, a sweet chestnut still in full summer leafage dotted the
grassland, and a couple of miles away, a stand of willow marked the line of
Possum Creek where it twisted and turned, dipping at last into light woodland.
There were cattle grazing, probably
some of those Hoss had come all this way to find. Cows with their half grown
calves and some yearling steers that already wore the pine tree brand on their
hip.
Hoss took a little sip from the
whiskey bottle and looked behind him. He knew darned well there wasn’t another
human being within a three hour ride of him. None the less, he had the distinct
feeling that he was being watched. The trail curved back into the dry hill
country, shimmering in the sun. Not so much as a lizard moved, yet the feeling
persisted. Something with a keen and savage intelligence was up in the rocks,
and it was taking an interest in him - or more probably, in his horse. He could
feel it deep down in the pit of his stomach. Hoss eased the rifle a little in
its scabbard, just in case he suddenly needed it in a hell of a hurry.
Gathering the reins into his big hands he nudged the horse forward with his
heels.
Unafraid and unhurried, the great
black beast padded silently down the centre of the trail, not quite a cat but a
fluid feline shape. It stopped where the man and the horse had stopped,
snuffling at the ground. Ahead of it were the cooler, wetter lands where it
rarely ventured except when hunting. It could have left the trail there and
then and returned to its haunt in the hills, but something about the two legged
intruder had piqued its curiosity, and its spark of intelligence drove it on.
Black jaws agape and green eyes glowing, it flowed on into the pastureland.
Hoss reached the banks of Possum
Creek in about twenty minutes. The water was high and running swiftly,
bespeaking rainfall higher in the foothills. He turned the horse’s head
downhill and kicked on. The animal did a little dance and fought the bridle.
Hoss looked back. He could feel the little hairs on his neck and arms all
standing erect. There was nothing to see but grass and an occasional cow.
Frowning, he brought the horse under firmer control and moved on along the
bank.
The road curved up and around the
shoulder of the hill before dipping down again into the semi-desert. As Joe
laboured his way to the top he was delighted to see that his horse had finally
stopped running. Being a herd animal, she had found comfort with others of her
own kind and stood quietly now, with the pair of workman like bays harnessed to
the wagon that stood, lop-sided, in the middle of the road. Joe was not nearly
so happy to see that the wheel was off, and that someone was lying sprawled
under the fallen back end of the wagon.
It was a big man, about his father’s
age, with longish grey hair, and about a two day growth of beard. He wore a
work shirt, and grubby overalls and he looked as if he were in an awful lot of
pain. Joe dropped to one knee in the dirt beside him.
"Hey, Mister, c’n you hear me?"
The grey head rolled and the eyes
opened, blue-grey, but they had trouble focussing on Joe’s face. All that came
from the lips was a groan.
Joe fetched the canteen from his
saddle, taking care, while he was there, to tie the mare to the wagon. He
moistened the stranger’s lips.
The man groaned again, and rolled his
head in the dirt, "Leg’s broke!" he said, through his pain. "Was
trying to fix the wheel, an’ the wagon dropped!"
"I’ll take a look at it."
Joe screwed the top back on the canteen, and squeezed, on his back, under the
wagon bed.
It was dark under there, and it took
a moment for his eyes to adjust enough to see what had happened. It wasn’t
good. The axle had come down hard against the man’s right leg. His shin bone
was all twisted out at a peculiar angle, and there was blood staining the cloth
of his pants. Joe used his pocket knife to slit the pants leg up to the knee.
Shards of white, splintered bone jutted out of an ugly wound. The man’s leg was
already purple and swelling.
Joe wiped the sweat from his chin
with the back of his hand. Not relishing the task in hand, he wriggled out
again, into the sunlight.
The blue-grey eyes fixed on his face,
pain filled and anxious. Joe guessed that his own face told a lot of the story.
He tried to put confidence into his voice, "It’s gonna be all right. I’m
gonna get you out of there, Mister..?"
"Idress. I am Paulin
Idress."
Joe thought he had detected a trace
of accent, and the man’s name confirmed it. He was Swedish, like Hoss’s mother,
or, at least, Scandinavian.
Idress rolled his head again. His
eyes were starting to glaze over.
Joe kicked some boards out of the
side of the wagon and used them, tied with his own shirt tails, as splints.
Idress’s screams, as Joe straightened his leg, reverberated from the hillsides,
and were something the younger Cartwright would remember, later, in his
nightmares.
As gently as he could, he pulled
Idress out from under the wagon by the armpits. By now, the man was only
semi-conscious, but still, he groaned.
The wound was starting to bleed
heavily. Joe didn’t think there was much chance of saving the leg, no matter
what, but he had to try to save the man’s life.
He turned his attention to the wagon.
The wheel lay back in the road. It was beyond repair by anything except a fully
equipped blacksmith’s shop. Two of the spokes were broken, and the rim had
sprung apart at the weld line.
Joe stripped a longer length of board
from the side of the wagon, hoping to heaven that it was going to be as strong
as he needed it to be. With much heaving and sweating, and a few choice cuss
words, he got it wedged up under the axle, and, with the rope from his saddle,
he lashed it securely in place.
He tied Idress into the wagon bed
with a length of rope around his chest and climbed into the driving seat. With
just three wheels on the wagon and the fourth corner dragging on the improvised
sled, he gee’d up the team, and they started to limp, slowly, on towards
Hop Sing had got over his fit of
pique. He’d never had any real intention of leaving. Early on he’d made this
kitchen, and this house, and this land, his home. In truth, he thought of
himself as much one of the family as if his own name were Cartwright. It didn’t
hurt though, to threaten occasionally, just so that they really knew who was
boss man in this household.
He decided that tonight, because
Mister Hoss wasn’t eating, he’d do one of his favourite meals, just to tempt
him. Pork, in a crisp crackling coat, with sweet potato, and onions, fried up.
He turned, skillet in hand, just as
the door to the yard opened and Mister Adam came into the kitchen. For a moment
Adam clung weakly to the door frame. Hop Sing took in the look of him at a
glance and produced a sturdy wooden chair. "You sit!" he ordered.
Adam didn’t need telling twice. He
sat.
"You sick!" Hop Sing
pronounced, taking in the drained face and the slumped shoulders. "Just
when we get you well, you sick again!"
Adam held up a defensive
hand,"I’m not sick, Hop Sing. I’m just tired. I guess I must have over
done it."
Hop Sing threw up his arms,
"Doctor tell you take it easy! Father tell you take it easy! Now
look!"
Adam sighed. It seemed that everyone
on the place knew just what the doctor had told him. So much for the new
concept of patient confidentiality. "I’m all right, Hop Sing. Really I am.
But I could do with some coffee. And, do I smell ginger cake?" Ginger cake
was one of Adam’s absolute favourites and the air was redolent with the smell
of it.
Hop Sing beamed, his annoyance
forgotten. There was nothing more likely to placate him than someone
appreciating his cooking. He poured Adam a cup of thick black coffee from the
pot kept constantly simmering on the back of the stove and cut him a
substantial slice from the slab.
Adam sat at the kitchen table, and
sipped coffee and munched his way through the sticky warm cake He reflected
that being confined to the ranch did have some advantages after all. He got
first stab at the treats without having to compete with his brother, Hoss. He
was well into his second slice, and discussing with Hop Sing the relative
merits, in culinary terms, of river and lake bass, when they were interrupted
by a piercing cry of pain from the living room.
He walked his horse over to the
livery stable, and stepped down. He stretched himself carefully, straightening
out the kinks of a long sustained ride. Secretly, he was glad he didn’t have to
make this journey too often. Perhaps it was a sign of getting old, but Ben
didn’t feel old. He felt as young as the springtime! The one thing he did
regret was that his son Adam had been unable come with him. They didn’t always
see eye to eye, but he missed the boy’s insight and his keen intellect, and, he
had to admit, his often acid tongue. Then he laughed inwardly at himself. Boy
indeed! Adam had been a full grown man these fifteen years past, even if he, as
his father, did sometimes see him still as a child.
And then, as he thought of Adam, the
laughter in his eyes faded. His son had suffered a lot that year. The bullet
that had nearly ended his life had left him with health problems that could be
long term. Ben knew that if he, himself, hadn’t gone off half cocked, and
ordered Adam from the house without listening to what he had to say, the
shooting might never have taken place. It was a thought that rose up from time
to time, to torment him.
A lad with tousled fair hair came out
of the livery, and Ben handed over the horse and two bits for feed and a rub
down. He figured the animal deserved it, and he wanted it fit enough to carry
him home that same night. He knocked the dust off his hat against his suit
pants leg, and brushed down the front of his jacket.
Ben felt like a tourist as he gawked
at the sights. There was a brand new dance hall, and several saloons, and what
looked like a real high-class brothel built in the Southern style with
balustraded balconies outside each of the upstairs windows where the ladies
could sit, and the customers could browse. Further on was a busy little
shopping district with fancy storefronts that could have come directly from the
any of the big cities on the coast. Ben found himself both fascinated, and
bemused by some of the goods on show, particularly the ladies fashions as
displayed on ridiculously proportioned manikins. He was glad at that moment
that his wife wasn’t with him. Jenny liked to dress in the latest style she
could manage, and the thought of trying to squeeze her into the necessary corset
made him sweat.
The thought of his wife reminded him
of the list she had written him, and he scanned the painted signboards looking
for the haberdashery.
The store he wanted was on the other
side of the busy street. Ben found crossing from boardwalk to boardwalk
something of an ordeal. The amount of traffic was amazing, and somewhat
alarming, with carts, and wagons, and private carriages going every which-way,
and a strange new innovation, a vehicle drawn by two horses in which a dozen
members of the public could ride at a time for the price of a ticket. He found
himself dodging between wheels and hooves and feeling quite the country
bumpkin.
A little breathless he pushed open
the door. A little brass bell tinkled a welcome, and the door, closing, shut out
the clamour of the street. The interior of the shop was dim, and perfumed with
muslin and silk. There were several ladies in bonnets and shawls at the
counters, being waited on by store clerks in dark waistcoats and white shirt
sleeves. Ben tipped his hat to them, and they looked the big built rancher over
with interest.
One of the clerks approached,
"Can I be of service, sir?"
"I guess so." Ben fished
the scrap of paper out of his pocket "Can you fill this list?"
The store clerk scanned the note,
"Yes, sir. Of course." He moved off, and Ben looked about him. The
store was an Aladdin’s cave, filled with boxes of buttons, and bolts of cloth,
and reels of thread in every conceivable colour and shade. One case held a
variety of scraps of lace, collars, and cuffs, and little trimmings for a
lady’s frock. When the clerk came back with Jenny’s papers of pins, and a
packet of sewing needles, Ben pointed out a particular little collar that had
taken his eye, "I’ll take that too."
"A gift for a lady?" asked
one of the ladies, a small woman whose grey head came only up to Ben’s chest.
She looked up at him with bird bright eyes. "Would you be courting, young
man?"
Ben laughed, "For my wife."
he said with a slightly embarrassed smile.
"Then a lucky lady indeed!"
"A gift of thanks. She is about
to have our child." Just then Ben saw the ribbon. A festoon of it hung
behind the counter. He remembered Jenny searching her workbox in vain.
"The ribbon," he said to the clerk, pointing.
"Certainly, sir. How much would
you like?"
Ben hesitated, bewildered,
"Well, all of it I guess"
"The whole roll, sir?"
"The whole roll." Ben
decided, firmly.
The woman with the bright eyes was
looking at him with amusement. "It’s to trim the baby's shawl," he
said by way of explanation.
"Ah! So you're expecting a
boy."
"Well, yes I am. But how did you
know?" Ben was acutely aware of the other ladies listening and smiling.
"It’s the latest idea from
Europe, you know. Pink for a girl and blue for a boy."
It was Ben’s turn to be amused,
"Is that a fact? Then this will be - appropriate."
The bright eyes twinkled at him,
"You’re very sure you’re getting a son."
"Yes, ma’am." Ben touched
his hat to her.
The store clerk put the ribbon into
the parcel, and tied it all up with string and sealing wax. Ben was stunned
when the resulting bill came to folding money.
Out again in the heat and clamour of
the street, he took stock of the other things he needed to do. Ben bought
spices for the kitchen, and, reluctantly, when he thought about Hoss’s sore
tooth, candy for his two younger sons. He wondered if Adam could possibly be
right about sweetenings causing tooth rot, or if his eldest son were just being
bloody minded and determined to upset his brother.
Silver City now had a dedicated
bookshop that Adam would have loved. Ben went in there, and arranged to have
lists of all the latest titles sent home to his son. There was also a brand new
tobacconist’s shop on a prime corner plot with a window full of spun glass
jars. Ben treated himself to some good pipe tobacco, so by the time he came to
the last item on the list he already had quite a little bundle of packages.
Hop Sing had given him a paper all
covered in Chinese writing together with an address. The little Oriental’s
relatives seemed to spread far and wide across the nation. The directions led
him down several back streets to a dark little shop that smelled of spices, and
oils, and incense. There was a little Chinaman inside that could have been Hop
Sing’s brother. He had the same smile, and the same crinkly eyes, and the same
bobbing bow. He took the piece of paper, and disappeared into the gloomy
recesses of the shop with it.
The small shop was filled with
curiosities. Ben spent several minutes while he waited, examining the strange,
and often bizarre, items in the boxes and bottles around the shop. Some of them
he recognised from his days as a sea faring man, little dried sea horses, and
starfish, and shrivelled up fronds of exotic herbs; joss sticks, and packets of
little flavoured crackers, and packets and jars all neatly labelled with hand
written Chinese characters. Others were utterly strange and completely
bemusing.
The Chinaman came back with a very
small package wrapped up in white paper. He handed it over with a deep bow, and
refused all Ben’s attempts to pay.
Emerging again, blinking, into the
street, Ben decided that the next item on his agenda just had to be lunch.
The woodland below Possum Creek was
sparse. The trees here were old and twisted and the vegetation beneath them
thin. Underfoot the ground was tracked back and forth by the feet of cattle.
Somewhere up ahead, there had to be a watering place.
Old black branches reached down low
over the meandering trail, and Hoss had to bend down in the saddle to pass
under them. He rode with one hand clamped hard against his jaw. The pain was
getting worse. It had spread from being just a face ache to an agony that
filled the whole of his head, pounding in time with his heartbeat. It had
spread down his neck, and into his shoulder and arm. He had consumed half the
bottle of whiskey, but now it just didn’t seem to be working any more. What
Hoss was dreading worse, was an enforced visit to the new fangled tooth doctor
that had moved into Virginia City only last week. He had seen the tools of the
dentist’s trade as they were carried into the building, and he had heard all
the talk going round in the saloon. It had sounded to him like there was a
veritable torture chamber being set up in that upstairs room. And the young,
handsome, dark haired dentist with the moustache and the flashing white smile
had, in the big man’s mind, taken on the persona of a demon straight out of
hell. One thing he was absolutely certain of, was that he wasn’t going to allow
any of those bright, shiny instruments anywhere near the inside of mouth.
Unfortunately there was every chance that his Pa just wasn’t going to see it
that way.
A low sound interrupted his morbid
contemplation of present and future suffering. Hoss drew up the reins and sat,
listening.
After a moment, the sound came again,
and Hoss knew it at once for what it was, a steer in some sort of trouble,
bellowing. He moved on with care, watching both the ground and the low branches
at the same time. The trail took another turn back towards the creek. The
ground was getting softer. He could see the cloven footed tracks of cattle in
the soft earth getting ever deeper. Several animals had come this way, and not
too long ago either.
The trees cleared, and ahead of him he
could see the problem. Several cows had broken down the bank of the stream, and
made themselves a wallow. When the water level came up the mud patch had become
a death trap. Hoss counted four animals stuck in it to half way up their sides.
They were so plastered in mud it was impossible to tell what colours they might
once have been; they were now all mud coloured. One of them wasn’t moving any
more and Hoss reckoned she was already drowned.
At the edge of the wallow, a young
brown and white steer was standing knee deep in the muck, calling to his
mother, and she was moaning back at him.
"Hey, now little fella,"
Hoss said to him, consolingly, "Your mamma gone an’ got herself stuck in
the crick?"
The steer mooed mournful agreement.
"Don’ you worry none," Hoss
told him, "I’m gonna get her out o’ there fer you real soon."
For the time being he forgot all
about his tooth. He backed his mount up, and stepped out of the saddle, taking
his rope with him. Right now he was really pleased he had ridden this particular
horse. He had trained it himself, and they worked well together.
He shooed the young steer out of his
way, and back, onto firmer ground, and then spun the loop of the rope lazily,
letting it swing out in an arc and settle squarely over the cow’s horns. She
complained loudly, and shook her head in an attempt to free herself. Hoss took
a hitch on the saddle horn, and walked the horse backwards. The rope tightened.
The horse threw up its head as it took up the strain.
"C’mon now," Hoss murmured
to him, "You c’n do it."
The horse pulled - and the cow pulled
the other way. It seemed she had made up her mind to be contrary. Hoss added
his not inconsiderable weight to that of the horse, and they both leaned
against the rope. The young steer called to his mother, and she bellowed back.
She fought against the suck of the mud, trying to lunge out of it but finding
nothing solid to push against.
The horse took up the slack the way
he’d been trained, and Hoss cheered him on. The cow sank back but not quite so
deep as she’d been before.
Hoss gathered up his strength for
another pull, and this time, the cow timed her own effort to coincide with his.
She came half way out of the mud before sinking back in.
Hoss wiped his sleeve across his
face. He was already getting all filthied up. He took a deep breath, and called
to the horse. An even, steady pressure on the rope started to draw the cow up
out of the mire.
The little steer lowed to its Ma, its
feet again getting perilously close to the edge. The cow made another mighty
effort. The black horse sat back on his haunches and pulled. The cow came loose
from the bog with a fearful sucking noise and an overwhelming smell of marsh
gas.
Hoss cheered her on as she staggered
up onto the bank, and then dropped to her knees in sheer exhaustion. Hoss sort
of knew how she felt. "There’s a gal!" He stepped forward, and freed
his rope from around her horns. "You git along now."
The cow mooed, and lumbered back onto
her feet, and moved off unsteadily with her youngster at her side.
Hoss took a moment to blow, and wiped
some of the muck of his face, and then remade the loop in his rope and turned
back towards the creek. The next cow was further out and deeper in. Hoss roped
her round the horns easily enough, but there was no way the horse was going to
pull this one out. He turned the animal broadside on to act as an anchor, and
started to strip off his clothes.
By the time Joe drove into the small
township of Sparks, Nevada, the team was nigh on exhausted. Dragging the
crippled wagon had been hard work, and the temperature was soaring. Their coats
were dark with sweat, and streaked with white foam. Joe drew up alongside the
first person he saw on the sidewalk.
"Hey, Mister! I gotta hurt man
here! You gotta doctor in town?"
The cowboy sauntered over, faded eyes
taking in the sweaty team, the rigged up sled and Joe’s dishevelled clothing.
"Nope. We ain’t got no doctor." He peered into the back of the wagon,
"But we got us a barber fella what fixes folks up when they wants fixin’."
Joe looked back at Idress. The big
man had been raving and sweating all the way into town, but now he was lying
ominously quiet. His leg had leaked a lot of blood through Joe’s improvised
bandaging.
"Can you tell me where to find
this barberin’ fella?"
"Shore kin. Down the street.
Past the Post Office. On the right." The cowboy waved his arm in the
general direction, "You can’t miss it."
"I’m obliged." Joe touched
his hat and gee’d up the tired team.
The barber’s shop was easy enough to
find. It had a glass front, and a red and white painted pole stuck up over the
door. Joe jumped down and went inside.
The barber, a small man with a bald,
white fringed head and bright blue eyes looked up from the man he was shaving.
He looked Joe up and down, and his eyes settled on his longish locks "You
jist take a seat, young ‘un, an’ I’ll be with you in two shakes."
"It ain’t for me I’m here. I
hear tell you do the doctorin’ ’round here, an’ I gotta man out in the wagon
hurt real bad"
"That a fact?" The barber
tossed his customer a towel and left him to wipe his off own face, "let’s
go take a look at him then."
The barber took a long look at Paulin
Idress’s leg, and stated the obvious, "That there leg’s one hell’ve a
mess, boy. This fella yore Pa?"
"No, he ain’t my Pa. I just
found him out along the road there. Wagon must’ve fell on him when he was
tryin’ to fix the wheel."
"Reckon there might not be much
I kin do fer that leg."
"Well, do what you can, all
right?"
The barber scratched his fringe of
hair and pursed his lips, "It’ll cost you ten dollars fer the
docterin’," he said, after several moments thinking.
"Ten dollars!" Joe was
astounded. The amount was outrageous.
"That's the price," The
barber stuck his hands symbolically into his pockets, "Take it or leave
it."
Joe sighed. He guessed he really
didn’t have that much choice. He pulled out the money his father had given him
to pay for the mare, and peeled off a ten-dollar bill. "You just patch him
up good, huh?"
The barber pocketed the money,
"’Cause, if’n that leg has ta come off it’ll cost two bits more fer the
whisky." He was eyeing the roll of bills in Joe’s hands speculatively.
Joe put the rest of the money back in
his pocket, "I’ll come back later and see how he’s doin’"
"Just as you say, boy." the
barber gestured to some of the men in the crowd that had gathered, "Two or
three o’ you fellas help git this man inside."
Joe stood to the back as several men
pushed forward, and Idress was carried, none too gently, through the door of
the barbers shop.
Joe untied his mare from the back of
the wagon and took a long look round. Sparks, if the truth were told, was not
really that much of a town. One wide street ran right through the centre, and
the buildings lined up along it on either side. Some of them had grand false
frontages, but the structures behind were not a great deal better than
shanties.
Joe spotted a small Mercantile that
claimed, on the signboard outside, to sell everything from horseshoe nails to
hat pins; a feed store with heaps of dusty sacks outside, and at the end of the
street, a shed that looked to be serving time as a livery. And of course, the
first building that went up in any town, a saloon!
Right now, to Joe, hot, tired, dirty
and thirsty, that seemed like a very good place to be. Leading the mare, he crossed
over the street and tied her alongside several other animals at the rail
outside.
"Hey, Mista!" The voice was
a high pitched whine, and it had a edge to it that instantly set Joe’s teeth on
edge. "You gotta quarter?"
Joe turned round. The man the voice
belonged to could only be described as a tramp. His clothes, now of no
particular colour, were filthy, and fraying, and showing holes. There was dirt
on his face and in his long knotted hair. His eyes were rheumy, and his breath
stank. In fact, all of him stank - of unwashed clothes, and unwashed flesh, and
drink. He held out a hand with grime imbedded in the lines of his palm,
"You gotta quarter?"
Right at that moment Joe’s patience
was running at a low ebb, and his reaction was, perhaps not as charitable as it
might otherwise have been. In fact, he recoiled in disgust, his contempt
clearly showing on his face. "Get away from me, will ya?!"
"Please Mista," The drunk
came closer, breathing fumes of rot gut into Joe’s face, "Just a quarter
ta buy a drink!" He put his hands on Joe’s chest, pawing at his clothes.
"I said getta way from me!"
Joe pushed him away rather harder than intended.
The drunk staggered back, tripping
over the edge of the sidewalk, and went sprawling on his butt in the road. He
sat up in the dirt, not hurt, but furiously indignant. There was drool on his
chin. "I’ll git ya!" he yelled, "I’ll git ya!" He spat in
Joe's direction, and shook a filthy fist. The gob landed on the toe of Joe’s
boot.
Swallowing his fury Joe turned his
back and pushed through the little crowd of amused onlookers into the dim
interior of the saloon.
Jenny came from being deeply asleep
to wide awake in the time it took her to lift her eyelids. She lay still for
what felt like a long time, watching golden motes of dust dance in the shaft of
sunlight that fell through the dining room window, wondering what had awakened
her so abruptly. She felt comfortable, almost languorous, in a deep state of
relaxation. Even the restless child seemed to be at peace. The only sounds in
the house were the slow ticking of the clock and a low murmur of voices coming
from the kitchen, lulling her. It was pleasant just to lay here, safe in this
comfortable home in the midst of the family she had come to love as her own. It
was all so very different from the days of her childhood on an
A slight ache in her back made her
shift uncomfortably.
She thought of Ben, and a slight
smile came to her lips. He was so different from anyone else she had ever known
- strong, powerful and influential. A good, moral, God fearing man, honest,
kind, and gentle with roots as deep as the land itself and a heart as big. She
remembered their first inauspicious meeting, his gallantry, his persistence,
his whirlwind romancing, his first introduction of his fine sons. He was so
proud of them. He was so anxious that she should like them and they her. A
kaleidoscope of happy images pressed in on her, dispelling the less happy ones
from before.
The pain in her back returned, and
brought a frown to her face. She thought that if, perhaps, she got up, it would
ease.
She lowered her legs over the edge of
the sofa and levered herself up. Instead of fading the pain increased and moved
abruptly to the front, travelling in a wave on down through her belly. She
cried out as much in surprise as anything else.
She wrapped her arms around herself
and rocked back and forth as the pain lingered. It was long seconds before it
faded, at last, to memory. She squeezed her eyes tight shut.
A door opened, and Hop Sing and Adam
came through from the kitchen in a hurry.
Adam dropped to one knee beside her,
his face all concern. "Jenny? What is it?"
She opened her eyes and looked at
him, "Adam," she said, softly, "I think it’s time."
He pulled a quick breath, "Are
you sure? I mean, isn’t it too soon?"
"Soon or not," she said.
"It’s now."
If Adam was in any doubt, Hop Sing
wasn’t, "Missy Jenny need doctor real soon."
Jenny struggled into a more upright
position on the sofa. "I think Hop Sing’s right, Adam. You’ll have to send
one of the hands. Can you help me to lay down?"
Adam straightened up and gave her his
hand. She leaned heavily against him. His instinct was to pick her up in his
arms and carry her up to the huge four poster bed that she shared with his
father, but the soreness that still lingered in his own belly advised strongly
against it. Instead, he put his arm round her, and very slowly, they walked
together towards the downstairs bedroom.
12noon
The beer was cloudy and warm, but it
was serving its purpose, and already it had taken the edge off Joe’s thirst. He
was starting to feel a whole lot better. His thoughts were beginning to turn
towards getting his horse and starting out on the final leg out to the
farmstead that Kingdom Jones had made the headquarters of his expanding haulage
business. From there, Joe’s thoughts moved onto the quarter horse mare he was
hoping to buy, and a slow smile spread to his lips. Joe was always happiest
when thinking about horses - or, of course, a pretty woman.
Behind him, someone cleared his
throat loudly. Joe turned - and looked up. The man was long in every sense of
the word. He was tall, standing head and shoulders over Joe, lanky and thin
with long arms and long legs. Even his face was long featured, and when he
spoke, it was with a drawn out drawl. He wore a shiny black dress coat, black
pants and a loose black string tie. The hair under his black hat was grey, and
long, and tied back into a bunch in the nap of his neck, and he had a tufty grey
moustache on his upper lip.
The two men looked each other over
carefully.
"You want something,
Mister?" Joe asked.
The tall man took a long slow breath,
"Well," he said, "I guess you could say I want you, boy."
Joe lowered the beer glass, "Me?
Why’s that?"
The pale grey eyes went over him
again, lingering on the tied down gun, low on Joe’s left thigh, and then
drifted off to focus somewhere way over Joe’s head. "Well, I guess I gotta
take you over ta’ the feed store an’ lock you up."
Joe stared at him, bewildered,
"Why would you want to do that, Mister..?"
"Hirshall. My name’s Osimire
Hirshall. Now we don’t have no properly elected sheriff ’round here, so I‘m
sort of temporary actin’ sheriff, like. ’N when some fella needs lockin’ up
then it falls to me ta’ do it."
Joe put the beer glass carefully on
the bar while his bemused brain tried to make sense of all this. "Mister
Hirshall, why would you want to lock me up?"
"Ossy. All my friends call me
Ossy." Hirshall drawled, "Guess I gotta lock you up on account o’ it
looks like you might a’ killed a man, boy."
Joe gapped. "Killed a man?! What
man?! I haven’t killed anyone, Mister!"
Hirshall chewed at his lower lip with
large, grey teeth, "Seems like you was havin’ some sort o’ altercation
with ol’ Henry Carlisle outside o’ the saloon here. Lots o’ folks say they seen
ya."
Joe blinked, "I don’t know
anybody called Henry Carlisle."
"Town drunk." Hirshall said
bluntly. "Pan handles of’n ever’body. Guess he tried it once too often
with you, eh boy?"
The ‘boy’ for Joe, was starting to
wear a bit thin, and his temper was getting ragged. "I don't know Henry
Carlisle - and what’s that got to do with me killin’ someone?!"
The grey eyes focused in again on
Joe's face, "‘Cause Henry Carlisle is the man what’s dead."
Joe had all but forgotten about the
filthy, ragged man that had accosted him outside the saloon. "I didn’t
kill him! I didn’t even know him! I only just rode into this town!"
The eyes gazed off into the distance
again, "Reckon you jist rode on in an’ reckon you sure didn’t know ol’
Henry, but you sure was seen shovin’ ol’ Henry around outside the saloon
here."
"That doesn’t mean I killed
him!" Joe was starting to get worried, and angry. "I’ve been here in
the saloon drinkin’ beer!"
Hirshall turned his grey eyes on the
bartender, "Hey Pete, this feller bin here fer the past hour?"
"Hell, I don’t know." The
barkeep shrugged eloquently, "I bin out the back."
Hirshall chewed on his lip some more,
"Well, I guess you might just ha’ stepped out there when ol’ Pete here
turned his back on yer."
"Well I didn’t! I’ve been here
for the past hour drinkin’ this damned beer!"
"There ain’t no need fer you to
go shoutin’ yer head off, boy." The grey eyes narrowed,
"No need?!"
"Guess you’d better come on over
t’ the feed store ’n let me lock you up fer a while. Jist ’til I git this
sorted out."
Joe stared at him, "The feed
store?"
Hirshall looked a trace
uncomfortable. "Guess we ain’t got no proper gaol ‘round here. Fella needs
lockin’ up we gotta use the back room o’ the feed store."
Joe shook his head. "I just
don’t believe any of this is happening."
"Guess you better believe it,
boy." Hirshall rocked back on his heels, "Ol’ Henry Carlisle sure is
dead, ‘n’ folks round here reckon you might be the one what done it. Now you
gonna come, or am I gonna take you?"
Joe was having a job getting his head
round this, but Hirshall had a business-like black handled Colt strapped down
on his leg under the dress coat, and when he fixed his steely grey eye on Joe,
he looked like a man to be reckoned with. Besides, Joe’s Pa had taught him to
always respect the law, and here in
He spread his hands, "All right
Mister Hirshall..."
"Ossy." The sheriff
repeated, "All my friends call me Ossy."
"All right, Ossy." Joe was
beginning to think this was some sort of Alice in Wonderland nightmare,
"I’ll come over to the feed store with you, but just ‘til we get this
sorted out."
"That’s all I’m askin’
boy."
"My name isn’t ‘boy’," Joe
said, with as much patience as he could muster, "It’s Joe
Cartwright."
Hirshall nodded to him,
"Alright, Joe Cartwright, Let’s git goin’."
The two men stepped side by side into
the hot bright sunlight, and crossed over the street. There were several men
loitering about watching, and three grubby boys with bright eyes threw pebbles
at Joe until Hirshall turned his grey gaze on them and they ran off whooping.
The interior of the feed store was cooler than the street outside, but airless,
and thick with the smells of sacking and corn. Hirshall marched Joe right
through the front shop, and into the storeroom at the back.
To Joe’s surprise, the back room of
the feed store made a very effective gaol cell. There was no window, and the
walls were boarded up on a sort of steel frame that made as perfect a cage as
any man could want. It was dark, and stuffy, and half filled with sacks and
bags of grain, and some bits of broken old harness in the back corner.
Joe looked round, and then turned to
Hirshall, "Say Ossy, how did this Henry Carlisle fella die?"
"You mean you don’t know?"
Hirshall chewed on his lip, "Figure if you killed him you aught t’ know
already how he died."
"I told you already, I didn’t
kill him!" Joe was exasperated, "Now tell me how he died, will
ya?!"
"Guess I can." Hirshall
eyed the younger man thoughtfully, "Someone done cracked the front of ol’
Henry’s head in with a rock. Over in the alleyway alongside the saloon."
"With a rock?!"
Hirshall nodded, "It sure was a
rock." He turned to the door, then had a further thought and turned back,
"Guess you’d better empty out your pockets ‘n’ hand over that gun o’
yours, Joe Cartwright. Jist while you’re locked up in here."
Joe sighed and unstrapped the gun,
and turned out his pockets onto a barrelhead.
Hirshall picked out the roll of
banknotes. "This is an awful lot of money to be carryin’ in your pants
pocket, boy."
Joe sighed, "It’s my Pa’s money.
He sent me ta buy a horse from Kingdom Jones."
"Guess this’d buy one hell’ve a
horse."
"That’s what my Pa sent me for."
Joe said miserably. He sat down on a sack.
"Hm." Hirshall scooped
Joe’s belongings into his hat, and picked up the gun belt. "I’ll jist look
after this all fer you. You all take it easy, now."
The door closed, leaving Joe in total
darkness, and he heard the heavy key turn in the lock.
The gun was now an unaccustomed
weight on Adam’s hip as he walked back across the sun baked yard. He was
considering his options. Jenny had asked him to send a hand into town for the
doctor. She didn’t know or had forgotten that he and Hop Sing were alone at the
house. All the hands had gone stock gathering, and they had taken most of the
saddle horses with them. Adam’s own gelding and Jenny’s had been turned out to
pasture while their owners were unable to ride. He considered briefly saddling
up one of the buckboard team and dismissed the idea at once as impractical.
They were slow, and unused to being ridden. He might not be able to get the
doctor back in time. There were a dozen or so mustangs in one of the corrals
but they were unbroken, and Adam didn’t feel himself quite up to bronco busting
today. Then there were two sick horses in the larger barn where the hands
generally kept their mounts. One had a badly cut foot, and the other had been
pulled over by a steer on the end of a rope and had twisted its back.
That left Mozart.
Adam sighed. Mozart was about the
onoriest creature that had ever set hoof, foot or paw on the Ponderosa. He was
a tall, solidly built bright bay stallion with about the meanest temper any of
the Cartwrights had ever encountered in a horse. Debate had raged furiously
back and forth through the family about whether to geld him or keep him whole.
Ben thought the knife would cure his manners, and make a useful work animal of
him. Joe maintained he could be useful as a stallion, introducing spirit and
fire into the bloodline. Hoss reckoned it would destroy the animal’s noble
character, and make nothing but a plough horse out of him. And Adam - well
right this minute Adam would have fetched a knife and willingly done the job
himself if he hadn’t needed the horse to ride right there and then.
He collected a bridle from the barn,
and hitched a saddle up onto his shoulder. The newly healed wound in his belly
pulled sharply, reminding him that he shouldn’t really be doing any of this. He
stood for a moment, head down, breathing shallowly while he waited for the pain
to subside. Then he hitched the saddle higher, and went out to the corral.
Nominally, Mozart had been broken in,
and was a saddle horse. The trouble was, Mozart didn’t know it yet. He stood at
the far side of the corral, head up and ears well forward, and watched Adam
coming. He had a bright intelligent eye, and he knew well what the man had in
mind before he ever reached the rail. As usual, he had no intention whatsoever
of co-operating.
Adam carefully closed, and fastened,
the gate behind him. He had no intention of letting the horse make a quick
escape, as he had been known to do in the past. He dumped the saddle on the
ground, and advanced with the bridle. Mozart watched him come, head held high.
Adam sighed again. He could read the horse’s body language.
"Come on, boy." he said,
softly, "Let’s not play this game today. Let’s be nice, huh?"
Mozart snorted softly, nostrils quivering.
He waited quietly until the man was in fingertip touching distance of him, and
then he moved in an explosive burst of power that shifted three quarters of a
ton of horse flesh from one side of the corral to the other in two and a half
seconds flat.
Adam used a short sharp word that his
father didn’t know that he knew. The horse stood still again, and shook his
head, defying him with the flying mane. Adam re-crossed the corral, aiming for
the horse’s front end in an attempt to forestall a repeat performance. Mozart
was wise to that. He waited again until Adam was almost within touching
distance of his head, and then backed up abruptly, spun in his own length, and
shot off again.
Five passes and a whole bucket of
sweat later, Adam trapped the horse in a corner of the corral. Mozart hopped up
on all four feet, and threw his head up, making it damned difficult for Adam to
reach him. For a moment, Adam thought he was going to refuse the bit, but he
managed to get it in between the tombstone teeth without getting bitten, and,
after a struggle, got the straps done up round the horse’s head. By now both
man and horse were sweating hard in the mid-day sun.
Mozart shook his head savagely,
trying to free himself of the bridle, and then submitted with an ill grace to
being led across to the dumped saddle. Adam took the precaution of tying the
reins to the rail before lifting the saddle onto the horse’s back.
Mozart saw the saddle coming. He
arched up his back and blew out his gut. It was an old trick, and one that Adam
knew well. He brought his knee up hard into the horse’s under belly. The horse
exhaled with a grunt, and Adam tightened the cinch before he could draw another
breath. The first battle was over. Adam leaned against the saddle and caught
his breath. It had taken more out of him than it had the horse, and he was
afraid he might yet loose the war.
Hoss had stripped all the way down to
his drawers and waded out into the thick mud until he could get around behind
the cow. She was embedded in the mud right up to the points of her shoulders,
and she was exhausted from her struggles to free herself. Hoss thought that she
was just about ready to lie down and die. The only thing keeping her head up
was the constant pressure the black horse, obedient to its training, was
keeping on the rope.
Hoss came right up behind the cow,
and got his shoulder wedged in under her rump. The fact that, in her terror,
she had defecated into the mud, didn’t make the task any more pleasant. Hoss
called out encouragement to the horse. The horse pulled. Hoss pushed. The cow
bellowed. Nothing else much happened.
Hoss paused to catch his breath and
consider his position. He would have liked to wipe the muck away from his face,
but his hands were thick with the stuff and would have only made matters worse.
Instead, he spat out what had got into his mouth.
He reckoned there wasn’t much else
for it. Much as he hated doing it, he had to be cruel to be kind. He took a
firm grip of the cow’s tail and gave it a good hard twist against the grain.
The cow suddenly found a whole lot of
get-up-and-go right where there hadn’t been any before. She lunged up and out,
taking the tension off the rope so fast that the horse standing braced on the
bank stumbled, and nearly went down.
Hoss was left behind, floundering in
the mud. He spat more of the filth out of his mouth, and tried to clear it away
from his eyes.
He looked across at the other animal
that had been struggling, but the steer had laid its head down in the mud and
died. Hoss felt a deep pang of regret. Near exhausted as he was, he would have
tried his damnedest to get it out.
From way back in the trees, the
varmint watched with interested detachment. It smelled life in the air, and
death, and life that should have become death. It had watched the man creature
thwart the inevitable. Now it watched him emerge, dripping mud, from the bog,
and marvelled, in its strange way, at its determination to change the one into
the other.
Adam opened the gate and led Mozart
out. The stallion followed docilely enough, but Adam wasn’t about to be
deceived. He wouldn’t be the first man this horse had made a fool out of. He’d
known it before, and, even while he’d been ill, his brothers had told him all
about the animal’s exploits.
He stepped up on the bottom rail of the
corral, and reached for the stirrup.
Mozart stiffened. Adam felt the horse
bracing himself, and he knew he was in for a rough ride. He put his foot in the
stirrup and started to step across. Mozart put his head down, making himself an
awkward shape to mount. Adam shortened the reins and the horse pulled back,
fighting the bit.
Adam put his free leg over,
transferring his weight into the saddle. Mozart didn’t give him time to find
the stirrup on the other side. He buck jumped from a standing start, humping up
his back and coming down again on all four feet at once. Adam left the saddle
by a good twelve inches and landed back in it again, hard. The impact drove the
breath right out of him, and something in his belly jabbed at him like a knife.
He remembered what the doctor had told him only yesterday about taking things
real easy, and hoped to heaven that his wound wasn’t going to bust wide open
again. That was all he had time to hope for, because Mozart was just plain
determined to get rid of him. The horse threw up his head in an attempt to head
butt his unwanted rider in the face. Adam narrowly missed a broken nose, but
got a face and a mouth full of stringy black mane.
Then Mozart thought it might be a
real good idea to sit right down and let Adam simply slide off backwards, but
by now Adam had found the loose stirrup and was able to cling on with his
knees.
Mozart shook himself like a wet dog,
and all Adam could do was hang on to the saddle horn and try to stay put on his
back. The horse reached round, extending neck and teeth in an effort to take a
big chunk out of Adam’s leg. Adam had taken just about as much of this horse’s
foul temper and bad manners as he was going to take. It was not a thing he
would normally have done, but when circumstances dictate...
It was a trick an old horse breaker
had taught him a long time ago, and something his father would not have
approved of.
Adam balled up his fist, and punched
Mozart squarely on the nose.
The horse nearly fell over in
surprise.
Adam took advantage of the moment to
get the animal’s head facing front again and got the reins real short in his
hands, bringing Mozart’s chin down onto his chest. Mozart shook his head and
pranced about, but Adam had him now. He got the horse pointing in more or less
the right direction, let the reins out just a fraction, and brought his heels
hard in to the animal’s flanks.
Mozart set off from a standing start
to a full-blown gallop in a single stride, with Adam clinging on to the saddle
on his back as much as riding him, but at least they were going in the right
direction. The rough pounding of the horse’s gait felt like hammer blows to his
tender belly.
Lunch in a grand style was in order,
Ben decided, so accordingly he set his sights on a place that called itself,
pretentiously, ‘The Windsor Castle Hotel’
The building stood all of four
stories tall behind a white painted, colonnaded frontage. It had wide steps
leading up from the street to double glass doors and a doorman in green
liveried uniform to hold the doors open. Once beyond the doors, Ben just stood
and stared. The inside had been all decked out in old colonial style
The ceilings were easily as high as
those of the Palace Hotel in
Ben finally had to shift when someone
wanted to come through the doors behind him. He realized he’d been gaping, and
to cover his embarrassment, walked quickly to the wide curving reception desk.
The reception clerk, tall, balding, dark suited, moved smoothly over. "How
can I help you, sir?"
Ben dumped his armful of parcels on
the counter, fully, and somewhat painfully, aware of the expression of disdain
on the man’s face. "I’m dining here today." he said, in his most
authoritative tone. "Would you look after these for me until I’m ready to
leave?"
The clerk looked from Ben to the
parcels, as if debating momentarily with himself quite what he should do with
the motley little collection of brown paper packages. Training won out.
"Certainly, sir." he said, scooping them out of sight under the
counter. "The dining room, sir, is that way." he indicated the
direction with a discrete point of the finger.
"Ben Cartwright!" The voice
boomed from somewhere behind Ben’s right shoulder.
Ben turned. For the briefest moment
he was confused, and then recognition dawned on him. The big man holding out a
hand to him was his old friend, Tobias Addington.
"Toby!" The two men clasped
hands long and hard, and looked each other over.
Addington came barely up to Ben’s
shoulder, and he was as big around as he was tall. Like Ben, he had aged
gracefully. His cap of curly hair had turned in the years, from black to pure
white, and there were more lines in the round, eternally cheerful face than Ben
remembered, but the vivid blue eyes that smiled out of it were the same.
Tobias Addington and Ben Cartwright
had been friends, and sometime business partners, from the time they had both
left their seafaring days behind them, but their life paths had diverged, and
time and miles had come between. Now, the years fell away, and, for a moment as
they gazed at one another, it was if they were both young men again, just
setting out on the long road.
"Ben Cartwright, as I live and
breath!" Addington said, through his smile, "What’re you doing here,
Ben?"
"Business, Toby. Business."
Ben laughed "And you?"
"Oh, I’m retired now. Resting on
my laurels, you know? You here to eat?"
"Now that’s the best idea I’ve
heard today!"
The two men walked together towards
the dining room, "Are you still running that whopping great ranch out west
o’ here, Ben?"
"It gets bigger every time I go
out an’ look at it. And did you ever marry that English girl you were
courtin’.."
"I sure did. Twelve years we
were wed. She died..."
"I’m sorry to hear that."
"And your family? Three boys you
had, last count, wasn’t it?""
"Soon to be four." Ben
said, with a smile, " I got married again, just last year..."
The turning of the heavy key in the
lock woke Joe up with a start. The hot dusty atmosphere of the dark storeroom
had produced a somnolence that proved irresistible to the young Cartwright
despite his problems. The feed sacks had made a comfortable mattress, and he
had slept.
The door opened, just a crack,
spilling light into the gloom, and then a bit further as someone carrying
something edged carefully round it. Joe sat up, blinking owlishly against the
brightness. Whoever it might be, it certainly wasn’t Ossy Hirshall that stood
in the open doorway - in fact, the body outlined against the light was a
woman’s, and a very shapely woman’s at that. Sure enough, the voice that called
out to him was female.
"Joe Cartwright? Are you there,
Joe Cartwright?"
Reacting instinctively, Joe ran his
fingers through his curls. "I’m here, ma’am. I don’t seem to have a whole
lot of choice in the matter."
He peered against the light. Now that
his eyes were adjusting, he could see that she was a very young lady, perhaps just
a year or so younger than himself, and pretty with it. She had a mop of short
fair curls, turned into a halo of gold by the light from behind her. It framed
a little heart shaped face with big eyes, a pert nose and a neat, bow shaped
mouth.
She came a little further into the
room, and he could see that she was carrying a covered tray in her hands.
"You don’t have to call me ma’am," she said, "My name’s
Maryanne. Ossy Hirshall called by my Ma’s house and said to bring you over
somethin’ to eat. I brung you meat pie and ‘taters. D’you like meat pie and
‘taters, Joe Cartwright?"
She had a light lilting voice, and
now that she was closer, he noticed that she wore a pleasantly light perfume.
"I like it real fine, ma’am."
She put the tray down and as he sat to
eat she settled beside him. "I said my name’s Maryanne."
Joe forked pie into his mouth,
hungrier than he thought, but the girl’s presence was a distraction and his
jaws moved more and more slowly as he felt her eyes dwelling on him. They
stopped altogether when she put her hand on his knee. He swallowed the food
half-chewed and looked at her. She smiled at him sideways. Her eyes were huge
and soft in the dim light of the storeroom. "You sure are a pretty man,
Joe Cartwright." She murmured. Her finger tips started to trace little
circles on his knee.
Joe was man enough to know an
invitation when it was aimed right at his head. His hormones were never slow to
rise, and even in present circumstances - well, a pretty girl was a pretty
girl. He set the tray aside, and let his hand slide loosely round her back. She
snuggled up into the circle of his arm, and he breathed deeply of the perfume
in her hair.
Her fingertips started to move higher
up the inside of his thigh.
All of a sudden, Joe Cartwright was
very interested in Maryanne.
He brushed his lips through the
fringe of her hair and then, as she raised her face, touched her lips very
gently with his own. His free hand came round, feeling for the softness of her
breast, drawing her closer.
She leaned into him, her own hands
exploring his back, his chest and for a brief moment, lower. Then she put both
her small hands against his chest and pushed him away, but only a little,
"Not here," she whispered, "Not in the dirty ol’ feed
store."
"Where then?" he asked
huskily, his hands dancing feather light patterns on her back and the sides of
her body. He was anxious and didn’t want to wait.
Her breathing had become short, and
she ran her fingers through his thick hair. She pulled his face down to hers
and kissed him, teasing him briefly with her tongue. "When Ossy Hirshall
lets you out o’ here, you call by an’ see me, you hear? You can’t miss my Ma’s
place. It’s right at the end of town, with all the pretty little pots of
flowers right outside."
Joe grinned at her from just an inch
away. "You’re awful sure he’s going to let me out of here."
She put a pointed little finger
against his lips. "I know my men. You didn’t kill ol’ Henry
Carlisle."
"No. I didn’t." Joe kissed
her again, slowly and gently, and then again more fiercely as his lips hardened
with desire. For a few brief seconds she answered his increasing passion with
her own. Then she drew away again.
"Not here," she repeated.
"Come on by, later, Joe Cartwright." She touched his lips again,
briefly, with hers, and the kiss was a promise.
Then she was gone, sliding out of the
door, closing and locking it behind her, leaving him breathless and alone in
the darkness.
The black horse stood ground tied a
short way from the banks of Possum Creek. Hoss had draped his gun belt, shirt
and pants over the saddle horn, and gone to wash off the mud. Now he was up to
his chest in the creek scrubbing at himself, firstly to keep warm because the
run off water was icy cold, and second, to remove the thick clinging mud from
the hair that lightly clothed his big body. He wondered how his elder brother
would have managed in similar circumstances. That thought brought a smile to
his face. Brother Adam had a whole lot more hair on him than Hoss did.
The pain in his face had subsided, just
a bit. But now there was a big lump coming up on his jawbone, right under the
tooth that was doing all the hurting. A lump that was just too painful to
touch. Hoss worried about that. He was sure that the swelling would be visible
from the outside of his face, and that first thing tomorrow his Pa would march
him, big as he was, right into Virginia City to visit that tooth doctor. Hoss
just could no resign himself to that prospect.
Once his body was clean, Hoss set to
washing the mud out of his drawers. The stains were such that not even Hope
Sing’s cousin’s laundry was ever going to get them out. He sighed, and scrubbed
harder.
The varmint lay in the long grass
beneath the willow trees. It had watched with interest as the man thing had
climbed naked into the water and rubbed at its pale body with its hands until
it started to go pink all over, from the cold. Now the cat-like creature was
bored with all the splashing. It sniffed at the air but it could no longer
catch the man thing’s scent.
But it could smell horse.
The varmint stirred, black whiskers
fanning out around its mouth. Slowly, very, very slowly it started to stalk.
The horse lifted its head and flicked
its ears back, and then forward again. Its nostrils quivered as it scented the
wind.
The varmint froze, one huge paw
lifted and poised above the ground.
The horse whickered softly.
Hoss started to wade out of the
creek. He had washed about as much of the muck out of his under garment as he
could, and it was just going to have to do. He paused in the shallows to wring
the garment half dry.
The horse caught the faintest whiff
of varmint in the air. It started to dance, and rolled its eyes until the
whites showed all around the edges of its eyeballs.
Hoss looked up in sudden alarm,
"Hey boy! What is it now?! You just settle down eh?!" He started for
the horse, reaching out a hand to snatch the trailing reins. The horse backed
away. Hoss made a grab and missed. The horse kicked up his heels, turned tail
and ran..
"Dad-burn-it...!" Hoss hurled
a furious expletive after it, but the animal just kept on going, taking most of
Hoss’s clothes, and the saddlebag with the precious whisky bottle along with
him. Hoss was left standing naked, and furious on the bank of the creek.
When he’d finished cursing, Hoss
pulled on his socks and boots, and the wet drawers, and feeling more than a
little ridiculous, set off in the wake of the horse.
Jenny Cartwright lay between cool
sheets in the strange bed, and gazed up at the ceiling. Hop Sing had fetched her
a nightdress, and she had managed to change into it, and to get herself into
the bed, but now she felt strange, disorientated, as if she were half floating.
Chattering away to himself, and to
her, in his own tongue, the little Chinaman had brought a covered jug of cool
water, flavoured with lemon, and from time to time she sipped at a glass of it.
She could hear him now, moving about in the dining room just beyond the bedroom
door, and then further away, in the kitchen. His presence was something of a comfort,
one firm link with reality.
Adam had not returned. She had asked
him to send one of the hands for the doctor an indeterminate length of time
ago. She worried vaguely. She would have liked the dependable strength of her
husband’s eldest son close at hand. Then she remembered that Adam himself was
still not a fit man. Her husband’s words of that very morning came back to her.
"Adam’s not as strong as he thinks he is", and she wondered again
where he had got to. If anything had happened to him...
She moved her head restlessly against
the pillow.
Infinitesimally, a puddle of sunlight
from the window crept across the floor. The house fell silent. The pains were
gradually building in strength, moving through her from back to front, and down
over her abdomen. She consoled herself that they were still a long way apart,
and in between them she was comfortable enough to doze.
With a superb dinner of roast duck,
potatoes and green beans tucked safely away under their belts, Ben and Toby
stood on the steps of the Windsor Castle Hotel, and shook hands.
"Now, Ben," Toby Addington
said with a smile, "You be sure and carry my best wishes back to that
little wife of yours, and say hello to the boys for me."
"I will. To all of them."
They laughed together, and Toby shook
his head, amused at Ben’s mule headed conviction.
"Now you remember what you
promised," Ben told him, "First chance you get, you come out to the
Ponderosa and visit. Jenny and the boys will be delighted!"
"I’ll be glad to do that, Ben.
Glad to do it!"
The two men parted, and Ben watched
his friend walk away into the crowd.
Ben set his hat solidly on his head,
and turned his footsteps in the other direction, crossing over the street, and
walking on the left hand side towards the centre of town.
The activity in the streets of the
city was frenetic, and the heat and the dust almost overpowering. At one time,
when he had been a young man, his trips to sea had often been interspersed with
shore leave in some of the larger coastal cities. The rush and tumble, the noise
and colour, the general awareness of time passing at a frantic pace, had held a
fascination. Boston had been his home port for many years before his decision
to move west, and he had relished time spent in New York, Chicago, Denver, New
Orleans and, to a lesser extent, San Francisco. This time, it was all rather
too much for him. The high rise buildings leaned in on him, and the impersonal
press of all the people crowded in on his personal space. After just a few
hours he was already missing the open skies and the tranquillity of the
mountains.
In truth, his encounter with Toby
Addington had disquieted him. Meeting his old friend again after so many years,
had been a pleasure. Already he was looking forward with enthusiasm to the
promised visit; to introducing Toby to Jenny, and to the boys. Adam, and maybe
Hoss, would remember him. Ben would enjoy showing him the ranch and swapping
yarns of the old days back and forth of an evening across a log fire. But
Addington had embraced a different style of life entirely. He had retired from
business, and was taking things easy. He had expounded at length on the
pleasures of travelling, and seeing the sights of
Even as the thought formed in his
mind he felt depression settling over him like a musty shroud. He knew, deep
down in his soul, that he would hate watching the ranch go on without his
guiding hand, or worse still, being split up if his sons couldn’t see eye to
eye. It was something he was going to have to discuss with Jenny.
Up ahead of him, there was some sort
of commotion on the sidewalk. Lost in his own thoughts, Ben had almost walked
right into it. A woman’s voice raised above the general clamour, "Stop
thief! Stop thief!"
A slight figure shot out of a little
knot of people and headed in Ben’s direction. The boy was dodging and ducking
this way and that to avoid the hands that sought to grasp him. He was barely
adolescent and wore rough, homespun clothes and a round, hard top hat exactly
the same as Adam had sported as a boy. In his hand, he was clutching a woman’s
green purse.
Ben planted himself firmly, and the
boy ran smack into him, bouncing back off the rancher’s solid frame. Ben
grabbed him firmly by the upper arms, and held on tight.
"Let me go! Let me go!" The
boy yelled, and kicked at Ben’s legs.
He put up one hell of a fight for one
his size, all the time shouting profanities Ben would have expected to hear on
a dockside, or in a trail camp. He wriggled like an eel, and he kicked, and he
tried to bite Ben’s hand, but he held on to the woman’s purse through it all.
"Easy, boy. Easy." Ben
could see that he was a fair haired little tyke, with a thin, freckled face,
now stained with tears of frustration He was all gangly arms and legs as Ben
recalled all boys were at that of age.
Ben held on tight to him until his
strength started to run out. Around them a little crowd had started to form. A
woman pushed her way to the front. She wore a green dress that exactly matched
the colour of the purse. A leaf trimmed bonnet framed a sharp, middle aged
face.
"That’s the thief!" She
pointed, accusing. " See? He still has my purse!"
Ben nodded to her, unable to touch
his hat because he still had hold of the boy. "Ma’am."
"What’s this then?" The
law, in the form of a short broad Irishman in a dark suit, with shiny buttons
and a flat cap like the policemen wore back East, had arrived on the scene.
"That boy snatched my
purse!" The woman said shrilly, "He still has it!"
The lawman looked over Ben and the
boy who, exhausted, and realizing his position was hopeless, finally stopped
struggling.
Feeling the fight going out of him, Ben
gradually loosened his grip on the boy’s arms. The boy slumped, and stood
looking at the boardwalk under his feet. Ben took the purse away from him and
handed it back to the woman, "Yours, ma’am."
"Why, thank you." She took
it with an ill grace, and rummaged inside.
"An’ I’ll take charge o’ this
young man, thank you, sir." The policeman took the boy firmly by the ear.
"An’ thank you fer doing your civic duty."
"Officer." Ben nodded. The
incident was over, but somehow, Ben was reluctant to turn his back and walk
away. "What happens now?"
The policeman, in the act of turning
away, looked surprised. "The boy goes up in front o’ the judge, an’ then
he goes to gaol," he said in broad brogue, " That’s the way o’
it." He turned again, pulling the boy with him.
Ben fidgeted. He didn’t know this boy
or anything about him, but there was something somehow familiar. "Just a
minute."
The policeman looked back again, this
time a scowl on his wide features.
"Is the lady pressing
charges?" Ben asked. He looked across at the woman, "Did you loose
anything, ma’am?"
"Well, no." The woman
looked flustered.
"Do you want to see this child
go to gaol?"
"I ain’t no child!" The boy
whined. The policeman pinched his ear harder, and he squirmed.
The woman’s eyes switched from Ben to
the boy, "I guess not."
"That don’t make no never
mind," The policeman growled, "This boy was caught thievin’, an’ it
ain’t the first time. I know this one. He’s a comin’ down ta the precinct house
with me."
Ben made a swift decision. "Can
I come with you? I’d like to speak up for the boy."
The policeman cast his eye over Ben
again, taking in the prosperous proportions, the smart suit, and the business
like strapped down gun half concealed under the jacket. Privately, he thought
that the big man had taken leave of his sanity. "I guess you can if you’ve
a mind to," he said heavily. "If you’ve got the time."
Ben thought of his meeting, and
realized he was going to be very late. "I’ve got the time."
The precinct house was a good
half-mile away through the busy city streets. It was a blank faced, board
fronted building with small windows, and steep steps up to the doors. The
policeman had led the boy there, by the ear, every step of the way.
Inside there was a large impersonal
room, with a floor of drab brown tile, and dark wooden panelling. Several tall
doors led to the deeper mysteries of the building, and long hard benches stood
against the walls between them. There was a broad, solid looking desk behind
which presided a broad, solid looking Sergeant of police. He too was an
Irishman.
"This boy’s bin here a’fore,
Mister Cartwright," He said in a resigned tone, "On any number o’
different occasions. We’ve warned him ‘til we’re blue in the face with warnin’
him. There’s no help for it. This time he goes up in front o’ the judge for
sure."
He started to write in the huge book,
open on the desk in front of him.
Ben looked at the boy’s sulky,
recalcitrant face. "Don’t you think you should get his Pa in here
first?"
"He ain’t got no
Ben hesitated for a single second,
wondering exactly what he was getting himself into. "How would it be if I
stood in place of his Pa?"
The Sergeant looked up from his
writing, "Why would you want to do that, Mister Cartwright?"
The answer presented itself instantly
to the forefront of Ben’s mind. Any one of a hundred different disasters down
the years could have cost him his own life, and what would have become then of
his own sons without his hand to guide them. Might one of them have started
down the outlaw path? He hesitated to think so, but there were times, even now,
when Joe ran a little wild.
"I have sons of my own." he
said simply.
"Ah." The Sergeant, a
vastly experienced man, heard more than Ben told him. He sighed and put down
his pen. "Are you quite sure you know what you’re doin’ of, sir?"
"I’m not at all sure," Ben
said with a wry grin, " But I know that I have to do it."
Outside the precinct house Ben bent
down to look into the boy’s face. "What’s your name, boy?"
The boy pouted, and then heaved a
mighty sigh. In a small voice that Ben could barely hear, he whispered
"Joe. Joe Drury."
Ben’s own breath caught as a thousand
images flashed through his mind - Joe as a baby in his mother’s arms; Joe
laughing, at play with his brothers; Joe grave with tears on his cheeks; Joe in
pain. A thousand images of his own Joe. He put a hand on the boy’s shoulder,
"Little Joe..."
"I ain’t so little!" The
boys head came up, his startling hazel eyes, flecked with green and with gold, were
diamond bright, diamond hard.
Ben straightened up, steadying
himself, "No. You’re not." He started over, "Joe, you heard what
the desk Sergeant had to say. You have one more chance. Your last chance."
That was not all the desk Sergeant had said. Ben’s own ears were still ringing
from the dressing down, and the boy’s face, Joe’s face, was scarlet.
"I heard him." Joe sounded
petulant.
"So what are you going to do
about it?"
"Me?" The hazel eyes met
his in surprise, "What d’ya mean, what am I goin’ to do?"
Ben countered the question with a
question. "What do you expect anyone else to do? You’re a man now, Joe,
almost full grown. A man has to be strong enough to make his own choices. Is
this the choice you’re going to make?" He encompassed with a graphic gesture
the blank faced facade of the police station and the full weight of what it
represented. "You set yourself up against the law, boy, and you’re not
going to win."
Joe looked even closer to tears than
he had before the desk Sergeant. He didn’t have any idea who this big man with
the fierce, dark, eyes and the gruff homespun manner might be. He did have
enough sense to realize that he’d run out of rope, and that this was a straw at
which he might clutch. His eyes were brimming. "I don’t want ta go ta gaol,
Mister. What am I gonna do?"
Ben considered him carefully, another
young man thrust suddenly into his care. "Have you thought about getting
yourself a job? Earning an honest living?"
Joe recoiled with a sudden, sneering
laugh, "A job? Who in hell’s gonna give me a job?!"
"For a start, you can stop
cussing." Ben said, starting as he meant to go on. "Can you read and
write?"
Joe shook his head, looking at his
boots again, "I can’t do none o’ them fancy things." Then,
defensively, "My Ma would a’ taught me, only she don’t know how
neither."
"Can you handle horses, or
cattle?"
"I ain’t never bin on no
horse," Joe sighed, "An’ I don’t think I never seed no cow."
Ben reflected that he couldn’t expect
it to be that easy. "You’re going to have to let me think on this a while,
Joe," He said slowly, "But first of all, you’re going to have to do
something that won’t be easy. If you want me to help you, you have to make the
first move."
Joe looked very doubtful, "What
am I gonna have ta do?"
"Well," Ben pushed his hat
back and tucked his thumbs into his belt, "First off, you’re going to have
to go home, and tell your Ma what’s happened here today."
The boy gaped at him, "I can’t
tell my Ma. It’d fair kill her if I told her what I done."
"You have to start a new life with
a clean sheet. And that starts with tellin’ your Ma."
"She’ll beat the hell out o’ me,
Mister!"
"Cartwright. My name’s Ben
Cartwright. You can tell your Ma that I’d like to talk to her, real soon."
There wasn’t any other comfort Ben could offer the boy. He figured that any
punishment the boy’s Ma dished out was probably well deserved, and would serve
to clear the decks.
Adam took a long, hard pull on
Mozart's mouth, and managed to haul him to a halt at the top of the hill. The
horse was all lathered up and his sides were heaving. He needed a good blow,
and, if he were honest, so did Adam. Mozart was anything but an easy ride. He
had fought for his head every foot of the way, and he had an awkward high
stepping action that rattled
Adam was as tired as he could ever
remember being. He was soaked in sweat, and he ached, and there was a cauldron
of fire in his belly where newly healed scar tissue had been pulled and jarred
beyond endurance.
There were miles behind him, and more
miles still to cover, before he reached the nominal boundary of his father’s
land. Then there was still a goodly trip into
Mozart shook his head with impatience
and started to jig and dance about in the road. Adam gave him just a few inches
of rein and a nudge with his heels. Mozart snatched the bit, and took off with
a flying leap down the trail. Adam grabbed on to the saddle horn in
desperation, just to make sure he stayed on top.
The first thing Hoss came across was
his hat lying in the long grass. It looked as if the running horse had somehow
managed to step on it. It was well flattened and had a large, ragged tear in
the tall crown. Hoss grumbled, and punched it back into shape as best he could,
and jammed it down hard onto his head. Any protection from the sun was better
than none at all. It was, he though, danged fortunate that the heat of the
summer was past. He could have been in real trouble, stuck all the way out here
in nothing but his drawers and his hat. As it was, he could already feel his
pale skin starting to scorch in the sun.
The black gelding had finally run himself
to a standstill, and was standing, somewhat contritely, in the shade of a stand
of chestnut trees. He let Hoss walk right up to him, and nuzzled at his hand.
Hoss found it impossible to stay mad at him. He stroked the animal’s soft nose.
"It ain’t no use you doin’ that. I ain’t got no more sweetenin’s"
The horse snuffled, disappointed.
Hoss was delighted to find his shirt
and pants still hooked over the saddle horn, and wasted no time at all getting
himself back inside them. As he buckled the gun belt back around his waist,
feeling fully dressed again at last, he suddenly stopped and sniffed at the
air. A cool breeze had started to blow downhill from the mountains, and it
carried with it the smell of rain. Hoss squinted up at the sky, and sure enough
there were clouds boiling up all over where it mattered.
Hoss took a good mouthful of whisky,
and swilled it several times round his sore tooth before swallowing. His
step-Ma had been right about the liquor helping. His face was still hurting
like hell, but somehow, the warm feeling the whisky was producing in his belly
was making it more bearable.
He tightened up his cinches, and
stepped back aboard. He still had a whole mess of cattle to round up today and
a long way to drive them. Another look at the sky told him that there was one
heck of a storm brewing up in the mountains. It was headed right his way. As
sure as the good Lord made little apples, he was going to get wet all over
again.
The Civic Offices in
Ben apologized for being late.
Godfrey Little, a prosperous banker
of generous proportions, whom Ben had known for years, made the introductions
round the table. They were all faces that Ben knew vaguely, "Williard
Tensing," a mild, reasonable sort of man, representative of the mine
owner’s Federation; "Jonathan Caldwell," abrasive, sharp faced and
sharp tongued, spokesman for a consortium of merchants; "Peter Harlan,"
who ran a timber operation on a mammoth scale in the North of the state, and
who had a reputation for ruthlessness, "and his son, Only." They were
all affluent, successful and influential men, who, like Ben, had made their way
up in the world from very small beginnings
Ben sat down and laid his papers
carefully out on the table. He was well aware that he was in auspicious company
here. He also knew that his opinion was likely to be in the minority. Each and
every one of these men, and he included himself, had made a lot of money in his
life-time. They enjoyed making money, and they intended to go right on doing
it. It was the means and the method that concerned Ben, and he had a feeling
that it bothered him a lot more than it did any of the others.
Godfrey Little confirmed his
suspicions by the lack of sincerity in his voice when he spoke his next
sentence, "We’re, er, glad you could make it, Ben." His eyes, small
and blue, darted round the table, "We were just saying before you came in,
now that they've connected the Central Pacific up with the Union Pacific, over
in Promontory, what a good thing it’d be to run the railroad right up through
the North of the State to Oregon. Eventually perhaps, we could connect up with
the trans-Canadian Railroad they’re building. That way we could ship timber,
and beef, and ore right out of the State to the factories on the coast.
Jonathan’s people could bring in all the things we need to make
"Now just a minute." Ben
sat forward in his seat. His eyes were already hardening with annoyance. His
deep, stern voice cut through the honeyed tones of self congratulation,
"As I understood it, the purpose of this meeting was to discuss whether or
not we should let the railroad build North of
Caldwell made a placating gesture
with his hand. The sunlight from the window caught, and sparkled, in the jewel
in the ring that he wore. "We all know about that. But the railroad is
coming whether we like it or not. You may as well get used to the idea, and
make the best of it."
Ben bristled. He didn’t like
Caldwell’s tone.
Little spoke up agreeing with the
big-built, fancily dressed merchant, "Jonathan's right. You know the
railroad company’s already bought right-of-way as far as Carson City. It stands
to reason that from there, they’ll want to press on northwards."
"That’s as may be!" Ben
said, growing a little heated. "What’s in question is the route they’ll
want to take and the way they go about it. Left to themselves, they’ll run
those tracks right through the most beautiful country in the State!"
"You can’t know that, Ben,"
Tensing said quietly, and Harlan added,
"It won’t be as bad as you
think."
Ben was working himself into a fine
temper. "It’ll be just a bad as I think! All the railroad tycoons are
interested in is making money!"
Caldwell laughed depreciatingly,
"I think we all have a vested interest in that!"
Ben’s dark eyed anger switched to him
with all the speed of a snake strike, "But not at the price of the
heritage we should be leaving our children!"
"Well, you have plenty of it to
leave yours, Cartwright." Caldwell rejoined.
There was general laughter at Ben’s
expense.
"And most of the best bits, from
what I’ve seen." Little added, chuckling.
Ben glowered. This wasn’t going at
all well.
Tensing tapped his pencil on the
table, first one end and then the other, "Are you trying to tell us, Ben,
that you won’t be shipping your cattle out through the new rail head at Carson
City?"
"Of course I will, but..."
"Well, the miners want the same
opportunity to ship their ore, and Peter there wants to haul his timber out,
an’ Jonathan would kinda like to buy in bulk from the warehouses on the coast
and ship in for his traders."
"It’s only fair that everyone
gets the same opportunities." Little said disarmingly.
Ben was cross at the apparent
conspiracy, "I’m saying that the enterprise should be properly planned,
rather than let it grow wild like some rank weed out in the pasture. I don’t
want any part of ruining the landscape for the sake of profit!"
"Are you saying, you won’t be
putting in a bid for the contract to supply lumber for the track?" Harlan
asked slyly.
Ben pulled up short. He knew full
well that the Ponderosa’s bid for that particular contract had already been
prepared, and submitted, and would soon be a matter of public record. He knew
his face gave him away. "The Ponderosa re-plants for every tree we
cut..."
"Very noble." Harlan made a
dismissive gesture. "Ben, you want your share, and we want ours."
"We all want access to the wider
market, Ben." Tensing said reasonably.
Ben knew for sure that he was losing
this one. "There’ll be factories moving in. Heavy industry. Pollution
scarring up the landscape..."
"And they’ll bring in
people," Little said mildly, "They’re all going want homes, and jobs.
That means profits for all of us."
The argument was becoming circular.
Ben wished that Adam were there with his educated eloquence and his quick mind.
But then, he thought bitterly, Adam might well have been arguing for the
opposing side.
And then Ben found support coming
from an unexpected quarter. Only Harlan, younger son of Peter Harlan, had been
sitting quietly listening to the flow of the argument, back and forth. Until
now he had taken no part in the conversation. Now he sat forward, and spoke in
a quietly restrained voice. "I think Mister Cartwright has a point. The
railroad’s coming. We all know that. If we try and stand in its way, we’ll be
trampled under by it." Ben remembered identical sentiments being expressed
by another voice only that morning. "But, if we’re not careful, we’ll have
property speculators moving in on us and taking over the entire State. We’ll
all be pushed clean out of business." Ben noticed that Peter Harlan looked
ill at ease, and then down right annoyed with his son’s expressed opinion. To
an extent, Ben could sympathise. He had been in that same position himself more
than once. However, he had a feeling that he could get to like this quietly
spoken young man.
Ben didn’t like the sound of property
speculators moving in one bit. He made a mental note to discuss it with Adam,
the first chance he got.
"What I suggest you gentlemen
do," Only Harlan went on, "is set up a small advisory group, say just
two men, to look into all the aspects of the proposed development, and the
effects that it’ll have on all our lives and businesses. Then, when we’re properly
informed, we can make a considered submission to Governor."
The five older men round the table
looked at him, digesting what he had said. Little looked at Ben, "Would
that be acceptable to you?"
Ben thought furiously, "Who
would we put on this advisory group?" he asked, suspicious.
Only Harlan drew a long breath,
carefully not looking at his father’s furious face, "I guess I’d be
willing to do it, for one. And for the other - I understand you have a son with
a degree in engineering, Mister Cartwright. Would he be willing to join
me?"
Ben hesitated for a second, wary of
committing Adam without consulting him, afraid of letting the opportunity slip
by. Fear won. "I’m sure my son would be very glad to join you, Mister
Harlan."
Godfrey Little smiled a fat-cat
smile. "That’s what we’ll do then. Ben’s son and Peter’s boy here, can put
their heads together, and come up with some sort of compromise. Now gentlemen,
let's get on to other business..."
The key turned, and the door swung
open, admitting a shaft of light into the gloom. Ossy Hirshall’s voice followed
it in. "Guess you can come on out of there, Joe Cartwright."
Joe emerged, blinking, into the
light. He looked around. Dust laden sunlight spilled in through the windows. It
had an odd, brassy look that sometimes denoted that a storm was on its way.
Ossy Hirshall was standing over by the door, leaning on the frame, looking out.
The feed merchant sat in the corner with his feet up and a newspaper spread
across his legs. He was asleep with his mouth open.
Joe walked up behind Ossy Hirshall,
"What is it, Ossy?"
Hirshall looked at him sideways,
"Guess you kin go, boy. Yore stuff’s over there on the barrel head."
Joe was relieved to see everything
there. He wasted no time in retrieving his gun and the roll of bank-notes. He
stuffed his other belongings back into his pockets. "What about ol’ Henry
Carlisle?" he asked, tying down the gun. "You figured out that I
didn’t kill him after all?"
Hirshall screwed up his face,
"Well, I went on over an’ looked at ol’ Henry, an’ I looked at the place
where he died, an’ I talked to a lot o’ folks round about." He stopped and
chewed on his lip.
"And?" Joe prompted.
"The way I see it,"
Hirshall said, "Ol’ Henry was so gol-durned drunk he tripped up over his
own feet, an’ fell down, an’ cracked his head on that darn rock hisself."
Joe joined him in the doorway,
looking doubtful, "If that’s the way you reckon it happened, Ossy."
He shrugged eloquently.
"Well," Hirshall cocked an
eye at him, "You sure didn’t leave that saloon ta kill ‘im."
Joe could only agree. "No. I
didn’t."
Someone had taken Joe’s mare up to
the stable, and tied her up out of the sun. As he walked along to get her, Joe
called in at the barber’s shop. The barber looked up, saw who it was, and went
back to the client he was shaving, "If’n you want yore hair cut, boy, you
jist sit, ‘n’ wait, an’ I'll be with you in jist a minute."
"I don’t want my hair cut. I
came to see how Paulin Idress is doin’."
"The foreign fella out
back?" The barber glanced up again, "Reckon he’s still sleepin’ it
off. Weren’t nothin I could do fer that leg ‘cept cut it off, so that’ll be two
more bits you owe me."
Joe sighed, feeling slightly sick. He
had been afraid from the beginning, that that would be the case. He dug deep in
his pocket for a two bit piece.
Sheriff Roy coffee leaned on the
corner post of the veranda at the union of First Street and Main, and chewed on
a straw. It was a favourite leaning post. From here he could see the whole
length of both of Virginia City’s principle thoroughfares, and spot anything
that looked likely to turn into trouble ahead of time. Roy had ridden into
Virginia City when it was still a collection of tents and shanties, and
somehow, never got round to riding out again. He had represented the law there
for more years than he cared to count. He had grown old as the town had grown
up. His dark hair had turned to grey, and then to white, and his always pale
eyes had bleached out to colourlessness. He was a phlegmatic, vastly
experienced man, who both demanded, and got, respect. With a small team of
select deputies, he kept the ever-growing boom town on a tight rein, and
mainly, he did it simply by keeping his eyes open. Roy Coffee didn’t miss much,
and he certainly didn’t miss the man riding into town on the big bay horse that
hung down as if he were still a stallion.
Roy’s attention sharpened.
Physically, he scarcely moved. Just a slight tensing of the muscles, an
infinitesimal straightening of the back, a tiny lift of the head, betrayed his
sudden interest. The rider on the bay horse sat the saddle just like Ben
Cartwright’s oldest boy.
Roy Coffee knew Adam Cartwright well.
Had watched him grow from boy to manhood, and both liked, and respected him. He
knew him for an intelligent, astute, highly capable man with something of a
short fuse. More than once, when he was younger, Roy had locked him up in the
gaol to cool off a mad. Now he had matured into a dependable, conscientious,
responsible citizen. He was also known to be a man with a clever, often cynical
mouth, and an eye for the ladies. Right now, Adam Cartwright didn’t look any
one of those things. He looked like a sick man, and Roy knew full well that he
had no business being on a horse, let alone anywhere near Virginia City.
He watched Adam turn the horse into
the rail across the street, and slither, somewhat gracelessly, out of the
saddle. Roy spat out the straw and started to angle across the street towards
him.
Adam clung for a moment to the saddle
leathers while he got what his father would have called his sea legs. His knees
had turned to jelly on him. Then he tied Mozart quite securely to the hitching
rail, and, walking carefully, crossed the board walk to the door of the doctors
office.
It was locked.
Adam turned the brass knob again, and
rattled the door. Somehow, he was finding it hard to get it into his head that
the place was all locked up, and Paul Martin wasn’t there.
Roy Coffee came up behind him gently.
He knew very well that Adam was lightning fast with that black handled gun he wore,
and he didn’t want any accidents. "You got a problem, Adam?" he asked
quietly.
Careful as he had been, Adam jumped,
but his gun hand only flexed. Roy looked him over. He was waxy white in the
face, and wet with sweat. His black hair was plastered down with it and his
shirt was sticking to him. Obviously, riding around with that scarcely healed
belly wound wasn’t doing him any good at all. Roy was surprised old Ben
Cartwright was allowing him to do it. Grown men his boys might be, but out at
the Ponderosa, Ben still ruled the roost. Come to that, the horse wasn’t in
much better shape. Its bright coat was darkened and lathered, and there was a
wild look in its eye.
Adam gathered himself quickly,
"I’m looking for Paul Martin, Roy."
"Well, he ain’t there." Roy
said, unnecessarily.
For a moment something akin to panic
flared in Adam’s hooded eyes. Roy thought he might go back and rattle the door
some more, just for good measure, but he didn’t. "D’you know where he
is?"
"Reckon he might be out at the
Pearce’s place ag’in. They got a couple o’ kids right poorly."
Adam stepped towards the horse and
Roy got out of his way. He knew pig headed determination when he saw it, and he
wasn’t going to tangle with Cartwright in this mood.
Adam had untied the stallion, and was
trying to get his foot up into the stirrup while the horse was trying all kinds
of foolishness to stop him. "Jenny’s having the baby." he said, over
his shoulder.
"Didn’t think that was for a
couple o’ weeks yet."
"I guess no-one told the
baby." Adam got the horse sideways on to the hitching rail, and managed to
get his foot up into the iron. It cost him a lot of effort, and quite some pain
to haul himself back into that saddle. Roy noted it all carefully.
He frowned, and shook his head.
"You sure ain’t well enough ta be galloping round the country side on no
horse, Adam. You want me ta’ find someone...?"
Adam’s face took on that archetypal,
stubborn, Cartwright look, even if it was a bit green about the gills.
"I’ve got this far," he said, remembering his manners just well
enough to touch his hat.
He touched his heels to the horse’s
sides, and the stallion took off with a squat buck that Roy thought was going
to dump Adam Cartwright on his head. The two of them went flying off down Main
Street, kicking up the dust and leaving Roy Coffee looking after them, shaking
his head.
Hop Sing padded across the dining
room floor, silent in his soft slippers. He regarded this big house as his own,
and the Cartwright family was merely another extension of his own, vast, family
network. He had seen Cartwrights born, and he had seen Cartwrights die, and on
the surface, none of it seemed to affect him. What went on behind his
inscrutable oriental features, he kept a carefully guarded secret.
His hand on the knob, he opened the
door to the downstairs bedroom and peered in. Missy Jenny Cartwright lay
quietly in the bed, her only movement the slow rise and fall of her breathing.
Her dark hair spread out on the pillow, framing her pale face. Her eyelids,
almost transparent, were closed in sleep. The time had not yet come.
Satisfied, Hop Sing closed the door,
and padded silently away.
3.00pm
Kingdom Jones was sitting in a tipped
back chair on the porch of the cabin that was both his home, and the offices
for the freighting business he ran when Joe rode into the front yard on his
piebald mare. He appeared for all the world to be sleeping in the sun. Joe
pulled the mare up, and sat in the saddle waiting for an invite.
Kingdom Jones wasn’t asleep. He
opened one eye, and then, slowly, the other. He looked Joe and the mare over
carefully. "I guess," he said at last, "You just have to be a
Cartwright."
Joe pushed his hat to the back of his
head. "How can you tell?"
Kingdom Jones rocked his chair
forward onto all four legs. "Something about the look of you," he
said, "Something about the way you sit in the saddle. Cartwright through,
an’ through. Just like your brother."
Kingdom Jones stood up, and to Joe’s
surprise, even though Adam had warned him, he just kept on coming. Jones was a much
bigger man standing up that he appeared to be sitting down. Nor was he so old.
He gazed at Joe out of pale blue eyes, "Come on down, boy, an’ tell me how
he’s goin’ on."
Joe stepped down from the mare’s
saddle, and looped the reins round the rail. "Brother Adam’s coming along
right fine," he said. "He’s been up on his feet for a while now. The
doc. said he could go out of the house today as long as he takes it real, real
easy."
"Glad to hear it. Good man, your
brother. Real sorry ta hear he got shot up like that. I guess you come ta look
over that quarter horse mare I wrote your Pa about?"
"That’s right." Joe
couldn’t keep the smile out of his voice.
Jones lifted an eyebrow at him,
"Know something about horses, do you, young Cartwright?"
"I guess I know a little,"
Joe grinned. "But I’m learning all the time."
Kingdom Jones led the way round the
back of the cabin, to where the mare stood in a small corral all by herself.
She was a very dark, bay horse, without a single white hair anywhere on her
body. She stood tall, with the powerful quarters, deep chest, and relatively
small head typical of the quarter horse. Her mouth was soft, and her big eyes,
darkly intelligent. Joe felt himself falling instantly, and deeply, in love.
Kingdom Jones put both forearms on
the top corral rail, and rested himself. "You better get in there, and do
what you gotta do, boy."
Joe came to with a jolt, and realized
that not only had he been staring like a star struck kid, but his mouth had
come open. He closed it, and climbed into the corral.
The mare was amenable to his
examination. She lifted each of her feet for him in turn. And she moved this
way, and that, when he asked her. She didn’t even cause too much fuss when he
opened her mouth to look at her teeth. Joe remembered his brother’s words, and
paid special attention to her legs.
Finally he straightened up, and
dusted off his hands. Kingdom Jones was still leaning on the corral rail
watching, his weathered face poker straight. Joe walked over, "She seems
like a fine mare, Mister Jones."
"She is a fine mare. Too good ta
be haulin’ one o’ my wagons an’ that’s fer sure."
"About seven years?" Joe
ventured.
Jones nodded, "I reckoned about
seven."
Joe looked back at the mare with what
he hoped wasn’t too much longing. He was imagining, already, the beautiful colt
she’d get from Monarch, his coal black Morgan stallion and the pride of his
breeding project.
"Er - how much did you want for
her, Mister Jones?"
Kingdom Jones named a figure.
Joe knew that was one hell of a lot
of money for a mare. He resisted the urge to swallow, hard, and drew a long
careful breath. Kingdom Jones was watching him carefully, and with some hint of
amusement.
Unconsciously, Joe wiped his sweating
palms against his pants leg, "I don’t know if my Pa was reckoning to pay
quite that much, Mister Jones." He said finally.
"Your Pa ain’t here, boy."
Joe looked from Jones to the horse,
and back. He had the money in his pocket. Just about enough. His Pa hadn’t
given him any instructions other than to look the mare over carefully, and to
make sure she was worth whatever he paid for her. Both his Pa, and now Kingdom
Jones, had left the decision to him.
Joe made up his mind. He held out his
hand.
"You got yourself a deal, Mister
Jones."
Kingdom Jones’s face cracked a smile,
"Come on in, Joe Cartwright, and let’s get ourselves a drink."
When it came to rounding up cattle,
it was often said that you needed three things: a good man, a good horse and a
fair wind. It was fortunate for Hoss Cartwright that he had with him the most
essential of the three. It had taken long, painstaking hours to train the black
cutting horse. It was now that all the patience paid off. That horse could out
run, out manoeuvre, and out think, any steer on the range, and it was as well
that he could, because Hoss wasn’t being a whole lot of assistance.
Hoss was in misery. The pain in his
face, which had abated for a while, had returned to torment him at three times
the intensity. He had a hot, hard swelling in the side of his jaw, which was
making his already broad face even wider. The ache had spread all the way down
his arm, and was making his fingers numb. The whisky was no longer helping,
although by now he had consumed two thirds of the bottle. The liquor lay in the
pit of his belly, a bubbling cauldron of fire, and the fumes were rising up to
befuddle his head. He clung on to the reins and the saddle horn with one hand,
and rode with the other clamped to his face. Visions of the dentist’s imagined
chamber of tortures occupied his mind more than the probable dispersal of the
cattle.
To add to the problem, and to Hoss’s
unhappiness, the rainstorm that had been threatening finally arrived, drifting
down out of the higher hills on cooling air currents. It started with huge
angel-tear drops that smacked into the ground with the sound of a bullet
hitting a sack of rice. They hammered Hoss across the shoulders, and the cold
wet started to seep through to his fevered skin.
As the pace of the storm increased
the wind picked up, driving down out of the hills and across the high
grasslands. The rain drops became smaller and much more numerous. Before long,
true to his prediction, both Hoss and the horse were soaked right through.
Sheets of icy cold, hard driven rain
marched in waves across the pasture, making it difficult, if not impossible, to
pick out landmarks. It took Hoss twice the time he would normally have taken to
inspect every last corner of the range, and to make sure he hadn’t left any of
the lost cattle behind. By the time he had the little rag tag herd of about
thirty head assembled, the autumn storm was blowing in full spate. The heavy
headed chestnut trees were tossing wildly in the wind, and there were
hailstones the size of walnuts pelting both horse and rider.
To crown it all, there was a sullen
rumble of thunder from up in the hills, and then a sudden vicious bolt of
lightening, hitting the ground too close for comfort, lit up the landscape.
Hoss jumped, and the horse shied, the
twin jolts coming together in the agony of his jawbone. Hoss groaned, in more
pain than he could remember for a very long time. For that moment, even the
threat of the dentist held not quite the horror that it had before.
Reluctantly, for right now, here was
the last place he wanted to be, he moved the black horse round to the rear of
the little herd, and started moving the cows forward.
Paul Martin came out of the Pearce’s
house with his bag and hat held together in one hand, and closed the door
behind him with the other. He was satisfied, at last, that the two Pearce children
he had come to treat were recovering from the spotty, feverish condition that
had laid them low for more than two weeks. The illness had lingered on for far
too long. He was certainly not happy that both the children were small in
stature for their ages, and much too thin. All of the children, and the
Pearce’s had quite a number, looked to be underweight and sickly. Paul was
afraid that more of them yet might come down with the fever. He was further
afraid, although she hadn’t said anything, that the prematurely grey and work
worn Mrs. Pearce might be carrying yet another addition to the, already too
numerous, family.
He set his hat on his head and
stepped across the porch towards his buggy. As he did so, he saw a rider coming
into the yard on a somewhat jaded looking horse.
Paul Martin stopped, and did a swift
double take on that. It was not Yemin Pearce coming home early from his work.
If fact, and Paul was sure of it, the rider, impossibly, was Adam Cartwright.
Paul stepped round the buggy, and
went to meet the horse as it pulled up. His kindly, somewhat weather beaten
face creased into lines of considerable concern and annoyance.
"Adam? What the devil are you
doing way out here? And why are you up on a horse?"
Adam decided that, on the whole, the
best thing for him to do was to stay right where he was, in the saddle. He
afraid that if he got down Paul would realize the state that he had gotten
himself into. The doctor would then waste valuable time in helping him, when he
should be on his way out to the Ponderosa. There was also the distinct
probability that his legs would betray him, and leave him sprawling in the dirt
of the Pearce’s front yard. So instead, he composed his face, and tried to make
his lean on the saddle horn seem nonchalant. "Jenny needs you out at the
ranch, Paul, –as fast as you can make it. The baby’s startin’."
"I can’t do it, Adam,"
Paul’s frown deepened, "I have to take medicine over to the Schultze’s
farm for old Mister Schultze. He’s being eaten up from the inside, and the pain’s
starting to get real bad. I promised..."
Adam cursed inwardly, and
straightened up in the saddle, "Give it to me, Paul. I’ll take it."
"Absolutely not!" Paul, an
old family friend of the Cartwrights, as well as their family physician, took
the liberty of putting his hand up on Adam’s saddle leathers, "You
shouldn’t be on that horse at all, let alone galloping round the country
side..."
"I’m on the horse now, Paul, and
a little bit further isn’t going to make a whole lot of difference. Jenny needs
you!"
"How long ago did Jenny
start?"
Adam hadn’t the faintest idea. His
time sense was all shot to hell. "I don’t know. Some time this
morning!"
Paul made rapid calculations. It was
essential that he got the pain killing medicine out to the Schultze’s farm. Old
Georges Schultze was going through ten different sorts of hell already, and it
was going to get a whole lot worse before the inevitable end. And the
Schultze’s place was way out in the other direction to the Ponderosa. Now Paul
wished he’d gone straight there first, instead of calling in at the Pearce’s.
He knew that Jenny Cartwright was
going to need his help. She was a small woman, slight in build and slender in
the hips, and the way she’d been blowing up lately, Paul was afraid she just
might be carrying another Hoss Cartwright. He looked at the man on the horse in
front of him. He’d known Adam for almost as long as Roy Coffee, and he wasn’t
fooled by the man’s act one little bit. Adam’s unconscious body language was
giving him away, even if his face wasn’t. He was exhausted, and in pain, and
barely staying on that damn dancing horse.
"I can’t let you do it,
Adam"
"You don’t have a choice! Give
me the damn bottle and get goin’ will ya!?"
Picking up on Adam’s agitation,
Mozart began to prance in earnest. Adam pulled the horse’s head round hard and
made him circle, "Paul!"
Paul dithered. He had three, no, make
that four patients, who all needed him, in three separate places. He had to
decide, and decide right now. "All right," he said. "Stay right
there, and I’ll get it."
Adam held Mozart together with a
tight rein while Paul plunged into the depths of his buggy. The doctor came up
with a medicine-bottle shaped package. He handed it up to Adam. "You just
give that to Mrs. Schultze. She knows what to do!" The last was shouted
after the retreating horseman as Mozart snatched the bit, and galloped out of
the yard.
Paul heaved a great sigh. He just
hoped that Adam Cartwright could summon enough strength from somewhere to stay
on that thumping great horse, and didn’t come off somewhere along the road and
crack his skull open. He’d just hate to have to explain that one to Ben
Cartwright! He climbed aboard his buggy and gee’d up his horse, setting off in
the other direction towards the Ponderosa.
Godfrey Little slapped Ben on the
back as they left through the meeting room door, and headed towards the rather
grand sweep of staircase that led down to the lower level and the main door. He
had sensed the big rancher’s despondency through the second half of the
meeting, and wanted to say something to at least lighten the atmosphere. Ben
Cartwright was a big man in the business world of Western Nevada, and Little
was astute enough to realize that getting on his bad side would help no-one.
"Don’t you worry yourself any
about Caldwell and Harlan, Ben. There’s a whole lot of talk there that don’t
mean much."
Ben Cartwright looked at him, and his
dark eyes were worried. "I wish I could believe that, Godfrey," he
said heavily. "They’re both powerful men, and they swing a lot of weight."
"The boys’ll sort it out. Only
Harken has his head screwed on straight, and your Adam has a brain on him like
a sharp knife."
Ben smiled wryly and shook his head,
"I guess they’ll figure something out between them. Hopefully before the
railroad drives right through the state."
"Say..." At the top of the
stairs Little hesitated, catching Ben by the arm. "Didn’t I hear something
about that boy of yours catching a bullet a while back?"
"I’m afraid you heard it
right." Ben suppressed a shudder at the horror of the memory, "It was
touch and go for while."
Little’s face expressed a concern
that certainly seemed genuine, "And how is he now?" He asked as they
started down the stairs together.
"He’s just about back on his feet.
Paul Martin pulled him through. You remember Paul?"
"Yes, indeed," Little
nodded. "He’s a good man. How are the rest of the family?"
"Fine. Fine." At the bottom
of the staircase the two men turned to face each other. "Joe and Hoss are
fine young men now, and Jenny, my wife, is about to have a baby any day."
"A girl, this time, Ben?"
Ben smiled and shook his head,
"No, sir. I reckon this’ll be another boy."
Little laughed and offered his hand,
"Well, Good luck to you, Ben. Give my best to your wife and the
boys."
The two men shook hands, and Ben
stepped out into the street.
4.00pm
As Ben emerged from the shaded gloom
of the civic buildings into the hot glare of the afternoon sun, a small figure,
all long arms and legs, stood up from where he had been siting on the bottom
step. Ben recognized at once the tousled hair, and the green and gold eyes.
"Joe?" He was more than
half surprised to ever set eyes on the boy again.
"Mister Cartwright." Joe
Drury shuffled his feet and looked uncomfortable, "I done what you said. I
went home an’ told my Ma what I done, an’ what you said down at the Police
Station."
"Did you now?" Ben looked
sternly down at him from his much greater height."And what did your Ma
have to say?"
The boy looked down at his feet, and
then up again. His eyes were bright, and brimming over. "Ma was awful
mad," he said with a distinct catch, "She got out the switch, an’ she
gave me an awful thrashin’." Joe wiped his wet nose on his sleeve,
"An’ then she sat down at the table, an’ she cried some."
Ben resisted the urge to reach out to
the boy. He remembered well times when he’d had to discipline one of his own,
and knew that sympathy rendered the punishment ineffective. "I don’t
suppose your Ma enjoyed it any more than you did." he said.
Joe snuffled and sniffed, "Then
Ma said I should come an’ find you, an’ ask you to come on down ta our house,
so that you’n her can have that talk you wanted." Joe’s eyes searched
Ben’s face, half fearful, half hopeful, "Ma’s gettin’ somethin’ awful fancy
ready fer dinner."
Ben read the pleading and the anxiety
that had replaced the former, sulky defiance, in the boy’s face. He gleaned
some idea of the interview that had taken place between mother and son.
"I’ll be real pleased to come and have dinner with you and your Ma."
he said, "You lead the way."
Joe did just that. He took Ben
through the city streets, out of the prosperous business district, south and
east, into increasingly poorer areas. The streets became narrower, and the
buildings that lined them upon either side, smaller, and less well kept. There
were few offices here, and none of the large fancy stores. There were small
shops and private houses, but finally, even these were left behind. They were
replaced by shanties, and shacks built of nothing more than clapboard, or
wattle and daub, with dark and threatening alleyways between. These were the
haunts of the pawn brokers, and the money lenders, of wagoners, and bootleg
whiskey makers, of whores, and pimps and opium dealers.
The streets, though so much meaner, were
no less busy. Gone was the opulence of the city centre. Here the traffic
consisted not of coaches and carriages, but of wagons and hand carts. Ben heard
a dozen languages spoken as he passed, among them French and German, Itallian
and Chinese. The people wore ragged homespun, and the women with painted faces,
faded finery. The stares that followed him were filled with curiosity, and
envy, and aggression. Although Joe walked unconcerned, Ben was uneasy, and took
comfort from the weight of the gun on his hip.
They came to a broken backed little
cabin, in the middle of a row. There were piles of garbage rotting up against
the walls, and a smell of something even less savoury in the air. Joe pushed
open the door, and led Ben inside.
The shack had only the one room, and
a kitchen at the back. It was sparsely furnished, with cots against two of the
walls, and a stove up against the third. It was tidy, and it was clean.
The name of Joe’s mother was Helen.
She was not tall, the bun of her greying hair coming barely up to Ben's
shoulder. Her face might once have held a sort of prettiness, but now it was
tired and jaded, lined with care and age before its time. Only her eyes were
young and vital, speckled with gold and green.
She smoothed the apron she wore over
a faded blue dress, and spoke in voice that had a faint lilt to it, maybe
Irish, but Ben wasn’t sure. "It’s honour you bring to my house, Mister
Cartwright. Joe told me what you done for him, and it’s my wish to thank you
for it. There’ll be a meal ready in a while, and we’d be right pleased if you’d
sit down and share it with us."
Ben smiled at her, "That’d be my
pleasure, ma’am."
She smiled back, and the smile took
some of the tiredness out of her face, "You can hang you hat an’ your gun
over by the door, Mister Cartwright, and then you jest set." She indicated
the one comfortable chair in the room, "Joe, you get on out ta the pump,
an’ get yourself washed up, an then you c’n come an’ talk ta Mister
Cartwright..."
Ben did as he was bidden, and settled
himself into the armchair, listening to the domesticated rattle of pots coming
from the kitchen, and the sounds of the traffic in the street outside.
Joe rode back into Sparks with the
bay quarter horse mare trailing on a lead rein. She had manners as nice as her
looks, and she wasn’t giving him any trouble. Ben Cartwright’s youngest son was
feeling ridiculously pleased with himself, and the three stiff shots he’d had
from Kingdom Jones’s bottle to cement the bargain, were just serving to help
the feeling along.
As he reached edge of town, he
couldn’t help but notice the neat little house with all the potted flowers
outside. There were pink ones, blue ones and yellow ones. As he rode by, quite by
chance, the front door opened and Maryanne stepped out onto the porch. She had
a watering can in her hand. She looked up and saw him, and her pretty little
heart-shaped face lit up with a big smile. She walked down the path to the gate
in the picket fence. It was all as pretty as a picture, and just a little too
good to be true. Joe pulled up the pinto mare and touched the brim of his hat.
"Ma’am."
"Why, Joe Cartwright! Don’t tell
me you were goin’ ta ride on by without even stoppin’ ta say hello?"
Joe grinned his wicked boyish grin -
the one he knew never failed to melt the lady’s hearts. "Why, ma’am, would
I do that?"
She leaned over the fence, just a
little - just enough to offer a glimpse of hidden delights to a mounted
horseman. "Why don’t you step on down, and sit for a while? My Ma just
made fresh apple pie, an’ there’s coffee on the stove."
Joe glanced quickly at the brassy
sky, estimating the time. He reckoned he had an hour or so. Never taking his
eyes from Maryanne, he threw his leg over the mare’s withers and slid down out
of the saddle. He tied both horses securely to the picket fence, and Maryanne
opened the gate for him. She hooked her arm through his, and they walked
together up the front path, and through the front door of the house.
Tossing his hat onto the kitchen
table, Joe looked around. Sure enough, there was an apple pie on the dresser,
warm, and fragrant, with a crisp sugar coat, and a coffee pot sitting on the
back of the stove.
All of a sudden, however, Maryanne
didn’t seen so very interested in feeding him. She moved in close, and he
caught another whiff of her perfume. She ran her fingertips lightly up his arms
from his elbows to his shoulders, and lifted her face to his, eyes half closed.
Joe lowered his head, and kissed her
softly on the lips. Her hands slid round his back, and she pulled him closer,
"C’mon, Joe Cartwright. You c’n do better than that," she whispered.
Joe drew back uneasily. "But,
er, where’s your Ma?"
Maryanne laughed lightly. "Ma’s
out visitin.’ She wont be back ‘til it’s dark."
"Is that a fact?" Joe put
his arms round her, and drew her in to him. She undid the buttons of his shirt,
one by one, and then slipped her little hands inside. She slid them across the
smoothness of his chest, and round his sides. She pulled his shirt out of his
pants.
Joe’s hands were busy doing some
exploring of their own. They followed the seams of her bodice down to where her
skirt flared out over her hips.
One of Maryanne’s hands disengaged
itself, and found its way round to the back of his head. Her fingers tangled
themselves in his curls, and she pulled his face down towards hers. Her mouth
was suddenly hungry and demanding. Her other hand tracked downwards, seeking
and finding.
Joe found himself rising to the
occasion. He felt for her breast, and found it hard under his hand. Her fingers
tightened in his hair. She pulled her lips away from his just long enough to
whisper in his ear "I got some real pretty things in my room, Joe
Cartwright. I’d sure like to show them to you."
"An’ I’d sure like to see
them," he whispered back.
"Why don’t you carry me on
up?"
Joe smiled, and scooped her into his
arms, and carried her out of the kitchen, and up the stairs.
Mozart came to a slithering stop
outside the Schultze’s cabin. Adam came out of the saddle rather faster than he
intended. He managed to land on his feet, and stood for a moment hanging on to
horse’s flank while he regained his equilibrium.
The door of the cabin opened, and
Mrs. Schultze came out onto the porch. She was a woman Adam knew by sight. They
had exchanged a few words from time to time. Tall, elderly, with hair turning
from grey to white, she wore a severe, slate grey dress with scraps of lace at
neck and wrist. Unable for a moment to let go of the horse, Adam nodded to her.
"Mrs. Schultze."
"Why, Mister Cartwright."
Mrs. Schultze came to the edge of the porch and put a pale, long fingered hand
against the upright. With her other hand, she tucked in a stray strand of hair,
an unconscious, feminine gesture. "Whatever are you doing all the way out
here?"
Finally, Adam caught his breath, and
managed to straighten up. "Doc. Martin asked me to ride out with the
medicine for Mister Schultze." He held out the bottle in its wrapping.
Mrs. Schultze gazed at the bottle,
and at the hand that held it, as if it were some strange, and mystical, object.
Her face worked, but no words came from her mouth.
"Mrs. Schultze?" Adam
prompted.
Her eyes refocused on his face,
"Oh, Mister Cartwright! I am so sorry. Please forgive me." She took
the bottle, and held it in both hands, close against her. "It really is
most kind of you to come all this way."
Adam stepped up onto the porch, and
stood close to her, "Is something the matter, Mrs. Schultze? What is
it?"
She gazed at him out of dry, slate
coloured eyes. "My husband died an hour ago, Mister Cartwright. I’m afraid
your kindness is just a little too late."
Adam put a hand lightly on the
woman’s arm and led her back inside the cabin.
There was only one room with a table,
and a bed, and a huge iron cooking range up against one wall. Georges Schultze
lay in the bed.
Adam sat Mrs Schultze down in a chair
at the table, and went over to look at him. He looked as old as anyone Adam had
ever seen, and he had died in the most terrible pain. There was nothing Adam
could do to compose the contorted features. He did manage to close the staring
eyes, and straighten out the limbs. He covered the old man’s face with a
blanket from the bed.
There was a pot full of coffee
sitting on the range, barely warm. The fire was just glowing embers, and there
was no wood in the box. The cabin was starting to grow cold. Adam found another
blanket and draped it round the empty eyed woman’s shoulders. Then he went on
out to find something to burn.
A mixed herd of thirty cows and
steers in the middle of a mountain storm was not the easiest thing for one man
on a horse to handle. The clouds had come down so low out of the mountains that
it seemed to Hoss that he just had to reach up a hand to touch them. The rumble
of thunder was almost continuous, low and angry, and flashes of lightening
danced from one thunderhead to another. The rain continued to pelt down.
The cows, now moving steadily on the
downward slope, bellowed, alarmed by all the commotion. Hoss urged the horse to
a faster pace to overtake the lead animals, and slow the little group down.
Thunder growled again, closer, and
louder. Encouraged by a rattle of hailstones against their rumps, the cattle
broke into a trot.
Hoss swore feelingly, and tried to
turn the flank of the herd in on itself to force the animals to mill and
circle. The cattle were having none of it. They continued on down the hillside
towards the lower pastures at a steadily increasing pace.
The black horse, sitting back against
the slope to avoid falling with its rider, was hard put to keep up.
Lightening flared, and cracked. Hoss
turned in the saddle to see a twisted old stump of tree, the object of many a
previous strike, flare into flame. The thunder, instant, and deafening, rolled
round the hills. The cattle broke into a run. Before he knew what was
happening, the big man on the horse had a full-blooded, if small scale,
stampede on his hands.
Jenny woke up with a cry of pain. The
dull waves that had been plaguing her all afternoon had sharpened abruptly into
a band of steel. She grasped at the bedclothes, as, of its own volition, her
body writhed against the mattress trying to free itself of the torment. Sweat
broke from every pore, sticking her hair to her head, and her nightdress to her
body.
Then, as the pain gradually started
to fade, there were hands to bathe her face and neck with a cloth wrung out in
tepid water. She opened her green eyes, and looked up into the face of the
little Chinese cook. He bobbed his head, and smiled encouragement at her.
"Missy Jenny be all right,"
he said. "Hop Sing here."
He lifted her head and held an eggcup
sized cup to her lips. She sipped a bittersweet brew of Oriental herbs.
"Keep Missy Jenny strong."
Hop Sing said with a smile.
Jenny rolled her head; her eyes
searched the room. "Where is everyone? Where’s Ben? Where’s Paul? Did Adam
come back?"
"Missy Jenny no worry." Hop
Sing dabbed at her face again with the cloth, "Missa Adam, Missa Paul,
they come real soon. Missa Ben, he come later."
Jenny looked at him in dawning
horror, as she realized that the two of them were alone. "Hop Sing? What
are we going to do?!"
"No worry," Hop Sing said
again, "Hop Sing here. Everyone else come soon."
Jenny didn’t have time to argue. The
next pain was starting to build.
Sipping at the hot coffee, Mrs.
Schultze gave Adam a wan smile across the rim of the cup.
"I really am grateful to you,
Mister Cartwright. If you hadn’t come along..." A strong frontier’s woman
of the old fashioned sort, she was recovering quickly now, from the shock of
her husband’s death. Her face was a better colour, and there was light again in
her eyes.
"I’m glad to oblige,
ma’am." Adam sipped his own coffee, grateful for the warming effect the
thick black brew was having on his belly He was still more pleased to have his
backside on a firm chair for a while, instead of in Mozart’s saddle. The
prospect of the ride back to the ranch did not hold much appeal.
It was warmer now, in the cabin’s
single room, and Adam had lit a lamp to forestall the gathering gloom. There
was enough firewood to last through the night, though the effort had cost him
dear.
"I expect you’ll be moving into
town now, Mrs. Schultze?" he ventured.
"I haven’t thought." She
shook her head, and smiled sadly. "I can’t manage the farm on my own so I
guess I’ll have to sell up."
Adam doubted there would be a buyer
for the little patch of cleared scrub brush and potatoes, but he kept his
opinions carefully to himself. "Do you have any family you could go
to?"
"No. We never had any children,
Mister Schultze and me. The good Lord never saw fit..." She squeezed her
eyes tight shut for long seconds and then drew a deep, steadying breath.
Adam waited. She brushed a knuckle
across a dry cheek, "I... have a cousin back east. We write each other
twice a year. She’s a widow woman too, now. I guess, if I could raise the fare,
I could go an’ live with her."
Adam reached across the table, and
covered her hand with his, "You write your cousin, Mrs. Schultze. I’ll see
to it that you have the fare."
The old woman looked down at their
linked hands and then up again into Adam’s face. Now, at last, there were tears
in her eyes.
Joe drew Maryanne’s soft warm body
close against his, and kissed her willing lips one last time. Then he stepped
out onto the porch and looked up at the sky. The overcast had lowered, and the
temperature of the desert had started to drop. Joe reckoned it was going to
rain before he got home. He set his hat on his head at a jaunty angle and set
off down the path.
His footsteps slowed as he neared the
gate in the little picket fence. A frown formed on his face, and a cold ball of
panic started to form up in his gut. The piebald mare still stood exactly where
he’d left her, one hind leg resting on the toe of her hoof. There was no sign
at all of the bay quarter horse. She had vanished completely, without leaving
one single trace.
With a yell Joe leapt the fence. He
stood in the middle of the street and looked both ways. The mare wasn’t anywhere
to be seen. Joe threw his hat down in the dirt, and stamped on it.
Ossy Hirshall was out in front of the
feed store, smoking a thin black cheroot. He watched with cool speculation as
Joe Cartwright galloped up on the pinto mare. Joe all but fell out of the
saddle, "Ossy! Someone’s stole my horse!"
Hirshall digested that statement with
care. "You mean someone’s stole that fancy horse your Pa gave you all that
money fer?"
"That’s the horse! I tied her up
real good, and now she’s gone!"
Hirshall looked Joe over,
considering, "Where’d you leave a horse like that so’s someone could steal
it?"
"What does it matter where I
left her?!" Joe was yelling now, "I was just visitin’ with Maryanne.
The horse was tied right outside! Ain’t you supposed ta be the law round here?
Ain’t you gonna help me find my horse?!"
Hirshall took a pull from his
cheroot. "Well, guess I am," he said in laconic answer to both
questions. He dropped the stub onto the boardwalk, and ground it out under his
heel, "You jist calm down a bit, boy, an’ I’ll go get my horse." He
started to turn away, then changed his mind, and looked Joe over again.
"Joe Cartwright, di’n’t your Pa ever tell you ‘bout visitin’ with ladies
like Maryanne?"
Joe felt hot colour flush into his
face, "My Pa told me," he confessed.
Hirshall drew a long breath, and
shook his head, "Guess if we don’t find that fancy horse, you’re going to
have one hell of a lot of explainin’ ta do, boy. One hell of a lot!"
Like Hirshall himself, the horse he
rode stood tall and lean. He was a raw-boned, red roan gelding, with flashy
white stockings all the way up to his knees and a wicked white face. Hirshall
sat an old fashioned, black, fore-and-aft rigged saddle all tasselled with
black leather stringing. With his dark clothes, little grey moustache, and his
long tied back hair, he looked like something out of some eastern rodeo show.
He sat in the saddle like an old time gun fighter: ramrod straight, with the
reins gathered into his left hand and his right resting lightly on his thigh.
One look into the pale grey eyes would be enough to dispel any hint of
amusement. Hirshall was a man on a mission. He was a lawman, and he meant
business.
He and Joe pulled their horses up
outside Maryanne’s house, and Hirshall looked all around. "Guess we ain’t
gonna pick up no tracks on this here road."
Joe Cartwright was approaching
despair. Looming over him, he could feel the full weight of his father’s rage,
"We don’t even know which way she went!"
Hirshall cocked an eye at him,
"Well, guess we know which ways she di’n’t go."
"We do?"
"She sure di’n’t go through town
or I’d a seen her. Couldn’t miss no fancy horse like that. An’ she sure didn’t
go east. Ain’t nothin’ but a whole lot a rocks out that way." He sat a
bit, and pondered the remaining alternatives, "C’mon, boy," he
squinted up at the sky as he turned the roan’s head towards the west,
"Guess it’s gonna rain ‘bout the same time as it gets dark. That gives us
about an hour ta pick something up."
Joe nudged his mare alongside,
"Why this way?"
"You jist trust me, boy. An’
keep that pistol o’ yours handy. When we catch up with this fella, he’s gonna
be a desperate man. Horse stealin’ is still a hangin offence around these
parts." He kicked the big roan on, and Joes shorter legged mare was
suddenly hard put to to keep up.
Mrs. Drury called Ben and Joe to take
their places at the little table in the kitchen area. It was all spread with an
elaborate white damask cloth, obviously a much treasured heirloom, and the
woman’s prized possession, and set with a selection of cream-ware china pieces
that almost matched. She had removed her apron and tidied her hair. Joe had
dressed in his other shirt, and looked smarter than Ben had yet seen him. Ben
took off his coat so that he could sit at table in white shirtsleeves,
waistcoat, and silk string tie.
"Would you be good enough to say
the grace for us, Mister Cartwright?"
Ben clasped his hands, and lowered
his eyes, calling down the blessing of his Lord upon the food, and those
gathered together to share it. He spared a small thought for another little
group of people who would be sitting down together about now in another house
far away - his own dear family.
Mrs. Drury served a very creditable
beef stew, with carrots, and onions; well padded out with lentils. If the portions
were meagre in comparison with Ben’s own table, they were sufficient eaten with
plain, boiled potatoes, and chunks of fresh bread. Ben noticed that Joe ate
like a starving man set before a feast, and he guessed that the boy didn’t see
a meal like this that often.
He sat back, finally, with a big
smile on his face, "That was a fine meal, Mrs. Drury, and I thank you for
it."
The woman’s face glowed at the
praise, "Why thank you, Mister Cartwright. After all you did to help Joe,
it was the least I could do."
"It’s Joe we have to talk about,
Mrs. Drury." Ben shot the boy a stern glance and saw his face colour.
"Joe’s almost a man now, and it’s time he decided what he’s going to do to
earn himself a living."
"I know it." Mrs. Drury gazed
at her son with worried eyes, "I’m sure I don’t know what’s to become of
him. It’s a life of crime he’s headed for, an’ that’s a fact, without no Pa ta
take him in hand."
Ben was carefully avoiding mentioning
the boy’s lack of a father, having noticed that Mrs. Drury wore no wedding
ring. He sipped at his after dinner coffee.
Joe’s ears had turned scarlet, and he
squirmed in his chair, "I ain’t gonna do no more wrong things," he
insisted sulkily. "I promised Mister Cartwright, an’ I promised the Sergeant
down at the Police Station."
"An’ you’ve promised me
before." his mother said, sharply.
Joe pouted.
Ben looked from one to the other,
"What Joe needs is a proper job, Mrs. Drury. A man needs to work, both for
his own self respect, and so that he can earn his own living, and pay his own
way."
Mrs. Drury shook her head sadly,
"I hear what you’re sayin’ Mister Cartwright, but who’s goin’ ta give Joe
a job? He can’t do nothin’. I never could afford to send him to no school, an’
I couldn’t teach him myself ‘cause..."
She left the sentence unfinished, and
Ben didn’t press her. He already knew the reason.
Ben frowned into his coffee. It was
time, he guessed, to bite down on the bullet, and make the decision that was
becoming more, and more, inevitable. He knew that he hadn’t given this nearly
enough thought, nor had he consulted with the other people who’s lives were
bound to be affected, but Ben had lived his life making decisions, and he could
feel the hand of fate moving strongly in this. Right or wrong, this was another
one to put on the list on Judgement Day.
"Mrs. Drury," he said
slowly, seriously, looking up at her from beneath his dark brows, "How
would it be if I took Joe to work for me?"
There was a silence around the little
kitchen table while mother, and son, absorbed what he’d said.
"I have a ranch south of here,
almost into the Sierras. I can always use hands. We can teach Joe to ride, and
rope, and brand, and drive cattle. And, if he’s willing," he turned his
eyes on the boy, "we can help him learn to read, and write, and
figure."
Mrs. Drury’s eyes flickered back and
forth between Ben’s face, and her son’s. Ben could almost hear her mind
working. He hoped she was as intelligent a woman as he thought.
She didn’t let him down, "That’s
a right kind offer you make, Mister Cartwright, an’ I thank you for it. But it
has to be Joe that decides."
Joe Drury looked about full enough to
burst. Half a hundred thoughts were tumbling around inside his head, and he
couldn’t make up his mind which one to voice first. The one that burst out
ahead off the others, gave Ben the measure of the man to come. "That means
I’ll have to go away, and leave you all alone, Ma!"
"Don’t you worry none about me,
Joe," The woman said, steadily, "I’ll manage just fine."
"When you get your pay, you can
send money home to your mother." Ben explained, "And the Ponderosa
isn’t so far away. You’ll be able to ride home once in a while."
The boy’s green and gold eyes were
starting to shine, as a whole new vision of the future opened up in front of
him. It was an amazing transformation, and Ben felt he was getting part of his
reward right there, and then, just seeing it.
Ben looked at the woman and was
delighted to see that she was smiling.
He fished in his pants pocket, and
pulled out one of the fancy little embossed cards that Adam had got printed up
for him. He gave it to Joe. "There’s a man named Kingdom Jones runs a
freight line all over this side of the State. When you’re good, and ready, you
hitch a ride with one of his drivers to
Joe ran his fingers over the raised
up writing that he could not read. His face was glowing.
Ben stood up, and reached for his
coat, "Mrs. Drury, doubtless there are things that you, and the boy
need..."
Helen Drury drew back with a shake of
the head, "I wont be taking your money, Mister Cartwright."
Ben hesitated. "You could look
on it as an advance against Joe’s wages."
"You’re taking Joe to your fine
ranch, an’ giving him a trade, an’ teachin’ him all the things that I can’t
teach him. It’s enough, and more than I can ever repay."
Ben nodded, accepting her decision.
The woman had her own fierce pride, and he wasn’t about to take it from her.
The storm, having done the worst that
it could do, had blown over. The clouds had broken up, and the rain almost
stopped. The horse arrived, finally, at the bottom of the downslope and landed
on all four feet with a jolt that rattled Hoss’s bones. He groaned aloud and
clamped a hand to his aching face. The swelling had become huge, and it was
throbbing in time with his heartbeat.
He circled the horse looking at the
tracks in the wet ground. For the first time that day, it looked as if luck had
been on his side. Still running, the little herd had turned southwest, towards
the lower pastures, and the feeding stations that would keep them alive through
the winter.
He debated momentarily going after
them, and making sure they went all the way down, but cattle, although
generally stupid animals, were gregarious, and they would gravitate naturally
towards their own kind. Hoss had the satisfaction of knowing that, by the time
it started snowing, they would all be safely right where he wanted them to be.
He took a long chug from the whisky left
in the bottle and swallowed it down. It reignited the fire in his belly, and
sang its song through his veins. He turned his horse’s head towards distant
home, and urged it on ahead.
Hop Sing was waiting on the front
Porch of Ben Cartwright’s house when Paul Martin pulled his buggy horse to a
stop. Paul was not really surprised. He had know the little Chinese cook for
years, ever since Ben, and his then wife, Marie, had brought him home with them
from a trip to San Francisco. Apart from occasional, long, unexplained
absences, he had moved in with them permanently, and taken over the running of
their household. Paul knew, through any number of previous encounters, that the
Chinaman had a sixth sense when it came to people’s comings, and goings.
Paul picked his bag off the buggy
seat, and started towards the house. "Hello there, Hop Sing. How’s it
going?"
Hop Sing smiled and bobbed a bow,
but, as always, his face gave nothing away. "Hop Sing very glad you come,
Missa Paul. Missy Jenny have baby soon. Need doctor."
"That’s about what I
heard." Paul parked his hat on the sideboard. "Where is she?"
Jenny Cartwright was lying in bed
half propped up on a pile of pillows. She was pale and frightened, but a
relieved look came to her face as Paul entered the room. Paul put on his best,
friendly, family doctor smile. "Hello, Jenny. Decided to start without me,
eh?"
Jenny managed a small smile at the
joke. "I thought I’d see how far I could get on my own." she said,
and then her eyes darkened, and she bit down on her lip as another wave of pain
began.
Paul took off his coat and washed his
hands in the basin, drying them on the towel Hop Sing handed him. He turned
towards the bed, and bowed to the woman who lay there.
"If you will forgive me..."
He drew back the sheet.
Adam tightened the cinch a notch, and
reached for the stirrup iron. Mozart rolled an eye at him, laying back one ear.
Adam braced himself and climbed stiffly into the saddle. He hoped against hope
that the horse wasn’t in the mood for another fight. He could feel the muscles
bunching up under the red hide.
Mozart waited until he was in mid
air, and squatted, putting his head down between his knees. Adam went forward
in a hurry and had to grab onto the mane with both hands to avoid going right
over the horse’s head. The saddle horn dug hard into his belly - right where it
hurt the most. Adam gasped, and lost a rein.
Overhead in the darkening sky, the
gathering thunder clouds rumbled a warning. Mozart whinnied a response. The
storm that had rained on Hoss, now started to rain on Adam.
Mozart didn’t like thunder, and he
didn’t like the rain falling on his broad rump. He kicked out at it with both
hind feet, all but tipping Adam over his head again, and then jumped up with
both forefeet into a rear that sent Ben’s eldest sliding back the other way.
Adam managed to catch the flying
rein, and pulled the horse into a tight circle. Once Mozart was pointed more or
less in the direction of
Hoss held up the bottle to the fading
light, and gazed at it disconsolately. He had drunk down the last of the
whisky, and the bottle was quite empty. With a sigh he tucked it back into his
saddlebag.
He was travelling downhill now,
through woodland, headed for home. The daylight was fading fast as the sun went
down behind he mountains. Here among the trees it was already dark. Trunks
loomed at him out of deepening shadows. Tree roots lay hidden across the trail
to trip the unwary hoof. Hoss kept the horse’s pace right down to give them
both a chance to see where they were going.
He’d had one God-awful day. He was
looking forward to getting home to the warm comfort of the ranch house and
getting something good to eat from Hop Sing’s kitchen. After a sketchy
breakfast and nothing all day, he was getting so hungry he had a hollow pain
right behind his belt buckle. At the thought of food, his stomach rumbled like
thunder, and the sour taste of stale whisky rose like bitter bile into his
throat. He just hoped the danged tooth would ease off long enough for him to
eat something.
The black horse’s head came up as he
smelled something strange, and frightening, on the wind. He snorted, and began
to dance on the path, refusing point blank to go any further.
His mind firmly on food, Hoss uttered
a cuss word and kicked him on. The horse rolled his eyes, and laid back his
ears. The smell was stronger now; the source of the terror closer. The horse’s
nostrils flared. He threw up his head and whinnied his fear.
Hoss was frantically scanning the
woodlands for the reason for the animal’s distress, "Gol-darn-it! What is
it, fella?" He brought his heels back into the horse’s flanks.
At that same moment, both the horse,
and Hoss, saw the shape of the varmint, black on black in the darkness of the
trees.
Hoss stared, trying to catch another
glimpse, not believing what he had seen the first time. The horse needed no
second look. He screamed, reared, bucked, and bolted; catching Hoss completely
by surprise, and hurling him from the saddle to land face first among the tree
roots. Reins and stirrups flying, the horse disappeared along the trail in a
flat run. The rattle of its hooves was the last thing Hoss heard as he sank
into unconsciousness.
Ben leaned forward, and spread both
his large hands flat on the reception desk top of the Windsor Castle Hotel. The
elder Cartwright glared with all the barely contained ferocity that he could
generate.
To give him his due, the counter
clerk refused to be intimidated. It was a different man this time, but he had
the same supercilious expression,
The same could not be said for the
clientele of the hotel that crowded the lobby. They were cowering back from the
big rancher with expressions that ranged from alarm, through terror, to sheer
awe. As any one of his sons would have witnessed, Ben Cartwright in a towering
rage was an experience to be reckoned with.
"Sir," the counter clerk
said with remarkable composure, "I really do not know to what packages you
refer."
Ben drew a deep breath, and started
over - in something just short of a bellow, "I left my parcels. Here. At
lunch time. And now I want them back!"
A smaller, dapper man stepped
forward, waving the counter clerk aside. "I am the floor manager, sir. Can
I be of assistance?"
Ben’s dark, angry eyes switched to
him, "Well, I certainly hope so! I left my parcels at lunch time!
Here!"
The manager smiled a small smile and leaned
forward, confidentially, across the counter, "So I heard you say, sir.
Could you tell me, please, exactly what the counter clerk did with your
parcels?"
Ben’s voice lowered in response to
the man’s intimacy, but only a little, "He put them down there, under the
counter, someplace. And now I want them back!"
"Ah!" The manager said, as
if that meant something, "If you would be kind enough to wait just a
moment, I shall inquire."
Quietened, if not mollified, Ben
watched him retreat into the offices behind the desk. The counter clerk eyed
him from the far end of the counter. Ben glared back. He looked round him and
found no-one willing to meet his eyes. He waited. He grew impatient. He fumed.
He leaned over the counter and drew another breath to bellow.
The little manager re-emerged from
the back room, and, by some miracle, he was clutching Ben’s half dozen little
paper packages. Some of them, to be sure, looked just a little the worse for
wear, but they were intact, and Ben was very glad to see them. The manager
handed them over with a smile. There was no way, this side of creation, that he
was going to tell this big man with the big voice that he had just rescued his
precious possessions from the trash.
His arms filled up again, Ben made
his way back towards the livery stable to collect his horse. The sun had set,
and it was going to be a long ride home in the dark.
Joe Cartwright looked anxiously at
the sky. The brassy overcast had deepened to copper, and then to red, and away
to the west, the edge of a distant storm was blowing in his direction. He
figured that what Ossy had said was right, the dark, and the storm, would
arrive just about together.
The desert country all looked the
same to him, rolling hills covered with scrub pine, and brush, and rocks, but
Hirshall seemed to know his way about. The lawman was following some sort of
trail, but Joe was just plain jiggered if he knew what it was. Every so often,
Hirshall would lean down a long way out of his saddle and study the sign in the
dirt. Just as frequently he would lift his head, and sniff at the air, almost
as if he could scent something on the breeze that was starting to blow in, cool
from the storm front. And again, sometimes he would just sit up straight in his
saddle and listen to the silence of the wilderness.
Joe didn’t like to intrude, but he
was starting to get really worried and not a little frightened. He was
beginning to wonder just how he was going to explain to his Pa how he had come
to lose the horse, and even if he was going to dare go home at all. He looked
anxiously at Hirshall. The lawman made a gesture for silence. His eyes were
focussed somewhere off in the deepening gloom. It was as if he heard something,
but to, Joe, the silence of the desert was complete.
Hirshall’s horse flicked an ear, and
Hirshall nodded as if in some sort of silent communication with the animal.
Hirshall gestured to Joe, and they moved on, the hooves of their horses making
almost no sound at all on the stony ground.
The storm front was drawing closer
all the time. Joe could see lightening now, flickering here, and there in the
leading edge of the cloud mass. He wondered if, by the time the storm reached
this far out in the desert, there would be any rain left to fall, or if it
would have become a spectacular, and doubly dangerous, dry electrical storm.
Hirshall stopped, listening again,
and Joe listened to. He thought he might hear the distant grumble of thunder,
but instead, although for second he didn’t believe it, he heard voices. They
were loud, shrill, children’s voices some way off to the west. He looked at
Hirshall, but no expression showed on the tall lawman’s face. Instead, he
gestured to Joe to follow, but quietly.
They followed the sound of the voices
and rode side by side over the shoulder of the next hill. There, in a dry draw,
was the bay quarter horse. Lined up on her bare back like three little monkeys,
were three small boys. The were the same three boys that had pelted Joe with
stones earlier that day.
Joe looked across at Hirshall,
"Guess you won’t be hangin’ any horse thieves today, Ossy." He
grinned. Relief was making his heart sing. The quarter horse was safe!
"Maybe not," Hirshall said
gruffly, "But we’ll sure be tannin’ the hide offa some."
They started down the hill towards
the boys, and the horse. The boys looked up, and saw them. Their surprise, and
alarm, communicated itself directly to the quarter horse. She pawed the air and
the boys slid off backwards, one by one, and landed hard on their butts in the
dirt. The mare shied away from them.
Osimire Hirshall sat his saddle, and
gazed down at the three children, "Guess you boys know what you got comin’
ta ya," he said laconically, "First off, you got one hell’ve a long
walk back ta town, an’ then I guess yore Pa’s are gonna’ have somethin’ ta say
about you stealin’ this man’s horse."
The youngest of the three had started
snivelling. The eldest stood defiantly rubbing his butt,"We di’n’t do no
harm, Mister Hirshall. We was just borrowin’ the horse a while."
"That don’t make no never
mind," Hirshall was implacable, "First ya walk, then ya bend."
Joe was so relieved to get his mare
back, he was feeling generous, "Don’t be too hard on them, Ossy."
Hirshall’s face turned towards him,
and Joe saw his mouth open for some rejoinder. It never got said. As Joe
reached for the mare’s lead rope, the electrical storm let rip with one
almighty crack of thunder, right overhead.
The bay quarter horse gave a shrill
squeal, and she ran.
Joe, and Ossy, and the three small
boys all looked after her in open mouthed amazement.
It was Hirshall that recovered first.
"Well," he said into the sudden quiet, "Guess that critter sure
is the fastest thing I ever seed on four legs."
Joe swung the pinto round, "I
gotta get my horse! Be seeing you, Ossy."
Hirshall raised his hand in farewell
as Joe thundered off in pursuit of the mare, "Good luck to you, Joe
Cartwright!"
It was Joe’s understanding of the
term, that a quarter horse would cover about a quarter of a mile of territory, on
level ground, at absolute, flat out, top speed before running out of steam.
He had followed after this one for
more than two miles, up and down hills, round rocks and through thorn thickets,
in the dark, and he hadn’t caught up with her yet.
The storm front had passed on
through, fading, having delivered just enough rain to soak Joe, and the pinto
mare through to the skin. It had left the desert dark, and cool beneath an
overcast sky. Joe found himself repeating over and over in his mind a line from
one of his elder brother’s best loved books ‘A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a
horse!"
Joe wasn’t about to give up, but he
was starting to think the damn horse had run on just about forever, when, from
somewhere close by, she whickered softly to his own mare. The pinto answered.
Then Joe saw her, dark on dark,
against the bulk of the hillside. He had nearly ridden on right by her.
He stepped out of the saddle, and
walked slowly towards her, holding out his hand and talking soft nonsense to
her, hoping to goodness she wouldn’t spook and take off again. He picked up the
trailing lead rope, and the mare nuzzled at his hand. He fondled her soft ears,
and, for just a moment, laid his cheek against her neck. Then, painstakingly,
he went over every last inch of her, including and especially, the precious
legs.
She was undamaged. Joe offered up a
small prayer of gratitude, and mounted the pinto mare. He turned her head for
the road home.
The varmint sat sentinel among the
dark dripping trees, not far from where Hoss lay unconscious on the muddy
trail, and it pondered. Strange, soft creatures were they, these human kind,
with dull teeth, and blunt fragile claws, ill equipped to survive. But they had
a spark that invited investigation. This one had shown determination, and
perseverance and a certain sensitivity. The varmint sensed a soul that still
had to be tested in fire. For this it was prepared to wait, but perhaps not for
long. For an instant of time, the woodlands flared in the glow of savage green
eyes. As Hoss Cartwright started to stir, the varmint turned on silent paws and
padded away into the darkness.
Hoss came to slowly. He was laying
sprawled on his front in the mud of the trail, with his face jammed hard up
against a big, old, tree root. He started to get up and groaned aloud as all
sorts of aches and pains assailed him. Coming off a horse head first in the
dark, was not the greatest thing he could have done for his health. He’d
cracked his ribs, and his knees, and he’d skinned the palm of one hand, and the
knuckles of the other.
There was something foul in his
mouth. Hoss sat up in the mud of the trail, and spat out a whole mess of blood,
and pus, and with it the rotted tooth that had been causing him so much torment
for so long. He was left with a big hole in his gum that was still leaking
blood, and it hurt like the devil but not with the horrid, pulsing pain of
before.
Hoss climbed stiffly onto his feet
and held on for a moment to a tree trunk to steady himself. He spat again to
clear his mouth and peered round into the surrounding gloom. He had the
distinct memory of something lurking out there in the trees. Something huge,
and black, and vaguely feline, but there was no sign of anything unusual now.
The trees dripped with a steadily slowing rhythm in the darkness, and the soft
rustling of the night creatures were returning. Whatever it was that he’d seen,
it was gone, and had left no trace of its passing.
Scowling, Hoss retrieved his battered
hat and set off on the long walk home.
Hop Sing dabbed Jenny’s neck with
rose cologne and gave her a sip of lemon water to drink. Then, at the doctors
nod, he padded out of the room, and closed the door softly behind him.
Paul Martin smiled encouragement, and
placed a cool hand on the labouring woman’s forehead. "It won’t be long
now, Jenny. It’s almost over."
Jenny rolled her head against the
damp pillow and looked at him out of huge, almost luminous eyes. Her face was
pale, and damp, and there were tight lines around her mouth. "I’m
beginning to wonder," she said, "why I ever started this."
Paul chuckled dutifully at the joke
he’d heard before and moved away, turning so that she wouldn’t see him rolling
up his sleeves.
The pain started up again, building
in an insurmountable wave, and, for the umpteenth time, Jenny bore down hard.
Her hands twisted the bed sheets into knots. She turned this way and that,
trying in vain to escape the agony. Something gave, and she screamed aloud,
"God damn you, Ben Cartwright! God damn you, and your sons, all to
hell!"
Paul Martin raised an eyebrow at her,
"You’re expecting another young man then?"
Jenny panted, looking at him from
between her raised knees. She clenched her teeth as it began again, "Ben
says. It’s going to be. Another boy!"
On the final word, she heaved again,
and the last barrier broke. Paul Martin’s expert hands caught the latest
addition to the Cartwright clan as it slithered free. Jenny’s body began to
tremble with reaction.
The baby didn’t need the traditional
slap. It entered the world red, and wet, and yelling. Paul looked where it
mattered. "I’m glad to see Ben hasn’t entirely lost his judgement,"
he said with a smile, "You have a new son."
Sheriff Roy Coffee leaned on the
porch post outside his office and watched Adam Cartwright ride back into town.
At least,
Adam rode the horse right up to the
gaol house, and pulled him up at the rail. As he swung his leg over to
dismount, the horse stepped away and left him hopping on one foot with the
other caught in the stirrup iron.
Roy politely looked away as Adam
floundered for his balance and reflected that perhaps it was a good thing that
here in the west, it was considered ill manners to comment on the way another
man handled his horse.
Adam finally got the horse hitched to
the rail, and caught his breath, "Howdy,
"Adam."
Adam nodded, "He should be out
to the ranch by now. I had to go on to the Schultze’s. Old Georges Schultze
died this afternoon."
"I’m real sorry ta hear
that."
"I guess not." Adam
stretched his shoulders. He had some muscles stiffening up there somewhere.
"Pa’ll probably be wondering where his horse is."
Adam took a long breath, "I
guess that’s another thing I’m gonna have to explain to
Adam bellied up to the long bar,
"Make it a beer, Sam." He threw some money on the counter and turned
to survey the room. The place was filling up fast with the usual drab mix of
miners, and ranch hands, and store clerks. Someone was playing the piano in the
corner, the music all but drowned out by the rising tide of voices. Over against
the back wall several of the regular poker games were just getting started.
A number of the saloon girls were
already downstairs, working their way steadily through the crowd. One of them
was a lady of Adam’s recent acquaintance. He had known her for a while before
his illness, and they had enjoyed an increasingly intimate relationship until
he had been shot. Her name was Mirri, and he kind of liked her company. He
caught her eye and grinned.
She saw his smile and returned it
with one of her own. Adam Cartwright was a man any woman would find attractive.
He was tall, and broad, with a pleasant face and deep set, hooded eyes. She had
pleasant memories of hours spent in his arms. She slipped off the lap of the
miner she was with, kissed him teasingly on the tip of his nose, and sauntered
over to the bar to renew the friendship.
The miner glowered darkly after her
until his friend distracted him, then went back to his beer.
Mirri couldn’t help notice that Adam
didn’t look well. He’d lost some weight since she’d last seen him, and the
lines of his fine face had hardened. She’d heard that he had been shot.
Concerned, she sidled up to him, "I haven’t seen you in here for a
while."
"I haven’t been in for a
while." As she recalled, his voice was educated and had a pleasant, mellow
tone. Clothed all in black from the toes of his boots, to the gun on his hip,
to the hat he wore, he looked long, and lean, and somehow dangerous. His
clothes were dirty, and stained, and he had a fresh stubble of beard darkening
his face. As she got closer she could smell the sweat on him. She didn’t mind.
In fact, it excited her. Most of the men she met were dirty and sweaty.
With her smile, and the sway of her
hips, she flirted with him, sidling up and letting her hip brush lightly against
his, "Buy me a drink, Adam?"
"Sure." Adam gestured to
the bartender, who brought over a bottle and a shot glass. Adam put a dollar on
the bar and poured whiskey into the glass. He pushed the glass towards her and
looked her over.
She was quite small; the top of her
head came just level with his chin. Young and naturally fair she was pretty
under the saloon girl paint. She wore a yellow dress with very short sleeves
and a low, low neckline. A red flower was tucked into her cleavage.
She sipped at the whiskey and put the
glass back on the bar. She didn’t really want the drink. It was the dark bulk
of the man beside her that allured her. She remembered the almost frightening
maleness of him. The body under the dark clothes was as good as it looked, and
he knew how to use himself.
"I heard you were sick. I sure
hope you’re feeling better now." She looked up at him coyly from under her
eyelids and then put a thin fingered hand on his arm, squeezing, feeling the
bunched muscles under the fabric of his shirt. They were as firm and powerful
as ever. She touched the tip of her tongue to her lip.
Adam looked down at her with
interest, something kindling in the depths of his eyes. She smiled an
invitation.
All of a sudden, Adam wasn’t tired
any more.
"Mirri," he said softly,
"I think I just started to feel a whole lot better."
He touched her arm with just the tips
of his fingers, and, when she didn’t draw away, slipped his hand slowly up to
her shoulder. She shivered, and moved closer to him, into the circle of his arms.
He drew her in to his chest, and she could feel the steady beat of his heart.
He let his fingers trace lightly down the lines of her back to rest at her
waist.
Mirri reached up, putting her arms
round his neck. For a moment they were both oblivious to the looks, and the
nudges, of the other customers around.
She drew his head down so that,
standing on tip-toe, she could whisper into his ear, "Why don’t you come
on upstairs and show me how much better you’re feeling?"
Adam half closed his eyes and breathed
in her perfume. He wanted this woman. In fact, he wanted her real bad. His body
was hungering for her. Perhaps it was time for a man to get back into the
saddle in more ways than one.
"Why don’t I do that?" he
murmured, his voice already husky.
She took him by the hand and, to the
cheers of some of the nearby cowhands, led him upstairs.
Ben rode into to the front yard of
his house to find, for the second time that year, the doctor’s buggy parked
outside the front door.
The house was lit up like a beacon in
the night. It looked as if every lamp the family possessed had been lit and put
in the front windows. Ben stepped down, and threw the reins of his horse over
the rail.
The front door opened at his touch,
but there was no one in the big room. Ben dumped his hat, and saddlebags on the
sideboard and stepped in to the room. He filled his lungs, and anxiety made him
bellow.
"Jenny?! Adam?! Hop Sing?!"
There was a moment of silence. Then,
with a babble of incomprehensible Chinese, Hop Sing erupted from the kitchen.
Ben raised his hands, and backed off, increasingly alarmed by the Chinaman’s
excitement, the torrent of language and the prolonged, unexplained absence of
his family.
"Slow down, Hop Sing. Slow
down!"
Hop Sing bobbed, and bowed, and Ben came
to realize that the ageless Chinese face was wreathed in smiles.
"Tell me what’s happened,"
he ordered, "In English!"
Hop Sing bobbed again, and a few
understandable words finally emerged, "Doctor here. Missa Adam
fetch."
Ben’s big voice boomed, "I can
see the doctor’s here! Where is he? Where’s my wife? And where’s Adam?"
"Missa Adam not come home yet.
Missa Paul with Missy Jenny. Missy Jenny have brand new baby." Hop Sing’s
grin split his face in two.
Ben stared at him, "Jenny’s had
the baby? Already?! Is she all right?"
"She’s just fine, Ben."
Paul Martin closed the door of the downstairs bedroom behind him, and came on
into the room. "She’s tired, but you’ll be able to see her for a few
minutes soon."
Ben studied the doctor’s face,
"And my son?"
Paul Martin smiled. "Your son is
doing well"
Adam came out of the saloon with a
big, silly smile on his face. Tucked into the band of his hat was a red flower.
He felt more of a man now, than he had for a good long time. In truth, his over
eager body had betrayed him somewhat. His time with Mirri had been over much
more quickly than he would have liked. But she had been soft, and sweet, and
she hadn’t said a word about the scar on his belly. There would be other
nights. In fact, now that he was well again, he might make a point of coming
into town more often.
The rain had stopped, but the sky was
still overcast and starless. Beyond the light that spilled out from the saloon,
the night was very dark. He had a long ride home still in front of him. Resignedly
he turned his steps towards where Mozart fretted at the rail.
Joe rode into the front yard, and
found his work cut out for him. Not only was the house all lit up like a
Lousiana riverboat, but his Pa’s horse was standing outside, untended. Joe
collected it from the rail and led all three animals into the barn. There he
found Hoss’s black cutting horse standing untied, and still saddled, in its
stall.
Joe saw to the needs of all four of
the tired animals before heading for the house, but by the time he got there,
his temper was distinctly frayed around the edges.
He boiled through the front door all
set to give someone hell, only to find Hop Sing, and his father, beaming all
over their faces and sipping at the best brandy. Ben turned to him.
"Joe! Come on in, son, and have
a drink. We have a new baby in the house!"
Joe forgot about how cross he was,
"A baby?! But when... How?"
Ben raised an eyebrow at him. "I
thought I explained all that to you once."
Joe blushed furiously, and Ben
laughed, pouring him a drink.
"Have you seen Hoss? Or
Adam?"
"Hoss’s horse was in the
barn." Joe took the glass, a big smile now on his own face, and admired
the colour of the liquor. "But I haven’t seen him. Or Adam. Mozart’s gone
from the corral."
"Mozart’s gone?!" Ben
stared at him, sobered, alarm bells starting to ring in his head. "Adam
went to fetch the doctor for Jenny. Are you telling me he rode out of here on
Mozart?"
Joe stared back, "Well, I guess
so."
The front door opened, and Hoss
walked in, looking very much the worse for wear. His clothes were all muddied
and torn, and there were bruises, and scratches, all over his face and hands.
He smelled, quite strongly, of whisky.
Paul Martin emerged from Jenny’s room
and pulled up short at the sight of him, "What ever happened to you?"
Hoss looked embarrassed, "I fell
off my horse is all. Knocked my danged tooth out." He put a hand up to the
side of his face, feeling the sore spot.
"Hey," Joe said, "That
the tooth that was givin’ you all that trouble this mornin’? The one with the
tooth rot?"
"I di’n’t have no tooth
rot!"
"Better let me take a look at
it." Paul Martin craned up to get a look in Hoss’s mouth. He pulled a sour
face, "I’ll give you some packing to put in that hole. But you sure been
eatin’ too many o’ them candies."
Hoss looked tearful, "I don’t
eat hardly no candies!"
Paul rummaged in his bag, and came up
with some wadding. He handed it over to Hoss.
"Well, Ben. I gotta be goin’
now. You can go in an’ see your wife any time. She’s waitin’ on you." He
picked up his hat, "And thank you for the cigar." At the door he
turned back, "Er, Ben, first thing tomorrow, you really aught to take that
big boy of yours in to see that new tooth doctor we got. He’s got a whole face
full o’ tooth rot comin’ on."
The room had been aired, and the
linen changed, and over on the dresser, Hop Sing had lighted a perfumed candle.
The lamplight cast gentle shadows, and on the carpeted floor, Ben’s feet made
no sound at all.
Jenny’s dark hair had been brushed
out and tied with ribbon, and it lay in a soft hank across her shoulder. Her
face was as pale as the pillow she lay against, and her eyes were closed.
At first, Ben thought she was
sleeping, but, as he came near, the beautiful sea green eyes opened, and she
smiled him a tired smile. He sat down on the edge of the bed, and took both her
hands into his. They looked white and tiny in comparison. He lifted them to his
lips, and kissed each of them in turn, "Jenny, my love..."
Ben walked over to the crib and
picked the child up. Even after all the years, his big rancher’s hands had not
forgotten how. The white wrapped bundle fitted perfectly into the crook of his
arm. He carried it back to the bed and sat down again beside his wife. He gazed
for the first time into the tiny face. The baby had a dark shadow over its
head, promising a mop of raven black hair to come. The eyes that opened and
looked gravely back at him were as dark as a starless night - his own eyes.
The baby gave his father a long hard
scrutiny, then screwed up his face and yawned, before going back to sleep.
Ben looked at Jenny, entranced,
"He’s beautiful. Perfect. How can I thank you?"
She smiled back at him, happy that he
was happy.
"What shall you call him?"
he asked.
"I thought, John, for my father,
and for your brother. But for a first name, Ben, you choose. Something from the
Good Book"
Ben looked at the baby’s face again,
"David," he said, "Who slew Goliath with a stone."
Jenny pulled a face, "He doesn’t
look much like a David to me."
Ben considered, "Daniel, then. Who
went forth into the lion’s den, and was not afraid."
Jenny smiled, "Now that sounds
more like a Cartwright!"
Joe and Hoss took their coffee and
sat down in the armchairs on either side of the fireplace.
Joe had a sandwich of roast pork and
a huge slice of pie, which Hoss eyed enviously. His mouth was still too sore
for him to eat anything. Beside which, he had the threat of a visit to the
tooth doctor hanging over his head, and that was enough to steal any man’s
appetite away.
Joe was gazing at his brother with
amusement sparkling brightly in his hazel eyes, "Tell me again what is was
you think you saw?"
Hoss heaved a sigh, "I didn’t
think I saw nothin’. I know darn well what I saw."
"Well tell me! Tell me what is
was!"
"It was sort ‘a big. An’ it was
black. An’ it was sort ‘a like a cat, only it weren’t no cat. It was somethin’
different. Like somethin’ I ain’t never seen ‘afore."
"You sure you hadn’t taken one
too many pulls out ‘a that whiskey bottle?"
"I tell ya, I wasn’t
drunk!"
"Hey Pa," Joe looked up in
delight as his father crossed the room, "You hear this? You hear what Hoss
thinks he saw?"
"I tell you, I saw it, Little
Joe!" Hoss pouted, and looked towards his father, "What d’you reckon
it might ‘a’ been, Pa?"
"I don’t know, son," Ben
shook his head, laughing, "But from what you say, its sounds like you just
might’ve seen the varmint."
Clutching at his stomach, Joe
collapsed into helpless giggles on the floor, and kicked his legs about in the air.
The thought of his big brother thinking that he had actually seen the myth of
childhood fairy tale was too much to be borne.
Ben took down the family Bible from
its place on the shelf, and laid it carefully on his desk. Sitting, he opened
it at the first page. There, carefully inscribed on the flyleaf, were the highs
and the lows of his life. The simple lines stirred a thousand memories: the
joys and grief, the marriages, the births and deaths. He ran the tip of his
fingers lovingly over the scripted names: Elizabeth and Adam, Inger and Eric,
Marie and Joseph - and Jenny.
He picked up his pen, and, in his
beautiful flowing hand, he wrote in the date and added the new name. Daniel
John Cartwright.
Three miles from home, Adam pulled
Mozart up for one last blow. He had come to the conclusion that this horse
never liked to go anywhere at less than a full-blown gallop. Even now, after
all the miles they’d covered, the big stallion was still fighting for his head.
Adam had to admit that he had
developed a grudging admiration for the horse. He had already decided that
later, when he felt less weary, and when his Pa finally let him out of the
house again, he would help the horse learn some better manners. And he might
even have second thoughts about that gelding knife.
Hop Sing slipped into the room very
quietly and closed the door behind him. The lamp was turned way down low, and
the room was full of shadows. The little Chinaman knew this house so well he
could find his way about without any light at all.
Missy Jenny was sleeping, a little
more colour in her cheeks now, her dark lashes like butterfly wings on her
cheeks. Hop Sing smiled.
Silently, he padded across the room
to where the crib stood. The baby was sleeping as well, its fists clenched
tightly on either side of its face.
Hop Sing bobbed a bow to the tiny
child, and uttered, very quietly with his lips, but cried aloud to his gods by
his heart, the traditional Chinese blessing upon the newborn: the eyes of a
dragon to see with; the heart of a dragon to love with; the soul of a dragon to
live with.
Another bow and Hop Sing pulled out
the contents of the little white package sent to him just in time by his cousin
in
Ben had gone out for a breath of fresh
night air and was standing just outside his front door when Adam rode Mozart
into the yard.
The elder Cartwright’s anxiety
concerning his eldest son’s whereabouts, his long absence, and his mode of
transportation, had been increasing exponentially. He had reached the point
where he could no longer sit still but had taken to pacing the great room of
the house, tramping back and forth before the fireplace. His imaginings had
become darker as the hands on the clock had advanced. All he could see in his
mind’s eye was Adam - thrown and trampled, Adam - with his head cracked open,
Adam - with the gaping wound in his body torn open again and killing him. The
more fanciful the invention, the more agitated Ben had become.
Now, seeing Adam ride in undamaged,
Ben’s concern turned at once into a towering rage. In hot fury he started for
the barn to give his son a tongue lashing he’d not soon forget.
Adam stepped out of the saddle more
stiff and sore, than he could ever remember. He ached from head to foot: arms;
legs; back; even his neck, burned with fatigue. For a moment he clung to the
saddle leathers, and then, wearily, led Mozart into the barn.
He took off the bridle and reached up
to put a headstall over Mozart’s ears. The horse tried to bite him in the face.
He undid the cinches, and with a last effort of his long unused stomach muscles
swung the heavy rig onto the stall wall. Somewhere inside him an adhesion tore
free with a stab of knifelike pain. Adam gasped and stumbled back against the
support post, bent over his much abused gut.
Ben came through the barn door with a
rare profanity burning his lips, "Where the devil have you been?!"
The sight of Adam, his face twisted
in pain and his hands clenched to his belly, quenched the fires of anger
instantly. He crossed the barn floor in just a few strides and got his arm
around Adam’s waist.
"Adam, are you all right, son?
What is it? Lean on me."
The pain was fading quickly now; Adam
managed to straighten and answered in something approaching his normal voice.
"Just a twinge,
"He did. Adam, I’d like to thank
you for what you did. I - think I know what it cost you."
Adam gave Mozart a final pat.
"Just don’t make a habit of it, eh, Pa?"
Of its own volition, the big smile
started to come back to Ben’s face. He put his arm round Adam’s shoulders,
"Come on inside, son. And meet your new brother..."
Potters Bar 2000