By
KRYSTYNA WOOLLON
So, here he was, sitting in the Red Dog saloon with a glass of cold beer on the table, exactly two years and six weeks from the last time he had a beer in the place. Two years and six weeks. He sighed deeply, picked up the glass and raised it to his lips. Joe had complained of the heat and the bar keep had talked about a trial being held in the town, and Joe had stayed and he – well, he had gone on his own and met his Nemesis.
The glass was empty when he put it back on the
table. He stared at it for a while and
then sighed deeply again. Joe should
have been sitting opposite him, drinking beer with him and chattering nonsense
which mostly entertained his serious minded brother for no obvious reason other
than he had lived with it all Joe’s life.
He sat back and crossed one leg over the other as he looked around the
saloon. It was not exactly busy. Two dusty cowboys draped over the counter
talking together in low voices, as they shared a bottle of whiskey to cut the
dust from their throats. Several miners
were hunched over a table, playing poker and some, quite obviously, were about
to lose all of their hard found gold dust.
The barkeep watched him thoughtfully before reaching
for a bottle of whiskey and two glasses.
Abandoning his place behind the counter he walked over to the man in black
and placed the bottle down with a friendly air, followed by the two
glasses. He then pulled out the chair
opposite the sombre looking customer, and sat down.
“I know you from back along, don’t I?” He indicated
the glasses and the whiskey with his ring finger, and receiving a nod as
acknowledgement, began to fill the two glasses. “You came in with your kid
brother if I recalls rightly, about two year ago?”
“S’right,” Adam Cartwright replied. He nodded his thanks as he picked up one of
the glasses. “Just over two years ago.”
“I remember because it was about the time of that
trial. Obadiah Johnson was up for
murdering his partner and his wife – his own wife I mean.” He grinned at his own joke, but Adam merely
raised his eyebrows. “Only got five years.
I thought he would hang for sure.
That seemed to be logical to me, if you murder a man you hang – murder
two folk – you hang!”
“Yeah, seems logical.” Adam sighed and frowned
slightly. That was all he needed, to
run into a barkeeper with a memory like an elephant’s.
“Your kid brother stayed here in town, didn’t he?”
“So I believe.” Adam poured out some more whiskey
and topped up his companion’s glass. “He
stayed for the trial anyway.”
“I guess he did,” Tompkins grinned. “Had a way with the ladies, did your little
brother.”
“Did he?” Adam crooked his eyebrow and nodded, not
liking to correct the man by saying that Joe still had a way with the
ladies. He held the glass up to the
light and surveyed it thoughtfully, before replacing it on the table.
“So what happened to you? Last I heard you were found wandering round
the desert dragging a dead man behind you?”
“Really?
Where’d you hear that interesting piece of information?”
“From Dolly.” Tompkins pointed over to a tall
brunette who was draped over the shoulder of one of the miners, the one with
the biggest poke of gold dust. “She worked in one of the saloons in Salt Flats
when your family rode in with you. It
was the talk of the district for quite some time. She got on pretty well with your kid brother
as well, and he told her all about it.”
Adam glanced over at the brunette and frowned. She looked the sort of girl that Joe would
‘get on well with’, but he doubted very much that Joe would have told her ‘all
about it’. That was mainly due to the fact that neither Joe nor any other
member of his family knew everything about it at all.
“Did she say who the dead man was?” he asked
Tompkins, leaning forward as though he were hanging on the man’s every word.
“Peter Kane.
She said it was Peter Kane, the crazy guy who had a mine about 15 miles
south of Salt Flats.” Tompkins leaned
forward now, and lowered his voice.
“Some folks reckon that the place is haunted by his ghost.”
“Is that so?” Adam’s dark eyes darkened a little more,
and he leaned back in his chair, surveying the talker opposite with wry
amusement. “What makes them think that?”
“I don’t ask.
I don’t believe it myself.”
Tompkins stood up and moved aside, hesitated for a second, as he
pondered over whether or not to take the bottle, then avarice won out, and he
took the bottle and returned to the counter.
The two cowboys had been joined by a third, and it was time to bring out
another glass and chew the fat over with them.
Ghosts! Adam
bowed his head and grimaced. He had been haunted by the ghost of Peter Kane for
over two years now so what really was new?
His father referred to it as the legacy of Kane, but for Adam, well, he
thought of it as more of a curse.
He picked up the glass of whiskey again, and nursed
it between his fingers as he stared down into the amber liquid, his mind
turning back to the time when he had first been aware of this so called
legacy. Oh yes, he had been ill. The whole thing had made him physically ill
for a while, but he had rallied and pulled through and resumed work as usual
within six weeks of the ordeal.
It had been a year later that the first sign of the
problem reared its ugly head. Spring
time. The foreman at one of their mines
had sent an urgent message asking for him to get there and check the main
shafts props. He had gone with Hoss
immediately, and found Peterson pacing the ground waiting for their arrival.
“The pumps not working, boss, and the underwater
springs have thawed out faster than usual and flooded one of the tunnels. We’re working flat out to get it drained,
but it seems thoroughly inadequate to the task.
I’m worried about the men down there as the joists seemed loose.”
“Why were they loose?” he had demanded as they made
for the mine entrance.
“I dunno, boss.
They were fine several weeks back, but since the thaw has set in they’ve
got looser’n looser.”
They had gone into the mine. Hoss had been behind him with the lantern
held high and they had gone to the tunnel, where the water was slowly seeping
in through the walls and turning the ground into a quagmire. The men were working flat out to stem the
problem at its source, except that they couldn’t trace the source and the pump
had failed altogether to clear away the rising water.
“Peterson, I want you to close this tunnel down
immediately and get the pump working in the one next door. Check that this problem is not recurring
anywhere else.” He could hear his voice
now, curt and abrupt. Peterson should
have known that there was a danger to the men here. He should have used his initiative and got
them out, instead of sending messages to the Ponderosa and waiting for them to
tell him what to do. He had wanted to
tell the man just that, but Hoss had put a restraining hand on his arm and prevented
him from doing so.
It was on the way home that the feeling had washed
over him. Nausea had swept up into his
throat, and the most terrible panic had taken possession of him, making his
whole body shake. His chest had felt
tight and he’d had difficulty in catching his breath. Half way home he had been forced to dismount
and throw up in a bush, and then wait until the sweating and the shakes had
left him.
“Summat you ate?” Hoss had asked, associating as
always everything and anything to do with the stomach, with food.
“Guess so,” he had replied through clenched teeth,
and had managed to get back into the saddle.
“Don’t tell Pa. No need to worry
him.”
Hoss had merely shrugged, which was his way of
getting out of making any promises, so Adam never knew whether his brother had
mentioned it to Ben or not.
A few days later, Peterson had arrived at the ranch
house, and had asked him to go back to the mine and check out some things. It was Ben who had been in the house with them,
and he had listened attentively to what the manager had said and agreed that
Adam should go immediately. His son
had dutifully picked up his hat, and was tying on his gun belt when the feeling
of utter panic had gripped him once again.
He must have changed colour for Ben had placed his hand on his son’s arm
and asked him if he were all right. ‘Sure’ he had replied, and he had followed
Peterson out of the house, even though his fingers were shaking so much he had
difficulty buckling up his gun belt.
He had ridden to the mine with the panic mounting
within him. By the time he had
dismounted at the mouth of the mine he was nigh on ready to scream. Clamping his teeth tightly together, he had
forced himself to the mine entrance, and then knew without any doubt at all
that it was impossible for him to go inside.
He had played for time. He asked Peterson countless questions, all
relevant to the problem, thankfully, and having supplied the man with all the
answers had somehow meandered his way back to Sport, and was back in the saddle
and riding home before the man had had time to think about it.
The next time Peterson had summoned him, he had
simply asked Hoss to go instead.
“Why me?” Hoss had asked with half a beef sandwich
in his mouth.
“Because you know about mines,” Adam had replied
testily.
“You ain’t doin’ nuthin’, why don’t you go, seein’
as how you’re the engineer of the family”
“Because Peterson doesn’t need an engineer, he just
needs one of us to do his thinking for him.”
Hoss had swallowed his sandwich and then had looked
at Adam thoughtfully. The blue eyes had narrowed, as he had given his brother a
long, searching look that had made Adam squirm.
“You ain’t skeered or summat, are ya?”
The silence had been overlong. Ben had glanced at Adam, and then had told
Hoss to go and check things with Peterson.
It had been obvious that Ben’s eldest son had been unable to hide his
feelings, for as soon as the door had closed behind Hoss, Ben had been at
Adam’s side and gripped hold of his arm.
“What’s wrong?”
The deep voice, clipped and hard, held in those two
words all the anxiety of a father. The
dark eyes, looking into the pale face of his son, held all the tender feeling
of a man who had seen enough to know that there was something about which to
worry.
“Nothing, pa, I just…”
“I want the truth, Adam.”
The truth?
What was the truth? Adam had
shrugged and told Ben about his visit to the mine earlier, and how he had felt
every time he thought about the mines.
Just thinking about them was enough to make him feel as though he were
being strangled and had a heavy weight on his chest.
“You are sleeping all right, aren’t you?” Ben had asked. “No bad dreams?”
“No, nothing like that, Pa. I go to sleep and wake up tired. Don’t we all?”
“No need to be flippant with me, boy,” Ben had said
softly, and had walked away, leaving him with his books, and his fears.
Adam Cartwright raised the glass to his lips and
gulped down half of the whiskey it contained.
He was about to take another gulp, when a light touch on his shoulder
made him turn, look up, and smile as the tall brunette moved to sit down on the
chair next to him.
“You looked deep in thought, mister.”
She turned to the counter, signaled for another
bottle, and then smiled at the handsome man, who was turning the half empty
glass round and round between his fingers.
“Fact is, mister, you look just about downright
lonely to me.”
“Oh, I don’t know about that, ma’am,” he replied. “I
just had a lot on my mind to think about.”
Tompkins bustled up and put down the bottle of
whiskey. Adam noticed it was a full
bottle again, and knew he was expected to pay for it. He pulled some coins from his pocket and
tossed them onto the table.
“Dolly, this is him! This is the guy who dragged
Peter Kane outta the wilderness!” Tompkins gabbled, as he gathered up the money
and slid the coins into his pocket.
Adam wondered momentarily whether they would make the transition to the
cash box.
She paused in the act of pouring the whiskey into
her glass and stared at him, with her ruby red lips opened like a blood red
circle.
“You brought in that crazy guy?” she exclaimed,
filling the glass overfull so that some trickled over her fingers. “Then you must be Little Joe’s brother, the
one who nearly died from getting lost out there in the wilderness?”
“I guess I must be,” Adam said, reaching out for the
bottle and filling his glass slowly.
“You know summat?” She leaned forwards
conspiratorially, and her eyes narrowed.
“That guy was just plain evil.”
“My brother?” Adam asked in a slow drawl with one
eyebrow slightly raised. She shook her
head and took a deep breath.
“Not him. I
meant the other guy. Kane.” She swallowed several gulps and then put the
glass down with a rather heavy thud, obviously that was not the first taste of
whiskey to have passed her lips that day.
“He came to where I worked in Salt Flats several times.”
“So what makes you say he was evil?”
“Just – wal – just the feel of him, you know?” She
looked at him, and the question was asked in such a way as to assume that he
would know the answer, without having to say what it was. She played idly with the glass between her
fingers before looking at him again.
Her brown eyes were just a little misty, as though she had tears in
them. “He always talked so nice and so
polite. But the way he looked at me and
the other girls – as though we were the scum of the earth. Yet he never talked to us, and didn’t bother
us at all. Just stood there, or sat at the
table, all alone, watching us. When he
was there…” she shuddered, “his eyes would just follow us all the time until it
made you want to scream.”
Adam looked at the whiskey and drank it down slowly,
then put the glass back onto the table.
She continued to talk, and Tompkins returned to the counter and began to
polish the glasses. Adam drifted back
to shortly after his conversation with Ben about the mines.
He recalled how he had woken up one night from a
dream that had him yelling out aloud, and that had brought his father and
brothers running into the room, wondering if a band of Paiute had got through
the bedroom window and were trying to scalp him. There was nothing to tell them, only that
he had had a bad dream, and Hoss had said something about leaving the cheese
alone in future, and they had gone back to their own rooms, yawning and
scratching their heads.
He knew he was not afraid of the mines. He was not
really afraid of anything – not really.
Logically, and looking at the facts quite coldly, there was no reason at
all for him not to go to the mines.
Several days later he forced himself to visit Peterson, and got as far
as the mouth of the mine, but felt as though he were walking into concrete. His feet had just suddenly seemed unable to
move. His breathing came fast and
shallow, as the perspiration had broken out over his body and under his arm
pits, and he had to put out a hand to steady him self. Peterson had actually taken him by the arm
and supported him to where he could sit upon a bench, upon which he had sunk
gratefully.
“Are you sick, boss?” Peterson had asked, and he had
shaken his head and said he was fine, really fine. It was just that when he tried to stand up
his legs went in two different directions, and he was back down on the seat
again.
This is stupid, he had told himself, a girl has more
guts than this. Get up and move
yourself. It was ten minutes before he
was able to get up and move. He had walked over to Sport, mounted up and ridden
home. What could he tell his Pa? That he was scared? But he was not. He knew he was not scared. He had been in that mine countless times, and
it was like taking a walk in the park to him.
“Pa?”
He had walked into the house feeling like a
frightened child. Bewildered and
confused, he sought the only person he knew who could give him the reassurance
he so required at that time. Ben had
taken his pipe from his lips and looked up, seen his son’s face, and had been
immediately on his feet and by his side.
“What’s wrong?” he had asked, and then he had taken
hold of Adam’s arm with a grip like a vice.
“Are the boys all right?”
Adam had taken a deep quivering breath to steady
himself. He had looked into the deep
brown eyes and seen the anxiety there, and it had been for Hoss or for
Joe. He had taken another deep breath,
and nodded slowly.
“Sure, Pa, they’re fine.”
“You came in just then looking so worried, I thought
that something had happened to one of them.”
Ben’s rugged face had softened and he had smiled. “Are you all right, son?”
His son had nodded, turning away as he slowly
unbuckled his gun belt and set it down upon the bureau. Then he had turned to look at his father,
who was watching him thoughtfully with the air of a man who had, perhaps,
missed something. He had taken off his
hat and set it down beside the gun belt.
Dolly stood up, and leaned forward, prodding him in
the shoulder with a long and very pointed fingernail, whilst with the other
hand she scooped up the bottle of whiskey.
“Y’know summat?” she snapped with a voice as brittle
as shattered glass. “You ain’t nuthin’
like your brother. At least he always
had the courtesy to listen to a gal!” and with a flounce she pushed away from
the table, and got to her feet and teetered away.
Adam watched her go with a slight frown, and then
looked over at Tompkins, who merely shrugged and grimaced. Pushing his chair back, Adam stood up and in
a few paces caught up with her and took her elbow
“I’m sorry, I forgot my manners and was rather rude
just then. I’m afraid that when you
mentioned how evil you felt Peter Kane to be, I – well – it brought back some
rather unpleasant memories.”
She looked at him thoughtfully, and her face
softened and she smiled.
“I can understand that, mister. I guess I was runnin’ on a bit anyhows. No hard feelings?” She put out a hand, and her eyes twinkled
when he took it and gripped it tightly.
“Say, y’know, you ain’t bad lookin’, mister, why don’t you come and see
me some other time. When you ain’t so
preoccupied p’raps?”
Adam smiled and nodded, touched the brim of his hat
and excused himself, and walked out of the saloon into the Main Street of the
town.
Chapter 2
Eastgate had grown in the two years since he and Joe
had been there. It showed its prosperity
by the tall fronted buildings that had grown around the main square. There was a fine looking bank in the town
that had not been quite so handsome previously, and the public baths were now
adjacent to a large hotel that appeared very new and very modern. Adam realised he could not remember what had
been there before, but could remember the pubic baths and the way he had
lectured Joe about the logical aspects of the law. Joe had said something then about did
everything have to be logical, and he had come up with some flippant comment
about how no one could drive him to murder.
His brow creased slightly in thought, as he walked
to where Sport was nodding in the sun.
He untethered him, squinted around the street to locate the Livery
Stable, and walked the horse across to where a large building declared itself
to be Livery Stable and Blacksmith. A
large man, with sweat standing in beads upon his face, came to meet him as he
entered.
“What kin I do fer yer?” Luke wiped his hands down a
leather apron, which protected his clothing from the sparks from the metal that
he hammered into shoes for the horses.
“Take care of my horse until tomorrow morning?”
“Over there – first stall on the left.”
Adam led Sport to the indicated stall, and began to
unbuckle the cinch strap and slide off the saddle. He swung it upon the top rail and paused, as
he realised the blacksmith was watching him with a curiosity not usually found
in busy men in his line of business.
“Anything wrong?” he asked, narrowing his dark eyes
slightly to get a more detailed appraisal of the man.
“Nope.” The
farrier walked up to Sport, ran a hand down the animal’s withers, and
nodded. “Seen this hoss before, ain’t
I?”
“I wouldn’t know,” Adam replied, “I don’t think you
were here the last time I was in Eastgate.”
“True enough, I moved here about six months
back. Jest a minute thar and I’ll
check.” He walked to a rather shaky
looking desk, where he pulled open a drawer and produced a thin leather bound
book. Mumbling under his breath, and
every so often licking his thumb and forefinger, he leafed through the book
until a satisfied smile creased his face.
“Yep, here it is. See, I thought
I’d seen his brand before.” He showed Adam
the entry. “I like to make a note of the different brands and kind of horse
that I bought or sold or shoed. This
hoss I bought from two rough necks, and then this young feller with…” he paused
and ran his finger down the rows of writing, “…a black and white hoss with the
same brand as this ‘un, came in and said it was his brother’s. You must be the brother.” He fixed Adam with a stern glare. “He came back later, to collect the
piebald. Nice hoss that ‘un was, I had
to fix his shoe.” He pointed to the sketch of a horseshoe and the note written
beside it, of the size and reason for shoeing Cochise. “I like to keep records
of things,” he said once again, “then when I git to retire I’ve some kind of
memory to look back on.”
Adam nodded, and continued to divest Sport of his
harness and bridle. He stroked the
animal’s cheek and nose, and led him further into the stall where the feedbag
was hanging.
“So what happened to yer?” the farrier asked as he
put the book back into the drawer. “That
young ‘un was skeered to death that summat was wrong.”
“I kinda got lost for a while,” Adam said quietly.
“Do you want me to pay now or later?”
“Now would be as good a time as any.”
Adam was about to put some coins on the desk, when
there came the sound of hurried footsteps approaching the entrance of the
stable, and a woman suddenly appeared with a wild-eyed and disheveled
appearance.
“Luke, Luke, oh Luke.” She ran to him and seemed to melt into his
arms as he held her tightly, and Adam, unsure exactly what to do, stepped back
and made an attempt to leave, but found his way blocked by them. He could do nothing except step back to the
stall and allow them some privacy, although he could hear the conversation well
enough.
He stood beside Sport and stroked his horse
affectionately, whilst the hurried conversation whispered about his ears.
“Luke, he’s escaped.
He’s free again.”
“But, he can’t be, sweetheart. He’s still got three more years to go.”
“I just heard it from Sheriff Cutter. He got a message from the State Governor
saying Obadiah had broken loose with three other men.”
“Then he’s crazy.
Darlin’, he won’t come here.
Don’t you be a-feared none, he won’t come here. Why, fer heaven’s sake, folk would be on the
look out for him and he’d be on a hidin’ to nuthin’ if he came here.”
“Luke, of course he’ll come here. Don’t you see? He’ll come for Danny.”
“No, no. He
won’t risk his neck and do that, not with three other men with him. They won’t want to come here and git hankered
down with a kid.”
“Why would he break jail now, Luke? He killed two people.”
“They said it was manslaughter, honey, and in the
heat of the moment. Not like it were all
planned an’ all.”
“He could have been free in another eighteen months
if he had stayed quiet and jest got on with things, Luke. Why spoil it all fer himself now? It has to be so that he can get Danny.”
“Hush now, yer jest worrying about nuthin’ now. If he comes for Danny, then we’ll jest reason
it out with him. He was always a good
friend of ours, Clara, and there ain’t no reason for him to be any different
now as he was then. He’ll have Danny’s
best interests at heart, you’ll see.
Why else would he have asked us to care fer the boy?”
Luke murmured more words of encouragement as he
wiped away the tears from her cheeks, and after a few more minutes she left
him, slightly calmer than when she had arrived.
Her husband, however, looked a far more worried man
than he had been when Adam had first seen him.
For a second or so he seemed to have forgotten that there was another
person in the building and stood, deep in thought, by the desk. Adam cleared his throat.
“I’m, huh, sorry, I couldn’t help but overhear,” he
said apologetically.
Luke shrugged and shook his head.
“My wife, Clara.
She’s got herself all worked up because Obadiah Johnson broke loose from
jail. Scared that he’ll be back for the
boy.”
“I see.” Adam put the coins on the desk and looked
at Luke thoughtfully. “I thought you had
only moved here recently? Obadiah
Johnson was jailed over two years ago.”
“That’s right.
Clara was related to his wife.
Cousins they were, and when she was killed, she came here for the
funeral. Then there was the trial, of
course. We’d always got on well with Obadiah,
and he asked Clara if she and I would care for the boy until he came out of
jail. Danny’s a good boy, so she brought
him back with her to whar we lived. But
then business got a mite tougher there, and it was a lonely place for the boy
who was used to a town and kids an’ such. We decided to move back here, so that
Danny could be with his old friends and be settled for when his pa came out of
jail. Obadiah was a good hearted man,
he never would have murdered anyone deliberately.” Luke sighed and shook his head. “Sure put the cat among’ the pigeons now,
thet’s fer sure.”
Adam nodded and picked up his saddlebags, which he
swung over his shoulder and, after a muttered leave taking, he made his way to
the main street and stepped out into the full glare of the afternoon sun. After a quick glance up and down the street,
he made his way to the hotel.
“One single room?
Yes, sir. Here’s your key. Room sixteen.” The little man behind the counter handed over
the key, and watched the tall dark man in the black clothes sign his name. “Oh, Cartwright huh? Had another Cartwright here some years
back. Wouldn’t be the same one, would
it?” He gave Adam another glance over. “No, can’t recall the face. Got a good memory for names though.”
Adam said nothing, but gave the clerk a piercing
look with his dark eyes and turned towards the stairs. Joseph had obviously made quite an
impression on the town during his stay there, and with a sigh he began to mount
the stairs to Room sixteen.
It was neat, clean and reasonably large. He tossed the saddlebags down onto a chair
and walked over to the window. The sun
streamed into the room, and he raised a hand to pull down the blind to shade
it. He recognised the blacksmith’s wife,
Clara, as she crossed the road walking hand in hand with a good-looking boy of
about ten years of age. Adam gave them
both a cursory look, before bringing down the blind and plunging the room into
semi-darkness.
He unbuckled his gun belt and hung it on the
bedpost, so that the gun handle was close enough for him to reach in a
hurry. He sat on the bed, yawned like
only an exhausted man can, and then turned and sank into the mattress. He folded his arms behind his head and
surveyed the shadows that lingered in the room, and then looked up at the
streaks of light that filtered through the gaps in the blind. His mind slowly returned to that day he had
visited Peterson at the mine, and how everything seemed to plummet out of
control from thereon.
Chapter 3
Nightmares had plagued his sleeping moments. He began to loathe the time for bed, and
fought against sleep. This resulted in
a ricochet reaction as exhaustion took a toll on his nerves. The tenser he became, the angrier he became
with everyone around him. It seemed
that suddenly there was not a single person capable of doing any job well or to
the standard that suited the Ponderosa.
He began to snap and snarl at everyone around him, so that even Hoss,
who loved his eldest brother more than he could say, had reached a point where
he had to walk out of the room in order to keep his temper.
When Ben had finally asked him what was wrong, Adam
had retreated into himself, and justified it by the thought that Ben had shown
too little interest too late. When Hoss
had sat down and gently tried to prise out some information from
his tight-lipped brother, he met with a stone wall of resistance that ended
with angry words on both sides. When
Joe had tried conciliatory measures, his eldest brother had curtly told him to
button his lip, then walked out of the room.
And night after night he forced himself to avoid
falling asleep, until his body ached and his eyes closed and he could resist no
further. Some nights he slept free from
hindrance of the dreams, but there were the other nights when they crashed in
upon him, and he would awaken from them, shivering and yet with the
perspiration seeping from his pores.
Then he would lay awake in his bed staring at the
ceiling, trying to make sense of the dreams that had awoken him. Dreams that could only be remembered in tiny
pieces, and none of them the same or matching the pieces of another. In one dream he could recall standing on a
cliff edge with Ben on the other side calling to him, urging him to jump,
whilst beneath them roared the torrents of a waterfall. He had jumped, and seen Ben turn and walk
away whilst he plummeted downwards. He
had awoken to find himself in a tangle with his sheets on the floor.
In another dream, he was lost in a mine. It was as though he were only a child, small
and alone and crying for his pa. He had
picked up a cold chisel and hammer and begun to hammer the wet slick walls, and
he had felt such an intense loathing in his breast that he had not been surprised
when a face formed before his eyes…but not the face of the man he had
hated. He had expected to see Kane, but
the face he saw was that of his father.
He had woken from that dream with tears streaming down his face that he
had stifled by pressing his face into the pillow.
Dreams, upon dreams upon dreams. Exhaustion and irritation. Fatigue and lack of appetite. Ben would look upon his son, and see the
handsome face growing more haggard and the eye sockets looking darker, whilst
the eyes themselves seemed to become sunken.
He had smoked his pipe and read his paper, but his eyes had strayed
involuntarily over to his son, and anguish had torn at his heart as he had
watched the restless eyes wander from object to object in the room, and never
appear to settle upon the pages of the book he held in his hands.
Perhaps Adam had not been surprised when he arrived
home one evening, to find Dr Paul Kay sharing a pot of coffee with Ben and his
brothers. The silence that fell upon
them, as he had stepped into the room, made it too obvious that the subject
matter prior to his arrival had been himself.
He acknowledged them by a curt nod of the head, and
unbuckled his gun belt and set it down beside his hat. His dark eyes had shifted from one to the other
and then back to the doctor, who had smiled and stood up, one hand
outstretched.
“Good to see you again, Adam.”
“And you, Doctor.”
He had taken the doctor’s hand and shaken it warmly, then approached the
table and poured himself some coffee.
“What brings you here? A social
visit?”
“Not exactly.” Paul had run his fingers through his
shock of gun metal gray hair and frowned.
“I wanted to talk to you.”
“Oh!” Adam
raised his eyebrows cynically, and sat down with the cup in his hand. “About what?”
Hoss had declared then that it was time for him to
check his horse, and Joe had offered to go along with him. His brother watched them both head for the
door and then, with a slight frown, looked at his father.
“What’s happening?” he had asked, and Ben had sighed
and raised his dark eyebrows and looked at Paul.
“I wanted Paul to talk to you, Adam. I’ve been worried about you for a while
and…”
“Worried about me?
Why? I’ve not slacked off from
work, have I?” He could feel the anger beginning to churn within himself, and
he glanced hostilely over at the doctor and then again at his father. “Why?” he repeated.
“I think you’re unwell, Adam,” his father had
replied very gently, and he frowned.
“I’ve heard you calling out in your sleep at night, and it’s obvious
you’ve not been sleeping and…”
Adam stood up and put down his cup, his lips pursed
into the stubborn pout his father knew so well. He tossed his head and his dark eyes
flashed.
“I’m perfectly well.” His voice was tight with
controlled anger and he glanced frostily at Paul. “I don’t need to see you. I’m sorry you’ve
had a wasted journey.”
“Perhaps on your account,” Paul said lightly, and he
smiled. “But I never feel it’s a wasted journey visiting the Ponderosa and
seeing you all here. Why not sit down
and let’s just talk.” He gestured to a
chair and waited for the young man to sit, but instead Adam turned and without
a word mounted the stairs to his room.
“Adam.”
He paused momentarily, then straightened his back and
walked on a few more steps.
“Adam. Stop
right there and apologise for your rudeness to Paul at once.”
He had turned then and looked down from the half
landing at the two older men. They
looked upwards, their faces upturned towards him like fledglings in a
nest. Ben’s face was purpling with
temper, whilst Paul looked worried and anxious.
“I’m not a child anymore, Pa, you don’t order me to
do anything.”
They had stared at one another. Black angry eyes meeting the force of dark
fury. Paul stepped between them and
nodded.
“That’s alright, Adam, I was going anyway, but don’t
forget, anytime you want to talk to me, I’ll be available for you.”
Adam had immediately given himself a mental shaking
at the doctor’s gentle delivery of the words he had spoken, and he half turned.
“My apologies, Doctor. I had no intention of being so rude,
but…” He paused and tapped the banister
with his hand as he tried to think of some excuse for his behavior. “I’ll call in sometime,” he had concluded
rather lamely.
“I hope you do,” Paul had replied quietly, and then
had watched him climb the stairs and disappear into his room.
Adam sighed, and felt the worm of shame wriggle in
the pit of his stomach at the memory of that day. Ben had accused him of being like a child,
acting worse than a five year old. His
only response had been to ask his father to accept his apologies, only he was
not too sure how a five year old was supposed to act.
**********
“I don’t know what your problem is, Adam,” Paul had
said on the afternoon Adam had finally capitulated and visited him. “All I hear
when I listen to you is anger. I think
you need to go back to the time when that anger first came to the surface, and
when you’ve dealt with it…” He had left
the words hanging in the air, and they had looked at one another. “Can you remember when it was?”
Kane. It
went back to that time when Kane had humiliated him; humbled him, put his boot
on his neck and ground him into the dirt.
Anger and hate spilled up into his loins at the very word, at the very
mention of the name. He swallowed bile
and had nodded.
“You could call it Kane’s legacy,” Paul said quietly
after listening to Adam for some time.
“Oh, I know so little about the human brain, but I know enough about
men. I’ve known many men who have faced tremendous evil, hardship. I was a doctor in the army for some years,
and I’ve seen brave men face terrible danger and walk away as though it were
nothing and then, weeks or perhaps months later, they begin to fall apart. They become pale shadows of their real
selves. Adam, they have to face the
hardest struggle of their lives. And
there was nothing that I could do to help them, or you.”
“Are you saying I am sick?”
“Yes and no.
I think that what happened to you, during that time with Kane, made you
so angry that you could not control it.
You’re now angry at everything and at everyone. You’re even angry with yourself.”
“Why?”
“That’s for you to find out. It would be easy enough to say that it was
because of the way Kane treated you. Or
because you don’t know whether he won or not.”
He saw the flash of Adam’s eyes and nodded. “Is that it, do you think?”
Adam sighed as he looked away and stared for a while
at the view from the window. Familiar
faces of people he had known for years, walking about their daily business
totally unaware of the blackness that seemed to be whirling about his head at
that moment. He looked back at Paul.
“I didn’t think I could ever get angry enough to
kill, to murder anyone. Kane contended
that I could – that any man could in the right circumstances.”
“But you didn’t kill Kane,” Paul said gently.
“No, not deliberately. But…” Adam bit down on his bottom lip in a
mannerism so familiar as to be endearing. “But I wanted to. When we fought that last time, I had my
hands around his throat and I knew that I could have killed him so easily. And I desperately wanted to.”
“What stopped you?”
“Kane. He
knew. He said ‘I won’. So, I left him and tried to get away, and he
said that I was going to leave him like the men who had left me.” His eyes narrowed, and anger stirred in him
again at the memory of those men who had condemned him to a death that would have
been pitiless and remorseless, and he remembered the horror he had felt when
Kane had accused him of doing just the same to him. Would that have cancelled out the other, he
wondered.
“You need to find out for yourself, Adam.”
He had looked at the doctor, and then at the door,
and frowned. How would he find out? Was there another Kane out there? Would the anger and loathing he felt give
him the courage to go and find out?
Chapter 4
Adam lay sprawled out upon the bed. He lay on his back with his arms flung to
either side of him. The warmth of the room, the slow drift of a
breeze through the window which merely touched the blind, the buzz of two flies
as they waltzed around each other in a speck of warm sunshine, all combined to
send the exhausted man into a deep, dreamless sleep.
Luke Morgan checked Sport’s shoes and then resumed
his business. The rise and fall of his
hammer upon the anvil was somewhat muffled by the closed doors of his stables,
so that he failed to notice the three men that rode slowly into town.
Clara Morgan and Danny stood together at the counter
of the Eastgate Bank. It had taken a
while to reach the counter, due to Mr. Dodgeson taking his time over counting
the money he had been given by the clerk.
He was leaving the bank when a new customer walked in, knocking the old
man to one side and ignoring the look of reproach that was hurled at his back.
In fact, the new customer ignored the whole
queue. He strode to the counter, and
then turned to face the townspeople assembled there. No one complained. They just stepped back with a gasp of
startled horror. The gun in his hand was
sufficient inducement for one and all to group together and step back against
the wall. Another man had entered now,
and he held a gun on them whilst indicating to the first man that they had to
hurry.
“Get these filled,” a thick graveled voice spat the
command at the clerk, who grabbed at the bag, and began to pull out the drawers
of money from the counter and throw the wads of dollars into the sack. “Now the safe.” Another empty bag was thrown at the other
clerk who, white faced and shaking, hurried to open the safe door.
“Git a move on, Larry,” a thin man standing by the
door called out, whilst he leaned against the doorframe in an attempt to appear
as a casual townsman. He had his arms
folded across his chest, but the gun in his left hand was pointed in the
direction of the huddle of customers.
Even if he were not aiming at anyone in particular they could see that
someone would be injured, were he to be alarmed enough to use it.
“Frank, git to them – see what they’ve got – we want
to make a clean sweep before leaving here,” the man referred to as Larry
suggested to the man who had followed behind him only minutes earlier.
Frank pulled a bag from his jacket pocket and
approached the queue. He began to
systematically pull off the rings from the women’s fingers, and fumble in
jacket pockets to pull out wallets and purses from the men. One by one the people began to empty their
pockets and throw their belongings into the now bulging sack.
Clara clenched her fist in desperation as he
approached her. He grabbed the purse
from her right hand, but seeing her efforts to hide her left hand behind her,
he reached out and grabbed at her wrist and pulled her hand forwards.
“Please, not my wedding ring,” she implored,
struggling to free her hand in a valiant but foolhardy attempt to save her
precious ring.
“Leave her alone.”
“Whatta – git off’n me ya young hellion.”
Danny was slim but strong, and his grip on Frank’s
arm was powerful enough to send the bank robber staggering back in an attempt
to keep hold of his gun and not release the bag that contained his ‘loot’. His yell was sufficient to bring him to the
attention of the man at the door, who stepped inside the bank and fired off a
shot.
The bank clerks suddenly seemed galvanised to move
at an even more frantic speed, stuffing money and bonds into the bags with an
alacrity that did them credit. There
were stifled screams from the women in the crowd, and one man yelled out an
oath that was silenced with a groan, as Jerry Coutts’ pistol butt was brought
heavily down upon his skull. Clara gave
a sobbing plea for the boy to be left alone, as Frank stepped forwards and
grabbed the boy by the hair. Danny yelled
and struggled, but against two men he was powerless.
“Please…!” Clara cried in a heartfelt sob, but Frank
raised his arm in a threat to silence her, and she shrank back against the
wall.
“Danny Johnson,” Coutts said, looking at Frank in a
way that Clara would eventually realise to be significantly suggestive.
“Leave me alone!” Dan yelled, and swung a kick at
their shins. He heard Clara’s scream
before the gun came crashing down upon his skull. As the blow fell she threw herself forward to
prevent its descent, only to be flung with such force against the wall that it
knocked the breathe from her body, and she fell unconscious upon the floor.
“Bring him with us,” Jerry Coutts said, indicating
the boy who was now slumped in a huddle on the floor close to Clara.
“Are you sure we can afford to be lumbered with
him?” Frank whispered but seeing the determination in Jerry’s eyes, he nodded
and dragged the boy up, and with a slight struggle succeeded in hauling the boy
over his shoulder.
Still no one moved.
Larry Parks grabbed the last bundle of money and forced it into the bag,
then turned and made for the door.
The Main Street was bathed in sunlight, and nothing
had changed despite the gunshot that had rung out earlier. The sound of Luke’s hammer falling upon the
anvil still tolled rhythmically like a church bell. The mute sounds of people talking drifted
from the stores and street walks. The
three men, one of them bearing the boy over his back, walked hurriedly from the
bank, mounted their horses, and had started their gallop away from the hitching
rail when the first alarm went off.
David Lowe was the one to send off the alarm. He and his fellow bank clerk had taken one
look at each other as the robbers left, and he, having the longer legs, had
reached the door first. He yelled as
loudly as he could and fired off a shot from a gun that had been concealed
under the counter, but which they had been too scared too use during the
robbery. For some reason David Lowe
assumed that bank robbers stopped using guns once they were on their horses
heading out of town. He was wrong!
Pandemonium was released with the speed of
light. From peace and accord came a
swift transition to chaos and terror.
Gunshots rang out from all directions.
A dog began to bark, adding his own voice to the cacophony of
sound. Women shrieked and men yelled.
David Lowe bled to death in the doorway of the bank,
his head resting in the lap of old Mrs. Butler, who wept copious tears that
cascaded down and dripped upon his face.
The sheriff, who had been slumbering under a hot towel in the local
barbershop, was firing off shots in all directions, hoping that one would find
the correct target. The dog ceased
barking, his voice now a whine and yelp as a bullet grazed his back leg and he
ran, his injured leg held high from the ground, to hide under the
sidewalk.
Adam Cartwright stirred, turned upon his side and
slowly opened his eyes. He blinked, and
as alarm sent adrenalin pumping through his body, he rolled from the bed,
grabbed his gun from its holster and headed for the window. He released the blind that rolled up so fast
it made him jump. Then he leaned
forwards, cautiously, his gun in his hand and ready for use.
He could see within seconds what had happened. His eyes took in the scene of the young man
dying and being comforted by the old woman.
The sheriff and half a dozen men running in each other’s way, firing off
shots that could possibly cause more danger to the inhabitants of the town than
the robbers themselves. He saw the tail
end of the three horses, as they rounded the corner and disappeared from
sight. People were running from the
stores and shops. He saw Luke Morgan
striding from his farrier’s shop, rifle in one hand and hammer in the other.
He relaxed.
He returned to the bed and slipped the gun into the holster and lay
down. This was not his town. Eastgate was facing a problem all western
towns had to face some time or another.
He rubbed his face and then yawned again. He closed his eyes. This would, he mused, test the mettle of the
town’s sheriff. If it had been Roy, then
it would have been a different story. He
slipped easily back into sleep, with the bedroom now bathed in golden sunlight
and the two flies now partying with several blue bottles in the corner of the
window frame.
Chapter 5
Clara Morgan opened her eyes to find herself looking
up at her husband. The anxiety that had
been etched on his face ebbed away like the creases ironed from fragile tissue
paper. He kissed her brow, and stroked
her hair, and held her close.
“You’re alive.
Thank God, for a moment I thought you were taken from me,” he whispered.
“Danny?” the word slipped from her lips in a gasp,
and her eyes widened in terror. “Where
is he?”
A woman, who had been receiving some impromptu
treatment from the doctor for shock, approached them and put a hand on Luke’s
shoulder.
“They took him.
Don’t you remember, Clara, they said his name and they took him.”
“You mean that they knew him?” Luke asked, his anxious eyes resting first
upon his wife’s face, and then upon the kindly features of Mrs. Groschen.
“One of them seemed to know him,” the elderly woman
replied. “The other man, the one they
called Frank, didn’t want to take him but they bundled him out of here anyway.”
“Oh Luke, Luke ....”
She grabbed at his arm. “I tried
to stop them hurting him, I tried but they were too strong.”
“The sheriff’s rounding up a posse, my love. I’m going with them.”
“No, Luke.” Her large eyes looked up at him in bleak
despair. Oh, to be sure he was an
ungainly man, not handsome, nor slim and sleek, he was overweight and he
smelled of the fire and the horse sweat, but he was her man, and she knew him. She knew the kindness in him, and the
honesty, and the gentle way he had to caring for Danny and herself. He loved her with an intensity that
engendered a tender love from her in return.
The fear of losing him now gripped her as so real that her heart shook
within her.
“I have to go, honey,” he whispered, stroking away a
tear from her cheek and releasing her hand from his arm. “Not just for Danny’s
sake, but for that lad’s too.” He turned
his head to bring her attention to the young man who lay dead at the door. “I’ll bring him home safely, I promise you.”
She said nothing more. He helped her to her feet, and made sure that
she was steady enough to walk. With
reassurances that he would be home as soon as they had caught the men, and that
Danny would be with him, he walked away.
Outside, the deputy was striking the big metal triangle with the steel
rod in order to assemble as many men for the posse as possible. It clanged loudly and consistently for
several minutes. As the noise ebbed
away, so the sheriff and the townsmen galloped out of the town.
The racket of the alarm clanged through Adam’s mind
and he woke up, shook his head, and sat up.
“Coming, Pa,” he mumbled, his eyes still shut tight,
and swaying slightly on the edge of the bed.
He yawned and opened his eyes, as he looked around
at unfamiliar surroundings. So, it
wasn’t Pa sounding out the alarm after all.
Had he been dreaming again? He
yawned once more, and stood up and stretched so high that his shirt slipped its
moorings and exposed an expanse of dark flesh.
He walked slowly to the window, tucking the shirt
back into his pants as he did so. He
watched as some men carried away the inert body of the young man from the bank,
and people left the building and walked their separate ways. An elderly lady leaned upon the arm of a younger
man, weeping into her handkerchief. A
younger woman walked in the opposite direction, alone, with her head bowed.
He followed her with his eyes and remembered where
he had seen her before, and wondered where the boy had gone. He sighed, and turned back to the bed and
picked up his gun belt. Had it only
been minutes since he had fallen asleep?
He could vaguely recall the bank raid being played out in his mind. It had all seemed part of a dream.
**********
Clara Morgan opened the door to her home and closed
it with a slow motion. She was too sad
and too anxious to move with any speed.
Weariness consumed her as she walked towards the chair at the table and
sunk down upon it, and then bent her head so that her face was buried in her
hands as she wept.
For some seconds she sat there, with only the
ticking of the clock as company to the sounds of her weeping. Then another sound came to her ears and she
froze. She lifted her head and turned
towards the door. The light tapping as
the handle turned brought a sudden hope to her heart, and she ran forwards with
the word ‘Danny’ on her lips. Even
before her hand had touched the door however, it opened.
“What are you doing here?” Hope died, and in despair she stepped back, a
hand clutched at her skirts, whilst the other was raised to her lips to hold
back the sob that caught at her throat.
The tall man at the door way put a finger to his
lips for silence. Dipping his head
slightly so as to avoid the doorframe, he stepped into the room and with a very
gentle movement pushed the door shut.
Then he stepped closer to Clara, took off his hat and forced a smile to
his lips.
“Hello, Clara,” he said very softly.
He was a handsome man. Tall, slim in build, with dark hair that
waved back from a high brow. His blue
eyes were large and framed by thick dark lashes and his nose was high
bridged. The mouth was formed well and
when his lips were parted to expose his teeth, they were seen to be very white
and even. A strong jaw line, which was
set off by a cleft chin, made the handsome face appear to be that of a strong
and resolute character. He held out a
hand towards her, a hand that was well shaped with a broad palm and long
fingers. An expression of misery fell
across his features as she shrank back from him.
“Clara?
What’s wrong? I thought you’d be
pleased to see me after all this time?”
“Pleased to see you?” her voice came as barely a
whisper. “How can you say that,
Johnny? You only had another eighteen
months to go before being a free man, and now you’ve broken jail you’ll be
forever looking over your shoulder.
Why? How could you be so stupid?”
He smiled gently and stepped closer to her, and she,
prevented from moving any further due to the table, was forced to remain where
she was, although she held out a hand to stop him getting too near.
“So? You do still worry about me then?” his voice
was soft, gentle and his mouth smiled whilst his eyes were wary as they watched
her face.
“Of course I worry about you. You’re Danny’s father, aren’t you? I wanted him to – to be able to know he was
safe when he went home to you. Now I
can’t promise him that anymore. Why
didn’t you stop and think of him, Johnny?
If you had, for a moment at least, perhaps you would have had some sense
and stayed where you were!”
He frowned and chewed his bottom lip, and then bowed
his head as though considering more carefully the things she had said. Then he glanced up at her and nodded slowly,
“May I sit down?” He pulled out a chair and sat
before she had answered either one way or the other. With a deep sigh he buried his face in his
hands, and stayed silent for a moment or two before asking her for something
hot to drink. “I’ve been riding for days.
Trying to get some distance between them and me. I had to get here before them.” He looked up at her and she stared at him,
her eyes round in a pale mask of horror. “You’ve been crying? You were crying when I came here? Where’s Danny?” He pushed the chair back, and
it toppled with a resounding thud onto the floor. “Where’s Danny?” He reached
out and grabbed at her, held her tightly by the arms and searched her face.
“Have they got here already then? Am I
too late?”
“What do you mean, Johnny? What – who are you talking about?” she
whispered, whilst her mind took her back just an hour in time, to when she last
saw the little boy being carried out from the bank.
“Just tell me where Danny is so that I know he’s
safe.”
“You’re frightening me. Let me go, Obadiah, let me go now.”
He relaxed his hold on her and she stepped back and
away from his reach. Like two
antagonists in a ring, they paused and surveyed one another, wary and
cautious. She was the first to move,
stepping towards the stove and placing the coffee pot on a ring, whilst she
thought over what he had said and the implications thereof. Then she turned to face him.
“There was a bank robbery just over an hour
ago. The bank teller was killed,
shot. They took Danny. One of the men seemed to know him, and took
him with them.”
“You didn’t do anything to stop them?” It was an accusation that stabbed her to the
heart. She bowed her head and burst into
tears, which prompted him to step closer to her and once again take hold of her
by the arms, but this time, more gently.
“They hurt me, and he stepped up and tried to stop
them. One of the men said his name and everything was so hazy, I think I had
fainted, Johnny, I can’t remember, except that they took him with them,”
“Do you know who they were?”
“One man was called Larry - I can’t remember - I
can’t…” She turned away from him and
walked to the table, slowly setting herself down onto one of the chairs. “There were three of them, and they robbed
the bank and took our jewellery and wallets, and Danny tried to stop them
taking mine. I don’t know anymore than
that. Oh, Johnny, I’m so sorry, I should
have taken more care of him for you, but…” she brushed away tears from her
cheeks and looked at him, “…I had him with me because I was afraid that you
would come and take him away from us. I
didn’t want you to go to the school and take him, so I kept him home with
me. We went to the bank together.” Again the tears flowed, and as she buried her
face in her hands, the tears dripped through her fingers onto the table.
He stared at her.
He watched the tears drip slowly onto the table and form miniscule
pools. He let her words sink into his
brain, before he too had to sit down opposite her at the table.
“You thought I would steal my own son away from
you?”
“When I heard that you had broken jail, I knew you
would come for him.” She looked up at him, her long lashes spiked by her tears.
“And you did, didn’t you? That’s why
you’re here.”
“Not to steal him away, Clara. No, no – I wouldn’t have done that to you and
Luke. I knew…” he paused, and stopped
himself from saying the words because they were no longer true. He could not assure her that he had known Danny
would be safe with them, when it had been proven that he had not. “I knew you would do the best you could for
him.”
“Luke’s with the posse. They’ve gone after them.”
He looked at her thoughtfully, and then shook his
head. “They won’t find them. Coutts was here before, he knows this
territory inside out….”
“So does Luke.”
“No, not like Coutts.” Obadiah Johnson stood up and
went to the stove. He began to pour out
the coffee whilst he considered what his next course of action could be, then
he took the cups to the table and set them down, before resuming his seat.
“Clara, I had to go with them. When I
knew what they wanted I had no choice.”
“There are always choices, Johnny,” she said softly.
“The right one or the wrong one…you could have ….”
“You don’t know, you weren’t there.”
They were silent for a while, as each struggled to
get their thoughts in some semblance of order.
Then he sighed.
“Clara, have you ever heard of a man called Peter
Kane?”
“No.”
“Well, he was a strange kind of a man. Kept himself to himself mostly. He had a mine about seventeen miles east of
the Lucky Seven. Not many people knew
its location, and I guess not many ever got to meet Kane, but rumours went
around that there was some kind of crazy hermit out there with a mine full of
gold. Coutts met him once, in Salt
Flats. Well, Coutts and I shared a cell
and he got to talking about it. Said
Kane was a man who made the hairs at the back of your neck stand on end. Scared the life out of Coutts.”
“What has this got to do with Danny?” she whispered.
He glanced at her sharply and frowned, then took a
deep breath.
“Thing is, Kane told them that he had more gold in
that mine than any he had ever heard, could start another Comstock, so he
said. He was the kind of man you’d
believe too.”
“Yes, but…”
“Then they heard that he was dead. Coutts told ‘em I knew the location of the
mine and could lead them to it. But I
said no, I had to work out my sentence.
Coutts said that if they didn’t get me to help them voluntarily they
would make me lead ‘em to the mine.”
“You mean, they threatened to take Danny, just so
that you would lead them to a mine?”
“Not just any mine, Clara. Look, I met Kane several times. He showed me some gold ore that was the
purest I’d ever seen.”
“So you agreed to leave with them?”
“I had no choice in the end. I was on a work party with them, and chained
to Larry, so when they made their escape I was an unwilling, but captive,
victim. I had no chance to stay put.” He looked at her and forced her to look into
his eyes, as though that would compel her to believe him. “Then later, when
they got to talking about things again, I thought if I could just get a horse
and reach town before them, I could grab Danny and get away someplace.”
“Luke would never have let you.”
“Well, Luke isn’t here, and Danny’s gone too,” he
replied quietly.
A sharp staccato knock on the door stopped them from
talking further and Clara froze, looking at him in horror.
“Just act naturally, don’t arouse suspicion,” he
whispered, retreating more into the shadows of the room.
She waited until it was quite obvious no one could
see him from the doorway, and then opened it very cautiously and slowly.
Chapter 6
“Excuse me, ma’am.” Adam Cartwright slipped off his
hat and held it loosely in his hand as he looked at her with a smile. His sharp eyes were quick to detect the fact
that the woman had been crying, although she held back into the shadows. He took a deep breath. “I’m Adam Cartwright from the Ponderosa, and
I left my horse at your husband’s stables.”
He paused and looked at her again. “Are you all right, ma’am?”
“Yes, yes, I’m all right,” she whispered.
“Well, I agreed to leave the horse there overnight
but decided to leave now. I just wanted
to let him know, so that he wouldn’t think the animal had been stolen.”
“I see. Thank
you.” She began to close the door and then paused. “Do you need a refund of
money?”
“No, that was not the point of my calling, I just
wanted to make sure he would know I had taken the horse.”
“Well, he isn’t here just now, but I will tell
him. Thank you.”
She began to close the door, but was prevented from
doing so when he placed a hand against it, and she looked up, frightened at the
thought that he was about to force an entry.
“I’m sorry, ma’am, and you can tell me to mind my
own business should you so wish, but I couldn’t help noticing that something
was upsetting you. Are you sure that
there isn’t anything I can do for you?”
She looked up at him then and noticed the kindness
in the stern features. She could see the warmth in the dark eyes that lingered
over her face, and she raised a hand to her eyes to wipe away the last traces
of tears. She forced a smile.
“I’m all right, thank you for asking.”
Adam nodded and turned away. Well, there was no point in foisting himself
upon her privacy. He was the stranger in
town, so why should she trust him? He
wondered if anyone else knew that there was a black horse steaming from sweat
caused by a hard ride, hobbled at the back of the house. That meant she was not alone in the house
and he wondered, momentarily, whether or not the man she feared returning to
town, was actually already present.
He mounted Sport and turned the big horse out of
town. Some towns had the power to hold
a person for a day or two, but not this one.
A few hours had been just about all he could take of Eastgate, and most
of that time he had spent sleeping.
He edged Sport off the track, as a posse of men rode
towards him and passed him by. The
sheriff and his men had returned to town, and from the look of it, they had
returned empty handed and with a few casualties. He shrugged, well, it was not his town, the
sheriff was not Roy Coffee and it seemed to him that they had not spent that
much time out there to warrant their return so soon. However, he urged Sport forwards and into a
quick gallop, he needed to get on as he had ghosts of his own to exorcise.
**********
Luke Morgan was not a handsome man. He was big of build with a barrel chest, and
was most often smelling and looking as one would expect of a man in his
particular trade. When he had married
Clara, a younger woman and attractive in her own modest way, people had been
surprised and pleased, for his looks belied a gentle, honest nature. He was a man who endeared himself to those
who took the time and trouble to get to know him. Clara had done just so and found herself a
rock, a man who loved her deeply, and who was loyal through and through.
He pushed open the door of his home with a weariness
that comes from either physical exhaustion or mental distress. Slowly he put the rifle down in the corner,
and then glanced up to find his wife hurrying towards him.
“Did you…?” the question hung half asked in the air,
and she swallowed the tears and blinked them back as she took hold of his hand.
“What happened?”
“Well, we had to turn back is what happened,” he
replied glumly, and he tossed his hat along with the rifle. “They knew we’d be along after them. Shot down Deputy Lawson and winged young Mike
Pitts almost as soon as we got on their trail.
Then they produced their ace card…..”
“Danny?” she whispered.
“Yeah.
Danny.” He put his arm around her shoulders and dropped a kiss upon her head.
“We had no choice but to turn back, or they would have used the boy as a
shield. Mebbe even killed him. Couldn’t afford to take that risk.”
“What are you going to do?”
“I’m going to go after them, of course. No one’s going to take my boy from me and use
him like some hostage. Who do they think
they are? Oh…” his voice trailed away as
he suddenly became aware of the other person in the room, and he looked
quizzically at his wife then at Obadiah Johnson. “I wondered when you would
turn up,” he said quietly, and with a sigh he released his wife, stepped
forward, and extended his hand. “You’re a long way from where you should be,”
he murmured as he shook Johnson’s hand.
“Where should a man be, Luke? Ain’t it with his son?” Obadiah replied
slowly.
“Not when he has a prison sentence to finish.” Luke pulled out a chair and frowned, looking
rather like a bad tempered bull. “What happened?”
It didn’t take Johnson long to explain to Luke what
had happened at the prison, and why he was now sitting there in their
cabin. He shifted nervously in his
chair, knowing that his fate now lay in the big strong hands of the blacksmith,
who was so honest in his dealings that harbouring a criminal, a runaway from
justice, was totally out of countenance with him.
For some seconds there was silence in the room, and
Clara could feel her heart beating faster and faster beneath her ribs. Eventually Luke looked at her, then he
reached out to take her hand in his and draw her nearer to him.
“We promised to take good care of your boy, Johnny,”
he said quietly. “We failed in doing that, although the situation was beyond
our control. If you think you know
where they may have taken him, perhaps we can get him back.”
“We?” Johnson said quietly, with a note of hope in
his voice.
“You and I.” Luke’s dark features darkened in the
shadows of the room and he frowned again. “You think they’ll still want to get
to Kane’s mine?”
“I’m sure of it.”
“Mmmm. So
where would they expect to meet you?”
“I don’t know….possibly at Signal Rock.”
“Signal Rock?
Well, if we leave within the hour, we should be there before
nightfall. Clara, make us something to
eat, dear, while we talk.”
Johnson put out a hand and grasped hold of Luke’s gratefully,
for a second his voice failed him, but when he spoke it was husky with emotion.
“I can’t thank you enough, Luke.”
“I’m doing this for Danny, and for Sarah, your
wife,” Luke replied, looking at Johnson with near black eyes. “We’ve come to
care for the boy, Johnny, and I’d rather die than break our promise to you and
Sarah and see any harm come to him.”
Johnson nodded and clasped his hands tightly
together, and rested them on the table.
“You do still believe me, don’t you? That I never
murdered them?”
“The jury saw fit to say it was not willful murder,
and the Judge gave you a lenient sentence.
As for me, who am I to judge any man.
If you say it was not murder, then so be it.”
“I want you to believe me,” Obadiah pleaded. “You
sound as though you don’t really believe me.”
“I believed you then, when Clara told me about
it. I have no reason to doubt you
now. If all goes well, and we can find
Danny and bring him home safely, you know that you will have to go back and
serve your sentence, don’t you?”
“You don’t really know what you’re asking,” Johnson
replied with his voice trembling. “It’s like a pit from hell there.”
“But if you serve your sentence,” Clara said gently,
placing her hand upon his arm, “you’ll be free to live your life with a clean
conscience. Johnny, you took two
people’s lives, and…”
“I know.” He nodded acquiesance. “I know, Clara.”
“First things first, we have to think of how to get
Danny back safely. We’ll get fresh
horses. Mine’s just about tuckered out.”
“Oh, that reminds me.” Clara turned from her meal
preparation at the stove. “A man came just before you came home, Luke. He said to tell you that he had taken his
horse and was leaving. He had told you
he was going to collect him tomorrow but changed his mind.”
“Who was it?”
“Adam Cartwright, from the Ponderosa.” She picked up
some plates and carried them carefully to the table. “He didn’t want a refund.”
“He’s got a good horse there,” Luke said quietly, and
then returned to the subject previously under discussion. “When do you plan to
meet up with these friends of yours, Obadiah?”
The younger man clasped his hands together in a
gesture of despair, he could feel the sweat on the palms and steadied them by a
determined effort of will. He looked up
at the dark eyes of the blacksmith and took a deep breath.
“Firstly, they ain’t friends of mine and secondly,
as soon as possible. I want Danny home
and out of their hands.”
“Don’t you think we want that too?” Clara cried, her
voice strained with the effort to keep calm.
“If anything has happened to him I’ll never forgive myself.” She turned
away and hurried from the room.
Her husband paused, looked at Johnson, and then
followed his wife into the other room, where he took her into his arms and held
her tight. Alone, Johnson buried his
face in his hands and saw only the blackness of despair ahead of him.
Chapter 7
Signal Rock was black against the beauty of a
surprisingly magnificent sunset. The
young man on the large chestnut horse steered the animal between the rocks and
towards his planned camping ground, without much thought to the action. He rode by instinct, registering obstacles
and such with one part of his mind, whilst the other part was engaged in
thinking. Sometimes he wished he could
turn off the thinking process altogether as it was becoming increasingly
exhausting.
He dragged his mind from where it had wandered and
looked about him, as he felt the slight tug on the reins and realised that
Sport had come to a full stop. He
inhaled deeply. A slight frown furrowed
his brow, as along with the fresh evening air came the drifting aroma of smoke,
and food being cooked. He allowed a
slight exclamation of annoyance escape his lips, as he came to the conclusion
that others had decided that Signal Rock was a good place to camp, and that he
had either to abandon the idea and ride on, or test out the hospitality of the
other travelers.
He stroked Sport’s sleek neck and considered the
situation seriously. Some travelers
were more than hospitable, and glad to have a stranger enter their camp. It meant pleasant conversation, and a
catching up of news that could be passed on to others at another time. But there were others whereby caution was
necessary. Adam Cartwright urged Sport
on to a slow walk, and gingerly approached the camp.
From a vantage point behind some shrubs, he was able
to look upon the camp and saw three men.
Two were in deep conversation whilst the other was busy checking on the
food. A coffee pot was spitting hot
water onto the stones by the fire, whilst fat dripped into the flames from the
rabbit incinerating above them.
He was in the process of inching forwards when there
came a rustling in the shrub and as he turned, his hand inches from the handle
of his gun, someone scampered through the shadows and towards him.
He could see from the corner of his eye movement in
the camp, as the three men seemed to separate, moving towards the point where
the figure had emerged. At the same time a hand grabbed at his booted
foot, and he looked down into the pale face of a young boy
“Help me…” the child gasped. “Git me outta here,
please.”
Without more ado Adam extended his hand and took the
boy’s in his own, and hauled him upwards.
It was a matter of seconds to maneuver the child into the saddle and
turn Sport round.
“Stop right there.”
The voice was hard and cold. The barrel of the rifle pointed at them was
even harder, colder. The moonlight
gleamed upon its gray lead and made it shimmer silver. He put out a hand to reassure the boy, and
turned Sport in another direction, only to be confronted by yet another rifle. Instinct warned him that the third man would
be right behind him now, and any move to get away would be futile.
“Put the boy down.”
It was instinctive to put a hand upon the boy’s arm,
to reassure him of his desire to help.
At the same time, the boy clasped at Adam’s hand and gripped so tightly
that the man felt the boy’s nails dig into his flesh.
“I said, put the boy down.”
Sport was a powerful creature and, as his legs
pumped into action in obedience to his master’s command, Adam held the boy
closer to his body, as though to protect him from any repercussions to his
actions. The horse seemed to mount the
air, hover and then land gracefully some distance from Larry Parks. Without any hesitation, Sport twisted his
body to a 45 degree angle and then leapt forwards. The muscles of his sleek and magnificently honed
body moved in perfect synchronization, and for an instant of time it seemed as
though horse, man and boy would be beyond the reach of any of the men.
But a bullet moves faster. Adam heard the crack of the rifle and his
brain registered the fact that, when he heard the sound, the bullet was already
covering half the distance between them and himself. He bent low, his head brushing against that
of the child, who squeezed himself against the man’s body and felt the breath
crushed out of his lungs.
Sport lunged to the left, and faltered. The bullet had burned a welt across his hide
that had both stung and startled the creature, and with a whinny of protest he
misjudged his footing. Adam heard the
boy cry out as he, himself, was sent somersaulting over Sport’s head and then
plummeting to the ground.
A well built man would find it impossible not to
land without some damage to himself.
He fell upon dry rock strewn soil that, for him, was a blessing. Even so, the breath was knocked out of his body.
He heard a crunching sound that seemed to fill his ears to culminate in
something grating. Then he was only
aware of consciousness ebbing away, and all the sounds around him seeming to
disappear down into a long tunnel.
“Is he dead?”
Larry Parks stood looking down at the man dressed in
black laid on his back upon the ground.
He knelt down and touched Adam’s neck, and felt the pulse beat against
his fingers. He looked up and shook his
head.
“Check out who he is,” Frank yelled, as he struggled
to keep the boy under control. “Could
be he’s the law around here. Git still,
doggone your ornery hide, boy, or I’ll whip you so good you won’t have a hide
left.” He shook Danny severely for good measure.
Larry Parks roughly manhandled Adam from side to
side as he rifled through his pockets, and finally stood up with the wounded
man’s wallet in his possession. He
opened it as he walked towards his brother and cousin. The sky was drawing to its climactic ending
to day, and all the beauty of the sunset was now gone.
“Let’s git back to camp,” Coutts grumbled with a
scowl at the man on the ground and a sharp slap around the head for Danny, as
he passed the boy now contritely walking by Frank’s side. “We kin find out what we want by the fire,
looks like a full moon anyhows….” He glanced heavenwards as the moon broke
through the clouds and lightened the sky.
“Ya ain’t thinkin’ of jest leavin’ him thar, are
ya?” Larry asked, pausing now as he thought of the man who could be dying from his
injuries only feet from their camp.
“Did we invite him to join us?” Coutts muttered out
of the side of his mouth. “I don’t think so!” he answered himself with a sneer,
and he spat heartily into the shrub before making a grab at the boy and yanking
him towards himself. “And as fer you, you little sneak, thought you’d be able
to git away, did ya?”
The boy raised an arm to ward off the blow that
seemed destined to fall upon him. A sob
jerked at his throat, and he raised his eyes upwards in despair.
“Look at this?”
Larry said, as he held a letter up towards them preventing the blow from
falling by so doing. “That guy ain’t any lawman, he’s one of the Cartwrights
from the Ponderosa, down Virginia City way.”
“Let me see that.” Coutts grabbed at the letter and
narrowed his eyes. The light from the
moon was bright enough to see by, but even so he strode over to the fire and
crouched near its flames to read the address on the envelope. He frowned and then looked at Larry. “The
name seems familiar.”
“You ain’t never met the Cartwrights, have you?”
Frank leaned down and poured coffee from the pot into a tin cup. His narrow eyes glanced from his brother to
his cousin, and then to the boy who was crouched against some rocks nearby in
an effort to appear as unnoticeable as possible. His mean, thin lips softened and with a
slight frown on his brow he stepped towards the child, and pushed the mug into
the shaking hands. “Here, boy, drink this and then get some sleep.”
Danny said nothing, but accepted the drink with an
alacrity that spoke volumes. His terror
of the men, who had snatched him away from the security of those he loved, no
less even though he had been shown this one act of consideration.
“I worked on the Ponderosa a spell.” Coutts said
quietly, chewing now on a matchstick and glancing thoughtfully over his
shoulder in the direction of the injured man.
“Old Ben Cartwright can be a force to be reckoned with, when
roused.” His voice trailed off, and he
looked once again at the square of paper in his hand. “Adam Cartwright, that’s
Ben’s eldest son, the one he relies on as his right hand man.” He tugged at his
ear lobe. “There’s something else too…”
“What’s that?” Larry pulled the rabbit from the
spit, swearing beneath his breath as the hot fat burned his fingers. He tossed the roasted carcass upon a flat
rock set down for the purpose, and began to pull meat from the bone.
“Dolly wrote me about him.” He jerked his thumb over his shoulder to
indicate the subject of their conversation. “That’s how I knew Kane was dead.”
“Did I miss something?” Frank sneered. “So, Dolly
writes and tells you Kane’s dead, but how does that have anything to do with
Cartwright or the Ponderosa?”
“Dolly was working in a saloon at Salt Flats, when
the Cartwrights rode in with Adam Cartwright half dead. Seems they found him dragging Kane’s body on
a travois through the wilderness. The
sun, lack of water and food, nearly killed him, it put paid to Kane, that’s for
sure.”
“How did Dolly get to know this?”
“Because Dolly, being a pretty gal, got friendly
with Joseph Cartwright, the youngest of the Cartwright boys. He told her all about his big brother nearly
killing himself in order to save Kane’s life, but failing.” His voice trailed
off, and he screwed the letter up and tossed it upon the flames.
“You know, that Dolly, she sure is a looker, and not
half clever either.” Larry laughed softly, only the motion of his shoulders
indicated his laughter, the sound of it was so muffled in his throat.
“She’s a good girl, and if it weren’t for her, we’d
not have known about the bank in Eastgate being so solvent.” Frank patted the plump sacks heaped by the
side of his makeshift bed.
“She has her uses,” Coutts agreed, as he stared into
the flames of the fire, his mind already dwelling on other subjects apart from
his sister and her useful qualities. “Larry, go and check that guy over, and
bring him here. I want to talk to him.”
“Wal, can’t you…” Larry’s voice trailed away, he
knew from years of experience that there was little point in protesting that he
was not there to run their errands. He
lumbered to his feet and walked away from the camp. In the white light of the moon, his lean
long limbed body was a strange silhouette thrown against the rocks and shrubs
in some kind of bold relief against their whiteness.
Chapter 8
Jerry Coutts surveyed the injured man
thoughtfully. There was little kindness
in Coutts. He was callous, mean and
cruel. As he watched the younger man stretched out on the ground and bathed in
the cold white light of the moon, his twisted little mind began to make
plans. He sat a little further away
from his victim, to consider his schemes and to see what would develop as he
put them into action. He smiled slowly,
he could be charming when he needed to be, when it suited him to achieve his
own ends.
Larry Parks stood in the shadows of the rocks and
felt the turbulence stirring in his breast.
There was all ways confusion and conflict within Larry, for he had a
natural kindness deep within him, hidden under layers of fear and terror of his
older brother and his cousin. Now he
stood and watched and hoped that stranger would hurry up and regain
consciousness. By doing so it would
salve Larry’s conscience and make him feel like a reasonably normal person
again. He swallowed hard. He had hoped to have become a more normal
person over the past few months, but the fear always so close to the surface of
his personna have proven to him that he had yet a long way to travel.
Frank Parks squatted on his haunches and stirred the
fire with a stick and thought of the money in the sacks. He was a brute who was led by his instincts
and the strongest of them was his fear of Coutts. He suffered no conflict of conscience such
as Larry because he had no conscience.
He was unfeeling to the suffering of others, enjoyed barking orders to
his brother because he knew he had power over him and that made him feel
strong. He forgot that the orders he
barked were those already directed at him by those who wielded power over
him. Years in prison had not sharpened
his intellect nor softened his feelings.
Whether Cartwright lived or died was immaterial to him.
Adam Cartwright slowly opened his eyes and then
closed them again. The flames of the fire
lulled him into the false impression that, when he opened his eyes again, he
would be sitting in the big room with his father and brothers. Everything that had happened was just a
bizarre dream. He moved, and the
resultant excruciating pain from his shoulder and arm reminded him that the
reality of life was not so easy to escape as would be a mere dream.
He groaned from the pain. It was a long, drawn-out shudder of a
groan. The pain made him want to keep
his eyes closed for as long as possible. It was easier to fight pain in the dark. The light could be too obtrusive, and who
wanted to have their weaknesses laid out on display as though on a shelf for
all to see? Certainly, not a man as
proud as Adam Cartwright.
He sensed someone approaching and tensed. It seemed to him that whoever had come near
was now uncertain as to what to do next, and hovered nearby as though waiting
for some instructions as to how to proceed.
Even as he thought to open his eyes and see for himself what was happening
around him, a booted foot kicked him squarely in the ribs. He inhaled breath sharply. In an attempt to avoid another kick he
rolled away, but met with an obstacle that prevented any further movement. He reached out a hand in the hope that the
obstruction would be some implement he could use to defend himself, but his
fingers closed upon only another booted foot.
He withdrew his hand immediately, rolled again, and
pushed himself away from the ground. He
was on his knees, on his feet, and felt himself swaying. His legs had no strength in them, and at
just the time he needed their support.
The pain down his arm was sending messages to his brain to run;
adrenalin and endomorphines pumped their way through his veins as a
result. He clenched his right fist. Then he opened his eyes to see what he had
to fight against.
The white light from the moon was practically
daylight and forced him to shield his face with his upraised arm. Even so, he had had enough time to see the
three men once more, and to know where they were located. His legs were steadier too, and he moved back
a pace or two and away from the men nearest to him.
“That’s enough.”
It was the voice of the man who had spoken earlier,
and obviously the spokesman of the three.
It was a voice that held a familiar ring to it and Adam waited, his body
tense, for him to speak again.
“Get him something to drink.”
Through narrowed eyes, Adam watched as the two men
backed away towards the campfire. He
saw one pour coffee into a tin mug and bring it over to him. Tentatively he reached out a hand to take
it. With non- reasoning louts such as
this one, it was possible that the coffee would be flung aside, or worse still,
thrown over him. It paid to be wary.
Larry Parks may have been non-reasoning, and a lout
too, but he was a man with kindliness about him, and was now ashamed of his
previous action in kicking a man when he was down. He gave Adam the coffee with his eyes
lowered, so that the young man would not be able to read the regret and shame
in his face.
“Th…ugh…thank you,” Adam grunted, forcing the words
through a throat that was dry from dust and from pain. He glanced hurriedly about him, and looked
at Coutts, who was now standing in the full glare of the fire. “Thank you,” he said, addressing Coutts as
the main benefactor of the drink.
“Sit down, man, before you fall down,” Coutts said
sharply, pointing to a bundle of blankets. “Help him down,” he snapped the
command at Frank, who did as he was bidden with an alacrity that too clearly
showed his fear of his cousin.
Coutts watched them, and smiled thinly. Kindness did not come naturally to him, but
it was useful. One caught more flies
with honey than without that sweetener.
He was now quite prepared to be as kind as a man could be – his only
hope was that his cousins would follow his direction.
The coffee
was hot and bitter, but Adam drank it with a relish that only a man in his
position could do. It took the
sharpness from the pain and seemed to make his brain start to function, in that
it began to pick up details and collate them together in their usual orderly,
logical fashion. Over the rim of the
mug Adam took note of the three men, their location and size of camp, and the
fact that the child was huddled against the rocks for protection but was
unhurt, although obviously terrified.
“Don’t I know you?” he addressed Coutts with that
control back in his voice, making it deep and commanding.
“I thought perhaps you would.” Coutts pulled up a saddle and a blanket, and
sat down opposite his ‘guest’. “I’m Jerry Coutts. I got myself a job on your Pa’s ranch some
years back along as a horse breaker.”
“I remember.” Adam nodded. “You were good at the
job. We were sorry to see you go.”
“Wal, as a job it was not too bad. Fact is, I don’t take kindly to working for
folk. Prefer it if they work for me.”
“So I see,” Adam remarked quietly, lowering his eyes
and raising the cup to his mouth again in an obvious movement designed to
convey to Coutts that he did not think much of the current arrangement.
“My cousins and I are on a kind of exploratory
mining expedition,” Coutts drawled in a leisurely manner.
“Mining?
Well, there are quite a few abandoned mines in this area. No doubt the town’s Assay Office could help
you out there.”
“No doubt, but the fact is that we thought you would
be more help to us than they could be.” Coutts leaned forward. “Does the name
Peter Kane mean anything to you?”
Adam raised his near black eyes and fixed them upon the
lean face of his antagonist. He drew in
a deep breath, and released it slowly.
The pain in his shoulder had already eased considerably, but his arm had
obviously been more severely damaged in the fall. He wondered briefly where Sport had gone and hoped
fervently that the beast was safe, and unharmed. He realised that Coutts was still waiting for
a reply and nodded slowly.
“Yes, I knew Kane.”
“My sister told me how you brought Kane through the
desert. Dragged him along on a travois,
even when he was dead. Buried him in the
desert, didn’t you?”
“No.” Adam
shook his head and frowned thoughtfully.
He sighed and looked over at the boy. “What’s the boy here for?”
“Never mind him,” Coutts voice snapped, a hard edge
to the words. Adam took heed of the
warning and drew back from the subject.
His own mind returned to the time he had regained consciousness in Salt
Flats, and how Ben had told him about their search for him, and how they had
found him, and Kane.
“My father and brothers buried Kane.” Adam drained
the cup and set it down. “I don’t know where exactly. Are you kin to him?”
“No.”
“Then why the interest?”
“Because I knew him for a while. Met him several times in Salt Flats as a
matter of fact. He used to tell us
about his mine, and that it had a vein running through it that was going to
yield another Comstock, he said.”
“There ain’t no gold in that mine.”
“Whaddya say?”
“I said, there ain’t no gold in that mine.” Adam
looked at Coutts severely. His dark eyes
stared straight into Jerry’s, and he raised one dark eyebrow as though daring
the man to contradict him.
“Kane always had a pouch of gold on him. Said it was just the beginnings of what was
to come.”
“He was lying.” Adam’s voice held the slightest hint
of scorn. “He was lying through his
teeth, like he always did.”
“Wal, one time my sister got hold of some of that
gold. We had it assayed, and the guy in
the office told us it was the purest gold he had seen in years.”
“Maybe so.
Maybe not.” Adam shrugged and felt a measure of relief in being able to
do so. The fear that his shoulder was
broken or dislocated had been immense, but at least that was one worry less at
present. He looked over at the boy who
appeared to have fallen asleep.
“What do you know about that mine, anyhow?” Larry Parks demanded. He scowled darkly at Adam, whilst all the
time chomping on some meat he had torn from the roasted rabbit.
“More than you know,” Adam replied, and he nodded
slowly. “More than you know,” he repeated, giving the statement an entirely
different turn of phrase. He leaned
forward. “Look here, Coutts, when I knew you back along, you struck me as a
fairly decent kind of man. You’re no
fool either, so why not just accept the facts as I’m telling you them.”
Coutts rubbed his chin thoughtfully, and stared at
the dying flames of the fire as he turned his mind back to the time he had
worked on the Ponderosa. He had earned a
fair wage and been treated like all the Ponderosa hands, as though they were
close friends to the family. He had
liked the three boys too, because they had not been afraid of hard work and had
rubbed along with the men, just like any other ranch hand would be expected to
do.
“Tell me what the facts are then, Cartwright. Ain’t no point in us believing there ain’t no
gold thar jest because it’s you telling it.
Could be you have aims to git it fer yourself, fer all we know.”
Adam nodded, that was, after all, fair comment. He glanced at the three of them and could
sense their tension. This hope of
finding a rich vein of gold had kept them going through the years, that much
was obvious. He just hoped that the
disappointment would not lead to the messenger being shot!
“Just over two years ago, I met up with Peter Kane
at his mine. I actually stumbled upon him by accident. At the time I thought it was a God-send as
it saved my life, or rather, his hospitality, did.” He glanced at the empty mug
and sighed and flicked his eyes over at Larry, who immediately picked it up and
refilled it. “To repay Kane’s
‘kindness’ I agreed to help in the mine for three days. I shored it up, put in new joists, used
explosives to make some new exploratory avenues, and in all that time, I didn’t
come across a single vein of gold. At
the end of the three days, Kane forced me to stay. I became, effectively, his prisoner.”
“How come?”
Frank demanded.
“Well, Kane was a bitter man. Disappointment and failure leave their mark
on a man after twenty odd years of seeking money, fame and fortune. It twisted something inside of him and
distorted any view to the future that he could possibly have had. He knew there was no gold, but he wanted –,”
Adam paused, what had Kane wanted?
Perhaps the whole issue of what had happened was all due to what Kane
really wanted. Adam shrugged and
drained his second mug of coffee dry. “He wanted to die. Maybe had he been alone, he would have shot
his own brains out, but I came along, so he played his games with me, hoping I
could be goaded into doing the job for him.”
“So what happened?
Did you kill him?” Frank wiped his mouth free of grease from the
rabbit’s flesh and narrowed his eyes. “Did you?”
“We fought.
I ran and left him but he called after me. He fell and struck his head upon a rock as I
was walking back to him. I…I made a
travois from the remnants of his camp and put him upon it, but I can’t remember
whether he was alive or dead. I can’t
remember anything really, until my father and brothers came and found us.”
His voice trailed away into silence. He could remember falling into his father’s
arms, and the way his father had enfolded him close to his breast and held him
so tightly. He remembered the smell of
him, and the sweat and heat on him, and the familiar strong beat of his
father’s heart as he had sobbed himself into unconsciousness.
“Is that the truth?” Coutts said in a bland, matter
of fact way, whilst his eyes remained fixed on the younger man’s face. Adam nodded, and bowed his head. Even the memory of that time exhausted him.
“There ain’t no reason for us to believe all that
talk.” Larry’s voice was raised and rang out sharply. “How’d we know he ain’t
wanting to stop us getting to Kane’s fortune?
He could know where Kane’s stashed it away.”
“That’s right, Jerry. Why should we believe him?” Frank flung the
remainder of the meat clinging to the bone into the fire, it spluttered as the
grease hit the hot embers.
“I’ve never known a Cartwright lie yet,” Coutts said
in a solemn voice, whilst his eyes remained fixed on Adam’s face. He was a man of some sense, some
discernment, and could see from the expression that something terrible had
happened to him during that last day at Kane’s mine. He sighed deeply, stood up, and walked over
to the fire, whereupon he poured himself some coffee and quietly began to drink
it.
He had pinned his hopes on finding that mine, and
the gold that Kane had said was there.
How many years had it been? At
least three, maybe even four. His
shoulders sagged and he glanced over his shoulder at the man in black and
frowned.
“Is that the God’s honest truth, Cartwright?”
Adam nodded. “Yes.”
“You didn’t see no silver? Copper?”
“There was nothing to see. Only rock.”
Coutts nodded slowly and chewed on the inner part of
his cheek whilst he stared down at the flames.
The veneer of kindliness was too shallow for him to withstand this kind
of set back. He threw the coffee and
cup into the fire and stalked away to the rocks.
Chapter 9
“Here.
You’ll need this.”
Adam glanced up as Larry Parks addressed him in a
voice that could only be termed as gentle.
In amazement, Adam realised that the man was holding some linen and a
mug of water, and even as he watched him, Larry Parks squatted in front of him
and reached out to take hold of the injured arm.
“I’m sorry about kicking you earlier,” Parks
mumbled, tearing back the sleeve of Adam’s shirt to expose the injury to the
full light of the moon. He leaned
forward to look at it more closely. “I always swore that I wouldn’t do anything
like that, jest ‘cos I was livin’ with people worse’n animals didn’t mean that
I had to behave like ‘em, and then, the first chance I git to prove myself a
decent human bein’ I go and kick a man when he’s down.” He began to clean out the wounds carefully,
but even so the action made Adam bite hard on his lip, although several
involuntary gasps slipped through and he writhed a little and clenched his
right hand into a fist once or twice.
There were two deep gashes torn in the flesh of the
arm itself. Had Paul Kay been attending
to them it would have warranted needle and thread to bind the edges together,
and the encouraging counsel that they would leave scars. As Adam watched Parks clean and bind up the
wounds, he wondered whether or not they would ever heal properly, with or
without scarring his arm for life. Parks
frowned in concentration and continued with his monologue as he worked, gently
dabbing here and there as he spoke.
“Me and Frank and Jerry always went around together,
even as kids. Our brothers never wanted
us around, so we went our own way and got into trouble as kids do. Guess if our folks had bin interested enough
in us, then things might’ve straightened out but…” He shrugged as though it hardly mattered now,
although it was obvious that at one time, it had mattered very much. “Then Jerry got hisself into big trouble and
went his own way for a while. Guess that
was about the time he was at your place, some years back.” He began to tighten the linen around the
injured arm. “Anyhows, next time we meet
up, Frank and me was already in the county jail for armed robbery. That was where I became the medical orderly.”
He looked up at Adam with a light in his eyes, a light that bespoke pride and
self respect, and Adam realised that the wretched man must have struggled
against many and much to have accomplished such a privileged ranking in the
prison.
“How long did you get?”
“Six years.
Guess if they catch up with us this time round, we’ll probably
hang.” Parks sighed and shook his head.
“Didn’t think on thet when Jerry said about the Bank in Eastgate, but when we
broke outta jail I thought it was to get to Kane’s mine.”
“Then why go to Eastgate in the first place if…”
“Jerry said we needed a stake, and his sister told
us when there was going to be a big amount of money at the bank for a payroll
to the big mining businesses in the area.
Jerry said…”
“Don’t you ever get to think for yourselves, or is
it always left to Jerry?” Adam flexed
his fingers, and shuddered as pain rippled down into his wrist, causing the
fingers to curl involuntarily into the palm of his hand.
“Guess we jest git back into old habits, Jerry was
always the one to take the lead.” Larry frowned. “Sorry if that hurts, but it’s
jest about the best I kin do fer now.”
Adam nodded, and pulled the remnant of sleeve away
from the shirt and gave it to Parks, who fashioned it into a reasonable
sling. Over Parks’ shoulder Adam was
able to see the boy, still sleeping, which prompted him to ask why the boy was
with them.
“Is the boy anything to do with any of you?” he
asked casually. “Seems rather odd to see him here, in this kind of situation.”
“Nah.” Parks shook his head. “Jerry knew him from
some time back. He’s the son of a local
miner around here, who knew Kane. Shot
his wife and partner and got put away for five years. He broke out with us and was going to take
us to the mine, but he went back on the deal.
So Jerry thought if we took his kid then he’d as sure as anything want
him back safe.” He glanced over his
shoulder and hurriedly stood up. “Hope the arm heals alright, but I can’t
promise much.”
With those words he walked back to the campfire, and
began to build it up in order to gain better warmth during what was going to be
a cold night. The moon slid behind some
clouds, and the campsite was plunged into momentary darkness.
Adam leaned back against the rocks and nursed his
injured arm against his chest. The
wounds were throbbing as a result of being cleaned and probed into by
Parks. Intermittent stabs of red hot
agony rippled down into his fingers, or up around his elbow and into his
shoulder. He was thinking that the pain
was rather like soldier ants biting into his flesh, when he realised that someone
was close by, and he opened his eyes to find himself face to face with the boy.
“I’m sorry, mister.
It was all my fault you got yerself hurt and into trouble,” the boy
whispered, and he edged closer, as close as he possibly could get, as though
the proximity of their bodies would afford both of them a greater chance of
survival.
“Well, I rather think I was heading for trouble
anyway, whether you were here or not,” Adam said quietly.
The boy said nothing in reply but sat in silence,
his head bowed. Adam reached out, put his
finger beneath the boy’s chin, and raised his head up so that he could look
into the young face. He had thought the
boy was at least ten, but on closer inspection he realised that Daniel Johnson
could have been no older than eight years.
The red rimmed eyelids were evidence to the fact that the boy had cried
a lot during the past hours, and Adam frowned at the thought that some form of
cruelty had been meted out to the boy.
“Are you alright?
They’ve not treated you too badly, have they?”
“No, I guess not.
Not really. Larry is okay I
suppose, but Jerry and Frank hit me sometimes.
I want to go home, mister, that’s all.
But they said my pa was out of prison now and would be meeting us here,
but then they said that they didn’t have to wait for him now ‘cos they got you
instead.”
“How do you mean?
They’ve got me for what?”
“To take them to the mine. My pa was going to take ‘em to the mine, but
now they won’t wait for him, they’ll jest git you to take ‘em. That’ll mean that my pa won’t find me here,
if they take me with you all.”
Adam nodded, it all made sense in some crazy fashion
and fitted in with what Larry had already said earlier. He put a gentle hand on the boy’s shoulder
and smiled kindly.
“Look, it’s been a long day for you. Why not sleep now and see what tomorrow
brings, huh? Could be that your pa is
not so far away anyhow, and you’ll see him sooner than you think.”
“Do you reckon, mister?” The boy’s eyes lit up like
beacons, then the light faded. “But what if they shoot him?”
“I don’t think they will,” Adam assured him, putting
a little pressure to his grip on the boy’s shoulder and drawing him closer.
“Settle down and sleep.”
Chapter 10
Clara Morgan opened the door slowly whilst she
pulled the shawl closer around her shoulders, for the early morning caller had
arrived before she had had time to dress for the day. Her nightgown billowed out as the fresh
morning breezes caught beneath the hem, and she blinked up against the brightness
of the sun.
“’Morning, Missus Morgan.” Sheriff Cutter touched
the brim of his hat and acknowledged her with a nod of his head. “I jest came
to see Luke for a moment.”
“Luke isn’t here,” she said quietly, and looked
straight into the sheriff’s blood shot eyes.
She saw the jaw line tighten slightly before the wide mouth relaxed into
a smile.
“Fact is, ma’am, I already knew that as I heard tell
he had left town earlier.” He watched her face, and noticed the crinkling of
her brow, and the widening of the pupils of her eyes. “I heard tell he didn’t leave on his own
either.”
“He’s gone to find Danny, seeing as you seem to have
forgotten all about him.” Her voice was harsh with accusation, although he knew
it was a woman’s ploy to try and deflect the subject he had raised by his previous
comment.
“I admit I’ve not pursued that matter as quick as
you may have wished, but the fact is, I lost several men yesterday, which means
some wimmin lost a husband or a son, and things like that need sortin’
too.”
They glared at one another for a second or two, but
she was the more fearful in her attempt to guard her secret, so she remained
silent, her hand on the door ready to close it as soon as she could without
raising more suspicion.
“You did hear that Obadiah Johnson broke out of
jail, didn’t you?” he lowered his voice in a conspiratorial manner, although
there was no reason, for there was no other house near enough to hear their
conversation.
“Yes, I heard.”
“And you know that harbouring a runaway convict is a
breach of law, don’t you?”
“Of course.”
“So, if Johnson were to come on by your place, you’d
know the sensible thing to do would be to notify me right away, wouldn’t you?”
She looked him squarely in the eyes, forcing her
features to remain unchanged and acknowledged that she would, of course she
would.
“And Luke wouldn’t dream of riding off on his own
with a convict now, would he?”
“What do you mean, Sheriff?” Her eyes narrowed and she glanced nervously
over the man’s shoulder as though desperate for the conversation to end.
“I mean, if by chance, Johnson had come here, Luke
would not be foolish enough to trust him, and go off on his own with him on
some stupid attempt to find the boy, would he?”
She had never been a good liar. Luke always said she was as transparent as glass. Her face reddened and her lips thinned, and
she pushed against the door to close it, but the sheriff’s big hand gripped the
edge of the door and prevented her from doing so. He frowned and looked at her anxiously.
“Where are they headed? Don’t try and lie, Ma’am, they were seen
leaving here together.”
She glanced away with a sigh and shook her head,
then looked up at Cutter and realised that there was genuine concern in his
eyes as he watched her, and she nodded slowly.
“Danny is Obadiah’s son too,” she said quietly. “All
he has left in the world. He had to get
the boy safe…”
“Safe?”
“The other three men took Danny to force Johnny, I
mean Obadiah, to lead them to a mine they’ve been planning on taking over for
years. Obadiah is the only one who knows
how to reach it, but he wouldn’t help them so they took Danny!”
“It’s a pity you didn’t let me know yesterday.”
“You’re the law.
We didn’t know if you would believe him, if you would help at all. It was more than he could bear, the thought
of being caught and put back in jail and never knowing if Danny were safe back
with us.”
“Where are they headed, ma’am? Don’t worry, I aim to help where I can, it’s
just that I don’t think they realise what kind of men they are up against. They’ve already killed three men…that
youngster at the bank didn’t stand a chance…”
“I know, I was there,” she whispered, and shrugged
the shawl closer about her shoulders.
“Then tell me where Luke and Johnson were headed.”
“Signal Rock.
I heard Johnny saying that the mine was about 30 to 40 miles south from
there.” She lowered her eyes, disappointed that she had betrayed their trust,
but relieved also that they were going to get unexpected and much needed help.
“I wasn’t sheriff here at the time Johnson was on
trial, ma’am, but a man who can kill his wife and friend doesn’t really seem a
very trustable kinda man, if you get my understanding.”
“He only got five years imprisonment, Sheriff, he
could have been hanged.”
“Perhaps he should have been,” came the reply, and
the sheriff turned, paused, and touched his hat politely. Then he walked away, back to the hitching
rail where his horse was nodding over the water trough wishing it were back in
its stall enjoying its breakfast oats.
She watched him wheel the horse around and ride
slowly away, and with a long drawn out sigh she closed the door and dropped the
bar across it. Once inside she found
that her legs had weakened, and she pulled away a chair and sat down upon it
hurriedly, before sinking her face into her hands in despair.
Chapter 11
Horses are gregarious creatures by nature. Once he had overcome his shock at being
stung by the bullet across his backside, and tossing off his rider, Sport took himself
off to get a long cooling drink from the pool at Signal Rock. The scent of other horses was a further
enticement to the powerful beast, so it was not surprising that when morning
dawned, Sport was to be found grazing on the grass close to the other horses.
“Seems you can’t get rid of a good horse,” Larry
Parks commented, as he led the animal in to the camp. “Looks like you won’t
have to walk to Kane’s mine after all.” He smiled in an attempt to put humour
into the remark, but it did little to assuage Adam’s concern as to just what
Coutts intended to do with him.
As it was, he stroked Sports soft velvety nose and
tried to think of what to do to get himself and the boy out of the situation
they were in. Frank Parks was on guard
duty, and there was no doubt about the fact that his own personal insecurities
made him over efficient when assignments were handed down to him. Just like his brother, he was cowed by his
cousin. Coutts’ aggressive nature,
bullying attitude, and history of brutality in and out of prison, coupled with
the fact that the two brothers had grown up with him as their role model, made
it a relationship carved, apparently, in stone.
The younger Parks brother stroked Sport’s neck and
then looked at Adam thoughtfully.
“This is a good bit of horse flesh. Powerful built as well.”
“He is.”
“I’d give anything to have a horse like this
one.” Larry sighed and ran his hand over
the horse’s long legs.
Adam said nothing. It went without saying that he
understood the implication of Larry’s comments but he also knew that if he had
any chance of leaving them behind, it would need Sport’s powerful legs to get
him out. He also knew that the chances
of slipping away unnoticed with Frank Parks always on the lookout were about a
hundred to one.
“How’s the arm?”
Parks asked, realising that his tentative hints about Sport were being
ignored.
“Painful.”
“Here, let me see.” He stepped forward to examine
the injured arm. Adam had a split second
of time to seize him and use him as a shield to cover his escape, and as he
moved forward, so the metal barrel of a revolver stabbed into his spine and
reminded him that he was under closer surveillance than he had first
imagined.
He half turned and saw Coutts looking at him, with a
leer on his lips that reminded him of a wolf he had once hunted down.
“Thanks for getting my horse for me,” he said
quietly in an attempt to diffuse the situation, for it was more than obvious
that Coutts had noticed the self same opportunity for escape that Adam had been
about to venture upon. “I take it we are
still going to take that trip to Kane’s mine?”
“That’s right.”
“Even though there’s no gold there?”
“I ain’t inclined to jest take your word for
it. I prefer to see things fer myself.”
Adam squinted up at the sun and narrowed his eyes,
before looking once again at Coutts. He
nodded slowly. The previous evenings
charade of friendship was over. With the
morning sun Jeremiah Coutts had arisen with no intentions of showing the world
his humane side – if he could have found it!
Adam realised that within seconds of seeing the man’s body language
towards him and he wondered how long it would take the two Parks brothers to
adapt the same attitude.
“You’d best fill every canteen with water because
there isn’t any where we’re going.
We’ve a long ride ahead, about thirty to forty miles due south of here.”
Jerry Coutts nodded and gave Adam a cool lingering
look, so filled with hatred that Adam wondered what he had ever done to the man
to deserve such loathing from him. He
sighed with the acceptance of facts.
Some people did not need a reason to hate. Coutts was one of those kind of people. He took Sport’s reins and led him to the
water, glancing along the way at the boy.
“Are you all right, boy?”
“I want my pa,” Daniel replied with a catch in his
throat. “They said he was going to come
here and I’d see him, but he ain’t here and they’re going away.”
Adam looked over at Coutts and the Parks brothers,
then at Daniel, and he put a gentle hand on the boy’s shoulder.
“Look, sooner or later there’s going to be a chance
for us to get away from them and…”
“No talking, you two. Daniel, get over here.” Coutts voice broke
through with the harshness of a whip lash cutting flesh.
“I want my pa!” the boy cried in a high pitched
voice full of misery, and he side stepped to cling to Adam’s leg. “Take me with
you, mister, I don’t want to go with them.
Can I ride with you? Don’t let them take me with them, please, don’t let
them take me.”
“Daniel, I…” Adam’s words were knocked out of his
mouth as Frank Parks slammed past him, hitting against his shoulder and injured
arm with the brutal force of a bull charging a red painted post.
“Come here, you young varmint!” Frank growled, as he grabbed the boy by the
collar of his shirt and bodily lifted him off his feet. The child yelled, his feet gyrating wildly
and his hands flailing uselessly in the air.
Instinctively Adam hurled himself at the wretched
man. For as long as he could remember,
Adam had had to protect those younger and more vulnerable that himself, and it
was second nature to him now to launch himself forward to protect the boy. Frank was caught wrong footed and stumbled
backwards, releasing the boy, who scampered hurriedly away, only to be snatched
up by Larry Parks some little distance further along.
Over and over rolled Frank and Adam, each of them
seeking some means of supremacy over the other, and at the same time an
opportunity of freeing themselves from the tangle of legs and arms that
currently prevailed. Disadvantaged due
to his injured arm, Adam landed a few punches and was pulling himself away when
Coutts ended the matter by clubbing him across the temple with his gun.
“This guy’s trouble, Jerry.” Frank scrambled to his feet,
panting heavily, and rubbing dust from his face and eyes. “Why don’t ya jest
git rid of him fer good?”
Jerry Coutts surveyed his cousin with a long
lingering look of contempt, and then gave a thin smile.
“You jest ain’t thought it out, have you, Frank?” He
slipped the gun into its holster and leaned down to pull Adam over onto his
back. “Could be that what he says about
Kane’s mine is true, and there ain’t no gold thar after all. Have you wondered what we’re gonna do then?”
“Sure thar’s gold thar, Jerry. Kane told ya so, didn’t he?” Larry frowned
over at his cousin and brother, whilst struggling to retain hold of the
squirming boy.
“Kane was crazy, everyone knew thet,” Jerry said
coldly. “So, if we don’t find gold in thet mine, then we git it from someplace
else.”
“Another bank raid, you mean?” Frank suggested.
“No, stupid.”
His cousin shook his head and sighed, and then nudged Adam’s shoulder
with his foot. “This, gentlemen, could be our gold mine.”
“Him?” both brothers exclaimed.
“Adam Cartwright.” Jerry smiled and looked up at the
sky. “Yes, that’s right, boys, we could be looking at the man who will make our
fortunes. Now, git those canteens
filled with water. We’ve some ways to
go yet.”
Chapter 12
Adam was stiff when he regained consciousness. He rubbed his head, and came away with blood
on his fingertips. Just for a moment he
did not risk moving as he felt light headed and dizzy. As he looked around the camp, all he could
see were vague moving shadows within shadows, and he wondered fleetingly
whether or not he was still asleep.
Gradually his sight grew clearer and he could see that preparations to
leave camp were well under way. The boy
was sitting slumped in the saddle of Larry’s horse.
It was a struggle to get to his feet. Thankfully Sport was not standing too far
away, and he was able to reach him without falling down again. He leaned against the animal’s side for a
fraction of a minute, and then slowly clambered into the saddle. He brushed away the blood that was
trickling down the side of his face, and took the reins. It was then he realised how difficult it was
to move the fingers of his injured arm.
Looking at them he saw that they were swollen, and the bruising that was
visible on his arm now extended to his hand.
It’s just bruising, he told himself, as he took a firmer grip of the
reins in his right hand and turned Sport’s head away from Signal Rock, and in
the direction of Kane’s Mine.
He could sense them behind him. For an instant he wondered about leading
them back to town via a track that would take them through the wilderness, but
could he afford to take the chance with the boy there? He was contemplating such a solution to the
problem, when Coutts rode up beside him.
“Now then, Adam Cartwright, you wouldn’t be thinking
of doing anything stupid now, would you?”
“Such as?” He
didn’t move his head, but stared straight ahead. The cool sweet air of the water hole at
Signal Rock was being replaced by the heat and arid heaviness of the wilderness.
“Such as taking us someplace else other than Kane’s
Mine, or just leading us into the desert and losing us?”
“You don’t trust me?” Adams lip curled as he spoke
the words in total contempt.
“Now I know that you’re your daddy’s cleverest boy…”
“I wouldn’t say that myself,” Adam retorted calmly.
“Ah, but you’re the one that went to college and got
all that education, ain’t’cha?” Jerry
Coutts smiled, and darted a look at the younger man’s face. He could tell just
by that one glance that the man was suffering.
The blood was already drying and congealing on his temple area, and he
held his body in such a way as to favour the injured side as best he
could. Coutts passed his tongue over
his teeth and chuckled to himself. “College ain’t gonna do you much good now,
is it?” he snickered.
Adam said nothing.
He kept his eyes straight ahead and rode on towards Kane’s Mine. There was no point in trying to avoid
it. The inevitable had to be faced. Perhaps this was the best way to end it all,
and the consequences could take care of themselves.
“You don’t know what it’s like, being poor.” Coutts said, his voice deepening. “You and your brothers always been so well
off, so rich. Had all that land, didn’t
ya? Must be something, when you rich boys
have to live rough like we have to. ‘Cept this is how we have to live all our
lives long. We ain’t never knowed what
it’s like to have money a-jingling in our pockets always, and able to go in and
buy good blood stock like that ‘un.” He indicated Sport with a nod of the head.
Adam raised his hand and gingerly touched the
congealing mess of blood from his brow.
He wondered just how much damage he had actually taken. He shook his head, in an effort to remove the
sound of the man’s voice, which jarred on his senses. Coutts continued to speak, using the time he
had to spit out his bile and his covetous contempt for those who had what he
himself longed to possess.
“I see’d how you boys lived high on the hog in that
big house of your’n. Food for the taking,
and that boy running around and cooking for you an’ all, like as if he were
your paid servant. You should live the
way me and my cousins done, eating anything that moved rather than starve,
seeing our folks worn thin with hunger and disease. No work, no money, more kids being born, more
mouths to feed and nothing there to feed ‘em with.”
Adam wiped the perspiration from his upper lip, and
from his brow. He was becoming
feverish, and the voice was becoming satanic in its goading. He forced his eyes to remain fixed on the
horizon.
“Then going to school, when there was one…no shoes
to wear, clothes jest rags and handed down from who knew who….and other kids
starin’ and gawpin’ all the time. Once
yer kin write yer name and read it there ain’t no point in goin’ no more…but
that ain’t the way with you rich kids, is it?
You git fancy books to write in and read, and you study and git to
college. Ya don’t sit thar bein’ made
to feel stupid and ignorant jest ‘cos yore poor and hungry.”
Coutts pulled a wad of tobacco from his pocket and
snapped off a bite, which he mangled between his stumps of teeth, and for some
while they could ride in silence. He
spat a stream of tobacco stained saliva into a dried out shrub.
“I seen those horses of your’n, there on the
Ponderosa. Cost a fine lot of money
each and every one I dares say. Wonder
how much a Cartwright would cost? What
do you reckon, Cartwright, how much would your daddy pay for you to git home
alive and whole, huh?”
He cast a quick look at Adam, and could tell from
the rigidity of the man’s back that the point had struck home. He chewed on his wad of tobacco a little
while to let his companion dwell on the matter a little.
“Now, take Larry fer instance.” He glanced over his
shoulder where Larry and Frank rode together, with the boy astride the saddle
in front of Larry. “If’n he’d had an education like your’n, he could have bin a
nurse, or better still, a real doctor.
But he didn’t have the breaks like you and your brothers, he didn’t have
the chances that came your way.”
“Because he had you as a cousin, that’s why!” Adam
growled.
“Now, now, that jest ain’t the right way to be
talkin’ is it? Not considering the way
things are jest now an’ all. You want
to be polite, boy, and civil. If Larry
had had a rich daddy like your’n, he’d have got the breaks, gone to college,
and got to be a doctor. That way he’d
have bin able to make his gifts profitable.”
“Is that all that matters to you, making a
profit?” Adam looked at Coutts with
barely concealed contempt, before resuming his steady surveillance of the
horizon.
“When you ain’t had money, boy, that’s the only way
you kin think,” Coutts replied coldly.
Adam shook his head slightly. The realisation that
man’s meanness and shortsightedness could only see money as a measure of
success in life, dismayed him. He
glanced at Coutts and saw the rigidity in the man’s profile, the bitter line of
hatred for those who had benefited from life whilst he had not.
“So your parents were poor?” he ventured to ask
eventually. “Your ma and pa?”
“Poor ain’t the word. She did as well as she could, but was glad
enough when I took off from home, same as Frank and Larry’s ma and pa were, I
guess. Fewer mouths to feed,” Coutts
replied.
“But you had a ma,” Adam said quietly, staring ahead
of him and thinking of the sepia coloured portrait of the dark haired woman in
the silver frame, that he always had beside his bed.
“Sure, everyone has a ma!” Coutts sneered.
“My ma died when I was born. My pa and I were on our own, until he met
Inger. I was five then.”
Coutts opened his mouth and then resolutely closed
it. He looked over at Adam, and then
returned his gaze to the far off mountains that were slowly drawing closer.
“Yeah, but your pa was rich. Money cushions misery, thet’s what my ma used
to say, when she saw folks going by in their carriages an’ such.”
“When I was three years old my Pa and I were
travelling through Indian territory. The
nearest homestead was through Indian land, and they were picking off white folk
like ticks from the hide of a dog. Our
wagon made too clear a trail, so Pa decided it was best for us to go down river
on a raft. It took nearly a week to
make that raft. He tied me on a long
length of rope to a tree, so’s I’d not fall into the water while he was working
on the raft. I was hungry. I got to being so hungry that I’d go down to
the water to chew the reeds until I was sick.
Sometimes I was able to catch a fish, or a frog, or something that crept
or crawled through the mud.”
He paused, and a slight frown furrowed his
brow. How odd to remember that now, here
in this arid dry land.
“Go on,” Coutts urged.
“When it was time for him to rest up, or when it was
nightfall, Pa would hide the raft and everything in the shrubs and bushes, just
in case there was any Indian scout prowling near. One evening they came down to the
river. We heard them whispering
together. Pa picked me up and waded into
the water with me, and put his hand over my mouth and whispered to me that I
was not to move, nor make a sound. He
pulled the boughs over us and we stayed there for what seemed hours, as they
smoked their pipes and talked and laughed.
I must have fallen asleep in my father’s arms, and my weight must have
been intolerable after a while, but he never let me fall for an instant. Just stood there in the water hour after
hour, waiting and praying for them to go.”
Adam closed his eyes; the horizon was melting into a
faded waving line of movement. It was with relief, that upon opening his eyes
again, the mountains rushed into view, clear and beckoning.
“When they had gone, Pa secured me to a barrel on
the raft and we set off down the river.
When we finally reached the settlement, the homesteaders saw our raft
and waded in and helped us ashore. Some
woman took me to her home and I never saw Pa for a while. He’d been taken ill from hunger, and
exhaustion. I know what it’s like to
be hungry, Mr. Coutts. To know what it
feels like to have your backbone cleave to your belly. So does my Pa, and so does Hoss.”
“Yeah, but he struck it rich didn’t he?”
“Money doesn’t prevent misery, Mr. Coutts. When my Pa married Inger, I guess that was
when we thought we were really rich. I
had a ma, and then I had a brother. And
then she was killed, right before our eyes.
That was real poverty, a real stripping off down to the bone, Mr.
Coutts. Seeing someone like Inger die
in your father’s arms, and holding her son in my arms to witness it.”
Coutts spat a stream of tobacco juice into the
dust. Adam averted his eyes and stared
at the mountain ridge as it drew closer.
Within its confines was nestled the mine that had haunted his dreams,
and those of his companions, for months now.
He chewed on his bottom lip, as he pondered over the things he had
talked about to Coutts, things that had aroused memories from long ago that he
had suppressed, or had he?
“Wal, whaddya think?” Coutts rough voice broke into
his reverie, and he was forced to look briefly at him, before shrugging and
asking him what he meant exactly. “Whaddya think about your pa? Reckon he’ll pay up to git you back whole
and alive?”
“My father has never kept it a secret that his sons
mean more to him than the Ponderosa, Mr. Coutts.” Adam’s voice was even but it held a trace of
sarcasm, and he drew a deep breath.
Sure, Ben would give every inch of the Ponderosa away to save any one of
his sons, but the four of them would give no quarter in the attempt to get
every inch back!
“Now, I like that,” Coutts said approvingly, and
spat another stream of juice into the dirt.
“You’re leaving a fine trail for anyone to follow,”
Adam remarked quietly “Who is it for?
Danny’s father? The sheriff?”
Coutts frowned, he had not given a thought to the
tell tale signs he was giving away so openly.
He said nothing, merely scowled.
“What about Danny’s father anyway? I thought you were supposed to be waiting for
him at Signal Rock. Couldn’t you have
let the boy go back home, instead of dragging him to Kane’s mine?”
“What I intend to do with that boy is none of your
affair, Cartwright. Jest keep your nose
outta my business!”
“Being dragged along with you makes it my business,”
Adam replied coolly.
For a moment or two they rode in silence, before
Coutts rather abruptly turned his horse around and joined ranks with his
cousins, leaving Adam time on his own to lead them to their destination in
peace.
But in his mind there was no peace. Thoughts trickled back to home and the last
few weeks that he had spent with his family.
His anger had precipated retaliatory anger from Joseph, which had
brought out the defensive nature in Hoss to protect the younger sibling.
Arguments raged over their heads. Ben had shouted and bellowed for peace and
quiet. Hoss had threatened to move out
and take a room at Widow Hawkins for some good nights’ sleeping. Joe had raked out years of resentment at what
he had considered to be favouritism on Ben’s part for Adam, whilst Adam had
mocked his youngest sibling for the fact that he was the only one of the three
of them that had never experienced the hardships and dangers that had
culminated in the founding of The Ponderosa.
They went to their beds angry and had turbulent
dreams. Adam found himself locked in the
treadmill of the nightmares relating to Kane’s mine, and the mental games that
Kane had played. He had woken up taut
and tense and as angry as ever, until the morning when Hoss had threatened to
knock some sense into his granite Yankee head
“Try it” Adam had mocked, raising his chin
challengingly.
“Don’t tempt me, Adam, you know I will,
if’n I feel I have to.”
Adam had shaken his head defiantly, and then, as he
had passed by his brother to mount Sport, he had elbowed Hoss out of the way in
a manner that was both arrogant and unnecessary. Hoss had grabbed him by the arm and turned
him around to face him. His genial face
was twisted into a distressful anger that Adam could not recall having seen for
many a year.
“Why don’t you jest ride outta here, Adam, and take
whatever poison there is in you, with you.
Go and ride it outta your system an find yourself agin, becos, by
thunder, I ain’t sure myself jest who you are anymore. The worse part of it is, I don’t think you
know either.
Their eyes had locked for some seconds, and then he
had pushed his brother’s arm away.
“I might just do that too,” he had growled, his deep
voice slightly deeper than usual.
“Good.” Joe’s
light voice had said behind them “That’ll give us all a break.”
“You mean, it’ll give me a break – from you.” Adam
had snapped back, his voice as taut as a bowstring. He pushed Joe out of his way as he stalked
out of the stable, pulling Sport along behind him.
He sighed now at the memory of that exchange. He had not seen either of his brothers since
then. He had succeeded in convincing
himself that neither of them missed him anyway, neither of them could be bothered
to spend time worrying about him, and that both of them would dove tail into
place and become the perfect brothers for his father to guide and protect
through life.
Paul Kay had been right. When he had told Adam Cartwright that his
anger went back further than Kane’s torment, he had been right. Adam had spent so much time during the past
weeks going round and round events in his life, that he was now quite sure that
his anger was directed against himself, and his father.
Now all he had to work out was why.
Chapter 13
“Let’s move on.
Staying here gives me the creeps,” Obadiah muttered as he walked towards
his horse, whilst at the same time firmly screwing on the top of his canteen.
“We’ve only been here five minutes,” Luke protested,
wiping sweat from his brow. “We need a rest.
So do these animals.” He wiped
white foaming sweat from the neck of his horse, as it drank the cool water in
the pool at Signal Rock.
“The longer we wait here, the further along they
get. Once they get to the mountains,
they could lose themselves and never find their way out agin. They’ve got my boy …”
“You don’t have to remind me, Johnson.”
“Then what are you waiting for, Luke? You know they can’t find the mine without my
help. You know that was the reason they
took Danny?”
Luke Morgan glanced over at his companion and
frowned. It was obvious that the man was
half out of his mind with fear about what was going to happen to the boy. The big man heaved a sigh, and stroked the
neck of his horse once again.
“Look, Johnson, if we ride away from here now, these
horses are going to be no use to us, nor to Danny, when we need to get
back. From what you’ve told me, Kane’s
mine is in a position in those mountains that makes walking into hell a picnic. Just give the horses time to recover; we’ve
pushed them hard enough as it is.”
Johnson shook his head, threw his hat on the ground
and then, weary beyond all measure, sunk down upon a rock and buried his face
in his hands. With a sigh, he
eventually moved his hands away, and it was then that his eyes noticed the
stains upon the rocks. He leaned
forward a little and touched them with his fingertips. Blood.
“Someone’s been hurt here,” he cried. “It could have
been Danny.”
“And there again it might not have been Danny. Now, calm down. Let me see.” Luke hurried towards the rocks
and leaned forward. He, too, touched the
dried blood with his fingertips and surveyed it thoughtfully. “Before we scare ourselves witless, let’s
take a good look around and see if we can make sense of this. Try not to obscure prints that are already
here. I’ll go over yonder, whilst you
look around here.”
Obadiah grabbed Luke’s arm and looked up into the
man’s face. He could not find the words
to speak for fear had frozen his voice, but the look in his face was
sufficient. Luke put a reassuring hand
on the man’s shoulder, and walked away.
It didn’t take long to find the tracks of a man and
boy standing together, and evidence of a scuffle. As Luke walked along, he thought he could recognise
the print of a horse shoe here and there and, crouching lower, he peered at one
very clear print and nodded to himself.
The horse had put a lot of weight upon his hind legs to get lift off for
a launch forwards, and several paces along there was the first sign of blood,
and the print, rather mussed up, of something heavy having fallen upon the dust
strewn rock. Blood, dried black by the
sun, was splattered upon a rock.
Someone had been hurt and lain prostrate upon the injury for a
while. But that someone had not been a
child.
“What did you find?” he asked Obadiah upon joining
him at where a camp site had been dismantled only hours earlier.
“Not much.
Danny must have spent most of his time over there. Some smudged prints here.” He pointed to the
two locations. Obviously the most
important signs he was going to seek were those of his son. What he had found had calmed him, for where
Danny had been, had not been the area where any blood was found. “What about you?”
Luke scratched his chin through his stubble and
narrowed one eye as though having to weigh up his answer carefully. Then he leaned forwards and picked up
Obadiah’s hat and passed it to him.
“I think I recognised the print of a horse.”
“The print of a horse?” Obadiah shook his head. “How’s that going to
help us?”
“Look, I keep a record of all the horses I care for,
by their shoes for one thing. Most of
the prints are horses I’ve never treated nor known before, but this one...his
prints are fresher than the others so he must have ridden up here later. Danny must have thought it was you ‘cos
there’s his prints near by the horse.
They tried to make a run for it, but something happened. My guess is
that Coutts, or one of ‘em, shot the man off his horse. That man was hurt, but not enough to stop
them riding on to Kane’s mine with him.”
Johnson looked at Luke and then nodded. “The guy who
came to your place and got his horse last night. Of course! What’s his name? Cartwright?”
“That’s the one.
So they’ve got him and Danny. But
they’ll still be expecting you, Johnny.”
Obadiah gave Luke a brief smile of thanks for the
mention of his soubriquet, an indication of acceptance and friendship.
“Let’s wait half an hour. That’s enough time for the horses and us to
have rested enough.” Luke pulled open his saddle bags and produced a small sack
of food, provisions hastily prepared by Clara for the journey. “We’ll eat and then ride on. It isn’t as though they’re taking any trouble
to hide their tracks, is it?”
**********
Adam turned in the saddle and looked back. They were in the mountains now. The rocks were treacherous, even for a sure
footed beast such as Sport. He could see
the boy tense as he sat in front of Larry, gripping the pommel of the
saddle. It was easier to lose a trail
here. He remembered how long it had
taken his father and brothers to pick up his own, and then lost it again and
again. He sighed, wiped his brow and
pushed his hat to the back of his head.
He was in pain now. It was
becoming increasingly difficult to ride as though the pain was not affecting
him. His fingers were swollen so much
that he could no longer bend them, and the nails had long lost their pink
colour, as circulation was being slowly strangled from reaching them.
He fumbled for his water canteen and drew it to his
chest, holding it firmly in place by his injured arm while he screwed off the
lid. He was about to bring it to his
lips when Coutts rode up and pulled it away, spilling several drops of the
precious liquid as he did so.
“We can’t spare water.”
Adam stared at him.
For an instant it were as though he was transported back in time, and he
fully expected Coutts to turn the canteen up and pour out sand and laugh, as
Kane had laughed.
Their eyes locked, and between them mutual hatred
flashed like electricity. Coutts’ eyes
narrowed and flickered momentarily but he could not withstand the cold loathing
in the younger man’s brown eyes, and reluctantly passed back the canteen. For a mere second, Adam kept his eyes fixed
upon Coutts before raising the canteen to his lips, and letting the water
trickle delightfully down his parched throat.
Even as the water slid down he was aware of the
intensity of feeling from Coutts, aware also that now he had made another enemy
and that he would have to watch every word, every action he made from
thereon. He turned and glanced over
his shoulder and saw Danny, who was white faced, with eyes overlarge and dark shadowed. He turned Sport’s head, and urged the horse
back to where the boy sat in front of Larry.
Without a word he passed the canteen to the boy, and nodded to him as an
inducement for the boy to take the water.
“I never said…” Coutts hissed, but his words were
cut short by the look Larry cast at him, and he knew he could lose more than he
would gain if he pursued the subject. In
order to ease the situation and gain some mastery of what was left of his
leadership, he pulled his horse back and took a deep breath. “I never said we
need go without, common sense has to prevail.
Perhaps now we should have a rest, the horses could do with it.”
Larry eased down the boy, who was still hugging the
canteen close to his chest. Adam
dismounted and walked alongside the boy, until they found a flat rock upon
which to sit in the shadow of the higher cliffs. Soon they would reach Kane’s mine, and he
suddenly realised that instead of the dread he had been feeling for days, he
now felt eager to confront what he had once referred to as the black pit of his
despair.
“Feeling better?” He glanced sideways on at the boy,
anxious not to lose sight for too long of the three men.
“A bit.”
Danny passed back the canteen as he looked at Adam and frowned. “You got
hurt, I’m sorry.”
Adam tried to shrug it off, but the pain in his arm
had traveled back up to his shoulder, and the bruised area was beginning to
remind him that he was no lightweight, and falling on rocks was folly for a man
his size.
“What would you be doing now?” he asked quietly,
trying to flex his fingers and get some life back into them.
“School. I
had an essay to read for Mr. Pritchard.”
“What was it about?”
“It was about a day in a blacksmith’s workshop. We all had to write about our pa’s work as
though we were actually there, but as my pa –.”
He stopped and looked down at the rocks. “I wrote about Uncle Luke
instead. I wish I were there now.”
Adam sighed and placed a gentle hand on the boy’s
knee. “You’ll be back soon. You’ll be a
hero, and you can write an essay about your adventures with outlaws and such.”
“It doesn’t feel like an adventure,” he whispered
forlornly.
“No, adventures never do until afterwards. You’ll see, I promise.”
“Truly?”
“Cross my heart and spit in the wind truly.” Adam smiled
and picked up the canteen, then he poured some water on his handkerchief and
began to wipe away the blood from his brow and face. “You remind me of my youngest brother.”
“I do?”
“Sure you do.
When he was your age, he loved to go on adventures. Fact is he used to find adventures so easily,
that Pa thought it might be wise to lock him in his room for his own good.” He
grinned at the boy, who gave him a slow smile in return. “He’s still getting
into trouble even now.”
“Doesn’t he mind?”
“He does at the time, but afterwards, well,
afterwards is always the best part of an adventure.” He looked over at the three men, and sighed.
“I think we have to move on. It won’t
be long now, Danny, and it will soon be all over.”
“I just wish my pa were here, that’s all.” The
child’s voice was husky, as he clambered to his feet and slowly slipped his
hand into that of the tall dark man at his side.
Adam felt the soft touch of the child’s fingers as
they slipped into his. They were dry and
warm, and curled about his hand with the trust only a child can bestow upon a
total stranger. It reminded him of the
times another little boy had done just the same, many years before, and his
heart turned a somersault in his breast at the memory.
Chapter 14
The camp was bleak.
The wagon was blown over, smashed and bleached white and gray with the
heat of countless suns upon it. The
lean-to, under which Kane had set his table and would take his meals, was no
longer there and it took Adam a little while to remember that he had used the
materials of it for the travois to drag Kane away.
There was the big rock upon which Kane had placed
the bag of food and the canteen of water, before he stepped away to place the
rifle down on the ground. Adam’s heart
fluttered mischievously at the thought of that moment in time, the desperate
lunge for the rifle, and the way they had fought and Kane’s taunts. He closed his eyes, as though to wash away
the memories of that time in order to deal with the situation as it stood
now.
The sun beat down even though evening was drawing
in. He watched as Larry Parks
dismounted, lifted the boy down in his arms and carried him to the mine, where
the shadows promised some respite from the heat. Frank Parks also dismounted and walked
round and round, leading his horse, his eyes narrowing as he peered here and
there, and then turned to look at Adam.
“This the place then?”
“Yes, this is the place.”
They stared at one another, and then Frank tethered his
horse to what remained of the wagon’s shaft.
Then he walked over to the pile of rocks close to the mine
entrance. He prodded at them with his
foot and several toppled over and cluttered down, spilling dust into spirals
about them. They had been there for over
two years, and had accumulated sand and grit from countless sand storms in that
time.
“And Kane’s gold is here, is it?”
“I told you, there’s no gold here.” Adam leaned upon
the pommel of his saddle and looked about him.
How could he have been so scared of this place? It was just a pile of rock, with drifting
sand, and the black mouth of a mine.
Why had he allowed it to haunt him so much that it had paralyzed him,
until even the thought of going into any other mine had crippled his mind so much
as to make him freeze on the spot. He
closed his eyes and put a hand to his face, and waited for the laughter. There was none. The silence was profound. He looked up and then saw Coutts walking
towards him.
“You reckon there’s no gold here, is that right?”
“I know there’s no gold here. I told you that before, but you wouldn’t
believe me.”
“Because I don’t believe you, that’s why.” Coutts put his hands on his hip and scowled.
“A man like Kane doesn’t lie. He had
gold dust in plenty, and boasted that there was more to come too. Apart from which, you wouldn’t have stayed
here more than a few days unless you were sure there was something in it for
you. Now, get down from that horse, and
show us where the seam is.”
Adam dismounted. He was stiff from the ride, and dry
from lack of water. He was in such pain
from the wound to his arm and shoulder that he longed to sink down and just
sleep, oh, and have a long cup of coffee and some of Hop Sings sweet and sour
pork and - he shook his head. Was he
becoming delusional?
“There is no seam.”
“So you keep saying, but I want you to go on in
there and prove it.”
“How?” Adam’s
eyes betrayed his open bemusement at their inability to understand what he had
been telling them. “How can I prove it to you?
Would you recognise a good seam of gold if you saw one? I can’t show you something that isn’t
there.”
“Just go on inside and show us.” Coutts stood with his legs apart and his
hands on his gun belt. He was master
of the situation now, and he watched the other man’s face contort with a myriad
conflicting expressions.
It was Larry Parks who came to Adam’s aid by,
putting his hand on his cousin’s arm and advising him to act with more caution.
“The man isn’t well, Jerry. I should’ve checked on his arm before
now. If there ain’t no gold in that
mine, then you’ll want to keep this pigeon alive, won’t you?”
Jeremiah Coutts stared thoughtfully at his cousin,
and then nodded slowly. Yes, he did want
this pigeon kept alive. His eyes flicked
from that of his cousin back to Adam’s, and then to the boy who was now edging
closer to the man in black.
“See to him.” he snapped angrily and stalked away,
barking orders to Frank to get a fire lit and some food cooking.
“Thanks for that,” Adam said quietly, looking at
Larry thoughtfully, as though he were seeing someone he had not expected to
see, but was pleased nonetheless.
“Don’t thank me yet awhile,” Larry replied, placing
his saddlebags down beside where the other man had sat down. “I’ve not checked that wound in your arm and
should have done. I’m sorry, but this is
going to hurt.”
Adam nodded, and watched as Larry carefully began to
unwind the temporary bandage that they had used. It didn’t take long to reach the stage where
the blood had dried onto the material, and Larry sighed. He opened his bags and began to rummage about
in them, and then produced lint and linen bandages and various boxes and
bottles of medication. Seeing the
question in Adam’s eyes he shrugged.
“I stole ‘em from the dispensary, as soon as Jerry
told me they were going to make a run for it.
I thought we’d be sure to need something like this sooner or later, and
it would spare us having to get to a town for a doctor.”
“You should have stayed there, in the prison,” Adam
said slowly, as he watched the convict pour water onto some lint and gently dab
at where the material, flesh and blood had become firmly attached. He flinched as Larry gently began to tweak
back the material.
“I told you already, I couldn’t do that, not only
because of Frank and Jerry, but because I couldn’t bear being locked up for
much longer.”
“Surely you would have been due for parole or
release soon?” Adam looked away and
stared at the sky. He was not squeamish
but, for some reason, watching Larry pull away the bloodied stuff made his
stomach turn over. Drops of vermilion
blood were seeping up to the surface and beading the line of the cuts in his
arm, glistening ruby red amongst the other colours the bruising and grazing had
created on his arm.
“No.” Larry
shook his head, as he began to gently clean the wound with some iodine. Adam
chewed the inside of his cheek, to take his mind away from the burning pain as
the iodine touched the raw wounds. “No, we still had a good six years to go on
our sentences.”
“Six years?” Adam looked at the man with eyes wide
at the thought that the men holding his life, and Danny’s, in the palms of
their hands, were guilty of crimes that had demanded over six years of
imprisonment for each of them.
“Well, we didn’t get the breaks like you, mister,”
Larry muttered, an edge to his voice that had never been there before. “A rich
pa, fancy schools and goin’ to college.”
He had a gentle touch, and was examining Adam’s hands and the
flexibility of the fingers, and with a sigh began to put ointment smeared lint
upon the wounds. “In the end, what does
it matter? You had the breaks but still
end up here with us.” He looked at Adam with a cool arrogance, and Adam
realised that any chance of reasoning with the man was slipping fast away. Whatever envious venom Coutts was spilling
out, was having its effect.
If they had only known, or would only accept the
truth of the matter. Schooling? What schooling? Adam’s dark brows met in a dark line of annoyance. He had been born with a thirst for
knowledge, for learning, and a love for words and books. As a child, there had been the long nights
and longer days in his pa’s company, listening to his father reading. He remembered sitting on Ben’s knee, learning
about the constellations at night, and how to navigate his way by the stars, or
paying attention to the way figures worked together to prove whether one man
and his child could eat that day, or go without food.
And there were the times when he went barefoot,
times when he wore clothes too small, too tight, too ragged; a walking
advertisement for poverty. Yet, upon
every settlement they reached, his father would send him to school. How many schools had he been to over the
years as an itinerant child? Too
many. Some he would attend for only a
few days, some a few weeks. Some,
happily, for several months. And the
teachers would slake his thirst for education as graciously as an oasis of
water could sweeten the belly of a horse dying for lack of refreshment.
Generous people gave them books for him to
read. Books still treasured, for they
had been gifts of immeasurable generosity, for these homesteaders could only
carry so many items of value, and any book was a treasure to them. Yet they had been given him, and sometimes,
Ben had paid money for a new book from a store, and that would then become, oh,
so precious.
Adam felt the warmth of the child’s body pressed
against him, and instinctively he put his arm around his shoulder and drew him
closer. Larry had concluded his
ministrations and was putting his things away in his saddle bags. With grave eyes, Adam watched Parks walk
away and join the others.
At least Kane had been educated. They had talked about poetry, and literature,
and found common ground for a few days.
Kane’s envy had come from what he believed had come too easy to the
Cartwrights…their empire. He had proven
himself as unreasonable as these three men; ignorant in their bitterness,
unreasoning in their covetousness. Adam
sighed, and glanced down at the boy.
“I’m awful hungry, Mr. Cartwright,” Danny whispered.
“We’ll eat soon.”
The boy looked at him trustfully, and then lowered
his head upon Adam’s shoulder and tried to shrink closer into the man’s protective
clasp. Adam watched, as Coutts and
Frank Parks walked towards the entrance of the mine and Larry took his position
as watchman upon the rocks.
What childhood had he enjoyed anyway? He looked down at the boy, and remembered a
golden headed child who had looked to him for protection from the first weeks
of his birth. Perhaps, Adam considered
now, the only time he had been a child, or allowed to be a child, had been
those weeks at school, wherever it had happened to be at the time, when he had
been able to play, kick a ball about, shout and holler, and learn, as any other
child could and would and should have done.
He sighed.
One could never turn back the pages of one’s life, except to peer into
them occasionally and see where the highlights lay, and in what chapters had
been the heartbreaks. He had never
envied anyone in his life, it never came into the equation, but now, suddenly,
he understood why he had felt so twisted up, so bitter and angry with himself
and with Ben, and even with his brothers.
He understood, and felt alternately relieved and ashamed.
“Cartwright?
Come here.” Coutts was beckoning
to him, and with another sigh he got to his feet, the child clinging to his
hand all the while.
They stood there at the entrance of the mine. The child was a complete non-essential to the
equation and it seemed as though, suddenly, Coutts realised that the boy was a
liability who would consume their share of water and food. He reached out and grabbed the child away
from Adam, and held him by the collar.
“Leave him,” Adam said immediately, his hand
outstretched towards the boy. “Leave
him, Coutts, he’s no harm to you.”
“Yeah? But he
ain’t much good to me either,” Coutts sneered, pulling his gun from its
holster.
“Look, whatever you want from me, I’ll do….just
leave the boy in peace.”
“How magnanimous of you, Cartwright. And what do you have to bargain with,
anyway? I can wait a few more hours
for this kid’s father to appear and show me where the gold is, or you can get
in there and find it for me. It hardly
matters now. Your worth comes from being
a Cartwright – but his,” he swung the gun towards the boy, “he ain’t worth a
plugged dime.”
“Then why bring him along?”
“Because at the time we needed to make sure his pa would
come and show us where this here mine was….you coming along removed that
need…which makes this kid irrelevant.”
He clicked back the trigger and smiled with that same blank eyed look on
his face that Adam had seen in Kane’s, and with a howl of anger and despair
Adam hurled himself towards Coutts, sending the man once again down onto the
ground.
His hand reached out for the other man’s wrist. The pistol wavered, first one way and then
the other. He grappled and held tight,
his fingers digging into the man’s wrist.
Coutts, equally determined to hold onto the gun, swung with his fist and
brought it down hard upon Adam’s injured arm.
Red mists swam before Adam’s eyes, pain trickled
over his body and he was about to give out, when a yell came from the rocks
above them.
“Riders coming this way. Looks like Johnson and some other man.”
Frank Parks grabbed the boy and hauled him
away. Coutts pushed aside Adam’s body as
though it were a sackful of garbage. He
scrabbled to his feet and brushed away the dust from his clothes.
“Are you sure?”
“Yeah, about half an hour’s ride away.”
Coutts smiled, and looked at the boy and then at
Adam, who was now getting to his feet and wiping blood from his mouth.
“Seems like your daddy’s got good timing, sonny.” Coutts smiled and slipped the gun into its
holster. “As for you, Cartwright,
that’s the second time you’ve pulled a stunt on me like that, there won’t be a
third chance.” He looked at the boy and
then again at Adam, and walked quickly to a vantage point amongst the rocks, to
watch the two black specks in the distance growing larger and larger.
For Adam and Danny it meant time waiting, and once
again they sat together on the rocks.
Frank Parks stood close by, his rifle nestled in the crook of his arm
and his eyes watching them closely.
There was little chance of escape.
Adam, with memories so much to the forefront of his mind now, knew the
risks involved in any attempt far outweighed future opportunities, which could
open up to them upon the arrival of the two men currently riding towards them.
He nursed his arm close to his chest in an attempt
to ease the pain. At the same time he
tried to put together the pieces of the conundrum that had brought him such an
angst ridden few months.
It had been the dreams of Kane, building up an
intolerable fear of the mines that totally paralysed him. He dreamt, not only of the mine, but of Kane,
and that ability of the man’s to cut, thrust and parry verbally to such an
extent that his victim became mentally torn to ribbons. Kane had been angry at the world, angry at
being defeated in finding his gold, angry at being too frightened to end it
all. All that anger had exploded into
such a bitter hatred against his uninvited guest, that Adam had been subjected
to a ruthless psychological tearing down of his own psyche.
Kane hated, envied, and loathed anyone more
successful than himself. Adam was all of
that, and more. Kane resented honesty
and decency in the man, because he lacked those qualities himself. He envied what Adam possessed, without
stopping to admire the abilities of the man in gaining possession of what he
had, and he coveted it all but lacked the generosity of heart and the courage
it took to gain it.
The dreams had brought all those negative emotions
floating to the top of Adams delicately balanced self control. Like so much dross and scum, it lay there on
the surface, so that he began to view what he had once accepted as something
objectionable.
When he was paralysed with irrational fear of the
mines he wanted his father to show him tender compassion and understanding, as
he would have done his youngest son.
But Ben had said and done nothing that gave his eldest son the
reassurance and comfort for which he now longed. Without any words spoken
between them, Ben had no way of knowing that his eldest son’s rigid self
control was slowly crumbling away.
Adam’s memories of his childhood began to trickle into the dreams, and
another thread crept unwillingly into them, the comparable childhood that Joe
had enjoyed.
Sitting beside Danny now, Adam watched the boy
thoughtfully. When Joe had been that
age, Adam mused, he had been used to being doted upon by his two older siblings
and his father. Everything he did,
everything he said during the day, would be discussed and shared between the
three of them because, by his presence, Joe had brought sunshine into their
lives. His childhood had been a glimpse
of the childhood Hoss and Adam had never enjoyed, but they gained pleasure from
the enjoyment he had, and this neither had ever begrudged him.
No, Adam sighed, he had never envied Joe his
childhood. It had been just over these
past few months, that he had felt restricted by the rigidity of his own self-control. Reason told him that it came about by the
necessity of their life style when he was a child. Emotion, and dark introverted meditation,
reminded him that it was a life style his youngest sibling had never known.
It was like being on a treadmill. He had been going round and round, and
becoming angrier and angrier, and for what reason? Because of Kane’s control reaching out over
the years and gaining the mastery over him once again? Could it have been that simple to explain
away?
As he sat there, waiting, with the child trembling
in anticipation at seeing his father again, Adam thought back over the years
with his brothers. He had always loved
Joe, but he had never been able to understand the almost flippant way Joe dealt
with life. Whilst Adam controlled his
feelings and needed to be in control of every situation that came upon him, Joe
seemed to drift through life, falling in and out of trouble with an abandon and
cheerfulness that never ceased to amaze his more serious minded brother.
Did he resent it?
Was he jealous? Had the bile of
envy and rancor that had spilled over from Kane’s personality, seeped into his
psyche like gangrene, and thus festered the loving relationship he had had with
his brother? Was it an inward desire of
his own to be more like Joe, and therefore more loved by Ben, that had caused
this strange see-saw of emotions?
He paused there for a while. Was this inward anger towards his father
because he felt Ben loved Joe more? He
frowned and bowed his head to think a little more about that, as it led him
down paths that he had at times wandered down in the past but not wanted to
linger upon.
“Mr. Cartwright.”
The boy’s voice shook him from his reverie, and he
glanced up as two riders came into view.
He recognised the blacksmith immediately, but the other man he did not
know. He was about to say something to
Danny, when the boy launched himself forwards like an arrow from a bow.
Man and boy met one another close to the big rock
that had once been the place Adam had sat to eat his meals with Kane. The man swept the boy up and into the air and
then down into his arms, and held him tight.
The emotion between both was tangible, and Adam glanced away and stared
only at the far off horizon.
“That’s enough now.” Coutts came, striding hurriedly
forwards with the rifle loose in his hands.
He pulled the boy away, and then looked at Obadiah and nodded. “Found
us, then?”
“It wasn’t difficult. You left a trail that was easier to read than
a novel from the prison library.” Obadiah smiled. The joy of seeing his son made him feel
magnanimous even towards Coutts.
“Who’s your friend?”
“This is Luke Morgan. He was caring for Danny, he wanted to come
with me to make sure the boy was safe, and to take him home.” Obadiah narrowed his eyes. He was making a statement, but it was really
a request. He was not stupid enough to
assume that Coutts was that open handed, but he did not want the man to feel
his superior. He needed, desperately, to
get his son home safely, or at least, know he was in good hands and away from
this crowd.
Coutts surveyed them coldly, and met cold eyes in
return. He noted that Morgan had his
hand resting easily on his thigh, but close to his gun handle. He nodded, turned away and looked at Daniel.
“Do you want to go home, boy?” he asked the child.
“Yes, sir.”
“Go on then.” He gave Daniel a push towards Luke,
and then smiled as he saw the boy’s eyes light up. “Say goodbye to your pa, you
won’t be seeing him for a while.”
“But…” The boy paused, and looked alternately at
Luke then his father, and he turned to Coutts. “But I want to go home with Pa.”
Obadiah grabbed his son by the arm and drew him
close, away from Coutts and nearer to Luke.
He knelt on one knee and looked into the boy’s face.
“This is as good as it gets, Daniel. Go with Luke now while you can. He and Clara will take good care of you, you
know that?”
“Yes, pa, but…”
“You know I can’t go back there to town with you,
Danny. I’d be arrested, maybe shot. This way at least I get a chance, and I’ll
know that you’re safe.” He drew the boy
into his arms and held him tight, and then looked up and his eyes caught the
dark gaze of the man in black, who was watching with a melancholy look in his
brown eyes. He turned aside and pushed
the boy towards Luke. “Go, now.”
“But, pa…”
“You heard what your pa said, boy. I ain’t got much patience, if you don’t git
outta here right this minute I may just change my mind.” Coutts raised his rifle and swung it towards
Luke. “Just move, now!”
Luke Morgan reached out a hand, took the boy’s hands
in his own, and lifted him easily up into the saddle in front of him. He looked earnestly at Obadiah and then, with
a curt nod, turned his horse and rode back out of the canyon.
“Thank you.” Johnson said simply to Coutts, knowing
that the man was not prone to acts of generosity. “Thank you for that.”
“It was a stupid idea to bring him along in the
first place. Still, I guess if we had
not, you would not be here now, would you?”
“No,” Johnson replied honestly.
Coutts nodded, and gestured to the man to walk along
with him to where Adam was now standing, watching them. When they were close enough, Coutts
introduced Johnson to Adam. The two men
eyed each other cautiously.
“Johnson, this here is Adam Cartwright.” Jerry looked at Adam and then at Johnson.
“His daddy owns the Ponderosa and is worth a fortune. Now this guy tells me that he was here two
years ago working this mine with Kane, and he says that there ain’t no gold.”
“Kane always boasted that there was a gold seam
bigger than the Comstock there in that mine,” Johnson said quietly.
“That’s what I keep telling Mr. Cartwright, but he
won’t believe me.”
“I didn’t say that,” Adam interjected. “I don’t
doubt that Kane boasted about the gold seam that he wanted there, but the
simple fact of the matter is that there ain’t no gold, and no wishing it up
will make it any different.”
Johnson frowned and shrugged. “I’ll go and take a
look for myself,” he declared, and walked towards the mine entrance, then
turned to Adam. “Are you coming?”
Adam nodded. In his dreams it would be now that his
legs would turn to lead and not move. Yet he was walking towards the mine with
an ease of a man without any problem, whilst only weeks earlier the thought of
entering one of his own mines had made him sick. If any mine should paralyse him with fear it
would be, should be, this one.
They stepped into the shaft and Adam looked around,
and saw the familiar sight of the place that haunted his dreams. He followed Johnson without a word, and
behind him came Coutts and Larry. Their
footsteps echoed in the hollowed out cavern of the mine, and they stepped past
the joists that Adam had hauled and erected there. They walked past the area that Adam had
blasted over two years before, where he had found only rock and dust.
Johnson stopped and looked around him. The lamp that had been lit for their use by
Larry, cast a dim light, but even so there was no responding glitter of any
gold from the black walls around them.
He stretched out a hand and ran it across the rough walls of the mine.
“Didn’t you find anything at all?” he asked Adam.
“Nothing,” Adam replied, and he glanced over at
Coutts. “Kane knew there was no gold here.
He knew, but didn’t want the dream to go, so he just kept on trying to
find it, until it broke him and drove him crazy.”
Coutts nodded and looked about him. He knelt down and picked up a discard lamp;
the stub of a candle was still there and he lit it and held it out to Adam.
“Right. I
hear what you say, but I ain’t gonna believe it jest because you said so. Now, you and Johnson are going to stay here
and find that gold vein.” He raised the rifle to the level of their belts and
behind him, Larry did likewise. He smiled
and nodded. “Good, I’m glad that you understand what I mean. Now, don’t just stand there, get to work!”
Adam and Johnson stood there; they looked at one
another and then at Coutts and Larry as they backed off down the mine shaft
back to the entrance. When Johnson made
a step forward Coutts stopped. “Don’t think about leaving, you won’t get far.”
Chapter 15
Sheriff Cutter raised his hand and drew his horse to
a halt. Immediately behind him, the
posse grouped together and came to a standstill.
“Mr. Morgan, as I live and breathe,” he declared in
a sarcastic tone of voice. He looked at
Danny and frowned. “Where did you both spring from?”
“Over there.” Luke turned in the saddle and pointed
to the area that he had just left. “How
did you know to follow us?”
“You were seen leaving with Obadiah Johnson, who –
may I remind you – happens to be an escaped convict. I should arrest you for assisting in his
escape, you do realise that, don’t you?”
“I didn’t assist him in his escape, don’t be so
ridiculous!” Luke Morgan snorted
angrily. “I rode with him to rescue his son, that’s all.”
“I see. And
where is he now? Not riding back with
you exactly, is he?”
“No.” Luke
frowned. “He couldn’t.”
“Of course he couldn’t, because his pals out there.”
“They aren’t his pals. They forced him to go with them, and then
took Danny to make sure that he did what he was told and…”
A plaintive wail broke through their discussion, as
the boy slid from Luke’s horse and ran to the sheriff and gripped his leg tightly.
“Don’t arrest him, please, don’t arrest him again,”
he cried, his voice thin and a wail of despair.
“Well, son, I don’t have much choice you hear? He’s a man who has killed two people, and
while he’s loose with those other men, he could kill more. He’s a dangerous man.”
“No, no, he ain’t dangerous, he ain’t.” Tears dripped from the boy’s eyes and coursed
down his cheeks. “It wasn’t him that killed Jeb and my ma, it wasn’t.”
“That’s enough now, Daniel.” Luke dismounted, put
his hands on the boy’s shoulders, and turned him around. “You don’t know what you’re saying, now, be
quiet.”
“I do know what I’m saying, I do, and my pa didn’t
kill anyone, he didn’t, I tell you.”
“Well, if he didn’t then who did?” Sheriff Cutter
asked patiently, tapping his fingers impatiently against his thigh. He was more
than a little anxious to get back to the job of arresting Johnson and the other
three men.
“I did.” The boy’s voice was barely above a whisper,
and he looked up at the lawman with round, terrified eyes, before bowing his
head and staring blankly at the ground. “I did, sir,” he whispered to the rocks
at his feet.
“Daniel.”
Luke squatted down and stared at the boy seriously. “Look, son, there’s
no need to lie for your pa. He wouldn’t
want you to do that for him, and would tan your hide if he knew that you were
lying for him like this.”
“I told you, I ain’t lying.” Daniel wiped his face on his sleeve and
looked defiantly up at the sheriff, and then at Luke. “It’s true.”
The two men exchanged looks, and then looked
anxiously at the boy.
“How old are you, son?” Cutter asked.
“Nearly nine.”
“That means you must have been coming up to seven
years old when your ma died. You mean
to tell me that you took a gun, and shot your ma and Jeb?”
“Yes.”
“A gun ain’t a toy, and it weighs something
heavy. You mean to say you were strong
enough to hold a gun steady and fire it, twice?”
Daniel nodded, his eyes were wide, terrified, and
his face was white. Cutter dismounted,
walked towards the boy, and turned him round to face him.
“Why didn’t you say before?”
“Pa said not to say anything. He said that they would take me away from
him, and put me somewhere, and I’d never have a decent life. He said it didn’t matter if he said he did it
because he knew he was innocent, and so did God, and that was all that
mattered.”
“But, Danny, if this is true, oh, Danny, think now,
are you really telling us the truth?”
Luke put his hand gently on the boy’s shoulder, and with his other hand tipped
up the boy’s face so that the child was looking up at him.
“Ma and Jeb were going to leave me alone. Pa was out and they were going to sneak off
together, and I said they couldn’t do that, and ma started shouting at me. She was always shouting at me.” His voice
trailed away forlornly. “Then she hit
me and I fell against the chair, and Jeb’s gun belt was hanging on the back of
the chair and the gun was in his holster, and I grabbed it and said she wasn’t to
leave or I’d shoot. The gun was heavy, heavier than I thought it would be, and
it was hard to keep it steady, and then it went off, and I fell backwards and
hit my head against the table leg.”
“Then what happened, son?” Cutter asked very gently.
“Jeb Early came and grabbed hold of me and shook me,
and was shouting and screaming at me, and then Pa came in. He started yelling
too, he kept calling ma’s name and moaning.
Jeb hit me across the head and said how I’d killed her. But Pa thought Jeb had killed ma, and when he
saw Jeb hit me, he jumped him and they started fighting. They were rolling on the floor, knocking the
things over and I saw ma then, and blood, and she was just lying there with her
eyes staring at the ceiling.” He began
to shake, and flung his arms around Luke’s neck and held him tightly, as
tightly as he could. “Jeb grabbed a rifle and fired it at Pa, and I was crying
because I saw ma like she was, and then the gun went off in my hand several
times over, and then everything went black and I couldn’t remember anything for
a long time.”
Luke shut his eyes tightly, trying to blank out the
images the boy’s discourse had brought into his mind. When he opened his eyes he looked at Cutter.
“Do you think it was possible?” he asked very
quietly, as he held the sobbing child in his arms.
“It’s possible.
But we only have his word for it, and his father, I doubt, would confirm
it.”
“Can I take him home?”
Cutter nodded and turned to remount his horse.
“Sheriff, I think I ought to mention that they have
another man there – a man called Adam Cartwright. They’re holding him hostage of sorts.”
Cutter nodded but said nothing. Cartwright.
The name had a familiar ring to it.
Chapter 16
The two men faced one another in the gloom of the
mineshaft. Each wondered whether the
other would be an antagonist, or an ally.
Each took the measure of the other, and both came to the same
conclusion. In the circumstance in which
they found themselves beggars could not be choosers, and they had to make do
with what they each could offer the other.
“I doubt if you’re going to be much help in finding
gold here,” Johnson said, pointing to Adam’s injured arm.
“There isn’t any gold here.” Adam sighed, and sat
down wearily upon some rocks.
“Kane always insisted that there was.”
“He was deluding himself.”
Obadiah frowned and looked about the gloomy
interior, while he tried to reason out the other man’s obvious irritation as
having his word doubted.
“I knew Kane for a long time, mister. Why should I take your word against his?”
Adam nodded slowly, as though assuring himself that
nothing in this world should surprise him, even now, here in Kane’s tight,
crazy little world all over again. He
stood up and placed his hand upon one of the uprights that supported a joist,
and took a deep breath.
“See this? I
put this into place. All these beams
were cut down, trimmed to size and placed here by me, while MISTER Kane sat
outside under his awning looking over pieces of rock. For many days I worked in this mine. I did the blasting and hauled out the rocks,
and all for nothing. He knew there was
no gold here. He’d known for weeks, but
hadn’t the guts to get up and move on.
He was a defeated, bitter man.”
Johnson nodded slowly and ran a hand down the smooth
side of the wooden beam, and then looked at Adam, before sitting down on the
rocks that Adam had just vacated.
“Yes, that sounds like Peter.” He frowned
thoughtfully. “But what possessed you to
stay here and work, if you knew there was no gold here? Why didn’t you just get yourself on your
horse and get the blazes outta here?”
Adam put his head to one side and stared at the
entrance of the mine, where a patch of blue sky could still be seen. Then he sighed and shook his head.
“Because…” He
put a hand to his brow, and then swept his hand to one side in a gesture of
utter futility. “Because I was his prisoner.
I had no horse and no weapons. He
saved my life with one hand, and then set about destroying me with the
other. When I tried to leave on his
mule, he shot it dead. When I tried to escape, he prevented me and hobbled me
to a post like an animal. He degraded my
very existence.”
There was silence for some moments, during which
Adam chewed on his bottom lip and Obadiah turned a rock round and round between
his fingers. It was the latter man who
broke the silence.
“But you survived, and he didn’t.”
“Sure.
Triumph of good over evil!” Adam said with a cynicism that was not lost
on Johnson, who sighed and nodded as he tossed the rock to one side.
“I sympathise.
Truly, I do.” He looked at Adam thoughtfully, then stood up and with a
deep sigh walked to the rock face and ran a hand over the rough surface, before
looking at Adam. He folded his arms
across his chest and leaned against one of the joists, that, full credit to
Adam’s hard work in installing it years ago, didn’t even move enough to raise
the dust.
“I knew Peter Kane for years. He was a schoolmaster in my home town. He was, in fact, a very good one at that, although
he had a very unorthodox method of disciplining his students. Any student who had any sense never crossed
Kane more than once, I can assure you of that.”
“He beat them?”
“No. He
insulted them. Humiliated them. Made a mockery of everything they were, or
ever hoped to become in the future. It
was cruel. The cruelest method of
disciplining I have ever known, and more than one child crumbled beneath the
weight of it.” Johnson frowned, contemplating the past for an instant and then
glanced up and said quietly. “He was
married, you know.”
“I didn’t know.
He never spoke about his private life, although I realised he was a well
educated man.”
“Yes. He was
married to a very pleasant young woman, and they had a child. I don’t think they were a happily married
couple in the fullest sense of the word, but he loved her more than anything in
the world. Then diphtheria struck the
town and quite a number of folk died, mostly children. His child was one of them.”
“That must have broken him,” Adam said softly.
“Yes, it did.” Obadiah sighed, and began to jab
rather absent-mindedly into the wood with his thumbnail. “He became obsessed over the fact that he was
a poor man, and because of his poverty he had lost his child. The fact that some of the wealthy ones in
town had also lost their children meant nothing to him. He railed against the fact that people with
money had the advantages that men such as he could never possess.”
“He made it clear almost immediately that he had a
problem with some things.” Adam sighed, recalling how quickly Kane had shown
that particular feature of his personality.
Immediately upon Adam’s introducing himself, he had sneered at the
wealth of the Cartwrights’ empire, as though it had all fallen like ripe plums
into their laps.
“His hatred for the rich became so obsessive that he
eventually lost his position at the school – I must admit not to the sorrow of
his students.” Johnson allowed himself a
wry grin, barely visible now in the growing darkness of the mine shaft, as
outside, evening drew closer.
“And his wife?
What happened to her?”
“She died in child birth not long after he had lost
his position. Of course, that cemented
his hatred for the wealthy, or for those he deemed wealthier than himself.”
There was silence again, and for an instant Adam saw
the harsh features of the man, Peter Kane, rise up before his eyes. He saw him as a crushed miserable man bowed
by the weight of his losses, and crippled by the burden of hatred with which he
was so obsessed. He turned away from
Johnson and sat down, holding his injured arm close to his chest in the
realisation that it had began to pain him again.
“Kane moved away to the gold fields. We heard about him occasionally. Sometimes he was rich. Most times he remained in poverty. Then I married and moved here, and took out
my own claim with my wife and partner, Jeb.”
Obadiah glanced swiftly over at Adam and bit his
bottom lip. “I guess you heard all about that, huh?”
“What?”
“About my wife and Jeb Early?”
“Oh, yes, sure I heard about that,” Adam replied
rather distractedly.
“It was during that time that I met up with Peter
again. He told me how much gold he had
gleaned from this mine. He had a fortune
already. There was yet another fortune still to be found. I believed him.”
“Well, he was lying.
I don’t know how many more times I have to say it, but he was, and he
admitted as much before he died. He knew
he had lost everything, but didn’t know how to end it all. He wanted to die, but didn’t even know how
to do that in a decent manner.”
“I can imagine,” Obadiah said simply. “What a miserable man he was.”
Adam Cartwright nodded in agreement, yes, what a
miserable man, what a small-minded, miserable man. Yet that same man, with his egotistical obsessions,
had subjugated Adam in a manner that had caused him to suffer unmitigated
misery. He glanced over his shoulder at Obadiah, and raised his eye brows in
question. “Do you intend staying here all night?” he said quietly.
“Nope.” Johnson smiled again as he leaned down to
turn up the flame in the lamp. “Do you trust me then, Mr. Cartwright?”
“Trust doesn’t enter the equation, Mr. Johnson, but
you have a little boy who loves you back in Eastgate, and I assume you care
enough about him to want to get back there?”
“Yes, true enough,” the other man’s voice quavered
just slightly, but sufficiently for Adam to notice, and be assured of the fact
that he could lean on the man for his support.
He made his way slowly towards the entrance of the
mine, with Johnson close by his side.
In silence they crouched together, observing the movements of the three
men closely, and noting in particular where the horses were hobbled.
“Larry Parks won’t put up much opposition,” Adam
murmured, pointing to where Larry was looking through his saddlebags, as though
ensuring that there was sufficient medical paraphernalia to withhold a
siege. His rifle was resting on a rock
close by, perhaps teetering would have been a better expression, and this Adam
noticed with a slight smile. His eyes
then turned to Frank and Jerry, who were in earnest conversation about
something, and the way they kept looking towards the mine it was obvious that
he and Johnson were part of the topic.
Jerry was pointing and gesturing towards the mine emphatically, and
Frank seemed to be losing his temper.
The rifle in his hands could well have become a means of disposing of
Jerry, if the conversation became any more heated than it was already.
Adam smiled and glanced at Johnson. He pointed to Larry and to the horses, just a
few feet to the left of the inattentive sentry, and as he raised his hand to
signal to Johnson in which direction to move, so a shot rang out. It startled them all. Adam and Johnson immediately stepped back
into the dark confines of the mine, whilst the Parks brothers and Coutts
scattered into the rocks.
“Who is it?
Do you think it’s that blacksmith?” Adam whispered.
“Who? Luke?
No, no, he wouldn’t risk Danny on some hare brained idea of rescuing
us. But I wouldn’t be at all surprised
if there wasn’t a posse close behind us.
I told Luke more than once that I thought I saw dust some ways behind
us.” He stopped, as Adam raised a hand
for silence, and together they waited to see what would happen.
If they were tense in their expectations of what was
to befall them, so were the Parks and Jerry.
In their covert hiding places, the three men felt their hearts racing as
they struggled to come to terms with what was happening.
“You’re surrounded,” a voice warned them, and
immediately they released the safety catches on their rifles and waited. “Coutts?
Parks? Did you hear what I said? This is Sheriff Cutter from Eastgate. I’m telling you that you are surrounded by my
men, and if you don’t throw out your weapons now you’ll be shot trying to
resist arrest. I’ll count to three.”
Jerry answered by sending a bullet in the direction
of the voice. It whined to its end,
flattened out against a rock.
“One.”
Frank and Jerry fired off several bullets, and
several bullets were fired back. One found its mark. Frank fell sideways, clutching at his
shoulder, the rifle cluttering from his powerless fingers. Seeing his brother fall, Larry Parks ran
across the clearing, and crouched behind the big rock where years earlier Adam
had squatted, forced to eat there like an animal by Kane.
“Shucks, I didn’t expect it to end like this.” Frank
groaned as he saw the blood seeping through his fingers.
“Two.”
Larry inched forwards, and without a word began to
check over the wound that his brother had sustained. He placed wadding against it and looked at
his brother sadly. Frank nodded and
opened his mouth to speak, but whatever he had wished to say was smothered by a
gush of black blood and then, with a sad little jerk, he was still.
“He’s dead,” Larry whispered, as though he found it
impossible to believe what his eyes told him. “He’s dead.”
“Three.”
“You said there would be gold for us, gold and
riches, that’s what you said,” Larry cried, as he turned to his cousin and
grabbed at his shoulder. “Now, see what’s happened? He’s dead, my brothers dead, and all because
of you.”
More shots were fired, peppering the surrounding
rocks, but the fatal shot that brought Jerry Coutts to his end was the one
fired from Larry’s own gun.
Even before the smoke had began to curl from the end
of the barrel, Larry had thrown the gun down, raised his hands above his head,
and yelled out that he was surrendering.
As he stepped away from the big rock and walked into
the clearing, where they could see him by the fading daylight, so the sheriff
and his men began to emerge from the rocks.
They stepped forward warily, their bodies tense as coiled springs.
“He said there was gold here,” Larry said by way of
explanation to the sheriff, who stood looking down at Jerry’s body. “He lied to us. Now Franks dead because of him.”
Cutter nodded slowly and walked over to the body of
Frank Parks, and then looked over at Larry and shook his head. With a sigh he turned away and returned to
his prisoner, whilst at the same time, Adam Cartwright and Obadiah Johnson
stepped from the mine.
*************
Pyramid Lake had never looked so beautiful. Sitting in the saddle with one leg hooked
around the pommel and his hat pushed to the back of his head, Adam Cartwright
looked at the perfect mirror of the lake, as the sun shone down upon it from a
bluer than blue sky. He wondered where
the reality ended and the reflection began.
On such a tranquil day and amongst such beautiful surroundings, he was
inclined to spend time to meditate and ponder such trivial things.
He allowed his mind to return to the events of the
previous day, when Obadiah was reunited with his son. Larry was put in the cell, and Obadiah and
Daniel were closeted with the sheriff for an hour or so. During that time Adam had his arm seen to by
a doctor, who assured him that he would have some scars due to a lack of the
proper medical procedures, but at the same time it would heal fast, as what
attention he had received prevented any poison festering in the wound.
Walking out of the doctor’s and surveying the town
as it baked in the sun, he watched Danny come out of the sheriff’s office, hand
in hand with his father. The two had
exchanged warm smiles and walked towards the home of the blacksmith and his
wife. Adam was watching them in a day
dreamy kind of way, when Cutter approached him.
“Time for a drink, Mr. Cartwright?”
“Time enough,” Adam had replied.
Seated with
their drinks before them, Cutter looked over at Adam, who was surveying his
beer thoughtfully.
“Guess you got to know the boy pretty well, didn’t
you?” Cutter asked, as he picked up his glass.
“Pretty much.”
Adam mirrored the sheriff’s action and raised the glass.
“Did he tell you about his ma’s death?”
“He did,” Adam replied slowly, and then looked at
the sheriff. “What are you going to do about him?”
“Wal, on checking the gun in question, I could see
where the problem lay…not only in it’s weight, and the youth of the person in
question, but also by the fact that it had a hair trigger.”
“A hair trigger, huh?” Adam’s dark eyes fixed onto
the sheriff’s face. “No chance of the boy firing with intent to kill then….the
gun would go off as soon as his hands touched the thing.”
“That’s right, that’s how I see it too.” Cutter finished his drink and wiped his mouth
on the back of his hand. “Can’t press charges under those conditions.”
“No, can’t see how you could.” Adam nodded
thoughtfully.
“Pity that Johnson didn’t tell us the truth in the
beginning, saved himself some years in jail.”
“Yeah, I can see what a problem it must be.” He finished his drink and picked up his hat.
“Thanks for the drink, Sheriff.”
“You leaving today, then, Mr. Cartwright?”
“Yeah.” Adam
smiled slowly. “I’m going to take a slow ride down to Pyramid Lake and then –
I’m going home.”
They had shaken hands and parted company. Outside the saloon Adam mounted his horse and rode slowly out of the town, the reins slack in his hands. He touched the brim of his hat as he passed the Johnsons and Morgans. Danny waved, but Adam didn’t look back. It was sufficient to have seen them all together, looking happy and relaxed.
It had been good to have woken up that morning. The weight of anxieties and fears had gone at
last. Doubts were dispelled and
jealousies banished. He had woken up to
face the day as only Adam Cartwright could, and would. He knew that the love of his father for him
was undoubted; it had been proven time and time again by word and action. The love Ben felt for his youngest son was
the love that son was guaranteed, as the youngest, and it was reflected by the
love each of his brothers felt for him.
Differently expressed, but stronger than any other bond could possibly
be, in life or death.
Did he wish for a childhood like Joe’s? Oh no, for when he looked back to the days
of his childhood – those rolling wagons, those wild rivers, those meagre
settlements – oh, what adventures he had shared with Pa and then, later, with
Hoss. When he recalled the days when a
homely, poor woman would hand him a book and ruffle his hair, or a small group
of children would look at him, wide eyed, as he was introduced to them as a new
pupil, his heart missed a beat, for he had tasted generosity unparalleled, and
a love of learning even in the smallest communities.
His life had been a rich pattern of all things and
in the midst of it all had been one man – his strength, his buckler, his
shield, his father.
He drew in clean fresh air and smiled, and then
turned Sport around.
“C’mon, boy,” he said quietly, “time to go home.”
************
The dust of summer storms blew upon the frail
remnants of Kane’s camp. Gradually it
was bowed down and buried beneath the sands.
The rock at which Adam had once squatted for his meals, and where Jerry
Coutts had died, stood stalwart guardian to the secrets of its past. Kane had a legacy; one of hatred and bitter
obsession that blinded him to the good in the man who had stumbled upon him one
hot summer’s day. His poison had
touched that young man’s life, and momentarily blighted it. In the end, however, the legacy fell
void. In poverty and in riches, and
throughout his life, Adam Cartwright had known love, not only in word, but also
in deeds, and that love had all the strength necessary to wipe out and remove
forever any trace of the introverted bitterness of Peter Kane.
He could go home now.
Finis
November
30th, 2003.