Doing What Had To Be Done
By: Rona Y.
For days, the sun had been
beating down relentlessly onto the corral, baking the ground to rock. The land
shimmered when you looked towards the horizon, offering an illusion of wetness that
just reminded you of how hot it really was.
Conditions were not ideal
for breaking horses, but time was Joe’s enemy and he had no choice but to do
it. The heat was punishing for both man and beast and the hard ground made the
inevitable falls much worse. But there was nothing for it but to push on, and
at last, after several days of hard graft, the end was in sight.
“Got the hammerhead ready
for ya, Joe,” Jeb called over to where his young boss was resting in the shade.
“All right,” Joe called
back, climbing wearily to his feet. He had done the majority of the work
himself, but one of the other hands had taken first ride on the black
hammerhead and had had an ignominious end to his ride when he was dumped within
a few seconds, to the accompaniment of raucous catcalls from the other men.
The horse’s shoulders were
wet with sweat as Joe climbed the side of the chute. Slowly, Joe eased himself
down onto the trembling beast and patted its neck reassuringly. Over at the
other side of the corral, Joe saw that his father had just arrived, but he
didn’t have time for anything more than a tight smile in his direction. “All
right, let me have him,” he said, quietly and the gate to the chute swung open.
For all that he had watched
the last ride on this horse and had seen how powerful it was, Joe was slightly
surprised by the power in the first buck. The horse had its head down to its
knees as it bucked on stiff legs across the dusty ground. Joe hung on, his body
going with the horse’s movements.
Over at the fence, Ben
admired Joe’s grace as he rode the mustang. He hated to watch his sons breaking
horses, knowing only too well the dangers that were involved. It was something
that he had never done, feeling that when he arrived out west, he was really a
novice horseman and was perfectly content to let others do this. It had amazed
him when Adam had first begun breaking, and then Hoss had followed in his
brother’s footsteps, but neither of them had really enjoyed doing the job and
were only too happy to back away and let Joe get on with it. They all agreed
that Joe was a natural horseman.
Suddenly, Ben was dragged
from his daydreaming as Joe let out a shout. The black, tired of bucking, was
now running at full pelt towards the railings. Joe was hauling ineffectually on
the halter the animal wore, knowing that there was very little he could do to
stop the creature.
At the last possible
second, the horse turned sharply away and Joe swayed wildly in the saddle.
Ben’s heart lurched, but his son regained his balance. Ben breathed again. But
his relief was short lived. The horse bucked wildly, almost throwing Joe from
the saddle. And before Joe could get back properly in the saddle, the horse
bucked again. The cantle of the saddle smacked Joe firmly in the butt, catapulting
him over the horse’s shoulder. For a long moment, Joe teetered there, then
gravity took over and he plummeted to the ground.
“Joe!” Ben scrambled
through the railings and hurried over to where Joe was lying on his back on the
ground. Before he could reach him, however, Joe rolled onto his side and pushed
himself into a sitting position. “Are you all right?” Ben asked, for it had
been an unforgiving fall.
“I think so,” Joe replied, shakily,
rubbing at his butt, which felt rather numb. Joe knew there was going to be a
huge bruise there the next day.
“You didn’t bang your head,
did you?” Ben went on.
“I might,” Joe admitted,
not completely sure. He shook his head, but everything seemed to be in working
order. He smiled at Ben, although the smile was still shaky. “I’m all right,
Pa,” he assured him. Slowly, Joe rose to his feet, with Ben hovering anxiously
over him. “Where’s the horse?” Joe glanced down at his left hand as he spoke and
hauled back on the partially removed glove, which had almost come off when Joe
hadn’t let go of the rope fast enough.
“Shouldn’t you call it
quits for today?” Ben asked, brushing dust off Joe’s back.
Wincing slightly, Joe
removed himself from his father’s reach. “No, I need to get this horse finished
today. The major from the army will be here day after tomorrow and we’ve got to
have these horses ready. This is the last one, and I want it done today. That
way, we have time to do a little more work with it.”
Since the horses were Joe’s
area of responsibility, Ben deferred to his judgement on this matter, although
he would have preferred Joe to return to the ranch house with him. “All right,
but you be careful, you hear?”
Smiling, Joe nodded. “I’ll
be careful,” he agreed, all the while knowing, as Ben did, that careful horse
breakers didn’t manage to break horses. He glanced at the men, who had ridden
down the black. “Get him back in the chute!” he ordered. “I’m comin’ again!”
****************************
By the time he arrived home
that night, Joe knew that his seemingly innocuous fall had done a lot more
damage than he had first suspected. He hadn’t noticed the pain to begin with,
but after his second – successful – ride on the black, Joe began to feel the
odd twinge in his butt. Now that he had arrived home, Joe was sure he’d done
himself some real damage.
Getting down from his horse
was an experience that Joe could have happily lived without, and his initial
relief at no longer being on the horse soon gave way to a grinding soreness
that erupted at every movement. Cochise received a very cursory rub-down that
evening and Joe walked slowly towards the house, wondering why, if he had
landed on his butt, he couldn’t stride out in his usual fashion.
As he already knew, Adam
and Hoss were both home before him. Joe sighed, knowing that he faced an
inevitable barrage of jokes about his fall. He took off his jacket and gun belt
and laid his hat on the credenza. The great room was deserted for the time being
and Joe hoped he would have the chance to go up and get changed before he had
to face his family.
However, his luck ran out
as Adam appeared at the top of the stairs and saw Joe. “Well, it’s about time
you were getting home,” he commented tartly. “Pa was about to send out a search
party for you.”
Forcing a smile that he
didn’t feel, Joe walked carefully across to the stairs and began to climb then.
He hadn’t gone more than two steps when he found himself wishing that he slept
on the ground floor. He passed Adam on the landing and Adam grinned when he saw
the dust coating Joe’s clothing. “Don’t sit on anything until you’ve taken your
pants off,” he advised and gave Joe a teasing swat on the butt, intending to
see how much dust he could raise in doing so.
What he hadn’t expected was
Joe’s reaction. His youngest brother all but went into orbit, jumping and
letting out a cry that sounded remarkably like pain. Surprised, Adam blinked.
“Surely its not that sore, Joe?” he teased. “A bit dramatic, wasn’t it?” He
laughed and walked off, leaving Joe clutching the banister and breathing
shallowly though his mouth as he tried to control the pain that was spreading
up his spine.
At a snail’s pace, Joe crept
up the remaining steps and met his father at the top. Ben’s face immediately
registered concern as he saw the pain etched on Joe’s face. “Joe, what’s
wrong?” he asked.
Trying not to alarm Ben,
Joe replied, “I’m sore from that fall, Pa.” He took the last step up, trying
not to wince.
“It looks like more than
that,” Ben returned. “Did you come off again?”
“No,” Joe replied,
truthfully. He found a smile, small but genuine. “I broke that black, Pa.” He
sounded justifiably proud of himself.
“How about I get Hop Sing
to bring you some water for a bath?” Ben suggested. “That’ll take the aches
out.”
He was surprised when Joe
looked alarmed. “No, never mind,” Joe blustered. “I’ll be fine.” The truth was,
he didn’t know if he would be able to get into the bath, and the thought of
sitting in it was enough to set his tail aching anew. In fact, the longer he
stood there, the more it ached. He smiled once more and detoured round Ben to
go to his room.
With a sigh of relief, Joe
closed the door and looked at the bed. A soft seat seemed to be just the thing
he needed and so he hobbled over and sank down, wincing at the pain as he
reached the point of critical bend. But that was nothing to the pain of his
buttocks actually hitting the softness of the bed. The pain was excruciating
and Joe couldn’t contain his scream. He rocked over onto his right buttock, his
arm leaning on the bed to help support his weight while his left hand shot
round to gently cup his injured part.
The thunder of feet outside
in the hallway ought to have alerted Joe to the fact his scream had not gone
unnoticed, but he was so deep in the pain that he didn’t actually hear them and
he was quite surprised to see the door to his room being flung open and his
father and brothers all dash in. “Joe, what’s wrong?” Ben gasped, looking
wildly all around as though expecting to see an armed intruder.
“Sorry,” Joe responded
through gritted teeth. The pain was beginning to ease slightly, but when Joe
tentatively tried to sit back down on both cheeks, it flared up again, and he
swiftly regained the more ‘comfortable’ pose. “I just didn’t expect it to hurt
so much.”
It took Hoss a moment to
realise what was wrong with Joe but when he did, he let out a great bellow of
laughter and within a moment or two, both Adam and Ben were laughing along with
him. Joe regarded them in hurt silence. He had expected this reaction to the
news that he’d landed on his butt, but given the amount of pain he was in, he
failed to see the funny side. “I can do without the audience,” he announced
curtly. Still laughing, the others back out and shut the door.
But Joe’s problems didn’t
stop there. Sitting down and bending over to take off his boots was almost
worse than just sitting had been and he discovered that he couldn’t do it. Nor
could he bring his leg up and rest it on the opposite thigh and haul his boots
off that way. Tears of frustration and pain rose in Joe’s eyes, but they didn’t
fall.
Thinking that if he stood
up, he might be able to pull his boots off by putting the opposite toe on the
back on his boot heel, Joe discovered that the act of sitting was preferable to
the act of rising. He clung to the bedpost, panting his way through the pain
and groaning softly. The only time Joe could remember experiencing such
excruciating pain was when he had had broken limbs.
“But I can’t have broken
anything there, can I?” he murmured. “It’s just my tail b…” Joe’s voice trailed
off as he remembered a conversation with Ben when he was just a little boy,
asking why his bottom was sometimes referred to as his tail when he clearly
didn’t have a tail. Ben had explained that there was a bone called his tail
bone. Remembering, Joe winced anew. Perhaps he had broken it.
Eventually, Joe managed to
get changed, but he felt slightly nauseous by the time it was accomplished and
he knew he was perilously close to being late for supper. Joe didn’t know if he
was hungry or not, but the thought of sitting at the table was one that wasn’t
easy to face. Slowly, Joe made his way down the stairs, and grimly set his jaw
against the burst of laughter that greeted his arrival.
Seeing that Joe was really
upset, Ben soon put a stop to the teasing. He watched with growing concern as
his youngest son eased himself onto his seat with an expression of extreme pain
on his handsome features. Somehow, he didn’t think Adam’s assessment of Joe
seeking attention was accurate. If anything, Joe usually made light of his
injuries. His attention seeking was always much more direct. Not wanting to
start his other sons off again, Ben said nothing, but he watched Joe chase the
food around his plate for a while before Joe announced that he wasn’t hungry,
just tired and could he pleased be excused.
“All right,” Ben agreed. He
watched Joe’s face closely as he got to his feet and heard the muffled groan
Joe couldn’t quite contain and saw the spasm of pain that crossed Joe’s pale
features. Hoss snorted indelicately into his napkin and Ben threw both his
older sons a hard glare as he realised they were both laughing again. They did
their best to subdue their glee, but didn’t quite succeed. Furious and
offended, Joe made his careful way across to the stairs and paused there for a
moment before beginning the painful upward climb.
As soon as Joe was out of
sight, Ben rounded on his other two sons, who were now both laughing openly.
“That’s enough!” Ben declared sternly. “Can’t you see your brother’s in a lot
of pain?”
“He’s sure making a meal of
it,” Adam cackled.
“Joe’s dignity sure is
painin’ him some right enough,” Hoss sniggered.
“For your information,” Ben
said, icily, “I don’t think he is ‘making a meal of it’! He’s in a great deal
of pain, and if you don’t know by now that Joe plays down any problems, then
you’ll never know your brother!” Glancing down at his own meal, Ben discovered
that he had lost his appetite. He threw his napkin down and rose, giving his
sons another glare. They both tried their best to look repentant, but neither
succeeded and as Ben rounded the corner of the stairs, he heard another burst
of laughter erupting from them.
For a moment, Ben hesitated
outside Joe’s closed door, then he raised his hand and knocked briskly. “Joe?
Can I come in?”
“Sure,” came the dispirited
answer from the other side and Ben entered to find Joe leaning on his dresser
with both hands, his head hanging down. He turned his head to look at Ben and
slowly straightened up. “Hi, Pa. Come to laugh some more?” His tone was bitter.
“I’m sorry I laughed
earlier,” Ben apologised, for he was sorry now that he’d seen the depths of
Joe’s distress. “I didn’t realise how
much you were hurting. After all, you got straight back onto that horse.”
“It wasn’t really sore
then,” Joe explained. “Just numb. And I had to get the horse broken, Pa. It was
only later, as I got down from Cooch that I realised how sore everything was.
Standing isn’t good and sitting is worse and that point between standing and
sitting is just…” Joe’s voice trailed off, because the only adjective that
sprang to mind was an expletive that Pa would not approve of – hell. He
swallowed. “And I couldn’t even get my boots off, Pa! And then I had trouble
with my socks; in fact, I didn’t put any more socks on because I couldn’t face
it.” Joe lifted a very woebegone face to Ben. “I’m in agony, Pa, and all Adam
and Hoss can do is laugh at me!”
Putting his arm around Joe,
Ben was troubled. Joe so seldom admitted to any physical weakness. Ben had
often wondered if it was because he was the shortest member of the family, or
because Joe had often felt, as a youngster, that he had to push harder to catch
up with his older brothers. But whatever the reason, Joe usually told everyone
he was ‘fine’. “Your brothers don’t realise that you’re so sore, Joe,” Ben
soothed him. “I didn’t realise at first either. Please forgive me. Now tell me;
what can I do to help?”
“Take my boots off?” Joe
suggested, trying to laugh off his misery. He failed.
“Sit down then,” Ben urged
and saw at once that he had blundered. “Joe, I’m sorry.” Ben cursed himself for
his thoughtlessness as he saw the anger flaring in Joe’s face. “Let me get you
something for the pain, and then we can see about getting your boots off.”
“All right,” Joe muttered
sulkily. He leaned over again, because that position gave him marginal relief
from the pain.
“How is he?” Adam asked, as
Ben came down stairs.
Glaring at his older sons,
Ben paused. “I’m going to get him some laudanum,” he replied. “Because
otherwise, I don’t think he’ll be able to sleep tonight. Did either of you two actually
look at your brother? He’s like his own ghost! He took a really bad fall out
there this afternoon and I think he’s really hurt himself.” Without another
word, Ben marched into the kitchen to locate the laudanum.
Sobered by Ben’s
displeasure, Adam and Hoss looked at each other. “I thought he was putting it
on,” Adam ventured at last.
“Yeah, me too,” agreed
Hoss. “I thought he’d have a bruise like that time Satan bit him an’ when he
got that corker when ya was back….” Hoss’ voice trailed off and he looked at
Adam. “When Tom tried ta kill him when ya was back east visitin’ that time.”
“I remember Joe telling me
about the bruise, and your story of him climbing on the dresser to look at it,”
Adam nodded. He hated hearing of the time Tom masqueraded as him and came close
to killing both Joe and Ben. “I thought it was just a bruise, too. I think
we’ve got an apology to make, brother.”
“I think you have, too,”
Ben nodded as he came back into the sitting room. “But give me a few minutes
first to get Joe settled into bed.”
“We’re right sorry, Pa,”
Hoss replied contritely.
“I’m sure you are,” Ben
responded and carried on upstairs. The shortness of his response told both his
boys that they would have some serious fence mending to do – and not just with
Joe.
******************
When Adam and Hoss went
upstairs a little while later, neither of them was keen to be the first to go
into Joe’s room. Adam knocked and Ben bade them come in. He had given Joe the
laudanum, then helped him out of his boots and into a nightshirt. At Joe’s
bidding, he discreetly looked for bruising, but there was nothing to see,
although the whole area looked a bit swollen.
“Can I help you get into
bed or are you better doing this yourself?” Ben enquired.
“I think I’ll need to do it
for myself, thanks,” Joe replied. He could feel the laudanum taking a hold and
although he really didn’t like to take drugs, the resulting numbing of his butt
was the nicest sensation he could imagine. Unfortunately, as he sat down on the
bed, he realised that he wasn’t going to be totally pain free. He managed to
bite back the cry that rose to his lips and swung his legs gingerly into bed,
immediately sliding down and rolling onto his right side, facing away from the
door. After a moment, his breathing eased as the pain died down.
As his brothers came in,
Joe gave Ben a pleading look. He hoped his brothers were there to apologise. He
didn’t think he could face any more teasing. Perhaps when the pain died away he
would be able to see the funny side; and he would be the first to admit to
laughing at others who had had a similar incident, but he vowed never to do
that again.
“Um, Joe?” Adam decided to
go first and get it over with. After all, he had added the additional insult of
swatting Joe on the butt. “I’m really sorry I didn’t take you seriously. I
didn’t think you were really hurt. I thought it was just your pride that had
suffered. And I’m sorry if I made things worse by swatting you like that. I
didn’t mean it.”
“All right,” Joe replied,
somewhat ungraciously. He glanced at Adam, who had moved round the bed so he
was facing Joe. His brother really did look shame-faced. “I know you didn’t
mean it,” he relented.
“I’m sorry, too,
Shortshanks,” Hoss added. “I was jist rememberin’ that bruise ya got on yer
butt afore.” For once, Hoss exercised a great deal of tact and didn’t remind
Joe of the horrible chain of events. “I don’t guess ya’ll be climbin’ on yer
dresser ta look at this one, will ya?”
“I don’t suppose so,” Joe smiled,
for Hoss looked so mournful that Joe couldn’t stay mad. He was feeling sleepy
now that the laudanum was hitting him and he slid a little further down the
bed, dismayed to find that even that simple movement hurt.
With a smile, Ben indicated
that his older sons should go and leaned down to pull the blankets up to Joe’s
shoulders. Joe’s lashes brushed his cheeks and he could barely drag his eyes
open again for long enough to whisper, “G’night, Pa.”
“Night, son,” Ben whispered
in reply, but he was sure Joe didn’t hear him. Ben gently stroked Joe’s curls
for a moment before going out and softly shutting the door.
*****************
When he woke the next
morning, Joe realised that he had been allowed to sleep in. He grimaced as the
sensation of being hung over hit him. The laudanum always did that to him and
Joe hated it. He rolled over and thought with immense relief that his butt
didn’t hurt any more!
Energetically, Joe threw
back the covers and swung his feet onto the floor. Pain rocketed up through his coccyx and Joe
groaned aloud. What was he going to do now? he wondered. He longed to roll back
into bed, but now he was awake, his bladder was making its presence felt. Joe
bent over to reach under the bed for the chamber pot, but that action proved to
be too agonising to complete and he sat back gingerly.
Finally, Joe slid onto his
knees on the floor and managed to reach the pot from there. Standing proved to
be less of a nightmare from that position than Joe had feared and he was able
to stand without too much pain.
With his bladder relieved,
Joe turned to his morning ablutions and quickly washed himself and slid on a
shirt. Although standing produced a feeling of discomfort, Joe found that by
swaying to and fro, it was eased slightly. Pulling on his pants, Joe decided
that there was no way he was going to sit down and attempt to put on either
socks or boots, so he headed downstairs in his bare feet.
He wasn’t terribly
surprised to find Ben downstairs, although his father was reading the previous
day’s newspaper, not working on the books. “Morning, Pa,” he smiled.
“Morning, son,” Ben
replied. “How are you feeling this morning?”
“About the same,” Joe
admitted, dispiritedly.
“Is the pain no better?”
Ben asked, worriedly.
“Not that I’ve noticed,”
Joe replied, trying to be as up-beat about it as he could manage. He walked
steadily over to the table and looked at his chair for a moment before lowering
himself gingerly onto it. Again, the moment of maximum bend was the moment of
maximum agony and Joe bit his lip to stop crying aloud. When the pain was once
more under control, Joe looked at Ben, who was regarding him with great
sympathy.
“Tough, huh?” Ben murmured
and briefly cupped the nape of Joe’s neck with his big warm hand before he went
into the kitchen to ask Hop Sing to bring Joe some breakfast.
It wasn’t until after Joe
had finished eating that Ben broached the dreaded question. “Don’t you think
you ought to see Doc Martin?” he enquired, neutrally.
The look of alarm on Joe’s face
was almost comical, but Ben also thought it was a trifle overdone. “No, it’ll
be fine!” Joe protested hastily.
“Joe.” Ben put his hand
down on top of Joe’s to prevent his son escaping, not realising that Joe was
dreading the thought of rising to his feet. “This is your back we’re talking
about here. You know the risks with back injuries just about as well as I do.
I’m concerned about this and I want you to come into town with me this morning
and we’ll see Doc Martin and pick up the supplies.”
“On the buckboard?” Joe
squeaked and Ben nodded impatiently.
“Yes, of course in the
buckboard. How else am I meant to get the supplies back….” Ben’s voice trailed
off as he suddenly understood why his son was so determined to stay away from
the doctor. It wasn’t just Joe’s habitual distrust of the medical profession;
it was the thought of sitting on the seat of the buckboard. “Oh, yes, I see.”
If Joe found sitting on an unmoving, quite comfortable chair so awful, how
would the hard plank seat of the unsprung buckboard feel? Ben quite understood.
“That is a problem,” he admitted. “I still think you should get checked out
though.”
No one could live with that
level of pain without wanting to do something about it. “I’ll ride Cochise,”
Joe replied. “I was okay when I was on him.”
Frowning, Ben asked, “Are
you sure?”
Nodding, Joe managed a real
smile this time. “That’s one bit of you that isn’t really on the saddle,” he
reminded his father, who thought about it and agreed.
“Well, if you’re sure.”
“I am,” Joe nodded. He made
to get up, and the pain had him groaning aloud and gritting his teeth as he
reached that hellish point once more. Ben hastened to help Joe, but there was
very little he could do for him, except offer him sympathy and someone to lean
on until the worst was past. “Thanks, Pa,” Joe said, gratefully as the world
came back into focus. “Let’s get this over with, shall we?”
************************
Although the ride to town
was something Joe was in no hurry to repeat, he knew it beat hands down trying
to sit on the buckboard seat. He was quite relieved to arrive outside the
doctor’s and didn’t even mind when Ben came round to help him dismount. For a
moment, Joe just stood, leaning against Cochise, and allowing everything to
settle. Ben went in to see if Paul Martin was there. Coming back to the door,
he nodded to Joe, who straightened gingerly and went in.
It took only a few moments
to tell his story to Paul. “I’m sorry to ask you to stand, Joe, but I need to
examine you,” Paul told him. “I’ll be as gentle as I can be, but this is going
to hurt.” He helped Joe to his feet and delicately felt the bottom of Joe’s
spine.
The tiniest bit of pressure
had Joe almost jumping his own height in the air. Fortunately, that was about
it for the examination. “I’m sorry, but I need to look at the pattern of
bruising. Could you lower your pants, please?”
Blushing, Joe did as he was
asked. He normally didn’t suffer from much modesty and frequently didn’t wear
underwear at all, but he was glad he had today, although since that had to be
lowered as well, Joe couldn’t decide why he was glad he was wearing it! But
Paul’s examination was brief and Joe was soon being eased back into a seat.
“All right,” Paul said, sighing.
“Joe, you’ve broken your coccyx – your tailbone,” he added, seeing Joe frown.
“There’s a little movement there. Unfortunately, there’s nothing I can do for
it, apart from give pain relief, which I’m sure you’d appreciate right now,
judging from your face?” Joe nodded mutely, and Paul rose to mix something up
for him. “I’ll give you a prescription for this,” Paul told him as Joe drank it
down. “But I’m afraid you’re looking at about six to eight weeks before it’s
healed. Assuming it does heal.”
“What does that mean?” Joe
asked, shooting an apprehensive glance at Ben.
“Well, coccyx often don’t
heal well,” Paul explained. “I don’t really know why. Something to do with
their position, I suppose. At the moment, some of the discomfort is because of
the level of bruising, Joe. Your butt cheeks aren’t marked, but between them…”
He trailed off for a moment, before smiling sheepishly at the look of horror on
his young patient’s face. “I know, it’s a charming topic, isn’t it? However,
that part of your anatomy is black right now, and it could be black for some
time to come. Some of the pain will ease out as the bruising eases, obviously.
But for now, don’t carry heavy weights. Don’t stand too much, or walk too much.
Keep riding to a minimum until the bruising is down. Try lying on your stomach,
not sitting, and don’t sit on the floor! I’ve found that makes everything much
worse!”
“Anything else?” Ben asked.
“Regular pain relief,” he
replied. “Certainly for the first week, and after that, you can judge for yourself
if you need anything, Joe. However, this isn’t a licence to loll around the
house and not do anything at all. No exercise is just as harmful as too much.”
He scribbled the prescription for painkillers. “Try to keep the getting up and
down to a minimum to begin with,” Paul added as Joe got to his feet to leave.
“That’s the point when the damage is exacerbated the most.”
“You don’t say,” Joe
commented dryly. “Thanks, doc.”
Outside, they stood for a
moment beside the buckboard. “Do you want to mount now, Joseph, or walk down to
meet me at the store?”
“I’ll walk, thanks, Pa,”
Joe replied. “I’ll meet you down there.” He took Cochise’s rein and began a
slow walk down the street. Ben watched him for a moment, then got into the
buckboard and went down to the general store.
************************
By the time they got home,
Joe could appreciate the stricture against not riding too much. It wasn’t the
sorest position he had found, but it wasn’t the best, either. With Ben’s help,
he slid carefully down from Cochise and made to take him into the barn, but Ben
wasn’t having that. “I’ll see to your horse,” he announced. “You go inside and
make yourself comfortable, all right?”
“All right,” Joe agreed,
for he was sore enough and tired enough to want to rest, but he had been taught
from childhood to take care of his mount before he saw to his own comforts. “At
least you didn’t tell me to sit down,” Joe quipped and Ben laughed.
“Get out of here!” he
scolded lightly and watched as Joe walked carefully across to the house.
When he came inside, Joe
was stretched out on his side on the sofa gazing dreamily into the flames in
the fireplace. “If you want to sleep, I won’t stop you,” Ben remarked.
“No, I don’t really,” Joe
replied. “I am a bit tired, but I’m not sleepy, if you see what I mean.” He
rolled his head round to smile at Ben. “I was just thinking.”
“What about?” Ben asked,
his tone carefully neutral.
“What do you think?” Joe
replied ruefully. “I was just thinking of the number of falls I’ve had over the
years from horses while I was breaking them. Sure, I’ve had my share of broken
bones, but this is one I never thought about. I didn’t know you could break
your tail bone.”
“Nor me,” Ben agreed.
“Although I do know men who have had an injury there, but a lot of them
wouldn’t trust a doctor, or have the money to consult one in the first place,
and so they just had to get on with things. Not every rancher is willing to
give men paid time off if they get sick or hurt, Joe.”
“I know,” Joe replied,
soberly. A few of his father’s rancher friends had followed Ben’s example of
giving men pay if they got hurt doing ranch work, but they were still in a
minority. “I’d hate to have to work through this pain, Pa.”
“I’m sorry you have to have
it at all, Joe,” Ben answered him.
“It’s not your fault, Pa,”
Joe frowned, sliding himself up so he wasn’t lying quite so flat. “I would
never hold anyone else responsible for something I did on a horse.”
Ben regarded Joe for a
moment, struck anew by how handsome his son was. “Is that your way of telling
me that you sometimes aren’t as careful as you ought to be, young man?”
The look on Joe’s face was
comical as he reviewed what he had said, and wondered how on earth Ben had
drawn the conclusion he had. “Um, no,” he ventured and glanced at Ben’s face.
It was with considerable relief that Joe saw the laughter there. He had always
known that Ben had a certain fear about Joe’s fearless attitude to horses,
stemming from Joe’s mother’s death. The fear had come to a head when Joe’s horse
had fallen in the yard as Joe rode in at a canter, eager to tell Ben about the
big cat that he had seen up by the herd. Joe had had a nasty head injury, but
he had escaped with a minor concussion only. Joe decided to try and dig himself
out of the hole he had managed to dig himself into in the first place. “But
since I’m in charge of the horses, nobody can be held responsible for me.” He
smiled brightly.
“It’s still my ranch,” Ben
reminded him, but he couldn’t begin to keep his face straight and laughed. “I
know you know the risks, Joe, but I’ve never broken horses and I don’t know how
you can climb onto a mustang, knowing that there’s a pretty fair chance it’s
going to throw you.”
“I don’t really know,
either,” Joe replied, thoughtfully. “It doesn’t really worry me. Generally, you
hit the ground and walk away. The times when you don’t are the minority, after
all. Even this; I did walk away from it, Pa. It was just one of those things.”
Joe shrugged.
“Well, I’m quite happy to
leave all the breaking to you, Joe, if that’s what you want,” Ben replied. He
slapped his knees and got to his feet. Joe envied him the ease with which he
accomplished the move. “Lunch should be ready soon. I’ll go and have a look at
the mail.”
***********************
There was no improvement in
Joe’s condition over the next few days. He took the painkillers regularly as he
had been told and with no complaint and that alone was enough to tell his
family how bad things were. Joe never took painkillers unless they were forced
on him. Adam and Hoss were quite contrite about their initial amusement at
Joe’s predicament and went out of their way to entertain Joe, or get things for
him. Joe swiftly became aware of this, and took full advantage of it for
several days until Ben put his foot down. Thereafter, normal behaviour was
restored.
Hop Sing had been giving
Joe something called arnica and Joe found that after he had taken it for a full
day, the bruising on his butt began to ease. By the end of the week, Joe was
finding he could go without the painkillers most of the time, although there
were still times he needed them.
As Joe improved, so the
family relaxed and Ben found himself going out more often to supervise tasks,
or take a more active hand in the activities that were going on around the
ranch. The range of light chores that Joe could do was understandably limited,
so he found himself relegated to collecting the eggs once more, and feeding the
pigs. Joe didn’t mind feeding the pigs so much, but he hated collecting the
eggs. The chickens seemed to have it in for him, pecking at him viciously and
he was apprehensive that one would land a direct hit on his sore behind! It
never came to pass, but Joe could not shake off this disquieting thought.
About three weeks after the
accident, Joe was out in the yard, petting Cochise in the corral when Fred, one
of their long-time ranch hands, came riding in full pelt. “Joe!” he cried,
spying his young boss.
“What’s wrong?” Joe asked,
diagnosing immediately that something was wrong, simply by looking at Fred’s
face. Normally of placid temperament, Fred now looked agitated and it usually
took quite something to agitate Fred.
“Stampede!” Fred cried and
Joe paled.
“My family?” he asked,
grabbing the older man by the arm.
“I dunno,” Fred panted. “Mr
Cartwright sent me ta get some ropes, take them back an’ then go fer the doc.”
“Where are they?” Joe
demanded. “Tell me what happened!” He listened in growing horror as Fred told
Joe of the sudden stampede. No one knew what had started it, but suddenly the
herd, which was being moved to fresh grazing, had broken into a run. Some of
them had plunged into the fast-running creek by the track they were following
and had become bogged down. Others had kept on going and Fred had been grabbed
by Ben and ordered to get help.
“All right,” Joe nodded,
his worry only marginally appeased. “You go and get the doc and I’ll go with
the ropes.”
“But you ain’t...” Fred
began but Joe interrupted him.
“My butt isn’t the issue
here,” he retorted. “Just get going, Fred!” He hurried into the barn to get his
saddle as Fred did as he was told.
******************
Anxiety ate into Joe as he
rode at a gallop towards the herd. He barely noticed the pain in his butt as
the worry for the safety of his family consumed his mind. Even though he knew
Ben had been all right when Fred left him, that didn’t mean things were still
all right. Anything could happen in the aftermath of a stampede.
He could hear the bawling
of the steers long before he could see them. Joe slowed his headlong pace,
knowing that appearing at a gallop was the worst thing he could do, even though
it was what his instinct urged him to do. At a cautious trot, he came face to
face with disaster.
Most of the herd was
milling about anxiously as the cowboys rode around them, trying to calm them
down. In the creek, Joe could see a number of beasts still stuck there. He was
pretty sure at least a few had drowned. The air was full of dust, but Joe
didn’t think about putting on a bandanna. He had to find his family.
“Joe!” The voice sounded
surprised and disapproving but was no less welcome to Joe because of that.
“What are you doing here?”
“Adam, are you all right?
Where’s Pa and Hoss?”
“They’re ok,” Adam assured Joe,
seeing how pale his younger brother was. But at that bit of good news, colour
began to creep back into Joe’s face. “What are you doing here? You’re not
supposed to ride this far.” The disapproval was back.
“I brought the ropes,” Joe
announced, wondering why Adam needed to ask. Cochise’s saddle was festooned
with ropes. “And I’ll help if I can.”
Frowning at Joe, Adam was
tempted to try and send him back to the house with a few well-chosen sharp
words. But he knew that they needed every hand they could get to help get the
steers out of the creek. “Keep away from the heavy stuff,” Adam ordered curtly
and took the ropes from Joe, riding off to distribute them where they were most
needed. Joe watched him go, relieved that Adam hadn’t tried to send him home.
Moments later, Joe spotted his father and other brother and, relieved, went off
to help soothe the herd.
A few of the hands lay on
the ground and Joe grimaced in pity for them. One man was clearly already dead
and another looked to Joe as though he would soon be joining his comrade. But
there was nothing Joe could do for them. Another hand was tending them with
rough sympathy. Joe rode on past, wishing there was something he could do.
Gradually the herd began to
calm down and the remaining hands got the animals moving in the correct
direction again. Seeing that they had things under control, Joe turned Cochise
and headed back to the scene of the disaster. As he arrived, he saw that the
first of the steers was being hauled up the banking from the creek. It reached
the top, shook itself while Hoss untwined the rope from around its horns, then
staggered slowly away, following its herd mates. One down, Joe thought, but
there were still several to go.
Even as he relaxed, Joe saw
disaster strike once more. The next steer panicked as the one beneath it
struggled to free itself and get up. The creature clearly had a couple of
broken legs and was trying to get up. Hoss continued pulling at the top steer
while Adam slid around it to put the underneath one out of its misery.
But before he could even
draw his gun, the creek bank crumbled under the flailing cloven hooves of the
steer and the big animal began to slide back down the bank, with Adam right in
its path.
“Adam look out!” a myriad
of voices shouted, but there was no time for Adam to get completely clear.
1200lbs of steer slid backwards onto Adam.
**********************
There was no time for
anyone to react to this disaster. The steer panicked as its hooves slipped and
it threw its head up. The movement shifted its whole weight, which began to
topple backwards. Hoss was pulled off his feet and before he could catch
himself, the steer fell back and landed across the creek, where it struggled to
free itself. Hoss was lost somewhere down the side of the banking.
Joe didn’t wait to see any
more. He snatched up the rope that was still tied to his saddle and leapt off
Cochise, sliding down to the edge of the river. Ben was looking frantically for
his sons, while the hand beside him went to put the both steers out of their
misery.
“Hoss!” Joe cried, as he
threw himself down on his stomach on the grass. He could see his brother at the
bottom of the bank, floundering around trying to regain his feet. He didn’t
seem to be hurt, but Joe knew that any moment, one of the flailing feet of the
steer could strike him. “Catch!” he called, and threw the rope down to Hoss.
Quickly, Hoss looped the
rope under his arms and did his best to help his rescuer as Joe hauled, hand
over hand, to help Hoss up the bank. It didn’t take long for Hoss’ head and
shoulders to come into view, and a moment later, Ben’s hand was there helping
Hoss up the last part. “Are you all right?” Ben asked.
Too winded to speak, Hoss
simply nodded. Joe glanced at Ben. “What about Adam?”
“He’s trapped between the
bank and that injured steer,” Ben replied, in a distracted tone. He hadn’t
seemed to realise that Joe shouldn’t be there. “I can’t get down to him.”
“I can,” Joe announced and
after patting Hoss on the shoulder, he got to his feet and hurried over to the
place where Adam lay. He threw the rope down first then slid down after it,
hearing his father calling his name in protest.
There was no time for Joe
to waste waiting for help he realised at once. Adam was lying in the water, his
face barely above it and Joe knew only too well that there was a risk of Adam
drowning before help could arrive. He drew his pistol and put the injured steer
out of its misery, then turned his attention to Adam.
“Where are you hurt?” he
asked, putting his hand on Adam’s arm.
“Broke my leg,” Adam
replied. His face was white with pain and his lip tight.
“Joe!” Ben shouted. “How’s
Adam?”
“He’s broken his leg, Pa,”
Joe called back. “If I loop this rope round the horns, can you and Hoss move
this carcass?”
“Yes,” Ben cried back and
Joe patted Adam before he scrambled off to attach the rope to the dead steer.
He made sure it was good and tight.
“Here it comes!” he called
and threw the rope to the top of the bank. Ben caught it easily and handed it
to Hoss, who wound the ends around his saddle horn.
“Joe! Put this rope on
too!” Hoss hollered and threw down another rope. His throw was excellent and the rope struck
Joe in the side before he had time to put up his hands to catch it. Standing
almost ankle deep in the cold water, Joe worked as quickly as he could.
“All right!” he called.
“Haul away!”
Moving out of the way, Joe
leant over Adam to protect him from anything untoward that might happen. He
watched over his shoulder as the steer began to move very slowly. Adam groaned
and Joe transferred his attention to his brother. He saw at once that the
steer’s movement would cause Adam to sink deeper into the water. Joe scrambled
around until he was by Adam’s head, then sat down in the creek, gradually easing
his brother’s head and shoulders up until they rested on Joe’s chest.
“Joe, I’m all right,” Adam
protested weakly. “You’re getting wet.”
“Well, I don’t shrink,” Joe
replied cheerfully, although it wasn’t so much the wet that was the problem as
the coldness of the water. “How’re you doing?”
“It hurts,” Adam grunted.
“Joe, your butt…”
“It’s still attached,” Joe
replied. He hadn’t felt it at all before then, but suddenly, reminded, the pain
came back with a vengeance and Joe realise that he had managed to hurt himself,
as the pain was much worse. He bit back a groan. Adam didn’t need to know that
Joe was suffering, too. He needed to think Joe was in charge – which he was.
Suddenly there was a shout
and the steer splashed back into the water, spraying both Joe and Adam and
making Adam cry out in pain. Joe’s own pain at the suddenness of the movement
was bad enough. He couldn’t imagine what Adam was feeling. “You all right?” he
asked, wiping the water off his brother’s face. He could feel Adam beginning to
shiver and his flesh was cold to the touch.
“Hmm,” Adam replied,
clearly anything but all right. His weight of his head increased as his ability
to keep it held up decreased as the pain increased. He slid into a sort of
stupor.
Later, Joe would never know
how long they sat there before the steer was finally dragged clear; all he knew
was that it was too long. But finally, Hoss slid down the banking to his
brothers and carefully picked up Adam and carried him over to the side where
willing hands pulled him to safety. Hoss turned round to make a comment to Joe
and was shocked to see his brother still sitting in the water. “Joe? What’s
wrong?”
“I don’t think I can get
up,” Joe replied. His legs were numb where Adam’s weight had rested on them and
his butt was screaming in agony from sitting on the rocky creek bed for so
long. He tried once more to get up and a river of agony shot up his back and
down his legs. He cried out.
In an instant, Hoss was at
Joe’s side and he bent over and picked his brother up as though he was a child.
Joe protested to no avail, yet he could feel Hoss’ muscles quivering with
strain. “Hoss, you can’t,” he whispered through the pain.
“Jist hush up,” Hoss
panted. He knew he was nearing the end of his strength, but he had to get Joe
out of there. Again, willing hands reached for Joe and hauled him to safety.
When Hoss scrambled onto
the banking once more, he realised, with a sense of shock, that it was getting
dark. They had been by the creek all afternoon. Doc Martin had been there for
some time, but there had been very little he could do for the most badly
injured hand except ease his pain and the man had slipped away peacefully. The
other men had been patched up and dispatched back to the ranch in the wagon
that Fred had been sent to get. Now, Paul examined Adam and Joe, hoping that
Fred would hurry back with that wagon.
Both men were very cold.
Adam’s broken leg was quite straight forward and Paul was able to reduce it right
there and then, also cutting off Adam’s boot to prevent the swelling spreading
up his leg. There were no blankets there, and the Cartwrights hadn’t even a
coat between them. Joe groaned and Paul hurried over to give Joe a painkilling
injection as he had done to Adam.
“I wish Fred would hurry,”
Paul commented to Ben in an undertone. He glanced at the two men. “Joe, try and
lie still,” he urged as Joe attempted to roll over onto one side. “I know it
hurts, but right now, lying flat is the best thing you can do.”
“How’s Adam?” Joe asked,
his teeth chattering. He clenched his jaw to try and stop them, but it didn’t
work.
“He’ll be all right, just
as you will,” Paul replied. He smiled slightly at Ben, who came to kneel
between his two sons.
“Here’s Fred!” Hoss
declared, his tones tinged with relief.
“At last!” Joe responded,
tartly. “Where did he go with those men? The moon?” He tried to laugh to ease
Ben’s anxiety slightly, but it didn’t quite come off.
Adam was deep in a drugged sleep
when he was moved and Joe envied him. He couldn’t quite drop off, although he
was exhausted. Each jolt of the wagon kept him in sheer, hellish wakefulness
and he was never so glad to arrive home as he was that day.
While Paul plastered Adam’s
leg, Ben helped Joe have a bath to warm him up and clean off some of the mud.
Sitting was a nightmare, but the warmth of the water did loosen some of Joe’s
muscles and he felt slightly better after it was over. He was embarrassed that
Ben had to dry his feet and legs, as he simply couldn’t bend over to reach
them, but Ben was quite matter-of-fact about it and slid a nightshirt over
Joe’s head without comment.
Finally lying on his side
in bed was a great relief for Joe. The painkiller was really working now as he
relaxed and Joe was drifting on the outer edges of sleep when Paul Martin came
in. Reluctantly, Joe dragged his eyes open again.
“All right, Joe, tell me
exactly what happened out there,” Paul requested.
Sleepily, Joe related the
story of Fred’s arrival with the bad news, his own journey out there, and then
the steer falling on Adam. “I helped
Hoss get up the banking,” Joe replied, “then I went down to help Adam.”
“So in other words, you
lifted a saddle, which is heavy, and helped pull Hoss up a bank – and Hoss is heavy! – and then supported your
brother’s weight in a cold creek while sitting flat on your behind. Is that
correct?”
Blinking at the sarcastic
tone, Joe nodded. “Sound about right,” he admitted.
“Well, I’m not surprised you’re
in pain,” Paul remarked. “Everything you did this afternoon hasn’t done your
back any favours. I’ll just have a look at it.” He probed gently at the
swelling at the base of Joe’s spine and was rewarded with a couple of hisses, a
groan and a yelp. “Well, its badly swollen again, Joe and I’m afraid you’ve put
yourself back with this. Any one of those things you did this afternoon would
have been bad for your back, and all of them together have really made a mess
of things. I want you to stay off your feet completely tomorrow, and you can
get up carefully the day after. But you won’t be riding anywhere much, or doing
anything much. Time is the only cure.”
“All right,” Joe muttered,
sulkily. He’d been aware that he shouldn’t be doing any of those things, but he
couldn’t sit back and let his brothers suffer. “How’s Adam?”
“Thanks to you, he’s fine,”
Paul replied, in a softer tone. “Joe, I was harsh with you just now, but you
needed to understand that you’ve hurt yourself badly again. But I have to say,
it was incredibly brave of you to do what you did.”
“It wasn’t brave,” Joe
protested. “I was just doing what had to be done.”
Above Joe’s head, Ben and
Paul exchanged glances, then Paul patted Joe’s shoulder. “Well, whatever, Joe,
I think it was incredibly brave. Now you rest tomorrow and keep off your back
as much as possible, all right? And take it easy. I’ll see you in a few days
when I come out to check on Adam.”
“I’ll be back, Joe,” Ben
said, as he rose to see Paul out.
Another bout of shivers ran
down Joe’s back and he dragged the covers up over his shoulders. Once more, he
was on the outer fringes of sleep when the door opened and Ben came back.
Seeing the sleepy expression on Joe’s face, Ben wasn’t going to linger, but
Joe’s eyes opened as Ben slipped a hot water bottle under the covers. “Are you
mad at me, Pa?” Joe whispered.
“Mad at you?” Ben echoed.
“Why, Joe how could I be mad at you?”
“Well, what Doc Martin
said,” Joe replied. “Everything I did this afternoon was wrong.”
“Not everything, Joe,” Ben
denied. “The things you did this afternoon were bad for your sore back, but
there was nothing wrong with the impulse that made you do them. Joe, a lot of
men wouldn’t have put themselves out for another in that dangerous situation.
And I’m very grateful that you did, even though I am sorry that you’re hurt
again.”
“It doesn’t matter,” Joe
replied. “I had to help Adam and Hoss.” His eyes were drooping with exhaustion
now.
“I know,” Ben soothed. “You
go to sleep now, Joe. I’m not mad at you.” He sat beside Joe for several
minutes until he was sure his youngest slumbered deeply, then he rose and went
downstairs.
He could hear Hoss’ voice
in the kitchen talking to Hop Sing, but Ben didn’t go to join them. He sat down
in front of the fire and held his hands out to the blaze although he wasn’t
really cold. He was thinking deeply about his three sons. Each of them would be
willing to give their lives for the others, Ben knew. It was an awesome
thought. Even though Ben had instilled the notion of family above all into them
since they were small boys, he hadn’t realised how far the boys were willing to
go with it. Ben was so proud of them all that he could have burst.
“Hey, Pa, supper’s ready,”
Hoss announced, coming into the great room and seeing his father’s silver hair.
“Reckon Adam an’ Joe’ll want some?”
“Well, I don’t know about
Adam,” Ben replied, “but Joe’s sound asleep.”
“All the more for us then!”
Hoss exclaimed gleefully and seated himself at the table.
That night, Ben’s thanks to
the Lord was more heartfelt than it had been for some time.
*********************
Adam and Joe were soon up
and around. Adam’s leg seemed to be healing nicely and after the first few
days, Joe’s sore butt had finally begun to ease and he was noticing a
difference in the way he could walk and stand. It seemed that despite his
exertions, he hadn’t done himself any lasting damage.
One afternoon a few weeks
later, Adam and Joe were alone in the house. Putting his book down, Adam
glanced at Joe, who was fathoms deep in a luridly illustrated book. Another
dime novel, Adam sighed. When would he grow out of them?
“Joe?” he ventured.
“Hmm?” Joe responded, his
nose still in the book.
“I want to talk to you,” Adam
persisted and Joe regretfully laid the book down.
“Whatever it was, it wasn’t
me,” he protested automatically and smiled angelically.
Smiling as well, Adam shook
his head. Joe always said that. “I just wanted to thank you for what you did
that day,” he muttered. “I know it was painful for you and you didn’t have to
sit with me.”
“If I hadn’t, you’d have
drowned,” Joe replied bluntly and then saw from Adam’s face that his brother
had known that nugget of information. “Adam, I would’ve done it even if you
hadn’t been in danger,” Joe hurried on. “You were in pain and needed someone
with you.”
“I’m sorry I made such fun
of your injury to begin with,” Adam went on, having digested that piece of the
story. “But I think I know what it cost you to sit there in that water with me.
Thank you doesn’t seem enough, somehow.”
“Its more than enough,” Joe
returned, his face crimson. “I was just doing what had to be done.”
Realising that to say any
more would force Joe into leaving the room, Adam smiled. “I hope you keep on
‘doing what has to be done’,” he concluded.
*********************
“So,” Ben asked, his face
wreathed in smiles as Joe dismounted from Cochise with his usual graceful step,
“how was your first full day back at work?”
Grinning with his normal
vivid enthusiasm, Joe replied, “It was great, Pa!” He led Cochise into the
barn, talking all the time, telling Ben the minutiae of his day. Ben listened
with delight. It had been three very long months for Joe, but at last his
coccyx had healed and he was now back into the swing of things.
“Well, I just hope you’re
this keen when we start the cattle drive next month,” Ben smiled as Joe finally
ran out of things to tell him.
“Pa, everything sounds good
to me right now!” Joe declared. He finished brushing his horse and patted him.
“So, is supper ready yet?”
They both laughed and Ben
draped his arm over Joe’s shoulder as they walked back to the house.
The End
Dedicated to Mac the horse,
who broke my coccyx, but gave me a gift I’ll be forever grateful for.