“I think so,” Josiah answered. “Joshua’s become a pretty good shot over the last few days.”
“Just like his pa,” Titus said. “You give a lad a chance, and he’ll show you the man he’s made of, Josiah.”
That night at their fire Scratch told again of his journey north on horseback and on foot until he stumbled onto Mormon Town in the dark and was delivered to the Pueblo. And once the youngest of the children were tucked away in their blankets and robes and fast asleep, the men gathered at a nearby fire, where they began to talk in low tones of just what the next days and weeks might bring.
“We waited this long,” Josiah cheered those men who had marched down from the Arkansas. “We can wait till more help gets here from Bents Fort, and those soldiers come up from Santa Fe afore we make any moves to take on them butchers.”
“Then we’re gonna give back hurt for hurt,” Mathew vowed.
Paddock turned to Titus, reaching out to slap a hand on the old trapper’s knee. “There may not be much left of our house when we get back to it—but you’re welcome under our roof till spring gets here.”
“Spring’s a long, long ways off, Josiah,” Scratch said, patting the back of Paddock’s hand before he stood. “I’m laying my head down for to sleep now. Come morning, I’ll be off hunting meat for the camp.”
That next, short winter’s day went all the more quickly with the men coming and going—a few daring to ride off to the south with Kinkead, while most spread out into the hills in search of game. Each time a hunter dropped a deer, he returned to camp, warming himself by the fire before he ventured out again to continue his hunt.
Having his family around him once more, lying beside his wife in the stillness of the night, Scratch knew … even before Paddock, Kinkead, and the others began making their plans for retaking Taos once the army arrived. Scratch knew.
“They should’a been up here by now,” one of the men grumbled.
“Maybe them soldiers already have,” Kinkead ventured. “And they found out there’s more’n they can fight by themselves.”
Bass nodded. “You ’member what we saw at Turley’s, Josiah?”
“I do.”
Scratch looked at a few of those around the fire. “That mob of angry niggers outnumbered this bunch by more’n ten to one—”
“With our guns, each of us is worth more’n ten of them greasers any day!” one of the Pueblo men interrupted sharply.
Leaning toward the man, Titus said, “But Paddock will tell you same as me: That big mob we see’d at Turley’s was only part of ’em. Josiah, tell these fellas how many of them Injuns live in the Pueblo.”
“Likely there’s more than a thousand,” Paddock confirmed dolefully. “But there’s no real telling. No one in Taos ever counted. Could be a lot more.”
“An’ ever’ one’s got his blood up because they’ve had it easy so far, tearin’ Americans apart, piece by piece,” Titus warned as he noticed Waits-by-the-Water sliding down inside their robes at a fire nearby. “You ain’t takin’ Taos back easy. Not even if Savary brings down a hull shitteree of riflemen from his fort to join up with all of them dragoons coming up from Santa Fe.”
“We can do it, Scratch,” Josiah prodded.
Titus stood, hankering for bed and a stretch of uninterrupted sleep … ready for it all to be behind him. “Maybe you can, Josiah. But—this ain’t my fight. It’s yours.”
The stunned silence followed him as he inched toward the next fire where his wife and children lay curled up in their bedding. By the time he pulled the blankets up to his neck, and Waits nestled her head in the crook of his shoulder—he knew the murmured whispers involved him.
“He’ll feel differ’nt come morning,” one of the voices said.
Another confided, “Come tomorrow, he’ll be better.”
Titus Bass slipped out of the robes well before first light. He’d always had trouble sleeping the night before a long journey was to begin.
He was cinching the pack saddle on the last Cheyenne horse, tightening it down on the saddle pad, when he felt the hand laid upon his shoulder. Scratch turned, peering up into the ruddy face.
“I got the feeling this will likely be the last time I ever see you, Titus Bass,” the younger man said with difficulty.
Scratch finished looping the cinch strap, then turned to Paddock. “Man was never meant to know what’s in store for ’im, Josiah.”
“But you and I both know,” Paddock declared. “After you went off to your robes last night, Mathew told me just what you’d said to him when you spotted me and Joshua riding down off the hills. Said you wasn’t ever coming back here again.”
He sighed. “I’d be lying to you if I said I was.”
“You’re leaving without joining in the fight to get Taos back?”
“Like I tol’t you last night—it ain’t my fight, Josiah. For all the good days and happy nights I spent in Taos … there’s ’nough dark memories that the bad comes out weighin’ all the more’n good when you hang ’em in the balance. I think it’s time I paid attention.”
“Paid attention,” Paddock sighed. “Like I did when I figured the time had come for me to quit the mountains.”
“You get to hear Lady Fate cacklin’ at your back only so long afore she slips up behin’t you and sinks a knife atween your shoulder blades.”
“Taos is all I’ve got now, Scratch—”
“You don’t owe no man no apology for wanting to go back into that village and clean up the mess been made of the life you made for yourself, Josiah,” he declared. “Least of all me. I’ll be the last man to say how ’nother man should live, where he should draw the line an’ make his stand.”
“What you think of me has always mattered, ol’ man.”
Scratch smiled, feeling how that tugged at his heart. “How you thought of me allays meant the world to me too.”
“There ain’t a chance in hell of talkin’ you outta leaving this morning, is there?”
He stared up at Paddock’s face, really noticing for the first time how deeply the wrinkles and lines had carved his old friend’s face with character. “No, Josiah.”
“Then,” Josiah said quietly, glancing at the ground while he dragged the back of his hand under his nose, “I suppose you best tell me what I can do to help you get ready for the trail.”
Bass laid his hand on Paddock’s shoulder. “Afore we load up these here packhorses, what say the two of us mosey back to the fire an’ have us a last cup of coffee together, Josiah.”
As much as the two old friends kept themselves busy with tying up bundles of baggage and seeing that youngsters ate their breakfast and that bedding was brushed free of snow, then lashed onto one of the three remaining Cheyenne packhorses, there was a weighty tension that grew all the more palpable as the minutes galloped past, one by one, drawing them both closer and closer to the moment of that final farewell.
Finally … with the sun’s hidden radiance beginning to turn the snowy valley to a pale, blood-kissed pink, the men and women and children circled around those riders who stood beside their eight Cheyenne horses.
“You two’ll take good care of one another,” Scratch said as he finished hugging Mathew Kinkead.
The hulking giant of a man had tears in his eyes. “We done it afore, Scratch. Josiah and me can do it again.”
“Take care of that new family of your’n, Mathew,” Titus asked. “They deserve to have you make it back home.”
Kinkead swiped some fingers beneath both eyes as he took a step backward. “I know my own self just how it feels to lose someone so special—like my Rosa. I ain’t ever gonna make my family go through nothing like that on account of me.”
“Maybe you’ll sashay up north someday?”
Mathew shrugged. “You never know which way the winds’ll blow a man, Titus Bass. When I first come west, never figgered I’d ever quit the mountains. Never figgered I’d raise buffler calves either. Hell, never thought I’d be a trader on the Ark
ansas … so who knows now where I might end up.”
“Till then, Mathew Kinkead,” Titus snorted away some tears, “you watch your back trail.”
The big man started to speak again, but couldn’t—so he quickly turned on his heel, spearing his way through the group of frontiersmen who stood as witness to this painful parting.
“There’ll always be a place at my table, a dry spot under my roof, for your family, Scratch,” Josiah said as he stepped up to Bass’s saddle horse.
Titus glanced a moment at how Looks Far and Waits hugged and sobbed, reluctant to let go now that they had again been through so much together. Then he explained, “If there’s anything I can count on, it’s you, Josiah Paddock. Still, if you’re ever to lay eyes on me again, it won’t be in no settlement or village or town—be it Mexican or American.” He began to choke with emotion, “Goddamn the settlements: they’ll likely be the death of me.”
Paddock tried futilely to laugh a little as he said, “I remember how the last time you left Taos, you told me, ‘Damn the settlements while there’s still buffler in the mountains.’ ”
“I’d sooner die, Josiah—than have anything to do with where folks gather up elbow to elbow, side by side by side. There’ll be no Saint Louis, no Oregon, no Pueblo, an’ no Taos for this here child. Not for what days I still got left me. Where folks plop down right next to one another … there’s bound to be trouble raise its head, just sure as that sun’s coming to light this day.”
Paddock confessed, “Last night I laid there thinking—how in so many ways, I wished it were years ago now, Scratch. An’ we was back in the mountains. Living and laughing—”
“Much as I wish it could be so, Josiah.… that was a time just ain’t ever gonna be again. There’s forts on the Arkansas an’ the South Platte. I’ve see’d where emigrants been cutting wagon ruts all the way from Westport landing clear out to Oregon country. An’ I’m afraid when they got that territory all crowded up out there, them settlers gonna come washing back here to fill in what country they passed through on their way to Oregon.”
“With all that’s changing around you,” Paddock admitted, “Titus Bass isn’t a man much ready to change.”
Scratch shook his head. “A man either figures he can live all crowded up with folks—with trouble a constant shadow lurking just outside his door … or he sets his sights on taking those he loves off away from the shove and clutter of so many others.”
“Listen, Scratch,” Josiah said with a sudden breathlessness, “I haven’t talked about this with Looks Far, but maybe you should take her and our children north with you.” He blurted it out in a gush. “They’ll be safer with you than they’ll be in these hills while we got some bloody work left to do before Taos is safe for women and children again—”
“No, Josiah,” he interrupted, clamping both hands on the taller man’s shoulder. “What’s your family gonna do ’thout you—their husband and father?”
Bass watched the worry darken Paddock’s eyes, recognized the pain there, and sensed the stab of guilt anew for that time years ago when he had abandoned his own loved ones to steal some California horses.
“You’re all the family they have, Josiah. There is no other kin for any of ’em to turn to down here. If they come with me, and you never find us in Crow country, they’ll never know for the rest of their days what really become of you. I learned firsthand that’s no way to leave things be with the ones you love.”
“Every now and then”—and Paddock wagged his head—“it gets real hard for me to know what to do.”
“Right or wrong, Josiah—live or die, you keep your family by your side. Now that you’re gonna make Taos safe for families again, you keep Looks Far and all your young’uns close … that way they can hug you if you drive back all them Mex and Pueblo murderers. Or, they can hold you in their arms if you’re terrible wounded. They can even bury you proper if your time’s been called. But one way or the other, Josiah—your family deserves to know.”
“You’d never be happy anywhere but that north country,” Paddock said after he embraced Bass again. “Back in your mountains.”
“That’s why I’m takin’ my family home.”
“Sometime last night,” Josiah said, “I thought on just what you should name the land where it is you belong.”
“What you figger I should call it?”
Paddock blinked, and said, “The used-to-be-country.”
Scratch repeated the words in a soft whisper. “Used-to-be-country.”
Then he sighed and signaled his children to mount up. Titus cupped his two hands together and hoisted young Jackrabbit onto the buffalo-hide pad draped over the wide back of a gentle horse.
“Flea,” Bass instructed in Crow, turning to his older boy, “you take your little brother and start these three packhorses down to the valley. Rest of us should catch up to you by the time you turn north. Follow the tracks. They’re plain enough. You’ll do just fine with your horse medicine.”
The ten-year-old beamed with pride, sitting up all the straighter on his claybank gelding as he slapped the rump of his little brother’s horse and jerked on the lead rope strung back to the pack animals. Flea called over his shoulder, “See you down the trail, Popo.”
Magpie and Waits-by-the-Water sat atop their ponies as the clatter of hooves faded and things grew very still, all but for the crackle of the morning fires, and that cold winter breeze sighing through the sage and cedar.
Dragging his sleeve beneath his runny nose, Scratch climbed slowly into the saddle. Sensing how his bones were getting old. This cold hurt more and more every winter. And damn, if he couldn’t point out to you every last one of the bullet, knife, and arrow wounds he had suffered since setting his heart on a home in those high and terrible places among the Rocky Mountains. This journey north in the middle of winter had all the makings of a tough one for the old man and his family.
But at least he had his nose pointed for home.
“My used-to-be-country,” he quietly repeated what Josiah had called those northern mountains while he put the Cheyenne horse into motion down the slope. “Sounds to me like it’s just the sort of place for a used-to-be-man.”
* One-Eyed Dream
TERRY
C. JOHNSTON
1947–2001
Terry C. Johnston was born on the first day of 1947 on the plains of Kansas and lived all his life in the American West. His first novel, Carry the Wind, won the Medicine Pipe Bearer’s Award from the Western Writers of America, and his subsequent books appeared on bestseller lists throughout the country. After writing more than thirty novels of the American frontier, he passed away in March 2001 in Billings, Montana. Terry’s work combined the grace and beauty of a natural storyteller with a complete dedication to historical accuracy and authenticity. He continues to bring history to life in the pages of his historical novels so that readers can live the grand adventure of the American West. While recognized as a master of the American historical novel, to family and friends Terry remained and will be remembered as a dear, loving father and husband as well as a kind, generous, and caring friend. He has gone on before us to a better place, where he will wait to welcome us in days to come.
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Death Rattle tb-8 Page 58