Gone to Texas

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by Jason Manning




  Gone to Texas

  Jason Manning

  Copyright © 2015, Jason Manning

  "LET THE DUEL BEGIN."

  Incensed by Christopher Grove's insolence, Adam Vickers sprang forward like a horse released from a starting gate, slashing with the saber, a mighty stroke. The point grazed Christopher below the ribs, ripping his shirt and slicing his flesh and stinging like a thousand angry fire ants.

  "No rules!" a spectator reminded the combatants, encouraging Vickers to hurl a handful of sand into Christopher's face. Momentarily blinded, Christopher staggered backward as Vickers pounced like a jungle cat, his blade biting deeply into the flesh of Christopher's sword arm. Blood gushed through Christopher's clawing fingers. Vickers pressed him, slashing with the saber again like a man possessed.

  For the first time in his life Christopher stared Death in the face. Adam Vickers was going to cut him into bloody pieces. . . .

  GONE TO TEXAS

  CONTENTS

  PART ONE

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  PART TWO

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  PART THREE

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  PART ONE

  The Point

  Chapter 1

  The dinner hour, commencing at one o'clock in the afternoon every single day of the year, was the only time between dawn and dusk that a West Point cadet had to spend on his own pursuits. While most of his fellow cadets returned to their quarters, or gathered in small groups on the commons to indulge in idle conversation, Christopher Groves liked to walk. The serene beauty of the site of the United States Military Academy never failed to soothe his sometimes troubled soul.

  Thirty-seven miles north of New York, the Academy was perched on the west bank of the Hudson River, at a place where the river bends, on a high level plain at the point of which was located the crumbling vestiges of old Fort Clinton. George Washington had described the Hudson as the "Key to the Continent" during the Revolution. It was here that a gigantic chain—like something, a romantic remarked, that had been used to bound Prometheus or some other mighty hero of Greek mythology—was stretched across the river to prevent the British from sailing upriver and cutting the rebellious colonies into two, more easily conquered, parts. Remnants of that massive chain were on display at the Academy.

  West Point's fortifications were designed by Thaddeus Kosciuszko, the Pole who had volunteered his services to the cause of the American patriots. His engineering skill had proved to be of immeasurable service to that cause, his work at West Point making that stronghold virtually impregnable.

  Leaving the mess hall, Christopher walked briskly along a path which led him past the post office and laboratory, then under the guns of the siege battery and to the river where the long dock jutted like a fat upside-down L into the river. The trail narrowed as it wound in serpentine fashion across steep wooded slopes to the point, above which loomed the old fort now falling into a disgraceful state of disrepair. It was nearly summer. The cool shade of the trees was a pleasure.

  Gazing out at the wide blue-green expanse of the Hudson, nestled between forested heights, Christopher noticed several white-sailed skiffs on the water. He thought of his father. It never failed—he always did when he saw a sailing ship, be it skiff or schooner. Jonathan Groves had first made a name for himself as a valiant young naval officer in the war against the Barbary pirates almost thirty years ago.

  Jonathan had gone on to achieve a measure of fame as the man responsible for the capture of the traitor Aaron Burr. The thought of Burr brought another traitor to Christopher's mind. Benedict Arnold. Feeling he had not received his just due from the Continental Congress as one of the heroes of the revolution, Arnold had tried to betray his fellow patriots by conspiring to hand West Point over to the British in return for twenty thousand pounds sterling and a commission in King George's redcoat army. Luckily for the patriot cause, the scheme had been exposed before any damage was done.

  Jonathan's involvement in the capture of Burr, who had sought to separate the western lands from the republic and establish his own private domain—or so they said; there was no solid evidence, and Burr had been acquitted of all charges by none other than John Marshall, chief justice of the United States—had catapulted the young cadet's father into national prominence. Jonathan had gone on to serve in the state legislature of Kentucky and then in the Congress, resigning from the latter institution to fight Indians in the bloody Northwest during the War of 1812. He had been at New Orleans with Old Hickory, and again with Jackson in the campaign against the Creeks, finally dying on the field of battle, which had long been his desire, in the Seminole Campaign.

  Jonathan Groves' rise to national hero was the reason Christopher was here at West Point. Two presidents had known and relied on his father. Thomas Jefferson had given him the mission to stop Burr. Andrew Jackson, currently residing in the White House as the republic's seventh chief magistrate, had considered Jonathan one of his best lieutenants. Sam Houston, who until recently had been governor of Tennessee, had called him friend.

  A frown creased Christopher's brow. Having just turned twenty-three, he was of medium height and slender build. Broad across the shoulders and slender at the hips, he cut a fine figure in his uniform—regulation gray tunic and white trousers and, of course, every cadet's pride and joy, the bell-crowned black leather cap with the polished leather visor and the yellow scales and eagle which could be fastened under the chin. By anyone's standards he was a handsome young man. His chin was square and strong, with more than a hint of stubbornness. His mouth, a testament of determination, could flash in an easy white grin. His nose was aquiline, his brow high. And his eyes, a startling sea green in color, were keen and intelligent. Despite his deceptively slender build he was endowed with an agile strength. Physically he was resilient—a cadet had to be to endure the constant drill which was a feature of the Academy. His constitution was cast iron, which was lucky, as the worst thing about West Point was the food. A cadet's diet was atrociously poor. Yet Christopher thrived. Food was of no importance to him except as fuel for the body. His mind was a sponge that soaked up the heavy doses of French and mathematics which inundated the cadets in the Point's sand-floored "academies."

  Now in his second year, Christopher was a popular member of the Corps of Cadets. Though reserved, sometimes to the point of reticence, he was amiable and reliable and eminently fair-minded. Apart from that, he was at the top of his class in horsemanship—which was little wonder considering his upbringing at Elm Tree, where some of Kentucky's most prized thoroughbreds were raised—and near the top in swordsmanship and academics. He was an accomplished dancer, and the apple of many a young belle's eye, and seldom did he have difficulty finding a dance partner for the "hops" which were all-too-infrequently arranged to break the monotony of drill and study, study and drill that distinguished life at West Point. Dancing ranked with fencing and horsemanship as an accomplishment necessary for a gentleman, and as one who excelled in all three pursuits, Christopher had already made a name for himself.

  And yet he often wondered if he was not here under false preten
ses. These self-doubts plagued him whenever his thoughts turned to his father. The entire nation held Jonathan Groves in high regard, but the people of the United States did not know the whole truth. In his private life Jonathan had been anything but heroic. His notorious and long-standing affair with Emily Cooper was common knowledge—and a source of unending humiliation for his son. But few knew of his penchant for strong drink, developed in his later years, when he was off on one campaign or another, fighting the British or the Indians and trying desperately to get himself killed. A suicidal alcoholic and philanderer—that was the father Christopher knew, though not at all well, since he had seldom come home to Elm Tree and his wife and son. Those few who were aware of these dark secrets—men like Jackson and Houston, to name two—kept it to themselves, out of respect, Christopher supposed, for a fallen comrade-in-arms.

  To say that Christopher hated his father would be too strong a statement, yet Christopher had never been able to forgive what had been done to his beloved and long-suffering mother. Since the age of five, Christopher—and his mother, Rebecca—had seen precious little of Jonathan Groves. But it was on the strength of the hero's name that Christopher had been accepted into the Military Academy. Ironically, nearly everyone here had a higher opinion of his father than he.

  Nearly everyone. Christopher knew of one exception. Adam Vickers hated the very name of Jonathan Groves, and by virtue of blood kinship, Christopher as well. Considering the circumstances, Christopher could scarcely blame him. But Vickers' hate put Christopher in an uncomfortable position of having to defend the indefensible—his father's honor.

  Christopher walked on with long brisk strides, hands clasped behind his back. There was no time to dally. At precisely two o'clock there was formation, and no one wanted to be awarded the demerits which being even one minute late for that daily ritual would bring.

  Breaking out of the trees, he turned south along the path below the ramparts at the rim of the plateau. Straight ahead was the Battery Knox, named after the republic's first secretary of war, and beyond that the stables and riding hall, near the road which led down to the south dock. The sun beat warmly on his face, and a breeze swept up from the river carrying the fragrance of spring flowers which bloomed in profusion on the slope near the water's edge. Due west of the riding hall stood the cadet barracks, and, having timed his daily walk down to the minute, Christopher was confident he would arrive just in time to join his company for formation. He was never late.

  Few were his demerits after two years. Only three cadets had a better record, and demerits were devilishly easy to acquire. There were a great many "thou shalt nots" at the Military Academy. Cadets were not permitted to drink, smoke, or play cards—nonetheless, Christopher had never seen so much tobacco use in his life, and gambling was widespread. The countryside was infested with civilians who made a good living in a brisk black market which supplied the cadets with forbidden merchandise.

  A cadet was not allowed to keep in his room any novel, play, or poem. If he was going to read it had to be something akin to Farrar's translation of the Treatise on Plane and Spherical Trigonometry or Berard's Lecteur Français, and not some piece of sensational prose like James Fenimore Cooper's works, or Sir Walter Scott's Waverly novels. A cadet could not leave the Academy grounds without a pass signed by the superintendent, and it was said that getting a death certificate was easier. Still, many were lured into attempting an unauthorized nocturnal excursion to North's, where good food and strong spirits could be had.

  Demerits were also received for loitering, being late for class or drill, bathing in the river, answering for another at roll call, or standing at guard duty in another's stead. Pranks and fistfights were also forbidden, which is not the same thing as saying that they did not occur on a regular basis—it was inevitable when two hundred proud, high-spirited young men were thrown together into an extremely competitive and stressful environment. Those unfortunate enough to be caught in flagrant dereliction of these commandments were often punished, but seldom court-martialed and dismissed.

  The worst crime a cadet could commit—one which inevitably resulted in dismissal—was to engage in the duello. If a cadet so much as heard of a rendezvous with pistols or blades to settle an affair of honor, he was duty-bound to report it.

  Dueling was a concept that left a bad taste in Christopher's mouth. A duel between his father and a man named Stephen Cooper had led to the disintegration of his family, for on that day his mother had miscarried, so worried was she for her husband's safety. Christopher sometimes wondered what it would be like to have a younger brother or sister. But he would never know, for his father had ignored his wife's pleas and gone through with the affair of honor, leaving her so distraught that she lost her unborn child and blamed him for it later. Jonathan had slain Cooper, and by doing so had become the object of Emily Cooper's—nee Vickers—undying obsession. Though his parents had never divorced, Christopher was painfully aware of the fact that his father had spent a great deal more time in his last years with Emily Cooper than with his mother.

  Why the bad blood between his father and Stephen Cooper? Christopher had learned the details from his grandfather, Nathaniel Jones, the legendary Kentucky frontiersman they called Flintlock. His mother had been consistently adamant in her refusal to discuss the past, or at least that part of it. Apparently, Stephen Cooper and Rebecca had been sweethearts before Jonathan appeared on the scene. But a Shawnee war party had kidnapped Rebecca, and almost killed Cooper in the process. Jonathan played a role in her rescue. He and Rebecca fell in love. After lingering for months at death's door, Cooper had finally recovered—and promptly disappeared. Folks said he was never the same after the Indian attack—that there was a clearly discernible mean streak in him, and from then on he would suffer berserk fits of rage without provocation.

  Cooper resurfaced some years later, having married into the Vickers family, a family of considerable wealth and influence. Daniel Vickers, Emily's father and Cadet Vickers' uncle, owned several plantations and was a power to be reckoned with in the Mississippi Valley. Bent on revenge against both Jonathan and Rebecca, Cooper embarked on a campaign of terror, murdering two of the slaves who worked at Elm Tree, the Groves plantation in Madison County, Kentucky, and posing a very real threat—or so Jonathan believed—to Rebecca as well. Jonathan had felt honor-bound to call him out.

  "Christopher! Christopher Groves!"

  Two cadets stood on the ramparts above him, silhouetted against the bright blue afternoon sky. They had to call several times to rouse him from his brooding.

  "Stay there! Wait for us!"

  Christopher waved acknowledgment. He recognized them both. Gil Bryant and John O'Connor. Like Christopher, they were second-classmen, and his roommates. Of the ninety-one cadets who had entered West Point with Christopher summer before last, nineteen had dropped out before the end of the first year, and a dozen more had failed to make the grade this year. Such a high mortality rate created a strong camaraderie between the surviving classmen, and Christopher considered both Gil and O'Connor friends. Especially O'Connor. The red-headed son of an Irishman was often brash, and sometimes bold to the point of sheer recklessness. His temper was notorious. But he was an engaging, outgoing, and fiercely loyal friend. His academic marks left much to be desired, but Christopher knew that O'Connor was capable of much better. He was just the kind who exerted the minimum effort necessary to squeak by.

  A hundred feet north of where the two cadets stood was a footpath which connected the ramparts with the broader path upon which Christopher was walking. The cadets negotiated this treacherous descent at breakneck speed. Christopher rocked slightly back and forth on his heels, falling prey to impatience; his keenly accurate mental clock ticked away precious seconds. He did not fancy a demerit just because Gil and O'Connor wanted to pass the time of day with him.

  But it was much more than that, as Christopher soon discovered.

  "The superintendent wants to see you," gasped O'Conno
r, breathing hard from what had been a long run from the mess hall.

  "What? Now?"

  "Right away. He sent us to fetch you."

  "But what about formation?"

  O'Connor flashed that rakehell grin of his. "There's no way out of it, bucko. When Old Silly wants you your goose is cooked."

  Christopher grimaced at the butterflies in his stomach. "Old Silly" was the common barracks nickname for Sylvanus Thayer, but there was nothing even remotely humorous about the superintendent. He was a stern, austere man, a hard disciplinarian. Unlike some of his predecessors, he ran a tight ship. Christopher admired and respected him, but was also afraid, because when a cadet was summoned before Thayer it was, as O'Connor had so succinctly put it, usually the case that his goose was cooked.

  "What have you done?" asked Bryant, who looked more than a little worried for his friend.

  "That's what I'm wondering."

  "Oh, come on," said O'Connor, with a sly wink. "You can tell us."

  "I'd tell you if I knew," said Christopher, wracking his brain for the answer.

  "Oh, yes, pure as the driven snow," jibed O'Connor. "I tell you what I think, Gil. It has something to do with Miss Inskilling."

  "What about her?" asked Bryant, seeing that O'Connor intended to have some fun at Christopher's expense—good-natured fun—and playing his role as the Irishman's foil to the hilt.

  "Well, you must be aware that Miss Greta's father and Superintendent Thayer are very good friends. You are also undoubtedly cognizant of the fact that our friend here has been seeing a great deal of the lovely lady. Maybe you've seen a bit more of her than her father thinks proper, eh, Christopher, you sly devil?"

  Christopher would have taken offense at the remark and all it implied, had it come from anyone else. But he knew O'Connor meant no disrespect.

  "You're just jealous, O'Connor."

  "Aha! You see, Gil? He admits it."

 

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