The Bozeman Trail

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The Bozeman Trail Page 4

by Ralph Compton


  Again, Caleb began coughing and gasping. Then, his breathing stopped.

  “Caleb? Caleb?” Duke called, but there was no answer.

  “Duke, did you mean what you said about quitting the war?” a voice asked.

  Startled, Duke looked around to see an old boyhood friend, also in a Rebel uniform.

  “Jason, how long have you been standing there?”

  “Long enough to watch Caleb die,” Jason answered. “I’m sorry.”

  “I did it,” Duke said. “I killed my own brother.”

  “Like he said, this is war,” Jason replied. “Did you mean it? What you said about getting out of the war?”

  “Yes,” Duke said. “I mean it. I can’t fight for the South, but I can’t kill any more of my own.”

  Jason pointed to the southwest. “Go that way,” he said. “There are no soldiers in that direction, either our side or yours.”

  “Thanks, Jason,” Duke replied. Standing, Duke took one last look down at Caleb, then he started in the direction Jason had pointed.

  “And, Duke . . . ?” Jason called to him.

  Duke stopped and looked back.

  “Mind what your brother Caleb said about them Butrum boys. They’re a mean lot.”

  Duke nodded, then went on.

  Chapter Four

  San Antonio de Bexar, Texas

  Wednesday, October 30, 1861:

  It was just after dark when Duke Faglier rode into San Antonio. From the small adobe houses on the outskirts of town, dim lights flickered through shuttered windows. The kitchens of the houses emitted enticing smells of suppers being cooked, from familiar aromas of fried chicken, to the more exotic and spicy bouquets he couldn’t identify.

  A dog barked, a ribbony yap that was silenced by a kick or a thrown rock.

  A baby cried, a sudden gargle that cracked the air like a bullwhip.

  A housewife raised her voice in one of the houses, launching into some private tirade about something, sharing her anger with all that were within earshot.

  The downtown part of San Antonio was a contrast of dark and light. Commercial buildings such as stores and offices were closed and dark, but the saloons and cantinas were brightly lit and they splashed pools of light out onto the sidewalk and into the street. As Duke rode down the road he would pass in and out of those pools of light so that to anyone watching him he would be seen, then unseen, then seen again. The footfalls of his horse made a hollow clumping sound, echoing back from the false-fronted buildings as he passed them by.

  By the time he reached the center of town, the night was alive with a cacophony of sound: music from a tinny piano, a strumming guitar, and an off-key vocalist, augmented by the high-pitched laughter of women and the deep guffaw of men. Somewhere in town, a trumpet was playing.

  Duke dismounted in front of the Oasis Saloon, tied his horse to the hitching rail, then went inside. Lanterns hanging from overhead wagon wheels emitted enough light to read by, though drifting clouds of tobacco smoke diffused the golden light. He overheard snatches of a dozen or more conversations, many having to do with the war that was being fought back East.

  As he stood for a moment just inside the door, Duke happened to see a “pick and switch” operation lift a man’s wallet. The victim was a middle-aged man who was leaning over the bar, drinking a beer and enjoying his conversation. While he was thus engaged, a nimble-fingered pickpocket deftly slipped the victim’s billfold from his back pocket. Instead of moving away quickly, however, the pickpocket walked slowly and deliberately away from the door, toward the back of the saloon.

  Duke watched as the pickpocket passed the pilfered wallet off to an accomplice who was coming in the opposite direction, leaving the saloon. The entire operation was so quick and smooth that the victim never felt a thing. No one else in the saloon saw it happen, and if Duke had not been in the exact spot at the exact time, he wouldn’t have seen it, either.

  Duke waited until the second man, the one who had received the stolen wallet, passed by him on the way out of the saloon. Then, just as the man got even with him, Duke knocked him down with a well-placed blow to the point of the chin. The pickpocket’s accomplice didn’t see it coming and he went down and out.

  “What the hell!” someone shouted.

  “Did you see that?”

  The sudden and unexpected incident stopped all conversation as everyone looked toward Duke in disapproval. The barkeep brought a double-barrel shotgun up from under the bar, and though he didn’t point it at Duke, it very presence lent some authority to his question.

  “You want to tell us what that was all about, mister?” the barkeep asked.

  Duke leaned down and reached into the inside jacket pocket of the man he had just knocked out. He pulled out the wallet, then held the wallet out toward the victim.

  “I believe this is yours,” he said.

  In a reflexive action, the victim reached for his back pocket and discovered that it was empty.

  “What? I’ll be damned!” he said. “That man stole my wallet!” He pointed to the man on the floor who was, at that moment, just beginning to come around.

  “No, sir,” Duke replied. Duke pointed to the actual pickpocket who was standing at the far end of the bar, now trying to be as inconspicuous as possible. “He is the man who stole your wallet,” he said. “This man was just his courier.”

  The pickpocket tried to run, but two men grabbed him. Two more men took control of the man Duke had knocked down, and the pickpocket and his accomplice were hustled out of the saloon bound for the sheriff’s office.

  “Mister, I want to thank you,” the victim said, extending his hand. “The name is Thornton. Michael Thornton.”

  “Duke Faglier,” Duke said, shaking Thornton’s hand.

  “Could I buy you a drink, Mr. Faglier?”

  “Later perhaps, after I’ve had my supper,” Duke replied. “That is, if a fella can get anything to eat in here,” he added to the bartender. “Do you serve food?”

  “Steak and potatoes, ham and eggs, your choice,” the bartender replied.

  “Yes.”

  “Yes, which?”

  “Yes, I’ll have steak and potatoes, ham and eggs,” Duke said.

  Thornton laughed. “The young man is hungry,” he said. “Bring him what he wants. I’ll pay for it.”

  “You don’t need to buy my supper,” Duke said.

  “I know I don’t need to, son. It’s just my way of thanking you.”

  “If you really want to thank me, you can tell me where a man might find a job in this town.”

  “You’re looking for a job?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “You aren’t afraid of hard work, are you?” Thornton asked.

  “Not if it’s honest.”

  “Good enough. I own the livery,” Thornton said. “I need a good man, if you are interested.”

  “I’m interested,” Duke said.

  “Then the job is yours.” * * *

  Over the next few months after Duke began working at the livery stable, the war continued to be the primary topic of conversation for most of the young men of San Antonio and Bexar County. When Duke was in one of the saloons he often listened, but seldom contributed to the conversations.

  The most outspoken of all the young men of the county was Abner Murback. Abner was the son of Tyler Murback. Tyler Murback owned the Circle M Ranch. Second in size only to Long Shadow, the Circle M was a powerful presence in the county, and Abner was a natural leader among his peers.

  Tyler had a daughter about James Cason’s age. Meg was a beautiful young woman, if a bit spoiled, and Tyler and Garrison Cason entertained hopes that one day their children would marry each other. Everyone expected that marriage to occur some day, and as a result, they were often put together at church socials, picnics, and the like. Even James had accepted the inevitable, but it was not something he dwelled on.

  Duke had worked particularly hard this day, and all he wanted was supper and a couple of
beers. He had no interest in being drawn into a discussion about the war, but Abner continued to wax poetic and Duke sighed, because he knew there was no way he would be entirely left out.

  “Seems to me like we’ve done showed the Yankees we can whip ’em,” Abner Murback was saying, as Duke ordered his supper of pork chops, eggs, fried potatoes, and a beer.

  “What I don’t understand is why we don’t just take us an army into Washington and demand that the Yankees get out of the South and let us alone,” Abner continued.

  “Yeah,” Johnny Parker said. “What do you think about that, Duke?”

  If Johnny’s question had been an inferred invitation for Duke to join them, he let the invitation slide by, remaining, instead, at his own table, halfway across the barroom floor.

  “I don’t even think about things like that,” Duke called back. “I’m leaving all that up to folks that are a lot smarter than I am.”

  “They can’t be all that damned smart,” Billy Swan said. “If they were, we wouldn’t be fighting this war in the first place.”

  “Not fight the war?” Abner replied. “What do you mean, not fight the war? Are you telling me we should just sit back and let the Yankees walk all over us?”

  “No Yankee has walked all over me,” Billy replied.

  “The way I look at it, if a damn Yankee walks over one Southerner, he walks over every Southerner. Right, Duke?”

  Duke held up his hands. “Like I said, Abner, leave me out of it. I don’t have any opinions.”

  Duke had shared with no one his experiences at Wilson Creek.

  For a while after the battle at Wilson Creek, there was little to suggest that the war would ever amount to anything more than a series of such skirmishes. For the most part, both sides seemed willing to take a “wait and see” attitude. Under such conditions, there was little need to increase the size of the army. The closest any of the young men of Bexar County got to the war, was to read the latest reports in the newspapers.

  In answer to the call from the governor of Texas and the President of the Confederate States of America, Bexar County raised a regiment. It was commanded not by Garrison Cason as everyone had predicted, but by Colonel Nelson Culpepper, a career soldier who had resigned from the United States Army shortly after the war began.

  At the last moment James almost had a change of heart. Despite his protestations against the war, he was nearly caught up in the sweep and pageantry of the thing. Bands played, and flags and pennants snapped in the breeze as the “Bexar County Fusiliers” formed ranks in the town plaza. Pretty girls and weeping mothers stood along the edge of the street, waving silken handkerchiefs at their brave men, already heroes even though they had yet to hear a shot fired in anger. Beneath the tunics of more than one soldier was the pressed flower given to him at the going away cotillion held the night before. In some cases, more than one soldier carried flowers given to them by the same girl. In other cases, some of the soldiers were carrying the flowers of more than one girl.

  The farewell speeches had been given and the men were drawn up in parade formation, ready for the order to move out. Colonel Culpepper, the most splendid-looking man of all in his gray-and-gold uniform, was the only one mounted, sitting importantly on a prancing white charger. Holding a flashing saber up in the morning sunlight, he gave the command that moved the regiment out.

  “Bexar Fusiliers!” he shouted, calling out the preparatory command.

  “Battalion!”

  “Company!”

  The supplementary commands echoed up and down the long formation.

  “Forward!”

  Again, the supplementary commands echoed from the battalion and company commanders. “Forward!”

  “March!” Colonel Culpepper finished with the command of execution.

  The drums began the marching cadence as the regiment moved out. Their departure was met with cheers and applause, sprinkled here and there with last-minute good-byes as families called out to their loved ones by name.

  “Bye, Carl, Joe, Syl!”

  “You be careful, Abner!”

  “George, you write to me!”

  “Kill lots of Yankees, Tommy!” The last was from a younger brother, and it caused titters of laughter to ripple through the ranks.

  “Now, Tommy, don’t you go an’ kill all them Yankees. You save some of ’em for us,” Syl teased, and Tommy the young soldier flushed in embarrassment.

  “Yeah, we don’t want you gettin’ all the glory for yourself,” Carl added.

  “Quiet in the ranks,” one of the officers ordered.

  Within ten more minutes, the regiment could no longer be seen, though it could still be heard. The rhythmic beat and roll of distant drums and the measured cadence of shuffling feet lingered over Military Plaza.

  Every able-bodied cowboy employed by Long Shadow had marched out with the regiment, leaving the ranch without any hands to run the place. Despite that, James continued to feel a twinge of regret for not having gone himself, though the twinge wasn’t strong enough to make him change his mind. He crossed the plaza, considered going into a cantina, but chose the saloon instead.

  Chapter Five

  Near Corinth, Mississippi

  Friday, April 4, 1862:

  Colonel Nelson Culpepper and his eager but as yet untested Bexar County Fusiliers reached Corinth, Mississippi, on the fourth of April. The Texans were but a small part of a growing Confederate army just south of the Mississippi-Tennessee border. Arriving almost simultaneously with the Bexar County Fusiliers was General Braxton Bragg and his ten thousand battle-proved veterans. In addition, the governors of several Confederate states had answered Johnston’s call to provide more men, so that the army grew to an even greater size. The commanding general of all the Confederate forces in the field at Corinth was General Albert Sidney Johnston.

  Just across the border, in Tennessee, the Union army, under General Ulysses Grant, was also collecting troops for what was shaping up to be the biggest battle of the war thus far.

  Giving his men permission to rest in place, Colonel Culpepper reported to General Johnston.

  “Colonel Culpepper, I am pleased to see you,” General Johnston said, greeting the colonel. “You wouldn’t have any information on the whereabouts of General Price, would you?”

  “No, sir, I’m afraid I don’t,” Culpepper replied. “We came here directly from San Antonio, Texas.”

  Johnston stroked his cheek and nodded. “Yes, and you are very welcome. I just hoped that, by chance encounter, you might have some news. The addition of General Price and his Missourians would ensure us victory here.”

  “General, don’t overlook the fact that these men are Texans,” Colonel Culpepper said, loudly enough for his men to hear and respond with a cheer. “I think we will more than compensate for any Missourians that don’t show.”

  Johnston smiled, then nodded. “I’m sure they will,” he said.

  “Where do you want us, General?”

  “You will be under my direct command,” Johnston said.

  “Thank you, sir. I consider that an honor.”

  “Do you have an aide, Colonel?”

  “I don’t have an aide, sir, but I do have an orderly. Private Abner Murback.”

  “Is he a good man?”

  “Yes, sir, he is a very good man.”

  “If you wouldn’t mind, I wonder if you would attach him to me temporarily,” Johnston said. “My aide has taken ill and returned to Jackson yesterday.”

  “Well, yes, sir, I suppose I could,” Colonel Culpepper said. “But then you would have a private for an aide, and you are a general, sir.”

  “You say Murback is a good man. Would he make a good officer?”

  “Yes, sir, I suppose he would.”

  “Then, if you recommend it, I will promote him to second lieutenant.”

  “I would be glad to recommend it, but we already have a full complement of officers in the regiment.”

  “I’ll carry his commiss
ion against my staff, that way it won’t reflect upon your regimental complement.”

  “Very good, sir,” Culpepper said. “Murback!” he called.

  Abner, who had been seeing to the colonel’s horse, hurried up when he was called.

  “Lieutenant, you will be attached to my staff until further notice,” General Johnston said.

  “Lieutenant?” Abner replied.

  “Yes. I’ve just given you a commission.”

  Abner smiled broadly, then came to attention and saluted the general. “Yes, sir!” he said. “Thank you, sir.”

  After the brief meeting with Culpepper, Johnston left, signaling Abner to come with him. With good-natured teasing and catcalls from his old regiment, Abner left Colonel Culpepper and his fellow Texans, to follow General Johnston.

  “General, uh, exactly what does an aide do?” Abner asked.

  “It’s a pretty simple job, Murback,” Johnston replied. “You just do what I tell you to do. Do you think you can handle that?”

  Abner laughed. “Yes, sir, well, I have a lot of experience doing that, so I reckon I’m your man all right.”

  Abner followed General Johnston into a large and elegant two-story farmhouse that was being used as his headquarters.

  “Are you hungry?” Johnston asked.

  “Yes, sir, a little. We were about to have supper.”

  “Well, you’ll be messing with the headquarters staff now,” Johnston said. He nodded toward the kitchen. “I think there is some cold chicken left, and some coffee. You are welcome to it.”

  “Thank you, General,” Abner replied. He walked into the kitchen and started to pull back a cloth that was draped over the food on the table.

  “Here, Private, what are you doing there?” a sergeant asked, harshly.

  Overhearing the remark, Johnston stuck his head back in the kitchen. “Cooper, this is Lieutenant Murback. He is acting as my aide-decamp. See if you can find a lieutenant’s blouse for him.”

  “Yes, sir,” the sergeant said. “I beg your pardon, sir,” he added to Abner.

  Abner, unused to being called sir, smiled. “That’s quite all right, Sergeant Cooper,” he replied. He pointed to the table. “Is it all right if I get something to eat now?”

 

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