North of Laramie

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North of Laramie Page 4

by William W. Johnstone; J. A. Johnstone


  He looked at the place where his own headstone stood, at the far left of the yard next to where his parents had been buried years before. It was a Bowman tradition to place the headstones of their kin within the first year of their birth, name, and birth date already etched. It was a practice that had kept the family grounded for generations, knowing that one day, they would die for one reason or another.

  Two of his sons were already there. Anthony, his second eldest, and Bertram, his youngest, had both been taken from him in the war. He had mourned them in the way the Bowman family had always mourned their dead. He threw himself into building the ranch and made it even bigger.

  Now, Tyler and Will would be buried beneath the stones that had stood waiting for them since their births twenty-one and twenty-five years before. They were his nephews and, in his own way, he supposed he loved them. They would join their father, Hammond, who had died in a similar fashion following an argument over a card game in the Belle Union Saloon in Newton. He judged all three men were better off where they were, more useful beneath the earth than they had ever been when they walked upon it.

  But despite their shortcomings, they had been Bowman men. And that still meant something in Wichita. In Kansas. At least it would for as many days he still had before he joined them.

  Ambrose Bowman looked when he heard the back door open and saw his eldest boy, Matthew, come out to join him on the porch. The sounds of the wailing and sobbing of the women inside mixed with prayers reached him. He was glad Matthew shut the door behind him to drown out their sorrow.

  “Finally had enough, I reckon?” Ambrose asked his son.

  “Been so long since we had a death around here,” Matthew said as he pulled over a chair from the outside dining table, “that I forgot how much of show it is.”

  “Catholics,” Ambrose said. “They do love a show, especially in mourning.”

  “We’re Catholics too, Pa.”

  “As far as it goes,” Ambrose said. “Too much ceremony for a hard land like this. But it pleases your mother, so I let it go. Never did much for me, though.”

  He heard his son’s knees pop as he sat beside him. Matthew was going on fifty years of age and was no longer the young man he’d once been. Neither am I, Ambrose realized. He knew they called him Old Man Bowman in town, and had for some time, just as they had called his father and his uncles before him when they had run the BF brand. The “BF” had first been struck by his father and stood for “Bowman Family.” The letters had made for an easy brand and each Old Man Bowman since had done his part to make it stand for something more than it had when he had taken it over. None of them had run it for as long as Ambrose had and, as he approached his eighty-first summer, he took no small amount of pride in that. His eyes may be going and he may not be able to ride a horse for as long as he once had, but he still made a point of checking his herds on horseback daily. And despite his growing aches and pains, he thanked whatever God there was that his mind was still as sharp as ever. His father had not been given that dignity, and he hoped he’d be dead before that same fate befell him.

  Matthew interrupted his thoughts by saying, “I didn’t tell you what happened in town today, Pa.”

  “Tom told me.” His second youngest was a good horseman, but an incredible gossip, a failing Ambrose decided he had inherited from his mother. “No need to relive it.” He looked at his son. “No need to be ashamed of it, either.”

  “There were twenty of us,” Matthew said. “And I let one man buffalo me. One lousy, skinny deputy.”

  “That deputy is the law,” Ambrose said. “He’s also Wyatt Earp. He’s not the kind of man you cross. Not a man like you, leastways. He’s buffaloed many a man and worse. Many a man better than you with a gun or their fists. Fighting him only would’ve gotten you killed or worse, and this family has suffered enough tragedy for one season.”

  But the words did not seem to soothe Matthew any. “It was his look that stopped me, Pa. A cold stare that felt like it went right through me.”

  “It’s the kind of man he is, boy. Men like you don’t go up against men like that. He’s younger and meaner than you. Going against him would’ve been suicide. There’s a place for his kind, and he’s found it among the drunks and heathens he deals with in town. Put him on a horse and have him tend a herd and he wouldn’t last a month. There’s a place for our kind, too, and don’t you forget that ever. You’re a Bowman, by God, and you don’t have to bow your head to any man, not even a man like Earp.”

  Ambrose was glad his son had decided to let it go for now. He knew the slight would eat at him for a while, but in time, it would pass. Matthew had a family of his own. A good family with three boys—Archer, Miles, and Joseph, and four daughters who were of marrying age with plenty of suitors among them. Ambrose knew he would take solace in that eventually, and the sting of his embarrassment would dull a bit more each day until he came to his senses, which he always did.

  The deaths of his nephews, however, would be a different story. He knew what Matt would ask of him, but Ambrose would wait until he got around to it in his own time. For now, he was content to smoke his pipe and watch another day die in the beautiful twilight of the faraway sky.

  He wasn’t sure how long it had been until his son said, “I’m going after them, Pa. I’m going after them right after the burial tomorrow.”

  Ambrose puffed on his pipe. “You sure you want to do that, boy?”

  He heard his son’s chair creak as he faced him. “You don’t expect me just to let Tyler and Will’s deaths go unanswered, do you?”

  Ambrose closed his eyes. Matthew always fell for the same trap. “I didn’t say that. I asked if you were sure you wanted to do that.”

  Matthew turned and faced the twilight again. “I’m sure.”

  “You’re sure you want it to happen or you’re sure you want to do it?”

  “I’m sure I want to do it, Pa.”

  “That’s a different bit of business, then.” Ambrose began to rock quietly, as he usually did when he was beginning to think. He had known this conversation would be coming the moment he’d heard Will and Tyler had been killed for the same reason their father had been killed twenty years before.

  “I want to do what you did, Pa,” Matthew went on. “I want to avenge them the way you avenged Uncle Ham.”

  “That was different,” Ambrose said. “Ham was my brother. The man who killed him had a ranch that would’ve moved on our own if I hadn’t killed him when I did. That death protected this family and kept those Barttleman snakes in Dodge City where they belonged.”

  Ambrose resumed his rocking. “Tom tells me the men responsible for Will and Tyler have moved on at Earp’s urging. Might be best to let them keep going.”

  “They’re still alive and ours are dead. I thought being a Bowman meant something.”

  Ambrose stopped rocking and glared at his son until the younger man looked down at his shoes rather than try to stare down his father. “It still does and always will as long as I’ve got breath in my lungs, boy. But they got in trouble in a place they didn’t belong and went up against a man they should’ve known well enough to avoid. They should’ve done what you did with Earp today, but they didn’t, and they got killed for it. That’s why they’re lying in boxes in my front parlor right now and you and me are still here to talk about it.”

  Matthew kept looking at his shoes. “I’d rather be dead than allow a slight like that to go unanswered. I aim to ride out after them tomorrow, Pa. And I’d like to have your blessing to do it.”

  Ambrose decided his son had endured enough humiliation for one day and went back to his rocking and his pipe. “Sounds as if your mind is already made up.”

  “It is,” Matthew said. “It was made up the second I heard they left town. What if they head up to Newton or someplace else and brag about what they did? How long do you think it’ll be before someone else tries to test one of our boys in town, only maybe they won’t be drunks or thugs. Maybe they�
��ll be cattlemen with eyes on our ranch? It’ll be twice as hard to stop them then, and it’ll mean more killing.”

  “Plenty have tried before, son. Better men than a saloon bouncer and a drunken gambler. They’ve always failed and always will as long as this family sticks together. And I’m not sure allowing you to ride off on some damned fool vengeance trail will do much to keep that from happening.”

  “That Trammel fella beat them to death, Pa. He didn’t just shoot them or even knife them in a fair fight. He beat them to death, both of them, like they were dogs. Bowman men aren’t dogs.”

  “No, we’re not. And we don’t run down things like dogs, either. When we do something, we do it the right way. The smart way.”

  “And what do you think the right way is here, Pa? Let Ma pray some rosaries and hope they break their legs in the wilderness? Pray they get struck by lightning?”

  “We’ll hire it done,” Ambrose said. “Just like we hire cowhands to help with the herd, there are men who know how to hunt down men like this. Wichita is full of men who can do the job, men more able for it than you or me.”

  “None that we can trust to do it right,” Matthew answered. “This is a matter of blood, Pa. This was done to Bowman men, and Bowman men have to put it right. This isn’t the type of thing you pay men to do for you. You have to handle it personally, and I aim to do just that.”

  Ambrose rocked and smoked, but said nothing.

  Matthew continued. “I know I backed down to Earp today, but I know how to fight. I fought in the war.”

  “This isn’t war, boy. You’re talking about riding out to find two men who could be anywhere by now. It could take you a year to find them, maybe more. I can’t afford to have you away from the ranch for that long. And what if you happen to find them and can’t beat them. What then? I can’t risk losing my oldest son on a fool’s errand.”

  Matthew sat straighter in his chair, but still didn’t look at his father. “I came out here tonight to ask for your blessing, Pa. But I’m a grown man with boys of my own. I’ll ride on without it if I have to.”

  Ambrose puffed on his pipe, quietly enjoying the mixture of emotions that were broiling in his belly. Fear for his son, but pride in his commitment to doing what needed to be done for the sake of the family name. It had been a long time since he had heard such conviction in his voice, and it did his old heart good to hear it now, despite the consequences.

  He dug into his pocket and tossed a small leather pouch to his son. “There’s a thousand in gold coins in there. Enough to outfit ten men for a while. Take five men from the ranch and what you need from the ranch stores. Then go into town and hire five men to ride out with you. Ten riders ought to be enough to go up against a drunk and a bouncer, even if the man is a giant.”

  Matthew stood up and put the pouch in his pocket. “Me and my boys will ride out first thing after the funeral.”

  “Like hell you will. I’ll not have your line rubbed out the way your Uncle Hammond’s was. You’ll take Walt with you. He’s not good for much anyway, and my sister will be glad to be rid of him. That boy’s been nothing but a heartache to poor Marcia since the day he came kicking and screaming into this world. You can take three hired hands with you, but not Cameron. He stays here. The rest you’ll hire in town. But no more than five, understand?”

  “I understand, Pa.”

  Ambrose Bowman stood up and faced his son. This time, Matthew didn’t look away.

  “Well, also understand this, boy. If you ride after these men, you’ll have to kill them. I won’t think any less of you if you wake up tomorrow and change your mind, but if you do it, then you’re going to do it all the way. No half measures. Kill them both and come back home.”

  Matthew swallowed. “Don’t worry, Pa. I won’t change my mind.”

  No, Ambrose thought. No, I don’t think you will. And that’s what frightened him and pleased him all at the same time as he watched another day die in Kansas.

  CHAPTER 7

  Trammel dumped the last of the firewood in the center of their small encampment. He was quite pleased with himself. He had decided he had chosen a good spot to rest for the night, a space beside a small outcropping of rocks with a clear field of vision in every direction. No trees for anyone to hide behind and good grazing for the horses they had hobbled fifty feet away.

  Hagen shivered beneath a blanket while Trammel did all the work. “May I have my medicine now, Mother?”

  Trammel didn’t want to give it to him, but he couldn’t stand to see the man suffer. He usually didn’t have much sympathy for drunks in his line of work, but as this drunk had helped them make greater time than he thought possible, he decided Hagen had earned a drink.

  He dug the bottle out of his saddlebag. “Two pulls, no more. I don’t want you drunk all over again. We need to keep up this pace tomorrow.”

  Hagen greedily accepted the bottle and surprised Trammel by handing it back to him after two quick sips. “Thank you. I wouldn’t have slept tonight without that, and I’d be of even less use to you tomorrow on the trail.”

  Trammel begrudgingly accepted his thanks and put the bottle back in the saddlebag. “You talk pretty fancy for a drunken gambler.”

  Hagen pulled the blanket tighter around his shoulders as his shaking seemed to subside. “That’s because I’m neither a drunk nor a gambler, sir. I merely like to act like one.”

  Trammel began piling the wood so they could build a fire. “You’re a hell of an actor, then.”

  “I’m not an actor, either, despite my flair for the dramatic. In fact, to use the parlance of our times, one could be forgiven for saying that I am quite loaded.”

  “You’ve been loaded since you came to Wichita, Hagen. I’ve seen that with my own two eyes.”

  “I mean loaded as in financially,” Hagen clarified. “I come from money, hence all of that fancy talk you mentioned earlier.”

  Trammel stopped building the fire. In the dim light of dusk, he couldn’t see the man’s face clear enough to tell if he was lying. “Don’t lie about something like that. Not now.”

  “I’d wager that you’ve heard enough lies in your time to know the truth when you hear it, Trammel. And you know I’m not lying now.”

  He was right. Trammel had no reason to believe him, but no reason to doubt him, either. Braggarts usually liked to talk themselves up whenever they had the chance. But in all the time Hagen had been staying at The Gilded Lilly, Trammel couldn’t remember a single time when Hagen had spouted off about having money. He never spoke much about anything, really, not even when he was playing cards. He usually got drunk at the tables and had to be carried up to his room, tipping whomever had helped him after he woke the following day.

  But out in the elements as he was, Trammel was in no place to take anyone at their word without a little prodding. “Where’d all this money you say you have come from?”

  “It came from the same place we are headed, my new friend. My family owns one of the biggest cattle ranches in the Wyoming Territory. The Blackstone Ranch, just north of Laramie. Commonly known by its brand, the Bar H.”

  Trammel dropped the piece of firewood he was stacking. “The Bar H. Hagen. That’s you?”

  “My father,” the gambler said. “Mine by right, I suppose, one day when that old sidewinder finally allows himself to die, which isn’t likely.” He pulled the blanket even tighter around him. “Evil never dies.”

  Trammel had heard about the Bar H long before he had come to Wichita. The Hagen family had employed the Pinkerton Agency on more than one occasion, though Trammel had never worked on any of their cases. But he knew they had one of the biggest ranches in the Wyoming Territory, if not the biggest.

  But Trammel knew that just because this man said he was a Hagen didn’t make it so. There were still plenty of details he had to know first before he believed him. “If you’ve got so much money, then what the hell are you doing out in Kansas, much less a place like Wichita?”

  “It�
��s a rather long story, I’m afraid, as such stories tend to be. But I’ll be happy to tell it to you in broad strokes while you continue to build that fire. It’s getting cold, and I’m starving.”

  Trammel kept building the fire as Hagen began talking. “My father and I never got along. It’s probably my mother’s fault as much as it was mine. She insisted on tutors and a classical education while my father wanted a son to take up the family business when his time came. He wanted a doer, not a thinker. He wanted a son who could ride and shoot and handle livestock. Trouble was I was naturally even better at all of those things, too. Much better than my brothers, Bradford and Caleb. Rather than be grateful, I think that made him resent me all the more. He figured a fancy education would ruin me, but I delighted in proving him wrong. Still, the die was cast against me and, when I was old enough, he pulled one of his many strings with his numerous friends to get me enrolled in a school in New York.”

  “No fooling?” Trammel looked up from the woodpile. “I’m from New York.”

  “Yes, I know. Lower East Side, if I’m still any judge of regional accents.” Hagen quickly added, “No offense, Trammel, but one who travels as much as I have tends to develop an ear for such things.”

  Trammel sat back on his haunches. “I’m from Five Points. How the hell did you know that?”

  The gambler smiled. “One of my many useless gifts. Anyway, I went to school and excelled in all the things both in the classroom and out of it, but my resentment of authority remained with me. I graduated at the bottom of my class despite my abilities and went on to have a mediocre career as a result.”

  Trammel went back to building the fire. “Which school was that?”

  “A little place along the banks of the Hudson River known as West Point.”

 

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