Little Gal and the Boy
By Christy
Summer 1863
He saw the little girl before he heard her weeping. It was a soft weeping, kept
low so as not to aggravate the men who held her captive. Shaking his head at the
cruelty of tying the child’s hands behind her back and blindfolding her, the boy
trembled with anger. He hated injustice and this was a form of despicable
ruthlessness. Creeping close behind the trees, he wondered how best to help the
blond haired miss who couldn’t have been more than seven or eight years old with
her long silky locks cascading down her back in a fine pony tail. She wore pants
and a shirt just like a boy while her face spoke of the angels. The three men
who had made camp for the night ignored their prisoner. Without her boots, the
girl wasn’t going anywhere in this terrain. The boy watching the camp had to
admire the girl’s courage for though she cried, she kept herself from irritating
her captors and that was something he hoped she would continue to do. Otherwise,
he knew all would be lost.
"Hold still, Little Gal," he said softly. "I reckon the war can wait till ya get
back to your folks."
Night fell slowly on the middle of summer in
San Joaquin
valley. It was close to nine before the sun set, the temperature cooling
considerably. The little girl sitting on the ground, her world turned upside. It
had been three days since she had been taken from her parents while riding her
pony with a ranch hand. They had been less than a mile from the ranch when a
single shot had fallen the protector. She had taken off on her own, hearing yet
a second shot which was certainly meant to kill John Abbott once and for all. In
seconds she heard someone galloping up behind her. She was taken off her pony in
one full swoop, her little body laid across the saddle as they rode. She kicked
and screamed to no avail. The men had whooped at their quick success. While
still in the saddle the child had been tied and blindfolded. So far she had not
seen any of the men who had taken her and she had no idea where she was. Even so
the little girl planned to escape until they took her boots. Without boots she
was helpless. She knew walking barefoot on the range was not a safe option. She
still held out hope that she could get to a horse and escape, but so far even
that opportunity seemed unlikely to a frightened little girl.
When the voices quieted, the child decided it was safe at last to fall asleep.
Before they tied her to the tree, they had untied her hands and allowed her to
relieve herself in the bushes. Sitting her back down under the tree, they
allowed her some fresh cooked rabbit and water, then tied her hands again, all
in the darkness that surrounded her, all with one word directions. Leaning
against the tree, the child comforted herself with the knowledge that her father
and brothers were certainly looking for her. They would rescue her before it was
too late. She had heard the men. They meant to take her to San Francisco and
sell her into slavery. The child didn’t really know what that meant, but she
knew it couldn’t be good.
“Psst…” a soft voice called. Her ears perked up. There was silence all around.
From behind the tree, a hand touched her shoulder, a hand not much bigger than
her own. She didn’t move as the boy spoke, untying her blind fold and her hands,
his whisper soft, and insistent in her ears.
“Don’t make a sound. I’m a friend, honest. Let’s go.” She didn’t need to be told
twice. Blinking, adjusting her eyes to the darkness, her heart pulsating in fear
despite a feeling that this was her way to safety, she turned to see a blond
boy, his finger on his lips. His sapphire eyes shone in the dim light of the
campfire behind them. Immediately the girl knew she could trust him, though she
wasn’t sure why. He turned, and beckoned her to get up on his back. Again she
did as ordered, praying this boy would take her home. It was hard to see in the
dark and yet what light she could see hurt her eyes. She closed and opened them
repeatedly as the boy moved. Circling the camp so as not to make a sound, he
got to the horses. Not bothering to saddle one, he helped her to get mounted. He
reached into his pocket and took out a knife.
“Ya hold on ta this. If they catch us, ya can use it ta work loose the ties. I
got one in my boot.” She nodded putting the knife in her pants pocket. With a
grin, he used a tree stump to get up behind her. He gathered the tethers of the
other horses and they made their way away from the camp. The men were roused by
the sound of the horses. With a cry, they chased after the boy and girl. She
felt the boy placing his body over hers as gunshots rang out. He held fast to
the horses.
“Stay down,” he ordered sharply as she tried to move. Another shot rang out. The
boy stiffened, falling forward on the little girl. They continued to flee. The
horses were let go as the boy fought to hold himself up.
“You okay?” he asked, groaning with pain. She nodded.
“We gotta…gotta get help. It’ll be morning soon…they can find us.”
“We live near
Stockton. Do you know where we are?” the child
asked.
“Stockton? Not sure…East of here I think. Oh
God.”
“Boy…did they hurt you?” she asked, her lips quivering. They were riding a
little more slowly for only the light of the full moon could guide them and
there was a chance the horse could step into a hole.
“My shoulder…bullet went through I think…but hurts like hellfire.”
“My mama can fix you up. You can come home with me,” she offered. “Boy you got
any water?”
“Sorry, Little Gal. I left my bedroll and canteen back there. Ya don’t want ta
go back…back for it do ya?”
“Uh uh,” she cried shaking her head. “They…said…they said they was going ta sell
me. I’m scared of them.”
“Smart Gal,” the boy answered. “That’s a good name for ya, Gal. I’m feeling
rather poorly. Can ya see ta ride?”
“Yep. It’s okay. I can ride good,” Gal answered.
“Good, cause we don’t want them to catch us.”
“You rescued me.”
“Yeah, what of it?” the boy returned sharply.
“Why? You don’t know me.”
“Well I couldn’t leave ya there. My mama would skin me good. Never leave a gal
in distress she says. So I didn’t.”
“But they could have killed you,” Gal protested. “If they catch us…”
“They won’t.” He insisted. “Can we just be quiet?” She turned to look at him.
Even in the dim light she could see he was suffering. The boy’s face was pale
and taut, his eyes expressionably filled with his agony. Little Gal knew they
needed to find help, but she also knew even if they found a person to help, they
wouldn’t know if they could trust them. Well if they couldn’t find help, they
needed to find water and
Stockton. She
touched his face with her little hand and deposited a wet kiss on his forehead.
“Aww, what’d ya go and do that for?” he demanded in disgust.
“I do that with my brothers,” she answered with a light giggle. “Don’t it make
you feel better?”
“Naw and don’t do it again,” the boy retorted. She turned back on the horse,
digging her legs into the side of the horse. She knew her kiss did make her
rescuer feel better. Her brothers protested too, especially Nick. Her oldest
brother, Jarrod was starting to compliment her for her hugs and kisses, but then
he was grown and in college. He had more manners than Nick. She plodded the
horse forward. Fortunately the horse was gentle, and he rode sure footed through
the night. The sun was just rising when Little Gal noticed her new friend
slipping off the horse. To her horror, he hit the ground with a thud. She jumped
down to his side just as horses galloped up to them. Her instinct to run was
blunted by her need to help the boy. She stood protectively by his side as a man
jumped off his horse and hit her hard across the face.
“You little brat. I told ya what would happen if ya tried to escape. Tie her and
blindfold her again, Danny.” The little gal stumbled back as a second man pulled
her arms behind her. While her hands were being tied, her eyes watched the scene
unfolding around her. The first man was looking down at the boy who had called
her Gal. The boy’s blond head was visible, his kind face buried in the dirt
where he had fallen. Before the hated blindfold came on, her heart plummeted as
the man lifted his gun and pulled back his trigger, aiming the gun at the boy’s
head. He spoke hideously chilling words that threatened to push the little girl
over the edge of her ability to cope with all that had happened to her.
“Well Sonny, didn’t anyone ever teach ya not to butt in someone else’s business?
Now ya gotta pay the price for your danged actions. The girl’s mine. Now you’re
dead.” The head turned, the sapphire eyes meeting the little gal’s with an
amazingly courageous reassurance. With an anguished scream, she launched her
body at the man just as the gun fired. The little gal only jostled her captor
for she was small and he was quite large. Cruelly, the man grabbed her, but not
before she witnessed the blood seeping out of the boy’s head and his eyes gazing
at her until they closed and his body went limp. She was certain she had just
seen him die, an atrocity she had never been forced to watch before. With her
mind spinning at the horror, the blond girl decided the boy had died for her,
and now it was her turn. Looking up, the child gasped, her mouth forming a
silent “oh.” She raised her hand to deflect the blow, but wasn’t fast enough to
keep the butt of the gun the man held from hitting her hard on the head. The
explosion in her head took her by surprise and then sent her into oblivion
giving her a blessed release.
**********
“Audra! Audra, please, Sweetheart. Talk to me,” Victoria Barkley pleaded with
her little daughter. Holding the child in her arms, Victoria was at the end of
her rope. It had been six weeks since Tom had found the men who had taken their
daughter. All three men had been killed in a shoot out with the posse that the
sheriff and Tom had formed when Audra went missing. Tom told her how the trail
had gotten almost seventy miles from Stockton and then suddenly turned back.
Five miles later, the posse’s lead stringer had rushed back to the group saying
he thought he’d seen the men now heading west towards them again. From his
vantage point he had seen Audra her little body slumped over the saddle. They
hid, waiting till the men appeared. Tom saw Audra lying across the saddle
unmoving. In one shot, he put a bullet between her captor’s eyes, giving him
grim satisfaction as the man flew backward, dead before he hit the ground. The
other two men were also killed before they really knew what hit them. With Audra
as their hostage there was little choice but to kill them before they could hurt
his daughter. Tom’s heart broke while carrying Audra home, her head bruised a
terrible black and blue, her listless body resting against his chest all the way
home. The doctor diagnosed a skull fracture, caused most likely by a blunt
trauma to the head. To her parents’ distress, Audra hadn’t regained
consciousness until they had been home for two days. When their little angel
woke she failed to recognize her family or talk to them. The doctor was
uncertain if it was trauma that caused the child’s condition or brain damage.
Victoria wanted nothing more than to hear her daughter’s voice and see those
blue eyes alight with mischief.
“Torie,” Tom said coming out into the garden. “How is she today?” Shaking her
head,
Victoria held the child close. Tom touched the
blond head, tears in his eyes.
“We got her back,” he murmured, “But what good has it done?”
“Don’t say that!”
Victoria cried with a fierce maternal
protection. “If you give up on her, Tom Barkley, I’ll never forgive you.”
Victoria’s
face was raw with grief and pain, but her intent was clear. Tom sat down next to
his wife, his arms embracing her and Audra.
“Torie, Torie,” he sighed. “I would never give up on our princess. She’s part of
my heart and soul just as our boys are. I just can’t bear to see her like this.”
Victoria took a deep breath, letting it out,
trying to relax.
“I know,” she conceded. “Where are Nick and Jarrod?”
“I sent them to town to get some supplies. They’ve been working hard. I thought
they could use some time just to relax a little. Ride to town’s a good way to do
it.”
Victoria nodded.
“You know, Torie, I’ve gone over this in my mind a hundred times. I just can’t
figure it out. What did those men back track for? It doesn’t make sense. And if
they hadn’t I strongly doubt we would have caught up with them. They were riding
hard and we almost lost them.”
“You mean…”
Victoria gasped. Tom’s sapphire eyes, those
terribly expressive eyes were solemn as he spoke.
“Whatever brought them back saved our girl. I don’t know if she managed to
escape or what, but I thank God for whatever happened every day.”
“Dear God,”
Victoria gasped again. She clutched Audra to
her, her silent daughter. She hadn’t known such fear or loss since the loss of
her baby son thirteen years before. When Audra had gone missing, her husband and
sons had given chase. Those six days of worrying and waiting had been some of
the worst of her life. Now, without her daughter’s constant prattle and
giggling, her heart was empty. Worse was the darkness that had descended over
her sons and husband in their distress. She only hoped that in town, the boys
would get a chance to relax and talk. They were so good for each other, that is,
she smiled to herself, when they weren’t fighting. She picked her daughter up
and she and Tom went into the house for lunch. Hours later, the boys arrived
home with the wagon and supplies. Nick was seventeen, tall and brawny with a
rugged face like his father’s and a no-nonsense look about his hazel eyes. He
hid a soft heart behind a temperamental exterior. Jarrod, four years older was
slightly shorter and thinner than his brother or perhaps less well muscled, with
the definite look of a scholar although now that it was summer he was home from
college helping out on the ranch he had grown up on. The boys were close
friends.
“Nick, you want to put the horses up,” Jarrod asked as the two brothers came
into the yard. “I’ll start unloading the supplies.”
“Sure, Jarrod,” Nick answered. “Jarrod?”
“Yeah, Nick.”
“You going to tell Mother and Father about the boy they found?” Jarrod Barkley a
law student who was just into his second decade nodded.
“Maybe it will help Audra put some of her fears to rest. I wish I knew what
really happened out there.”
“Me too,” Nick agreed. “I’d give anything to have her asking me pesky questions
and bothering me again. She’s a nuisance, but that’s better than her being so
quiet.”
“True.” Jarrod had finished unloading the supplies and putting them in the barn,
while Nick put up the horses. When they were both done with their chores, they
walked from the neatly kept outbuildings to the large mansion their parents had
built while they were both small boys. They found their mother in the living
room.
Victoria was holding her daughter, reading her one of her favorite stories. The
child was stiff with Victoria’s arm around her, but the mother was convinced
that touch and love would bring her daughter back to them. Nick and Jarrod
exchanged glances, and then walked into the living room. Behind them, the front
door slammed as Tom Barkley’s voice bellowed out.
“Torie? Nick! Jarrod! Audra! Where is everyone?” Silas appeared to take Tom’s
hat. After greeting the house man with a grin, Tom walked into the living room
with
Victoria shaking her head.
“Tom! Must you be so loud?” She said automatically. “My eardrums.” Tom bent
over, kissing his wife on the cheek, and then did the same to Audra who was
unresponsive.
“I haven’t broken your ear drums yet, Torie, or Audra’s. As for Jarrod and Nick,
I’m sure they’re used to it.”
“Well, Father, I must admit, between you and Nick, this house is never at a loss
for noise,” Jarrod teased with a wink at his brother.
“Now see here,” Nick put in pretending to be offended.
“Boys, Boys,”
Victoria chided. The laughter in the room was
comforting. Audra lifted her head, looking around, and then seemed to retreat
again.
“Torie, did you see that,” Tom asked putting down the bottle of brandy he had
been about to use to pour himself a drink.
Victoria, her
heart suddenly hopeful nodded. Nick and Jarrod patted each other on the
shoulder. Nick came over to kneel in front of the blond child who had captured
his heart the moment her tiny finger took his when she was born eight years ago.
“Hey, Little Sister, it’s about time we saw those pretty eyes a yours. Now you
get better and I’ll take ya riding on your pony.” Audra didn’t answer. Nick was
disappointed, but he still squeezed her hand. He stood, leaning against the
fireplace across from his father who did the same while sipping his brandy.
Jarrod sat on the marble table in front of his mother and sister.
“Nick and I talked to Sheriff Grant today. He had some news about a boy. He was
found out on the range and taken to Modesto. Sheriff’s deputy came over from
Modesto to do some investigating.”
”What about the boy?” Tom asked with general curiosity.
“Well, he was found the same day you found Audra. He’d been shot in the shoulder
and had a bullet that had glanced off his head. He was unconscious for several
days. When he woke he had some difficulty remembering what had happened. Guess
he was sick for awhile. Bout a week ago, when he was getting ready to be placed
in an orphanage, he remembered. He insisted on finding “Little Gal.” Jarrod’s
eyes were on his sister. Did he imagine it or did he see a flicker in her eyes.
“Little Gal?” Tom asked in puzzlement? “What’s that?” Jarrod’s answer to his
father’s question was intriguing.
“Seems it was a little girl. He insisted the sheriff find her. He said that he’d
tried to rescue her from some men who were going to sell her. That boy was dead
serious and very insistent. He said the little girl came from
Stockton.
Wanted to make sure someone lit out after her cause, and I quote what the deputy
said, “Those no good low life’s still got her.” The deputy came here because he
knew of Audra’s disappearance. He doesn’t know any more than that, except that
the boy has run off. No one knows where he is. It’s possible the little gal he
was talking about was Audra.” Silence pervaded the room. Tom held his drink as
if he were frozen.
Victoria looked down at her daughter, hugging
her close, and then let her gray eyes meet her husband’s. This boy then was the
distraction that had saved their daughter. Next to her Audra wiggled free.
“Jarrod?” Taken completely off guard, everyone stared at Audra as she looked at
her brother. Jarrod knelt down in front of his sister.
“Yes, Honey?”
“The boy? Was he okay?”
“Yes, Honey. He got better and he’s on his way to wherever he planned to go.”
Audra looked to her father and mother. Bursting into tears she let her mother
comfort her.
Victoria’s heart was full to bursting with joy,
and so were her husband’s and sons’. Audra finally got a hold of her emotions.
Snuggled close in the safety of her mother’s arms, she haltingly told her family
how the boy had tried so valiantly to save her life. Her face paled as she
recalled when he was shot for the second time, her lips trembling as she
finished.
“I thought he was dead,” she confided. “I thought he died for nothing. I felt so
bad.”
“Oh, Sweetheart,”
Victoria sighed. Tom Barkley sat on the other
side of his little girl and pulled her into his lap.
“Princess, when a man dies or even is injured trying to save a life, it’s never
in vain. You must never forget that. The boy was very brave.”
“Yes, Papa, he was,” Audra agreed. “I liked him. He didn’t like my kiss though.”
Nick and Jarrod spluttered and then started laughing. Tom’s chuckle enfolded his
daughter as he held her close. Her chatter couldn’t be stopped after that
day…and no one in the family ever minded it again…except perhaps, Nick.
**********
Epilogue
Fourteen years later, Heath Barkley burst into his sister’s room. Downstairs,
the family had just brought Audra home from the hospital in Sacramento after she
had had her appendix removed during a traumatic train ride from Stockton to that
capital city. Audra had asked Heath to come upstairs and get her favorite wrap
to wear. It was folded in the second drawer. Heath would have preferred that
Victoria get the wrap but she was in the kitchen fussing with Silas to get
something for Audra to eat and drink. Embarrassed to be going through his
sister’s things, Heath found the wrap. He was about to close the drawer when his
eyes lit on a red jackknife that had been under the wrap and was now staring up
at him. Picking it up curiously, he noted how old it was and a nick on the end
of it. Shutting the drawer, he kept his eyes on the jackknife, all the way
downstairs. Absently he handed his sister the wrap which his brother Nick was
quick to help her into. She laid back on the settee where she had sat with her
parents on that day so long ago when she found out her rescuer hadn’t died.
“Feel all right?” Nick growled in his gruff manner. Audra’s brilliant smile was
bright.
“I’m fine. You need to stop fussing.” Her voice was bright and happy to her
brothers’ relief. They had come close to losing her on the train. Life without
their little sister was something the Barkley men were not prepared to deal
with.
“Brothers are allowed to fuss over little sisters, Honey,” Jarrod chuckled
sitting on that same marble table. He looked up at Heath who was still eyeing
the jackknife.
Victoria came into the room with a tray of
lemonade and sandwiches for all of them. Nick too noticed Heath’s distraction.
He came over and put his hand on Heath’s shoulder.
“Whatcha got there, Little Brother?” Without reply, Heath got up and sat on the
settee, letting Audra put her stocking feet on his legs. He held out the
jackknife to her. She took it with a puzzled expression.
“Little Gal, how long ya had this here knife?” he asked in a soft voice. Audra’s
eyes opened wide. Nick, Jarrod and Victoria froze. A smile broke out over
Audra’s face as a long ago memory took hold.
“Well, Boy, I suppose it’s been quite a while.” For several seconds the brother
and sister’s eyes were locked on each other. Audra sat up. She planted a kiss on
Heath’s cheek. When he grinned from ear to ear, she pouted.
“Now what’s that look for, Sis?” he teased.
“Aren’t you going to protest?” she giggled back. Heath shook his head.
“No way, Little Gal. Only a twelve-year old boy refuses a girl’s kiss,
'specially when it’s his own sister.” Heath shook his head until he exclaimed
with amazement. “I’ll be damned.” Audra’s hand touched his face just as it had
that night.
“You saved my life, Heath. If it wasn’t for you those men would have taken me
for sure, Father said.” Heath shook his head in disbelief, still stunned by what
the jackknife and Audra confirmed. He did have some questions.
“The sheriff in
Modesto told me your family had found you.”
“Sure after you get yourself almost killed for me,” Audra smiled. “Through that
entire ordeal, you were my hero. I kept the knife to remember the courage of a
little boy who couldn’t leave a gal in distress…”
“'Cause my mama would have skinned me good,” Heath finished. “I’ve never
forgotten you. You were so brave and did everything I told you.”
“Oh, Heath,” Audra sighed. Hugging each other close, they were quickly pounced
on by their mother and brothers. When it finally came clear that Heath was the
boy who had saved Audra from being taken to God only knew where,
Victoria
hugged her son close.
“Mother, don’t,” Heath pleaded. “It’s over now. I was just surprised when I saw
the knife. I wanted to tell Audra how proud I was of her. She saved my life
too.”
“How?” Nick thundered, looking from his brother to his sister and back again.
“I saw you, Audra,” Heath said. “You flew at that man and his bullet went wide.
If it’d gone in where he intended, I’d a been six feet under for sure.”
“Well I couldn’t let him shoot you,” Audra replied indignantly.
“Anymore than I could let them take you,” Heath replied. This was a part of the
story the family had never heard, for Audra only told them the men had shot the
boy in the head and that was when she thought he died. She didn’t mention her
little stunt. Nick gathered his sister up in his arms, dancing around the room
with her and hugging her close.
“Audra, you are the bravest, most courageous Little Gal I bet there ever was,”
he praised with a big wide grin of delight on his rugged face.
“Hey, what about my horse?” Heath interrupted. “She may not be as strong and
sleek as Charger, but she’s as fast as the original Little Gal she was named
after.”
“So that’s where you got her name from,” Audra breathed as Nick gently placed
her back to the settee. Heath and Nick fussed over their sister as Jarrod came
to put his arm around his mother, hugged her to him. He had been silent
throughout the revelation that had just raised his pride in both Heath and Audra
a hundred fold.
“Well, Lovely Lady, what are you thinking,” Jarrod asked with a loving note.
Victoria’s gray eyes stayed on her three youngest children while she leaned
against Jarrod’s embrace. Tears fell down her perfect cheekbones.
“I’m thinking Tom would have been so proud to know Heath.”
“That he would, Mother, and how Audra saved Heath as much as he saved her.”
Victoria smiled, nodding.
“You children never cease to amaze me,” she murmured.
“Excuse me,” Jarrod wondered. Victoria slapped his back gently.
“You heard me, Jarrod.” She planted a maternal kiss on his cheek. “Now let’s go
eat with our boy and our little gal. This family is home and I for one intend to
relish every minute of this wonderful day.” Jarrod watched his mother glide
across the floor to join the family. His blue eyes rested fondly on the blond
brother and sister who were brought together once by chance and then by blood.
Jarrod couldn’t fathom how their lives would have changed without Heath’s
existence in more ways than one. But for the boy he had been and the man the
blond had become, the Barkley’s lives would certainly have gone down a path
Jarrod didn’t like to consider. Joining the family, he had no idea how the
fates could work so explicitly. He could be forever grateful to the boy who had
saved their little gal so long ago and now was part of their hearts…by grace,
good fortune and love.
*****End*****