The Return
by Debbie L.
Editor’s note: This story depicts
how Joe’s life might have been different if he spent his early years growing
up away from the Ponderosa.
The stage could rattle the dreams
right out of you, the woman thought to herself, and smiled. It was something
he might say. She had stared out of that grime caked window for endless hours,
watching as the miles of trees folded into themselves, until they were nothing
but dust beyond sagebrush and sand. She was young, she was beautiful, and the
knowledge of it had already brought her a lifetime of grief. Her loveliness
was a desolation, much like the landscape she passed that day.
“Like ashes between my lips,” she
mused and startled when the young man sitting across from her gave her an odd
look. She had not realized she had said the words aloud.
“I’m sorry,” he shouted. “The noise
in here - I didn’t catch what you said.”
“It’s nothing,” she said, and smiled
her most winning smile to placate the man. If nothing else, she knew how to
handle men. Hadn’t that been his accusation, the source of his rage? She would
be damned if she allowed herself to live through such a nightmare again. No,
she knew well how to take care of herself. She had done it before, and with
sorrow upon sorrow, she could certainly do it again.
The sun was slipping past the last of
the foothills, as the coach continued its flight away from the West, from the
Ponderosa, from him. She wrapped her arms tightly around her chest and let one
hand drop to caress the gentle rounding of her belly. To touch her future
still so small it was barely there. With her second chance at life slipping
away, she could only allow herself this one last hope. Nobody would ever take
this away from her. Never again would she allow a child to be wrested from her
arms. A week earlier, she would never have believed him capable of such
cruelty, but here she was, overcome by the nature of men.
Never again, she promised herself,
and this time her laugh was bitter.
“Where are you heading?” the young
man tried again, watching her laugh. His voice cracked in his struggle to be
heard.
“Bubbles in honey,” she replied,
after hesitating a moment. “The city of bubbles in honey.”
And beautiful, young Marie
Cartwright, aching with unborn life, bowed her head and cried.
***********
Sixteen years later...
At last, the stage lurched to a stop.
The young man wedged between the two spinster sisters longed to stretch, to
feel his body at ease again in the sun. Yet the thought of what waited for
him on the other side of the stagecoach doors made him pause.
Joseph Cartwright had seen a lot in
his short life, and he would be damned if he let anyone call him a coward now.
He had made it this far. His mother had taught him to fight - with a rapier,
a dueling pistol, a knife, a smile - whatever it took, and with everything he
had, he heeded that call. They formed a legion of two, a bulwark, a force of
nature: a lovely woman and her beautiful boy.
Laughter and rage, she had told him.
Hold on to both, and you will always be strong. Rage and laughter had forged
them together, as long as he could remember. From his first shaky steps in the
gambling parlor where his mother entertained, to his boyhood running wild on
the streets of New Orleans, Joe had let both tether him to the world. It had
been a hard and lonely life for a sensitive boy, smaller and prettier than
most, who wore his heart on his sleeve. For many years, any common bully could
whip the tears out of him. Any careless insult could make him cry.
But Joe had inherited more from his
mother than her looks. Beneath the distraction of his appearance, he had
inherited the legacy of her fury and her betrayal. She had loved hard and
recklessly, and she refused to love like that again. All devotion and
tenderness now remained only for her son. She bequeathed him all the
fierceness and determination to survive that she could muster. The two had
served him well, until that day.
The customer had been little more
than a joke to her. A homely and wealthy man who would buy her a drink for
some laughs and would help pay for the set of rooms that she and her son
called their home. A look, an arched neck, a smile and Marie would be well on
her way to providing another meal or a pair of boots for young feet that would
not stop growing.
Joe knew that his mother loved him,
knew it with all of his heart. But he also knew the price she had paid for
that love. He was hardly shocked by his mother’s occupation. He had known the
facts of life between men and women before most children entered school. His
mother could not protect him from those facts. She did the best that she could
and expected him to do the same.
The man had been persistent at first.
He had bothered her long after her obligation was over, with his demands, his
needs, and his demons. He had wanted everything from her, but Marie had been
long past giving anything of herself to anyone but the boy back at home. So
the man waited and watched.
Finally, one steaming, summer night,
when the moon hung as an orange sliver in the sky, the man took his chance. If
he could not claim such beauty, if he could not grasp it as his own, it could
not belong in the world. He grabbed her arm as she passed him, slapped his
hand against her mouth, and dragged her into the narrow alley behind the
gaming parlor where she worked. Plunging the knife into her chest, the man
panicked at the blood that swelled and pooled underneath his hands. Trembling
with fear, he eased her onto the dusty ground, touched her golden curls, and
fled towards the street. He vanished into the swamp of New Orleans humanity,
another man who would never be able to forget the lovely apparition named
Marie Cartwright. The man did not kiss her goodbye.
Marie clung to life that night with
the sheer willfulness that had marked her entire life. Pierre, the livery boy
who found her the next morning, shook at the vision at her still body, lying
at the edge of the alley. Gasping for each breath, Pierre flew towards the
rooms where she lived with her son, Joe.
Pierre recognized Marie immediately
for he had shared a boyhood on the streets with her son. Born a mere month
apart, the two of them had bonded over a love of cards, fast horses, and
pretty girls. While Joe’s mother had not exactly approved of her son’s
lifestyle, she understood the wildness in his heart. She understood it and
might have admitted that she encouraged it. And she liked Pierre. He was a
handsome devil, just like her little son. Pierre remembered the way her smile
lit her face, like sunlight through the mists of the city. She was kind.
Running faster, he leaned into the corner and collided directly into her son.
Joe had been strolling towards the
salon in search of his mother. Although it was not unusual for him to spend
his mornings alone, he had awakened to an empty stomach, no money, and no way
to feed himself, save from the trash heaps in the alleys behind the shops.
While he certainly had foraged in the past, he had no intention of doing so
that morning. Joe knew his mother’s latest conquest had been flush and easy
with money.
Joe was not a boy who was shocked by
the desperate things of the world. Love was a business transaction for his
mother, nothing more and nothing less. If Joe needed to twist the truth to win
a game of poker or swindle a drunk out of his last paycheck, then so be it.
Their life at night filled their stomachs in the morning. With her latest
proceeds and his genius at cards, by nightfall Joe would be able to triple his
mother’s earnings. For this month at least, Marie and Joe Cartwright could
survive in style.
He was smiling at the thought of the
evening’s bounty when Pierre plowed into him from around the corner.
“Hey friend,” Joe started, with his
easy laugh. He stopped Pierre and placed his hands on his shoulders. “Which
girl’s chasing you this time?”
“Joe,” Pierre gasped. “It’s your -
it’s Marie. It’s Marie.”
Joe did not ask any questions. He
ran. He ran until the breath erupted from his chest in sickly gasps. He was a
fast boy, in every way, and he outran his friend, with ease. He did not need
to ask the way. He knew exactly where he was going.
By the time Joe reached the alley, a
small crowd had gathered around the body of the tiny woman, and a constable
had reached the scene, pushing the onlookers out of the way. Despite his small
size, Joe shoved past every gawker until he knelt in the dirt next to his
mother.
“Mama,” he cried, his voice betraying
his age. “Mama, it’s me. It’s Joe.”
She would not have opened her eyes
for anyone else. The onlookers gasped, as the woman they assumed was dead
shuddered and looked steadily at her son.
“Joe.”
“Mama, I’ll get help. I need a
doctor. A doctor!” Joe sprung to his feet and grabbed the collar of a man who
was standing by his side. The amused smirk on the man’s face sent fury
spiraling through Joe’s body and he pulled a knife from his pocket before the
man could react. “Mister, you better run and get a doctor, or so help me God,
I’ll cut your throat.”
The man’s smirk vanished in a moment.
It was only a boy, a slip of a boy at that, but something in the boy’s eyes
scared the hell out him. He fled towards the doctor’s office.
The constable also turned away. He
had more to concern himself with than the stabbing of a party girl and her
boy.
Joe knelt beside his mother, a child
once more, tears streaming down his face.
“Mama,” he crooned. “Mama, you’ll be
all right. Don’t worry about anything.”
“Joe, my darling. Oh my darling,” she
whispered. “I have been so unfair to you. All my pride, my foolish, foolish
pride.”
“Don’t talk Mama. It’s all right. The
doctor’s coming.”
“No, my love. I won’t leave you yet.
I still have something to tell you. Something to do.”
**********
Later, after the grueling weeks of
travel on steamer, on train, and finally on the stage to Virginia City, Joe
would try to remember his last moments with his mother. He did not remember
the arrival of the doctor, the awkward stiffness of her body as she was
carried by strangers, or the way Pierre had stayed by his side until the
moment Joe slipped behind the doors of the doctor’s office. Joe did not know
that he would never see his friend again, so he never said goodbye. It would
become one of the many regrets that had marked his young life.
Thinking back on those terrible days,
the only memory that remained was the lovely translucence of her face and the
calmness in her voice, as she told her story. But oh what a story she told.
Joe would never know where she found the strength to tell him the story.
All his life, Marie had lured Joe to
sleep with fables of the mystical West. In his dreams, trees soared to the
stars, and knights rode on horseback. Good and evil dueled on every dusty
street corner, with guns instead of rapiers, and little boys grew to be men,
strong and true. Joe loved these stories that told of a life so different than
his own, and he often begged for more, not understanding the look of sorrow
that passed over her face.
But this story....this story was so
unexpected, so fantastical, he could hardly believe it was true.
Yet, his mother had never lied to her
son and he had always believed her.
Even as Joe handed his mother the
paper and pen and watched as she wrote the letter, he could not comprehend her
words. Her fingers trembled violently as she composed the letter. Her script
was weak and shaky, but any fool would have known it was hers.
When she finished, she handed him the
letter. With a voice that was already folding into itself, Marie whispered,
“Send this to your father.”
Much later, to his disgust, Joe found
that he could not even remember the moment of her death. Eternally stubborn,
Marie had refused to die for days, for weeks, until the telegram arrived that
answered her desperate letter.
The telegram was succinct,
compassionate, and made Marie remember the depths of her feeling for the only
man she had ever really loved.
It read: “In shock. Stop. Looked
everywhere for you. Stop. Of course the boy must come home immediately. Stop.
All funds have been wired. Stop. Love Ben.”
After Joe read her the telegram,
Marie smiled her brilliant smile and closed her eyes. Her child was safe and
she could rest. Life for her had been cruel and unjust, but her child could
return to the land of tall trees and brave men that danced at the edges of her
dreams.
***********
While it might be a blessing that he
could not remember the last weeks of her agonizing life, Joe berated himself
for forgetting her death. Now, as he watched the two elderly women elbow each
other off the stage, he fought the sudden desire to hide under the seat, to
keep riding, to move on. He had not allowed himself the luxury of grief, yet
he longed for his mother’s gentle touch on his cheek. For the look on her face
that told him that she understood him, understood everything about him, and
nothing could ever drive her away.
He had not believed she would
actually leave him.
He longed to run, to take his chances
in one of the rough and tumble towns he had passed along the way, but Joe
Cartwright was raised to be a fighter. He could not be afraid of anything.
Joe lifted his chin defiantly towards
the dusty world that lay beyond the stage door. He could take on anything or
anyone. He only looked like a boy. With a confidence that did not reach his
eyes, Joe vaulted out of the stage to meet his father and his brothers.
**********
Adam Cartwright was a tired man.
Night after night, he had sat in the armchair by the hearth watching his
father pace endlessly, hour after hour. The letter had changed all their
lives, in the few minutes it had taken to read it, but no one had been
transformed more dramatically than his father.
“I don’t understand,” Ben would say
again and again. Adam listened even though it didn’t seem to matter to his
father whether he had an audience or not. “We looked everywhere in New
Orleans. Everywhere. She just vanished without a trace. All these years. How
could she have been there all these years?”
“New Orleans is a big city, Pa,” Adam
would say, but it didn’t matter. His father just continued on.
“A child. A boy. Why didn’t she tell
me? Am I such a monster that she couldn’t tell me? Why didn’t she tell me?
Stubborn, so stubborn. Heaven and Earth. I would have followed her anywhere.”
“Pa, it’s not your fault, Pa.”
“My God, Adam,” Ben gasped in a voice
edged with grief and regret. “Can it possibly be too late? Too late for
Marie?”
Adam shivered now, standing in the
rain, as he leaned against the hitching post at the crossroad of Virginia
City’s main road, waiting for the stage. He stood next to his father and
brother, and tried to shake off the fatigue that had settled over him like a
second skin during the past month.
“Dadburnit Pa,” Hoss muttered,
flicking off the water that kept pooling on the brim of his hat. “That stage
was due an hour ago. Where could it be? I’ve a mind to ride out and meet it
myself.”
“Easy, Hoss.” Ben’s smile was kind
now, his pacing and fury replaced by gentle regret. “It’ll be here son.
Sooner than we know.”
“Pa. I was wondering. I don’t
remember Marie - Ma - at all any more. What do you think he will be like? You
know, my... my brother? Do you think he’ll look like me or Adam any?”
Ben wrapped his arm around his son’s
large shoulders. Of all of them, Hoss had typically reacted to the letter with
the purest of emotions - shock, surprise, and then utter joy. He did not
remember Marie, but he loved her for his father’s sake, and already felt for
his unknown brother a love that surprised even himself. For Hoss, life was all
about possibilities and never about complications.
“Well Hoss,” Ben began, “You and Adam
favor your mothers, so I would imagine that Marie’s son - Joseph - would do
the same. She was the most beautiful woman any of us had ever seen. Isn’t that
right Adam?”
“Yes Pa, that’s right,” Adam
assented, even as his long fingers pinched the bridge of his nose. He
certainly did remember Marie’s beauty, though she had only lived in their home
for a matter of months. It haunted him in dreams and outshone the loveliness
of every pretty girl he had ever held in his arms. He had been twelve years
old when Marie left, and sometimes he felt that her memory had spoiled the
promise that any mere girl would ever hold for him.
His father’s adoration for Marie was
forever tangled in the memory of “that day.” It was no wonder Hoss had no
memory of his young stepmother. Hoss managed to turn his back to everything
that was hurtful or unpleasant. It was not that he was naive or slow. He just
had no darkness in him. Adam often envied his younger brother.
Ben cleared his throat and Adam could
feel his father’s body tense. He had stood by his father’s side through so
many trials, big and small, that Adam had always felt that they needed few
words between them. They were not that type of family. But this was something
new altogether.
“It’s coming,” Ben said.
The rain seemed to a slow a bit, just
as the stage rattled around the corner to a shuddering halt. The driver hopped
off his perch and opened the door with a weary sigh. It had been a long trip
and he hated driving the team in the rain. Shivering and holding their hands
to their backs, the Slattern sisters exited the stage. Adam held his breath
for what felt like an hour, but was just a moment. Next to him, his father and
brother also appeared frozen in their shared expectation; they knew everything
was changing. Nothing would ever be the same.
The moment ended when the boy inside
bounded out of stage. Adam had expected a display of nervousness, maybe some
fear, but nothing prepared him for the intensity of life that now stood before
them. He knew it as soon as he saw him. The kid was the picture of Marie. Adam
would have recognized him in any crowd, on any street corner, in any city. The
boy looked around until his eyes rested on the three men standing before him.
His eyes met Adam’s, he frowned for just a moment, and then his face dissolved
into a slow, deliberate smile.
Joe was terrified out of his mind.
Any confidence he thought he had mustered in the stage, vanished at the sight
of the three strangers. His curls dripped into his eyes and he pushed them
back impatiently. He knew he should have had his hair cut at one of the stops
along the way. Breathing slowly and steadily, Joe made himself smile. Charm
was a survival skill his mother had taught him before he could walk. Use
everything you got Joe, he told himself. He forced his legs to move, one after
the other, until he stood in front of the oldest of the three. Joe told
himself this must be his father. Hello sir,” he said, and held his hand out.
He was gratified to see that it was no longer shaking. “I’m Joe.”
Joe’s action seemed to stir the
Cartwrights out of their fugue. Ben shivered as he reached for the boy’s hand.
It was like something out of a dream. His darling Marie’s face resurrected and
transposed on the face of this very young boy. He was a stranger. Ben had
never seen him before in his life, and yet he would have known him anywhere.
In that moment, the missing pieces of the puzzle of his life began to fall
into place.
Ben grasped the boy’s hand and arm
and shook it a little too eagerly. The boy’s smile faltered and his lips
seemed to tremble. Never a quiet man, Ben felt himself unable to speak a word.
“Well, boy howdy,” Hoss was
exclaiming, and he immediately circled the boy’s slight shoulders with his
massive arm. Joe was utterly swallowed by the man’s embrace. “Ain’t you a
sight? Look at you. Anybody’d know you was a Cartwright, wouldn’t they Pa?”
Oddly, Joe felt relaxed in the large
man’s arms. He couldn’t imagine anyone more physically different from his
petite mother, but this man’s embrace felt natural and somehow comforting.
“Hoss,” Joe said out loud,
remembering his dying mother’s tutelage. “You must be Hoss.”
Adam stepped forward, his good
manners reasserting themselves, as the shock of seeing the boy wore off. “I’m
Adam. How was your trip? The stage is terrible this time of year.”
Ben looked at his sons gratefully. He
had to be able to speak to this boy, this living embodiment of Marie. The
words felt like gravel in his throat, but he managed, “You must be tired. We
brought the wagon. It’s quite a long ride to the Ponderosa.”
Before he could stop himself, Ben
reached out his hand and pushed aside a curl from the boy’s forehead. For a
moment, Joe flinched. Like his mother, he hated to be touched by strangers
unless it was for business. You never knew when a pretty girl could make a bad
poker game right, but Joe had learned to control himself at all costs. Giving
too much away could cost you your life in the gambling palaces of New Orleans.
Adam saw the tiny movement and
wondered at the boy’s smile. Who was this kid and how would he fit into their
lives?
“That sounds great sir,” Joe said, in
a voice as light and easy as he could manage. Don’t give too much away, he
told himself. You don’t know anything about them. You don’t know anything at
all about these people, except that they turned her away. Joe kept smiling. He
had been told by more than one experienced girl that his smile could cover a
multitude of sins.
“Are you hungry? We could eat here,
before we go,” Ben asked, draping his arm around his new son’s shoulders. He
knew he was simply used to his older sons’ large frames, but this boy looked
so slight and bedraggled in the rain, it seemed to Ben a stiff wind would blow
him away.
“No thank you sir,” Joe answered,
reaching for his bag. “I don’t eat much.”
“Well, anyone could tell that by
looking at you,” Hoss exclaimed, beaming at this small new brother. “Sally Mae
makes the best apple pie in town. She’ll be plumb put out if you don’t try a
lil’ ol’ piece.”
“And it has nothing to do with the
fact that you’d do about anything for a piece, yourself, is that right,
brother?”
Adam, Joe remembered, as he felt an
unsettling surge of affection towards these men his mother had called his
brothers. What would it have been like to have grown up under the arms of such
men? The darker man, Adam, smiled a funny half smile and took his other
baggage.
”This all you got?” Adam asked, and
Joe was grateful that he didn’t ask him to eat anything. Joe tried to keep his
manners animated and lively, the way he watched his mother work a crowd, but
he could feel himself fading with the exhaustion of the trip and this meeting.
“That’s it,” Joe replied. “You hold
my life in your hands.”
At that, they all smiled and walked
as one to the wagon. Adam sighed. This would be one hell of a ride.
**********
The journey stretched into hours as
the wagon rolled through the most beautiful land Joe had ever seen.
“And all the trees of the field shall
clap their hands.” The words came to mind unbidden, but somehow, he heard the
silver tinkle of his mama’s voice.
Hoss, his huge horse trotting easily
by the side of the wagon, kept up a constant stream of narrative, pointing out
what seemed to Joe to be an endless collection of creeks, crags, and ravines.
Every rock seemed to have a name, and every name seemed to be just a footnote
on the world that was the Ponderosa. Joe could barely wrap his mind around the
size of it.
The ride was long and twice they
encountered ranch hands who gaped at the new arrival in unabashed curiosity.
“This is my son. Joseph,” Ben almost
growled, and his stern visage ensured that no one muttered a word other than,
“Nice to meet you, young fellow.”
Joe wondered at the man who ruled
this empire, who seemed to frighten the toughest of men with a mere
expression. Until a month ago, he had not given a second thought to even the
possibility of a father. Many of the street kids he ran with were the scrappy
children of unmarried saloon girls. Others had lived in terror of their
fathers’ drunken rages. A father was an idea that would take some getting used
to.
Joe knew this man had sent his mother
away, yet the hand that held his arm was as gentle as hers had been. He
considered that he should hate this man, but his voice, his touch was like
something out of a half-remembered dream. Closing his eyes, he could hear his
mother’s voice and for a moment, she was with him, weaving in and out among
the trees.
“Tired?” Again the voice was strong
and soft, and Joe opened his eyes and nodded.
“I guess so,” he replied. “All this
space. It kinda gets under a man’s skin. I guess I’m used to making due with
smaller spaces, sir.”
Ben looked at the “man” sitting next
to him, and couldn’t help but smile. He looked both younger and older than he
had expected. At sixteen, both Adam and Hoss had resembled grown men, both in
stature and physique. This boy looked years younger, not only because of his
small size.
Yet, in another way, he seemed older
than Adam and certainly more knowing than Hoss. There was something in the
eyes, a weariness that Ben found familiar, but could not quite place. The boy
had not stopped smiling since he hopped off that stage. The smile, however,
never reached his eyes. It was like he had already seen the world, at age
sixteen, and found it wanting. And then he remembered.
Involuntarily, Ben’s hand flew to his
mouth to cover the beginning of a groan. Astride Sport, on the other side of
the wagon, Adam glanced at him quizzically, one eyebrow raised.
“Nothing,” Ben mouthed, to his oldest
son, who wouldn’t believe him anyways. They knew each other too well from
their many years of working side by side. But it wasn’t nothing. The
expression in this boy’s eyes mirrored the look in hers, so many years ago,
when he found her with the man.
That afternoon, after he found them
together in the outbuilding behind the barn, Ben had felt the cravings of his
heart melt into a merciless rage, but she... she... He remembered the look in
her eyes.
Struggling out of the man’s embrace,
she had met Ben’s eyes without flinching. She saw his face. She knew he would
never believe her. Her lovely, lovely smile turned into a grimace, marred with
pain. At first, Ben thought she cried. But the sound that escaped from Marie
Cartwright’s throat was a laugh. This laugh had nothing to do with the sound
of silver and light that Ben had fallen in love with. It was the laugh of one
already damned. She laughed and laughed, because she knew. Ben could think of
nothing in the initial roar of his jealousy, but she already knew how their
story would end. Comedy or tragedy. Laughter or rage. It was over when it
had barely begun. And Ben never forgot her eyes....
**********
Hop Sing wiped the sweat from his
brow with the edge of his sleeve. Despite the rain outside, the kitchen was
steamy with the fruit of his exertions. He began cooking as soon as he got
word that the boy was on the stage. Hop Sing needed no prompting; he fully
understood the significance of this day.
Hop Sing had never forgotten Marie
Cartwright. She had arrived at the Ponderosa mere months after he began
working there and he had fallen for her with a devotion that had never faded
away. It wasn’t just her beauty, which was considerable, or her easy smile.
It was her kindness that Hop Sing remembered the most. Marie had understood
what it was like to be an outsider looking in, and her thoughtfulness towards
him far exceeded the polite gratitude of the rest of the household.
Along with everyone else on the ranch
that afternoon, Hop Sing had heard the shouts, the epitaphs, the accusations.
He too had trembled at Ben Cartwright’s rage. Marie had fled into the house
through the kitchen, scrambling towards the back staircase. On the third step,
she froze and looked down at the small man cowering by the stove.
“Xia xia,” she said softly to Hop
Sing and smiled. Thank you. She was the only one who had tried to learn his
language. A woman already condemned, Marie pivoted and disappeared up the
stairs.
Hop Sing would never see her again.
But Hop Sing stayed with the family,
despite his anger at the man who had driven her away.
Ben’s wrath was quickly spent,
however, and when Hop Sing saw his employer’s utter remorse and despair, he
decided to forgive. Ben Cartwright would have gone to the ends of the earth to
restore his family, and Hop Sing had become a part of that family. In a
family, love forgives all things. So he stayed.
As he stirred the stew boiling at the
back of the stove, Hop Sing heard the familiar sound of horses approaching and
the rattle of the wagon as it pulled in front of the house. Finally, they were
home. Sixteen years later, Marie’s son was home at last.
**********
Joe wondered at the size of the ranch
house. Imposing and handsomely set back from the clearing, he couldn’t imagine
ever calling such a place his home. In New Orleans, home for Joe and Marie had
changed from month to month, and sometimes week to week, largely depending on
which landlord Marie could sweet talk into providing an inexpensive roof over
their heads.
Adam cleared his throat and offered
Joe a hand down from the wagon. Joe frowned a moment before accepting. He had
not fully regained the strength of his muscles after his weeks of travel. But
he couldn’t afford to let his guard down, and he eyed Adam a bit more warily.
Adam Cartwright was the type of man
his mother had warned him to stay away from in card games. Joe had recognized
his type right away. Far too clever for the usual tricks, you should never try
to con a man like that, Marie had told him; he’d see right through you. Stick
to the soft ones, the naive types, who could never imagine the guile that
could hide in the heart of a boy.
Ignoring his mother’s advice, Joe
turned his back on his father and Hoss and followed Adam into the barn. He
knew he should stick close to Hoss, who already struck him as the most
innocent and trusting of men, but something drew him to Adam. He stood beside
Adam, silently watching the man care for his horse. The look of cool appraisal
that Adam gave him almost made back away. Could it be possible, Joe wondered,
that someone might know him, understand him, and not push him away?
The whinny of a nearby horse drew
Joe’s attention away from Adam. There in the corner stall waited the most
beautiful horse he had ever seen. Taut with unspent energy, the animal looked
almost mean. The embodiment of the wilderness, the pinto could not have been
more unlike the well bred horses of the New Orleans elite. Joe was so
entranced by the horse that he did not notice that Ben and Hoss had followed
him into the barn. They stood next to Adam, watching this boy with amused
smiles.
“What’s her name?” Joe breathed,
betraying his age at last, with his unabashed desire.
“She ain’t got a name yet,” answered
Hoss. “She’s still half wild. We’ve only had her for a month at best. Pa
traded a string of horses to the Paiutes for her.”
Ben stepped forward. He had to be
able to talk to his son. “You can have your own horse, Joe,” he offered. “Of
course, we’ll have to teach you how to ride.”
“I know how to ride,” Joe snapped.
His voice was more bitter than he wished it to be. “My mother taught me.
I... I had a friend who worked in the livery. I helped him in the afternoon. I
rode every day.”
The men smiled at each other, with
some surprise.
“Well, Joe,” Adam offered. “Tomorrow,
you can pick out a horse and we can see how you do We have a lot of horses on
the Ponderosa.”
“I want this one.” Joe’s voice was so
soft, he wondered if he had said the words out loud. From the collective groan
that answered, he knew his words had been heard.
“This ain’t a horse for a beginner,
boy…” Hoss blurted out.
“Joe,” Ben protested, “this horse
will take months before it’s ready to ride.”
“You can’t be serious,” Adam
sputtered.
“Enough!” Joe silenced them all. The
anger welled to the surface, before he could clamp it back down. As if sensing
his emotion, the pinto unexpectedly gentled under his steady hand. “All of
you! You don’t know anything about me.”
Joe leaned into the horse and crooned
into her ear before storming out of the barn. Exchanging looks with each
other, the three men followed.
The evening passed slowly and
awkwardly, and at last Ben headed toward the stairs. It concerned him that
such a young boy had not turned in for the night, but Joe showed no
inclination to do so, as he beat Hoss at another game of checkers. Not quite a
father, not quite a host, Ben followed his heart and placed his hand on the
boy’s shoulder. “Joe,” he said gently. “It’s been a long day for all of us.
Let’s call it a night.”
Knowing that the law had spoken, Hoss
and Adam pushed back their chairs to follow their father upstairs. Hoss
ruffled his new brother’s hair affectionately as he walked by. Already, he
could not help himself. Adam mildly patted the back of Joe’s chair.
Joe remained seated, until it was
clear that the group fully intended for him to follow. Nobody in his young
life had ever showed the least bit of interest in when he should go to bed. He
shrugged, rather amused, before he stood and followed the men up the stairs.
An hour later, Adam crept down the
stairs, gun in hand. The noise that awakened him had been odd, the distinct
clatter of glass and the squeak of cupboard doors. The sight before him left
him wide-eyed in wonder. For once, Adam’s steady well of sarcasm ran dry.
“What the hell are you doing?” Adam
hissed. He strode to Joe’s side and shook the child who had just downed his
third glass of whiskey like it was water. Without hesitation, Joe whipped the
small knife out of his pocket and held it under the taller man’s dimpled chin.
Adam felt Joe’s breath on his neck, before the boy pulled the knife away, his
left hand still trembling. Dimly, Adam remembered Marie had been left handed
too.
“You shouldn’t scare a man like
that,” Joe said, trying to control his breathing. He was revealing far too
much, too soon. “I’m not used to these early nights. I needed something to
relax me.”
“Early,” Adam sputtered, his voice
still weak and shaky. “It’s well past midnight. And a boy your age should not
be drinking whiskey.”
“I am not a boy,” Joe stated with an
authority that floored Adam. “And I’ve been drinking whiskey long as I could
remember. My mother taught me how to hold a drink.” He poured a fourth glass,
downed it, and looked at Adam with genuine curiosity. “But I’m a guest here,”
he continued mildly. “Of course, I’ll abide by your rules.”
Joe put the bottle back in the
cupboard and headed up the stairs. “Good night,” he said with that smile, and
then he was gone.
Adam slowly released the breath he
had been holding. He had never met anyone like Joe Cartwright.
“Good night brother,” he whispered
and picked up the empty glass. “Whoever you are.”
*********
Time passed. The first awkward hours
melted into days and weeks. To everyone’s amazement, the boy transitioned
rather easily into the complicated organization, known as the Ponderosa. Joe
had not survived on the streets of New Orleans for sixteen years by being
difficult to live with. He knew how to get along, and in the Cartwright’s
house, he was biding his time. He did not know what he was waiting for, but
his mother had asked him to leave New Orleans to join this family, and he
would have done anything to make her happy. In his own way, he had been an
obedient son.
But it was not easy, and Joe chaffed
under the mass of rules and restrictions that festered like splinters under
his skin. Marie had asked very little of Joe. She had been careful to instill
in him a courtly set of manners that would help him survive in New Orleans.
Yet she worried little about the choices he made and the moral code he picked
up from his life on the street. It was not that she did not care. She simply
did not have the time to borrow trouble. Tomorrow would have to take care of
itself.
Marie had certainly never worried
about his safety. Joe was a street child, through and through. Every instinct
he possessed was finely tuned toward self preservation. Nobody knew better how
to keep Joe Cartwright alive than Joe Cartwright himself.
That is, until Ben, Adam, and Hoss
Cartwright came along.
“Absolutely not,” his father
thundered, for the third time that day. “You are not riding that horse until
someone is able to fully break her.”
“But sir,” Joe protested, cocking his
head to the side with the most winning look in his personal arsenal. “I just
know she can be ridden. She’s been waiting for me.”
Highly amused, Adam and Hoss cocked
their hats further over their eyes and watched the showdown. Neither felt the
boy should be allowed to ride that horse, but they sure enjoyed watching him
try. Adam had never seen anybody as skillful at changing his pa’s mind as
Joe.
Joe continued, “Now, you’ve seen me
ride horses and you know I’m good. Charlie over there says I’m a natural.”
Adam and Hoss nodded in agreement.
All of them had watched the boy ride and it was a thing of beauty to see him
ride a horse. He was a natural, just as his mother had been.
Ben felt his throat tighten at the
thought of Marie. Twice, he had tried to talk to the boy about his mother, but
Joe’s face had hardened immediately. No. Talking about Marie would have to
wait.
“Look, all I’m asking for is a
chance. How can I ever be part of this family, if I’m never given a chance?”
Joe pleaded and suppressed the smile he could feel twitching at the corners of
his mouth. It was working beautifully. He had played his hand perfectly.
Hoss’ eyes filled with tears and even Adam had to look away. Joe had no
intention of becoming a part of any family, let alone of the one that turned
his mother away. But Lord Almighty, he did want to ride that horse.
He knew he had won the hand when Ben
leaned against the fence, sighed, and shook his head. His father wasn’t going
to call his bluff.
“All right Joe,” Ben sighed. “You can
give her a try. But any sign of trouble, and you fall clear, you hear? Be
safe.”
“Yes sir,” Joe breathed, but before
he raced away towards the barn, for the first time, he looked at them directly
and the Cartwright men saw the true smile of Joe Cartwright.
**********
It turned out to be the right call.
Several days later, even skeptical Adam had to chuckle as he watched the boy
gallop across the meadow, his curls whipping across his eyes as he rode.
“Ain’t never seen nothing like it,”
Hoss affirmed and let out a low whistle. “Like he was born to ride that
horse.”
“I guess he was right. That horse has
been waiting for him,” Ben admitted, walking behind his sons. He rested his
arm around Adam’s shoulders. “It’s been quite a month, boys. But I feel like
we’ve gotten through the worst of it. Joe’s really coming around.”
Adam wasn’t so sure. “Well, he
certainly loves that horse. He’s helpful with chores, doesn’t complain much.
But, Pa. Don’t you think... I mean, we don’t know anything about him.
Anything about his life with Marie - Don’t you think it’s time -”
“No Adam.” Hoss’s tone was sharper
than he intended, but he held it firm. “We don’t want to scare him off. That
look in his eyes, Pa. He’s like a little critter that doesn’t know how to
trust nobody no more. I seen it before, Pa. We gotta give him time, Adam, we
just gotta. I never knew we had him, but I ain’t planning to lose him again.
We’ve lost enough already.”
“Yes, we have Hoss, yes we have,” Ben
said. How much loss could a man face in one lifetime and not lose his mind? Or
a sixteen year old boy, for that matter? He had so many questions that he
longed to ask his son. So many questions that would have to wait. But Ben
Cartwright was a patient man.
He spoke firmly, “We wait.”