Darkness Falls
Part One: Doolittle
The last couple of days had gone from bad to worse. First a bank robbery and a
killing, then an eyewitness that claimed to recognize one of the gang of robbers
that headed east out of town. He couldn't believe it...refused to believe it.
But he was the law, and until he found evidence to the contrary, all signs
pointed to the guilt of the young man he now had locked up in his jail.
So they followed the meager trail, followed it over meadow-land and forest. They
followed it until they reached a rocky hillside where the sun was hot enough to
bake the leather from the soles of his boots. Squatting on the parched ground,
he searched for signs; signs that he knew in his heart just weren't there. In
frustration he ran his hand over his mustache and chin....but it wasn't any
use...the trail had gone cold - cold as the feeling in the pit of his stomach.
He hesitated before looking up to the men waiting impatiently on their mounts.
Shaking his head sadly from side to side, he confirmed what they feared to be
true and watched hope die in their eyes. He couldn't remember a time when that
silver star felt heavier on his chest. Other men were allowed to fail. It may
mean less money in the bank or a poorer crop or explaining to the missus that
you lost your wages in a poker game, but for him failure just wasn't an option.
"I'm sorry, Ben," was cold comfort to a Pa who was going to lose his youngest
son to the gallows’ noose.
Part Two: Dbird
Adam leaned against the door of the jail and tried to stretch out his back. It
ached from the hours he had spent at his father’s side, waiting in Roy Coffee’s
front office. The sheriff hadn’t let them into the back cell to keep Joe
company; and the air was thick with the heat of an August night and their
frustration.
“What do you think I’m going to do, stage a jailbreak? I just want to sit with
my boy,” Ben Cartwright roared, but Roy was implacable.
“I’m sorry Ben,” he replied, not without sympathy. “But I start granting you
favors and folks will start talking. There’s already talk around town that a
Cartwright can’t get a fair trial in
Virginia City.
Talk like that gets folks riled up, and pretty soon you’re looking at someone
deciding to take things into their own hands.”
“It may be true that a Cartwright can’t get a fair trial in Virginia City,” Adam
said, his voice edged in bitterness. “But not in the way you’re thinking.”
“Now Adam, that just ain’t true! I’m doing everything I can to find some
evidence to clear Joe. You know that! But I can’t find evidence that’s not
there, and you know that too!”
Adam leaned across the lawman’s desk and pointed a finger at their old friend.
“Then tell me who this mysterious eyewitness is, Roy. We can’t do anything to
protect Joe, unless we know what he’s up against. Hoss is out scouting around
the bank for evidence, but we don’t even know what we should be looking for.
Someone’s trying to set Joe up, and I want to know why.”
“I think you’re wrong, Adam,” Roy said quietly. “This eyewitness has nothing
against Little Joe… let’s just say the witness couldn’t be much more
sympathetic.”
“For Heaven’s sake,
Roy,” Ben sputtered. “Just tell us who this witness is!”
“All right, Ben, I’ll tell you. But you have to promise me that your two boys
will mind their manners and not go harassing my witness.”
“My boys aren’t going to go harassing anyone,” Ben protested.
“All right then. Her name is Lucy Watkins. She entertains at the Bucket of
Blood, and she’s only been in town for a couple months. Came all the way from
San
Francisco. She’s the one who saw Little Joe at the scene of the crime.”
“But how would she even know Joseph?” Ben asked. “Why would her identification
prove anything?”
“She knows him,”
Roy replied quietly. “By all accounts, she knows him pretty well,
Ben.”
“That’s ridiculous! Joe is still a boy. He’s seventeen years old,” Ben
protested, but the sheriff had returned to his paperwork, effectively shutting
out the Cartwrights and their troubles.
“Don’t worry,
Pa. I’ll take care of things. I won’t let anything happen to Joe.”
Adam reached for his hat and smiled reassuringly at his father. He didn’t have
to say where he was going.
Once at the saloon, he tried to compose himself, as the lilt of a fiddle and a
burst of laughter welled out from behind the swinging door. Think logically, he
commanded himself, but it wasn’t easy. The events of the past couple days had
come at them with such confusion and disorder that he could hardly make sense of
what they meant.
Roy arresting Little Joe for bank robbery and murder certainly made no
sense, but the sheriff was standing behind his accusation.
Adam knew without a doubt that Joe could never be involved in something like
that. It was true that Joe had been kind of wild lately. He had taken to staying
out all night, and more often than not, came home smelling of stale smoke and
cheap perfume. He’d been losing most of his wages as quickly as he earned them,
and several barroom fights had taken care of the rest.
Adam had strongly believed that their father needed to step in and take control
of the youngest Cartwright while he still could and had told him so. But Ben had
reminded his oldest son that he had also gone through a wild period when he was
that age. He was right. However, at seventeen Adam had been on his way to study
at the university, not living under his father’s roof and under his father’s
authority. Looking back on it, Adam was rather glad that his youthful
indiscretions had taken place without a built in audience to witness all his
mistakes. Joe had the misfortune of being born the youngest in a family of
opinionated men. Nobody was willing to let him get off too easily.
Adam entered the saloon, and without a word, the barkeep gestured toward the
back of the room, where a young saloon girl sat alone, tracing the rim of a
whiskey glass with her finger. Approaching slowly, Adam took a moment to
consider the sole eyewitness who stood between his brother and the gallows. She
was a pretty thing, painted features notwithstanding. With a start, he realized
that she was awfully young, probably not much older than Joe. She looked up at
him then and pulled out a chair, like she had been expecting him all along.
“Adam Cartwright,” she said. “Joe said you would be the one to come.”
“Joe is in jail,” Adam said, with some confusion. Oddly enough, he felt like he
had entered in the middle of a conversation but was sure that he had never
spoken to the girl before. “How could he have told you I’d come?”
“He told me before I told the sheriff what I saw,” she answered. “Before he was
arrested. He said that you would try to get me to change my story.”
“I don’t understand,” Adam said, and he really didn’t. His intention to
interrogate the young woman had fallen completely apart during the single minute
he had been talking to her.
“After the robbery, I went to Joe and told him what I saw,” she said, tears
forming in her eyes. “He told me to stick to my story, no matter what. He said I
had to do what was right, no matter what it cost.”
“Miss Watkins, you’re making it sound like my brother wanted you to testify
against him,” Adam protested.
She could hardly keep looking him in the eye, but she continued anyway. “Joe
believed in me. I loved him; I think I’ll always love him. But Joe told me that
I had to say what I saw, no matter what happened after I said it. I would have
lied for him, Mr. Cartwright, but Joe just wouldn’t let me.”
Adam stared at her, his hopes as heavy as the air in the stifling room. For the
first time in a long time, he had absolutely no idea what he was going to say
next.
And the pretty saloon girl, who loved his kid brother, covered her face with her
hands and cried.
Part Three: GrimesGirl
Adam sat silently for several minutes. Slowly the young girl's sobs died away.
She raised her tear stained face and studied the man across from her. She had
seen him on several occasions since she had come to
Virginia City.
He had impressed her with his good looks and confident ways. She could tell that
he, as she did, cared deeply for Joe. But she had promised not to lie.
"Mr. Cartwright, I want to help Joe, I really do. But I saw what I saw," she
said in a trembling voice.
Adam studied her through narrowed eyes. "Alright, Miss Watkins, let's start by
telling me exactly, and I mean exactly, what you saw."
Suddenly Lucy didn't look so confident. "Well, it was like this. I had just left
my room over at the boarding house to come to work. I was walking on the
opposite side of the street when I suddenly heard shouting. Someone was yelling
'stop them, they've robbed the bank'. Well, at first, I couldn't think and then
I got scared. I ducked into the alley by the general store and knelt down behind
a barrel."
"Behind a barrel?" Adam queried. "May I ask exactly what you could see while
hiding in an alley behind a barrel?"
Lucy seemed to draw back for a moment. Then, she straightened her shoulders and
continued.
"Well, I could see the horses as they ran down the street and the legs of the
men that had run out of the bank. I saw Joe's legs and that pinto he rides all
the time."
Adam stopped her and asked, "Joe's legs? How would you know Joe's legs? And he
doesn't have the only pinto in these parts you know."
Lucy nodded and answered, "I know that Mr. Cartwright, but it was Joe's legs. I
saw that left-handed gun and he's the only person I've ever seen that rides a
pinto and is left-handed."
"That's it? Is this what you told the sheriff? I think this is rather flimsy
evidence to hang a man."
"Hang...you don't mean they'll hang Joe. Oh, Mr. Cartwright they can't do that.
I tell you what, maybe I can tell Sheriff Coffee I was wrong."
"No, Miss Watkins, you can't go changing your story now. I still think you're
mistaken but we'll leave that for now. But, before I leave I want you to tell me
exactly why Joe told you not to lie. I have to know the whole story if I'm to
help my brother."
Part Four: Kaatje
Joe stared at the ceiling, wondering if he’d ever sleep again, or if it
mattered, considering the likely outcome of all this. If wishing could make the
difference, the last few days would never have happened. Why hadn’t he listened
to Adam and Hoss? Sure they were on his back lately, but he saw now they’d had
reason to be. Why hadn’t he gone to them when he’d first heard the news? They
could have helped him think this through. It was too late now. He could well
remember his annoyance, especially with Adam. Anyone would think his brother had
lived a parson’s life at Joe’s age, from his scowling expression and folded arms
when Joe had returned to the house in the early hours of the morning. Adam even
had the nerve to discuss his habits with Pa, and to suggest he be confined to
the ranch for a while. Joe gave a humorless chuckle, wishing Pa had agreed, now.
If only he had been confined, then he wouldn’t have run into Carter, and his
bunch of so called friends.
Hoss hadn’t been any better. His gentle brother had actually cornered him in the
barn as he was saddling Cochise for a night on the town. Hoss had threatened to
clobber him if he didn’t make it home on time for a change. Joe shook his head
again. While he didn’t think Hoss would’ve followed through, even a clobbering
would have been preferable to this.
As for his father, his time and attention had been greatly occupied by the
gracious and elegant Anne Harrison. It had almost been fun to watch his father
acting like a schoolboy, lighthearted and eager to please, to sometimes catch
the serious minded Ben Cartwright dreaming, staring into the middle distance
with a small smile. Joe sighed. It had looked as though his father had a chance
for happiness again. There were long odds of that happening now.
His stomach seemed tight, no matter how he tried to relax or move, and the
feeling wasn’t about to go away anytime soon. Somehow the muscles managed to
tense more as he heard
Roy
speaking. “I’m tellin’ ya, Ben, I’m gonna have to supervise any visits, exceptin’
those with a lawyer. And ya can’t have all night to talk to the boy either.” Roy
was firm.
“Roy, I don’t see why I can’t be in the cell to talk to him,” Ben was
arguing.
“Now Ben, we’ve been all over that. You want to visit Joe; this is how it’s got
to be.”
Roy’s voice held a note of finality. A heavy sigh of exasperation
followed these words.
“Joseph.” The deep mellifluous voice of Ben Cartwright was like soothing music
to his ears, for a little while.
“Pa.” He tried to keep the emotion out of his tone, but thought his
father might pick up on the slight quiver. He cleared his throat.
Roy eyed him sharply as he reached through the bars to clasp his
father's hand. Joe looked into the liquid dark eyes of this man, his father. Was
there anyone in the world who meant as much to him?
“How are you son?” Ben asked.
“I-I’m well enough,
Pa.” Joe forced himself to disengage from the handshake. “How are all
of you?”
“Concerned about you. Your brothers are doing what they can to look into the
matter. The truth will come out and then we’ll get you out of here, son.” Ben
reached through and squeezed his left shoulder. “Joseph, is there anything you
can tell us that will clear this matter up? Surely you were somewhere else at
the time. Someone must have seen you.”
Joe pulled away and turned slightly, looking down. “Pa.
I can’t tell you anything about it.”
“Joseph! Son, if you’re protecting someone —“
“No! Pa, I don’t know anything that will help.” Joe’s eyes closed tightly, and
he cringed inside as he anticipated the next question.
Ben’s voice lowered to a whisper, a sound that still conveyed his growing dread.
“Joe. Son! Don’t tell me you did it.”
Joe’s voice sounded strangled in his own ears. “No, Pa. I didn’t.”
“Then tell me the truth, boy.” A pleading note entered Ben’s voice.
Joe turned his back and stepped away, crossing his arms tightly, no longer
trusting himself to say a word. His eyes burned and his throat felt tight. How
could he tell the truth when it would destroy his father?
Part Five: Nanuk
It was a very silent group that made its way home that night. Forcibly thrown
out by Roy Coffee despite his protests, Ben had reluctantly complied when both
Adam and Hoss had tugged at his shirt sleeves and guided him outside.
They had hardly spoken at all since starting out from Virginia City, but there
hadn't been any need to. Everything that could possibly have been said had been
mentioned that afternoon - and Ben cringed at the memory.
He still couldn't understand what had really happened. He had tried to calm Joe
down enough to get him to talk, and for a very tiny moment his hopes had soared
and his hands tingled in anticipation when his son admitted that he hadn't done
it. But before Ben could even ask what "it" was, Joe had lifted his pale face,
and Adam, whom Ben hadn't even heard entering, had quietly said from behind him,
"He was there, Pa."
The shock had shot through Ben like fire.
Buck stumbled in the darkness and Ben was abruptly brought back to the present
as he regained his balance. Adam and Hoss, who had returned from the bank with
empty hands and dashed hopes, still rode in front of him, dark and silent as the
mountains in the distance, and lost in misery.
Even so, Ben couldn't help throwing an irritated glance at his son's straight
back. The minute look of relief Joe had thrown Adam in the cell hadn't gone
unnoticed by him and had only served to raise his anger. But no one had seemed
able to explain to him what was going on, and the reluctantly muttered, "He was
really there, Pa" that Ben had extracted from Adam on the way home had been less
than satisfying.
Again Ben's eyes wandered to Adam, who had managed to avoid any further
discussion by staying stubbornly three paces ahead, his back a stone wall a mile
high. Ever since this ordeal had started, Adam, though inquisitive and obstinate
as ever, had been keeping his thoughts to himself, but Ben was sure that his son
was trying to hide something from him.
He frowned, then looked up when he saw the lights of the ranch house gleaming in
the distance. Secrets were swirling around him like mist, and he didn't like it.
He didn't like it one bit. His son was in jail, accused of a murder Ben was sure
he hadn't committed. But he didn't think he had seldom been more afraid.
By the time they reached the yard, his body was stiff, his mind weary. He tried
not to think of how he was supposed to be spending the evening when every second
his thoughts strayed to his absent son. But from the lights he judged that Anne
was already waiting for them, and he threw his reins to Hoss’s offering hand
with a grateful nod before heading after Adam.
Just as Adam reached the porch, though, there was a crash inside. Ben turned his
eyes toward the illuminated opening of the door where he could just make out the
dark shadow of his oldest son, who stood frozen. Then he heard the shot.
And Adam flinched.
Part Six: Arien
Ben felt his heart lurch when his oldest son flinched, and automatically
pulled his weapon, his breath catching as he saw Adam fall to the ground. He was
afraid to move, afraid of the damage he was sure to find. The spell, however,
was broken a moment later as Hoss barreled past him with his pistol at the
ready.
“Son, are you all right?” Ben hurried to Adam’s side, grabbing the other’s arms
and pulled his son out of the line of fire. He ran his hands over the red clad
chest, searching desperately for a wound. “Tell me where you were hit?”
“Pa, I’m all right.” Adam said after a moment’s hesitation. “The bullet hit the
doorframe. I was already at a disadvantage and just dropped to get out of the
way of more shots.”
Ben searched the dark eyes in front of him and saw the truth they held.
Reassured, he turned and walked through the open door knowing Adam was close
behind. He could hear the raised voices of his son and fiancé before he saw them
behind the settee. Hoss held a small revolver in one hand and was holding Anne
up with the other.
“Anne!” Ben shouted, trying to make himself heard over the din of voices. “Anne,
what in blazes is going on?”
“Ben?” she asked, her dark hair falling down from its stylish coif and her green
eyes beginning to swim with tears. “Ben, I…”
Hoss watched as his father took the distraught woman into his arms. He would be
the first to admit to being amazed at the thought of his father marrying the
young Anne Harrison. In her middle thirties, she had moved to Virginia City to
open a dress shop and promptly found his pa.
He moved away from his father to Adam’s side, allowing the couple a moment of
privacy. He wasn’t sure what had happened to cause Anne to shoot at the first
person through the door, but he knew it would be a few minutes before she was
calm enough to talk.
“You all right?” he asked, remembering the fear he had felt at seeing his
brother fall to the ground like a dead weight.
Hoss watched as some unidentifiable emotion flickered behind the hazel eyes
before being hidden again. Reaching out, he lightly touched his brother’s arm.
“Adam, you okay?”
“I’m fine, honest, the bullet hit the doorframe,” he explained, looking away
from his father to meet Hoss’s eyes.
Looking at his brother, Hoss said, “Aw, Adam, you know she didn't mean nothin'
by it. She was just scared, that's all."
Adam did not answer immediately, instead watching Anne with his father. After
his lengthy conversation with Lucy, he had been disturbed to find out that a
woman fitting Anne’s description had been seen near the saloon several times,
exchanging papers and hushed words with a man.
He wasn’t sure where the information would lead, but he aimed to find out.
***********
Joe lay on the hard mattress in his cell, arms pillowed behind his head, staring
at the ceiling. There had been a deep sense of relief when he had heard Adam’s
quiet “He was there, Pa.” It had turned his father’s focus from him to his
oldest brother. The distraction had kept him from caving into the entreaties of
his father.
When Roy had led Pa and his brothers out of the jail, he had almost given
into the desire to tell the whole truth, anything to wipe the look of bitter
regret from the faces of his family. The door had shut behind them with a
finality that echoed in his soul. He had realized there was no turning
back—wherever the path he had chosen led, he would have to deal with the
consequences.
Alone.
“Joe, you sure you don’t want some dinner or somethin’?” Roy Coffee’s voice
broke into his reverie. The sheriff was standing at the door and had a look of a
man with the weight of the world on his shoulders.
Joe shook his head, looking away from the older man he had known most of his
life. He took a deep breath before speaking. “Roy,
if-if things go the way I think…can you look after Pa? I’d ask Adam or Hoss but
they’ll need someone to look after them, too. Don’t let them blame themselves.”
Roy felt the deep thrum of grief in his heart as he listened to the
worries of his young prisoner. Approaching the figure stretched out on the cot,
he said, “Joe, why can’t you tell me what happened? The circuit judge won’t be
here for a month. That’s a mighty long time to be sittin’ in jail if you don’t
have a need to.”
Joe sat up, swinging his legs over the side of the bed, and moved to the small
window. His hands gripped the bars so hard his knuckles turned white. He heard a
sigh behind him and the quiet steps of the retreating figure. With the soft
click of the door shutting, he allowed his head to rest against the cool stone.
A month was an eternity and a blink of an eye, not enough time with his family
but too long to wait for the judge.
Part Seven: PRj
Ben held Anne’s hand and gently sat her down on the settee before going to get
her some brandy. Adam moved over to the blue chair and casually sat down while
Hoss had moved over in front of the fireplace to sit on the ledge.
Anne cautiously regarded Ben’s eldest son. His eyes held hers, but his face gave
nothing away, and feeling suddenly uncomfortable, she moved her eyes to Ben as
he poured the brandy, gratefully accepting the glass he held out to her. After
pouring glasses for his sons and himself, Ben sat down next to her, giving her
arm a soothing pat.
“Are you feeling a little calmer now, Anne?” Ben asked, after she had several
sips.
“Yes, I feel better now. I’m sorry I fired at you, Adam. Some of the people in
town have been awful to me and I've been a bit nervous since Joe killed that
poor young man who used to hang around with that Carter fellow from town.”
“Joe didn’t kill anyone,” Adam corrected her with a deep, almost cold tone that
just barely avoided being uncivil.
“You’re right, I’m sorry I misspoke. Please forgive me.” Anne softly smiled at
Ben.
“It has been a crazy few days. No wonder you’re scared.” Ben took her hand to
reassure her. “You’re trembling, my dear; maybe I should make up the guest room
and you should stay here tonight.”
“Oh, Ben, what would everyone say? I’m only your fiancée, not your wife.”
“They will say I was taking good care of you. I’ll go and make the room ready
for you. Then I think you should go to bed.” Ben stood up.
Anne sat nervously, unaware her gaze had strayed to the desk in the study, until
she felt someone’s eyes on her. She quickly turned towards Adam to see if he was
looking at her, but he appeared to be only looking at Hoss. It was Hoss who was
watching her.
“Are you sure you’re okay, Anne? Can I get you anything?” Hoss asked.
She turned to Hoss, and like many before who had underestimated this gentle man,
thought that he looked like a puppy wanting to play. She returned her attention
to Adam and studied him surreptitiously out of the corner of her eye, whilst
acknowledging Hoss’s concern. “I’m fine, Hoss. I’m sorry I’ve caused such a fuss
this evening; not at all what Ben and I had planned.”
“You never really said why you took a shot at me,” Adam quietly reminded her, as
he crossed his legs and leaned back in his chair, looking deceptively relaxed.
“Didn’t I?” She slowly turned towards him, acting like she was thinking it over.
“I thought I had.”
“No, you said some people in town were mistreating you, and that you were
scared.” He schooled his handsome features into a half smile that didn’t quite
reach his eyes. “That doesn’t answer why you felt it necessary to shoot at who
ever walked in the door.” The casual façade was carefully controlled as suddenly
a terrifying thought entered his mind. Had she been shooting at him? Or had she
been thinking that his father would enter the door first?
He waited for her response, his face remaining implacable. Easing further back
in his chair, he held her in the strength of his gaze, pinned like a trapped
insect in amber. He sensed her discomfort and viewed it with some satisfaction.
It confirmed in his mind that she knew something. Maybe her unease would cause
her to let something slip. He maintained the silence; waiting for her to
respond.
Anne felt unnerved by the way both Cartwright sons were scrutinizing her. She
had already decided that Hoss would not be a serious threat, but Adam was likely
to be a different matter. She knew that Adam could mess up her plans, wondering
just how much he had figured out, and what it was that Joe had told him. She
pulled herself together and nervously answered.
“I fired because of Carter. He has been harassing me and telling me he was going
to come out here and get some ‘easy’ money.”
Adam imperceptibly raised an eyebrow. Anne saw the fleeting reaction and
inwardly cursed the astute man in front of her, who was so hard to read. She
knew that she could easily understand and manipulate most men, but Adam
Cartwright she’d have to deal with. She only hoped that he would ignore her
remark about Carter, but that hope was dashed in the next second.
“When was Carter bothering you?” Adam casually enquired; a little too casually,
Anne thought. “He hasn’t been seen around town for the last few days.”
Just at that moment Ben came down the stairs.
“Oh, Ben,” she stood up, happy to escape any more of Adam’s questions. “I feel
so tired. Could I go up and rest, if the room is ready?”
“Of course, we’ll talk in the morning. It has been a hard few days on all of
us.” Ben followed her up the stairs. “Maybe we should all try to get some sleep
tonight so we can be fresh in the morning.” He glanced at his sons, but knew
none of them would rest easily until Joe was free.
Adam waited until he heard the bedroom doors open and then shut. He turned to
Hoss and quietly asked.
“Hoss, where did you find Anne?” His mind held a mental picture of the bullet
hole that was lodged in the door’s frame just under the hinge. He adjusted
himself near the stairs until he was in line with where he thought Anne had been
standing when she fired, and then glanced around at his surroundings. His
concentration was broken when his brother finally spoke.
“What?” Hoss had been lost in his own thoughts, and was surprised by Adam’s
unexpected question.
“I wondered where you found Anne when you came into the house,” Adam said, as
his eyes trailed across to the study.
“She was comin’ at me from where you’re standin’, why?”
“No, reason,” Adam replied, heading for the object that had held Anne’s
attention, just after their father had left the room.
Hoss followed and watched as Adam opened the drawers to his father’s desk,
wondering what his brother was up to.
“When Pa and I came in you were standing near the settee,” Hoss nodded. “Now
think back before you answer; then tell me exactly what happened.”
Hoss closed his eyes, and sighed. Then let his mind wander back to when he’d
barreled into the house; his gun at the ready.
He took a deep breath. “Well,” he cleared his throat. “When I came in, Anne was
movin’ towards me.” His eyes popped open, but the scene was still being played
over in his mind. “I can’t tell you how close I was to shootin’ her.” His eyes
looked deep into his brother’s. “Comin’ straight at me like she was…” He paused.
“When she saw me, she started yellin’ or somethin’, but I still couldn’t tell
ya’ what she was sayin’. I holstered my gun and took the revolver Anne was
holdin’ out to me. Then she went all weak in the knees; so I took a hold of her,
and led her to the settee. That’s when you and Pa came in. Why, Adam? What are
you thinkin’?” he looked down at the opened drawers to the desk, and watched as
Adam adjusted some of things in there.
“I’m not sure yet.” Adam put a reassuring hand on Hoss’s shoulder. “Hoss,” he
paused until his brother was once again looking him in the eyes, “Hoss, you
didn’t fire. She’s fine.”
Hoss nodded, as he blew out a breath he was surprised he had been holding.
“When we were tracking the gang with
Roy and lost
their trail in the rocks…” Adam started, then paused, not sure he wasn’t about
to make a mountain out of a mole hill. “You seemed like something was bothering
you, and then just before I went in with Pa and Joe, I heard you talking to Roy
about the trail we’d followed. Did he say anything at all about it?”
“Well, I didn’t want to say nothin’ until I had some proof, but some of the
tracks had me puzzled…” his voice trailed into silence.
Adam waited for Hoss to continue, but his brother took so long that finally he
prompted, “Puzzled, how?”
“Well, remember that new ranch hand we took on last month?” Hoss scratched his
head, as his brother nodded. “Remember me tellin’ ya he has less experience than
he’d said, ‘cause I caught him shoein’ his horse, and the way he was doin’ it
was going to leave it all marked up?”
Adam had placed his hands on the desk and hung his head low between them. He
nodded, while wishing his brother would get to the point.
“Well, I wouldn’t want to accuse him and have no proof, as I’ve not really seen
his horse’s prints up close, but I’m sure when I do…they’ll match. So tomorrow I
plan on findin’ some, and seein’ if I’m right. We’ve not been around much
lately, and I’ve not really seen him either, it could all fit together somehow.”
Adam raised his head and Hoss noticed his eyebrow was already up. His brother
was in ‘deep thinkin’ mode’ again and wouldn’t be answering any of his
questions any time soon, despite the dozen or so Hoss had. He watched Adam close
the drawers, and headed for the stairs.
“Good night, Hoss,” Adam called, as he went up to his room. “Let me know what
you find tomorrow, before you tell anyone else.” He paused on the stairs, and
looked at Hoss, “Even
Pa,” knowing his brother would do as he asked, even if he didn’t like
it.
With that Adam went up the stairs, leaving Hoss to wonder what had prompted such
questions.
***********
Adam lay on his
bed, his hands laced, behind his head; eyes semi-focused on the ceiling; his
mind racing from one thought to the next. Faces flashed in front of his eyes. So
many small clues, but nothing linked them together, and Joe… a single thought
was suddenly brought to the forefront of his mind. Joe, who are you trying to
protect?
Adam bit his lip, he was thinking round in circles. He needed some answers but
knew that, as much as his father disliked being left out, he had to find them on
his own.
Turning his head towards the wall mentally running through his list of citizens,
Hong entered his mind. If there was anyone that would know about the woman that
had been seen near the saloon exchanging papers…it was Hong. The Oriental man
had been washing the saloon’s laundry for a year now and knew just about
everything that went on around town.
Adam knew that most folks around
Virginia City
hardly took notice of the Chinese population and would act as if they weren’t
even there. So he knew the odds were good that Hong would know something.
He shook his head and cursed himself for not talking to Hong when Joe was first
arrested, but his focal point had been on finding out who the witness was and
getting Joe out of jail. Sitting up in bed, he felt a heaviness fill the air
around him. Loosing his focus again could cost the life of his youngest brother
and maybe his father.
Adam slowly lay back down; his mind drifting back to the swirling pool, trying
to remember when he had last slept. He knew the one thing he needed the most,
and had the least of, was time. Joe wasn’t being forthcoming with information,
and in fact seemed intent on being a hindrance, which meant valuable time being
wasted on leads that went nowhere because of Joe’s obduracy.
Adam closed his heavy eyes. He didn’t want to think about what would happen if
he let even more time slip away from him. Every moment’s delay felt like an
eternity, and yet he could feel the precious seconds ticking by with every beat
of his heart.
Part Eight: lijebeck
A grim looking Hoss was waiting for him in the barn the next morning. Sport was
already saddled and his brother was in the process of pulling a bridle over
Chubb’s head.
“I made a point of visiting the bunkhouse before the hands headed out,” he said,
stretching the leather band behind the horse’s ears and tugging bits of forelock
out from under it. “Pa wanted me to check in with the fellas, seein’ as we’ve
all been kinda distracted lately. I got a good look at them tracks when they
mounted up for work.” He turned to heft his saddle up off its tree.
“And?”
Hoss settled the saddle on the horse’s back. “They match sure enough,” he said
reaching under Chubb’s belly for the cinch. “And, guess who just got back from
workin’ alone ridin’ fence on the east range for the past week?”
“It would’ve been real easy for him to take a little trip into town to do some
banking,” Adam said. He took up Sport’s reins and led him out of his stall,
stopping to adjust his own saddle just outside the barn door. Hoss followed him
out, leading Chubb.
“That’s my thinkin’. They’re gonna be clearin’ ditches over in the south pasture
today. Let’s go have a talk with him.” Hoss turned to put his foot in the
stirrup.
“No, not yet,” Adam said, halting him with a hand on his arm. “Don’t say
anything yet, Hoss. He obviously doesn’t think he can be connected to the
robbery. Otherwise, he wouldn’t still be around. I’d like to check into a few
other things before we confront him.”
“Well, maybe I’d better just keep a close eye on him for the time bein’ in case
he gets nervous and decides to high tail it after all.”
“That’s a good idea. You’ll also be able to notice any unusual visitors he might
have. Just be careful not to tip our hand. Act like everything’s normal,
alright?”
“Normal,” Hoss repeated glumly. “Ain’t nothin’ been normal around here for some
time and it won’t be until…” His voice trailed off as his eyes traveled to the
stall where Cochise stood idle. “Dadburnit, Adam, it plain riles me knowin’ that
fella is roamin’ free on the Ponderosa while our little brother sits in a jail
cell.”
“I know.” Adam gave him an encouraging slap on the shoulder. “Don’t worry. We’ll
get Joe out of this one way or another. A jail break is still a possibility, if
I don’t start getting some satisfactory answers soon.”
Hoss smiled half-heartedly as his brother adjusted his saddle and swung up into
it. “I’m with ya if it comes to that,” he said. “Where are you off to then?”
“Town. I need to see a man about some dirty laundry.”
**********
He found Hong
bent over a tremendous steaming kettle stirring a batch of sheets with a thick
wooden paddle. Beyond the fire stood row upon row of clothesline draped with
sheets, bar towels and assorted clothing in varying stages of drying in the
morning sun. The stocky little man paused at his work and bowed low when he saw
the black clad Cartwright approaching.
“Good morning, Hong,” Adam said, tipping his hat and sliding gracefully down off
his horse.
“Mr. Cartwright, what brings you to my humble home?” Hong said by way of
greeting. Dark eyes full of curiosity studied him.
“I have some questions about events that have happened around the saloon lately.
I thought you might be able to help me.”
Hong nodded thoughtfully and bowed low again. “Ah, yes. So sorry to hear of your
family’s troubles. Your brother, Joseph, is not a bad boy. He is guilty only of
the poor judgment of youth. Let us hope the true culprits will be found.” He
smiled and gestured invitingly. “Come, I just prepared my morning tea.” He led
the way into his tiny yet solidly built shack. Adam followed, removing his hat
before ducking down to enter through the low doorway. Inside, a small neatly
made up cot was tucked in one corner. In the center of the room stood a small
square table and two chairs on which the tea was laid out, but his gaze was
captured by the shelves full of books that filled every bit of available wall
space.
“All in English,” the Chinese man said proudly as he carried the pot from the
diminutive stove in another corner of the room and poured two cups of fragrant
tea. “I have very few material needs and no family, so I am able to give myself
this luxury.”
Adam eased himself into one of the chairs and accepted the tea. “Books can be as
essential as food and water.”
“Very true.” Hong sat down opposite him and sipped from his cup. “You did not
come for literary discussion, though.”
“No, I was hoping you might be able to tell me about the woman who was seen
exchanging some sort of papers outside the saloon. Lucy Watkins described her to
me and she sounds very much like my father’s fiancée, Anne Harrison.”
“It is as you fear. I, myself, saw Miss Harrison meet with a gentleman there on
several occasions. I could not hear what was said, but each time she gave him
some papers.”
“And who was the man?”
“I did not recognize him, but I did recognize the other man who would come to
meet with him after Miss Harrison left.”
Adam set down his cup. “The other man?”
“It was young Mr. Tomkins, the bank clerk your brother is accused of killing.”
Part Nine: debpet
Adam stared at Hong for a moment.
“Are you sure of that?” Adam’s voice was tense.
“Oh yes,” Hong replied, nodding. “Each time I would see Miss Anne meet with the
man, sure enough, Mr. Tomkins would come along a few minutes later.”
Adam leaned back in the chair, his mind in a whirl. There was something about
someone that young Tomkins was known to hang around with...wasn’t there? He
strained to remember, and then it came to him. It was what Anne had said. What
were her exact words? “I’ve been a bit nervous since Joe killed that poor young
man who used to hang around with that Carter fellow from town.” That was it.
Tomkins hung around with Stan Carter. And Carter was the man that Anne accused
of harassing her and making threats against the Cartwrights. Could the
mysterious man that both Anne and Tomkins met with be Carter? He leaned forward
again, placing his arms on the table and directing a piercing stare at his
companion.
“Hong, this is very important,” Adam said. “Can you tell me what this man who
met with Anne and with Tomkins looked like?”
Hong’ face was thoughtful as he made the effort to remember. “Short man, heavy
built. Not much hair, but always seemed to need a shave. He was always scowling.
His clothes were always dirty.” Hong’s mouth turned up with a trace of a smile.
“He could have used my services.”
Adam was stunned. That sounded like Stan Carter all right. He tried to remember
what else he knew about Carter, and he couldn’t come up with much. The man
seemed to have a somewhat unsavory reputation, but Adam was unaware of any
specific illegal activity in his background. Thinking of it now, it was rather
surprising that the mild mannered, always neat bank clerk Allen Tomkins should
have been friendly with such a man. But then, the world was full of even more
unlikely partnerships, so who was he to say? The question now was - what was
going on among Tomkins, Carter...and his father’s fiancée? And what, if
anything, did this have to do with the bank robbery and Tomkins’ death?
It suddenly occurred to Adam that, if Joe had discovered something questionable
about Anne Harrison that would go a long way toward explaining his brother’s
reluctance to talk. He could be trying to protect their father from some
devastating revelation. That would be so like him.
Adam’s attention was caught by the gentle touch of Hong’s hand on his arm.
“Mr. Cartwright, is anything wrong? Forgive me, but you seem...distracted.”
“I was just thinking, Hong. There are just a couple of more questions I’d like
to ask you. About the papers that Anne Harrison exchanged with the man. Did you
hear or see anything that would shed some light on what they were?”
Hong shook his head. “I only know that she always gave him an envelope and he
always gave her another one in return.”
Adam raised his eyebrows. “Envelopes? Then you don’t really know what was in
them?” He paused. “One of them could possibly have contained money.”
“It is possible,” Hong conceded. “I cannot say otherwise.”
“When was the last time you saw them do this?”
It happened about every two weeks for the last couple of months. The last time
was just a few days...maybe three days...before the robbery.”
“Yes, about the robbery. What did you see on that day, Hong?”
“The honorable Sheriff Coffee has already asked me this. I’m afraid I was not
able to be of any help. On that particular day I was making a delivery at the
time the actual robbery took place. I did not see anything.”
A flicker of disappointment passed across Adam’s face at that. But it quickly
disappeared as he rose from his chair. Hong also rose.
“You’ve been very helpful, Hong, and I thank you,” Adam said with a respectful
bow of his head.
“It is a pleasure to serve you.” Hong bowed his head in return. Then he seemed
to hesitate. “I just wish to say that I hope facts will soon come to light which
will prove the innocence of your younger brother in this most unfortunate
matter. I know it would be most distressing to the honorable Hop Sing if
anything were to happen to the young man.”
Adam regarded him with troubled eyes.
“I hope so, too, Hong. I hope so, too.”
**********
A few minutes after leaving Hong Adam was sitting on a bench in front of the
newspaper office, thinking about what he had learned and trying to decide what
to do next. There were a number of leads in the case that he was eager to follow
up. Then, of course, there was their recently arrived hand, whose horse’s
distinctive tracks Hoss had noticed among those they had attempted to follow.
What was the man’s name anyway? Adam had not had much contact with him, but he
still felt as though he ought to remember. But the thing that intrigued him most
of all at the moment was this question of the relationships among his father’s
intended wife, the man she accused of harassment and threats, and the young bank
clerk who had been killed. Adam was convinced that, if he could understand what
had been going on among those three, everything else about the case would
somehow fall into place.
He had to admit to himself that he had a personal interest in the matter of Anne
Harrison’s actions. When she had taken a shot at him, however accidentally it
may have been, something had started to nag at the back of his mind and now,
after Hong's words had connected her to Carter, the suspicion grew deeper. Now
it seemed that there had been some kind of questionable dealings between those
two in the weeks leading up to the robbery. How could he discover the truth? The
key seemed to be Carter’s friendship with the dead clerk, Allen Tomkins.
Tomkins had been an unmarried young man who had lived with his mother in a small
house a couple of streets over from the bank where he had worked. Surely she was
the one who would be most likely to have the information he was seeking. The
thought of intruding on her in her time of grief did not sit well with Adam, but
the need to get to the bottom of things was too pressing for him to hesitate.
With a sigh, he got up from the bench, put on his hat and set off.
In short order he found himself passing through a yard full of roses as he
followed the stone walk that led up to the door of the Tomkins house. The wreath
trimmed in black ribbons that hung there was a sobering indication of what he
might be letting himself in for. He stepped up to the door and hesitantly raised
his hand to knock. It was a long moment before the door was opened by a petite
middle aged woman dressed in black. Her light brown hair, streaked with gray,
was pulled back into a tight bun.
“Good afternoon, Mrs. Tomkins,” Adam said quietly as he removed his hat in
respect. “I’m sorry to impose on you at this time, but I really do need to speak
with you. I’m...”
“Adam Cartwright. I know,” she interrupted him in a flat, emotionless voice.
“Everybody knows you Cartwrights. Why are you here? I suppose you’re trying to
find something to clear your brother of killing my son.”
Her directness left Adam a little taken aback. “I’m just trying to find out what
really happened, Mrs. Tomkins,” he replied. “I’m sure you want to see justice
done, to see whoever actually killed your son be held responsible. Well, that’s
what I want, too, believe me. And I think you may have some information which
could help explain some things that I’m wondering about. I would really
appreciate it if we could talk for just a few minutes.”
Her red rimmed eyes stared into his face, seemingly trying to estimate his
sincerity. Then, finally, she stepped back and gestured him to enter.
“Come in,” she said.
Part Ten: Lily of the West
The room was cold and dim. A thick smell of old cooking grease permeated the
air, and mingled with it, a whiff of alcohol. Iris Tomkins slipped into a large
armchair by the empty fireplace and pulled an old knit blanket over her knees.
She did not look at Adam or invite him to sit.
“So. What do you want?” she said. The fireplace was dead and Adam saw that it
was filled with empty whiskey bottles, some whole, most broken.
Adam hesitated for a moment, but then decided that this woman would not likely
suffer him for long. It was best to get straight to the point.
“Mrs. Tomkins, I believe…no, I know that my brother did not kill your son.”
She snorted. “Naturally. You Cartwrights never do no wrong.”
“I wouldn’t say that, Mrs. Tomkins. I won’t say Joe isn’t capable of killing.
He’s a hothead sometimes, but I also know that, if he had killed your son, he
would admit it. He would not lie.”
She twirled an end of her blanket between her fingers and still did not look at
him. “What difference is it to me? My Allen is dead. What the hell do I care
about Little rich Joseph Cartwright?”
Adam stood silent for a moment. Then, making a decision, he smoothly slid in
front of her chair and sat on the cold stones of the fireplace. They were knee
to knee now.
“Mrs. Tomkins, please look at me,” he said.
She looked up at him for a moment, before letting her eyes fall back to her
blanket.
Adam continued. “You care because you believe in justice and truth, like any
good person. You care because you’re a mother and because you wouldn’t want
somebody else’s son to be innocently hung when you yourself may hold the key to
his freedom.”
She looked at him now. “Me? What key?”
“Has your son ever mentioned someone by the name of Stan Carter?”
She shook her head. “Never heard that name.”
“Well, some folks have observed that Allen met with Carter near the saloon.”
“So?” she shrugged.
“These meetings happened briefly after Carter had met with a woman named Anne
Harrison.” He watched her face for a reaction and was not disappointed. Her eyes
shot up to his and became hard and narrow.
“Did you say Anne Harrison?”
Adam sat up straighter. “Yes. What do you know?”
Her face grew dark. “That floozy. Allen met her in San Francisco. Brought her to
Virginia City and said he was going to marry her. I told him she was only
playing with him; ‘She’s too old for you, son,’ I said. ‘She’ll grow tired of
you the way a cat grows tired of a mouse she has caught, and then she’ll eat
you’. ”
Adam’s head was swirling. “Allen had a relationship with Anne Harrison?”
“She was flat broke when she latched on to him in San Francisco. Said she wanted
to leave town because some old obsessed lover was pursuing her – puh. My foot, I
tell you. Allen, the silly, soft-hearted boy, believed every word she said. He
bought her a ticket for the stage and brought her here. Two days in town, and
she grew cold as a dead fish. She never wanted nothing from him except a passage
out of Frisco. Broke his heart. He wasn’t the same after that.”
Adam forced his jaw back up and swallowed. “Do you…do you know where Miss
Harrison is now?”
Mrs. Tomkins shrugged. “What do I care? Off to New Orleans, St. Louis, or
someplace to find her next victim.”
‘Well, no,’ Adam thought. ‘She’s found her next victim, all right, but
she didn’t have to go that far.’
He sat silently and ran his hand through his hair. If Anne dumped Allen and
‘latched on to’ Pa, to use Mrs. Tomkins’ words, did this mean that Allen had a
grudge against Pa and somehow conspired with Carter to harm the Cartwrights? Or
was he out to harm Anne? What was in the envelopes exchanged between Carter and
Anne? Was anybody being blackmailed? Had Allen hired Carter to do this? And what
on earth had Joe to do with all this? If Joe had gotten wind of this and
confronted Tomkins… Adam groaned and sank his head into his hands; he’d just
stumbled across a fine motive for Joe to have killed Tomkins.
Adam stood up abruptly. “Mrs. Tomkins, you’ve helped me a lot. I…I thank you
very much.” He turned to go, but paused at the door to look back at her, slumped
in her chair under her smelly blanket, pale and slightly drunk in that cold,
dark room. Adam forced himself to slow down. He was in a hurry but could delay a
few more minutes.
“Have you got any fire wood?” he asked.
She shrugged. “Out back.”
He brought in the wood, cleaned the broken bottles from the fireplace and lit a
large fire. He stacked several days’ worth of wood next to her chair. She smiled
a little in the orange glow and let her blanket slid off her knees to the floor.
“That was kind of you, Mr. Cartwright,” she said. And as he slipped on his hat
to walk out the door, she called after him, “Would you…would you come back
sometimes? I could tell you some more about Allen. He was a good boy, really. A
fool, maybe, but he had a kind heart.”
Adam smiled back at her and nodded. “I’ll visit again. I promise.”
***********
Adam found Joe stretched out on his cell bunk, staring sullenly up at the
ceiling. He’d been thinking hard on his way over to the jail, and had decided
the best way to shake the truth out of Joe was to poke him in a few sensitive
places.
“I know about you and Anne,” he said without preamble.
Joe slowly peeled himself from his cot and sat up, blinking. “You know what?”
“I also know that Anne was with Allen Tomkins before she went to Pa. And I think
Allen hired Carter to blackmail Anne, and you got real mad at Allen. What is it,
Joe? Do you have it in for Anne? Have you and Anne been having some secret thing
behind Pa’s back? Is that why you’re not talking? Because Anne belongs to Pa?”
Joe stared at him. “You’ve gone mad, brother.”
“I’ve gone mad? I’m not the one in jail for murder and bank robbery.”
Joe shook his head incredulously. “You know I didn’t do those things.”
Adam took a long step towards the cell and grabbed the bars with both hands. “I
know no such thing, Joe. What I do know is that my hotheaded little brother has
a temper that’s gotten him in trouble more times than I can count, and that this
time he’s gone too far. C’mon, Joe, you went to the bank to confront Allen, and
you lost your head. And then you robbed the safe to cover up the murder. Admit
it. I know it’s true.”
For a moment, Joe’s face scrunched, and he looked ready to pounce against the
bars. But then he suddenly laughed and pointed a finger at Adam.
“Nice try, older brother. I ain’t sixteen any more, you know.”
Adam grunted and let his head thud against the bars. “Joe, I’m tired of this
nonsense. You did know about Allen and Anne, didn’t you? I do believe that Allen
was up to no good, and that you went to the bank to confront him on the day of
the robbery.”
Joe was silent for a while, and then sighed, as if he’d come to a decision. He
sat up and smiled crookedly at Adam. “Brother, I think old age has finally
wilted that great brain of yours. You got it all wrong. You see, Allen was an
honest soul. He thought that Anne was using Pa in the same way she had used him,
he told me so. In fact, when I asked him, he warned me about her."
“And Carter?”
Joe shrugged. “Allen had observed a few meetings between Anne and Carter. He saw
materials pass between them, envelopes. He confronted Carter a couple times
afterwards. Carter told him to stick his nose where the sun don’t shine, or
something like that.”
“And the robbery?”
“Carter, I think. But I didn’t see him. There was another man, too. They were
masked. They busted in just as I was done talking with Allen. I tried to stop
them, but I got pinned behind the counter by gun fire. I ran out in the street
after them. I guess that’s when Lucy saw me.” He nodded at Adam. “You were right
about that one. The bank robbery was just a smokescreen. The idea was to hide
the real motive for killing Tomkins. I suppose Carter hired himself some crony
to do the job and paid him off with the loot money.”
Adam stood still for a while, absorbing all of this. He rubbed his aching head.
“Joe, why in the name of heaven didn’t you come out with this before?”
Joe shook his head. “Don’t you get it, brother? No proof. It’s all hearsay. The
only witness is Tomkins, and he’s dead. Can you imagine how it would have broken
Pa’s heart if I accused Anne of plotting to get at his money without being able
to prove it?” Joe jumped up from his cot and grabbed the bars to look Adam in
the face. “And you know what? We could be wrong. Maybe Anne has done nothing
wrong and is genuinely in love with Pa. You want to take that away from him?”
“Then what is she doing exchanging envelopes with Carter?”
Joe threw up his hands in frustration. “That’s the question, isn’t it? Either
she’s being blackmailed or she’s up to some foul play.” He slumped back on his
cot.
Adam sighed and shook his head sadly. “That’s all well and good, little brother,
but has it ever occurred to you that it might get Pa’s heart broken if his son
gets hung for murder?”
“I guess I figured the proof would be uncovered somehow before it came to that.”
Joe shook his head and smiled a little.
Adam rubbed his forehead. “Joe, I admire your optimism. Just how did you think
that would materialize?”
Joe shrugged sheepishly. “Well, there’s my very inquisitive and clever older
brother. But more importantly, there’s someone else who may have a chance to
snap up one of those envelopes.”
Adam’s eyebrows shot up. “Who?” And when he saw Joe’s grin, he guessed the
answer. “Lucy?”
Joe nodded. “Carter’s been sweet on her. Goes to the saloon and gets drunk while
she sits on his lap. She’ll try to get at one of the envelopes. The proof or
disproof of Anne’s guilt is in the envelopes, Adam. I wanted to wait till we got
one of those before making any accusations.”
Adam stood and pondered this for a minute. “Well, there’s only one thing to do
then,” he said abruptly and turned to leave. Over his shoulder he called to Joe,
“just sit tight, brother. With a bit of luck, we’ll have you out of here in a
day or two.”
“Where are you going?” Joe called after him, a hint of hysteria in his voice.
“To intercept some envelopes,” was the answer, followed by the sound of Sport’s
galloping hooves outside.
***********
Later that
night, two shadows crept unseen across the roof of the saloon. They slithered
all the way to the edge to peek into the dark alleyway below. There they lay
silently. The moon disappeared behind an overcast sky, and the night air
thickened with dampness. A light rain began to fall. One of the shadows stirred.
“Tell me again how we know they’ll be here this night, Adam?” Hoss whispered.
“We don’t.”
“We don’t. I see. I’m askin’ ‘cause it ain’t helpin’ Joe any if you and me are
lying around here in the rain night after night like two big ol’ garden slugs,
just ‘cause our big brother is havin’ himself a notion about strange dealings
and envelopes and….”
“Shh,” Adam hissed. “Someone’s coming.”
Listening into the darkness, the two brothers heard a cautious footstep approach
through the alley. Silently, they pulled their guns from their holsters and
readied themselves for what was to come.
Part Eleven: tbuster
As the torrents above poised to rival the ones that were already wreaking a
fearful havoc on her petite frame, she tugged at her cape, pulling the garment
in a tighter shield around her auburn hair. A newly painted shingle swung over
the dress shop as she turned to lock the door and placed the key into her
pocket.
Concern was wearing ruts in her heart as her hand came to rest uneasily against
another demanded envelope as she made her way along the streets of Virginia City
to yet another ill-fated meeting. Tears began to well as she thought of what she
had let herself get involved in. From the moment she had walked absentmindedly
into Ben’s way at the bank, he had saved her a fall with one arm and caused her
another with his smile.
Her heart had been aching for weeks. Things had gone far beyond what a bit of
information could pay for. She wiped at the tears and begged silently for an
end. Why wouldn’t he just give her peace? All she wanted was happiness. Was that
too much to ask for? How could the mistake of endearing the wrong man cause her
so much grief? Just as she asked the questions, she chided herself for knowing
the answer and shed her tears in frustration. The ominous sky began to spray a
warning that few on this evening would heed.
***********
Roy’s first evening round had been accomplished in relative peace. For
the first time in several days, it appeared he might be on the winning end of
quiet. By the looks and feel of the threatening black expanse above, he wouldn’t
be looking forward to anything less. He watched her lock up the shop and head
safely toward home. It was a small thing he could do for his friend in light of
the much bigger one he wished he could perform, but letting Joe out of jail even
in good faith would rile the town far beyond its restless boundaries.
It was hard enough keeping the law among a transient group of gold diggers but
rounding the corner to find the three horses tied up in formation made him
realize it was much harder to keep it among law abiding friends. A deep sigh
escaped his chest before he opened the door to find Ben anxiously pacing before
a more sedated and obviously satisfied Andrew Morton, Esq.
“Ben…” The greeting was as much a question as it was an acknowledgement and
Roy
furrowed his brow in displeasured prospect.
“Roy, Mr. Morton has just arrived from
Reno with Judge
Briggs’ order to release Joseph pending his trial.” Ben’s tone and use of the
lad’s Christian name set a boundary on the friendship and imposed a rivaling
authority with the document he accepted from Morton’s hands to present.
Setting his eyes in defiance first to Ben and just as deliberately to the
offending lawyer,
Roy countered, “Is that so?”
Ben was no more determined than before to have his son released from the
confines of this jail, as he stood firm in the face of
Roy’s expected
anger and insisted, “It is so... signed and legally sealed. Now release him so I
can take him home.”
The endless contradiction of justice fueled a contained fire. Roy fought to
control the wrath he knew others would only be too willing to fan if he didn’t
consider, carefully, his options as sheriff. Taking the time to remove his hat
and place it with exaggerated care on its hook, he finally made his way to his
desk. It was only after slowly getting comfortable that he reached forward to
take the orders from Ben’s hand. “Now just let me take a look at this.”
Friendship aside, Coffee was one formidable man when he chose to be. Ben’s
apparent exasperation was no reason for him to compromise the principles he held
dear. Sound reason was justification enough to look up to the glare that awaited
him when Ben impatiently cleared his throat so he contented, “Looks like the
judge has put everything in order.”
A sigh of relief bounced back too quickly as Ben smiled in tribute to Morton and
said, “Well, let’s get him out.”
“Not so fast there, Ben.”
Roy
leaned over to open a drawer behind him and shuffled a few files before finding
the one he was looking for. “I have some papers to sign myself before Little Joe
gets back out on the streets of our fair city.”
Instinctively, Morton started with the warning as Roy picked up his pen,
“Appealing this order Sheriff Coffee will only necessitate a few more of these
unfortunate encounters.”
Ben’s smile quickly dissolved into a frown and his hands came down hard on the
paper positioned on the desk as he obstructed Roy’s intended pen and bellowed,
“My son has just as much right to protection under the law as anyone else, and
you’re going to appeal it?”
Pushing back in his chair,
Roy
stood matching the fury that faced him. “You’re darn right I’m appealing this
order. That boy’s protection lies right there in that cell. No judge sitting
miles away from here knows like I do the temper of this town.”
“And now you’re judge and jury?”
“No, Ben, I’m not paid enough for those jobs, too! We all know Judge Briggs
signed this order purely on the basis of the Cartwright name.”
“It’s a name that has stood for right in this town more times than not and it’s
not likely to change now!”
“You and I may know that but you insist on taking Little Joe out of here you
won’t get him past the first tree...court order or not!”
**********
Voices filtered
out into the alley she was expected in as she reached the end of the boardwalk.
Cautiously stepping around the side of the building she quickly found shelter up
under the eaves as the unfamiliar voice spat her name venomously in the dark.
“You and Miss Harrison fixing to double cross Carter?”
Lucy flinched at the pressure being applied to her arm as Nelson shoved her out
the back door into the alley. A dirty aisle already lapping up the rain to form
a muddy sludge guaranteed to impede any progress her heeled feet might make in
trying to escape. Swallowing hard to control the fear she didn’t want him to
see, she argued, “I don’t know a Miss Harrison.”
Jerking her up harder, she stifled a cry as he countered, “You sent her a note
didn’t ya?”
Perched on the roof, Adam shot a glance sideways to Hoss, issuing a silent order
to hold back and wait. He’d seen Anne step back into the shadows and realized
the trap they were all dangerously close to falling into.
Hoss squinted against the increasing rain and motioned with his head back
towards the door. Adam held up a hand to emphasize the need for patience and
steadied his eye and his gun on the pair below.
“I…”
“Shut up, girl. Carter knows you’re sweet on that Cartwright kid. You don’t
think he’s been watching you like a hawk?”
“But I already told ‘em about seeing Joe at the bank.”
Even in the dark, Nelson’s cold-blooded grin could be seen spreading across his
whiskered face as he pushed her away into the mud and admonished, “Well, Carter
wants you to keep your mouth shut and your nose to yourself. You hear?”
Tearfully acknowledging his order, she moved to stand as he was already making
his way toward the street when she saw him abruptly draw his gun and turn back.
She heard another woman scream first before she cried out as a searing pain
exploded in her chest.
Fleeing into the shadows of the building, Nelson narrowly escaped the bullets
fired from the roof. Just as quickly he took the advantage and made his way free
and clear from the carnage and the pursuit.
Swiftly scaling down the porch column, Adam headed toward Anne writhing in pain,
his gun still in his hand.
“Anne?” Kneeling to assess the wound to her shoulder, he reassured her, “You’ll
be alright, Anne.” Though, he wasn’t so sure of the girl that lay so still in
the distance. Wadding the end of her cape he pressed it into the burning flesh
to stave the bleeding and cringed with the cry that left her unconscious.
Patrons were spilling out of the saloon, both front and back, when he heard
someone shout. “Up there...on the roof!” And another voice from were Lucy had
fallen, accused, “You just had to kill her!”
Part Twelve: AdamFan16
Adam pushed away clinging hands, moving toward Lucy despite the pressing crowds.
The babble of voices faded to the back of his mind as he saw a limp hand and
out-flung arm through the sea of legs and boots.
“She’s dead?” he asked harshly, steeling himself against the answer he knew was
coming.
“As if you didn’t know, Cartwright.” The hate-filled voice followed the
accusation with a string of invectives. The man’s breath ran out before his
mantra, but he paused and glared at Adam from a face grown purple with alcohol
and rage. “You Cartwrights ain’t known for missing your mark, are you?”
Adam tightened his jaw, willing that voice to fade out as the others had. He had
more important things to worry about than false accusations against himself. The
slur against Joe slammed into a bruised part of his soul, evoking a more
volatile reaction. His fist clenched, a tiny smile stretching his lips as he
envisioned the satisfying impact.
Hoss’ arm suddenly blocked his path, his voice rumbling a warning. “Ain’t no
cause for talk like that, not when a lady’s just died.”
“Lady? Don’t go settin’ that girl on a pedestal, Hoss.” A slurring voice called
out, eliciting a tipsy laugh from the growing crowd.
“You just hush.” Somehow, Hoss had gotten their attention without raising his
voice, just letting the cold anger icing his heart flow out of his mouth. The
scowl on his face was making even Adam unclench his fist. “It ain’t our place to
judge when she can’t defend herself.”
A grumble worked its way through the gathered men. One called out mockingly,
“She couldn’t protect herself from your brother’s bullet neither, Hoss!”
The crowd took on a sinister aura in the uncertain light from the windows. Even
the falling rain wasn’t deterring the drunken men.
“What reason on earth would I have to kill Lucy?” Adam regretted the explosion
the moment it left his mouth. To any outsider, he had every reason to want that
girl dead. Only he knew how much his brother’s defense rested on Lucy’s help.
The dirty man who had first accused him charged forward, “I say we don’t wait to
find out!”
************
A rumble of thunder jerked
Roy’s
attention away from the papers on his desk. The headache he was denying nagged
itself closer to a migraine. It had finally materialized when Morton had walked
out a few minutes earlier and he was left alone with a very stubborn Ben
Cartwright.
“I’d like to get home before this storm gets any worse, Roy.” Ben’s insistent
voice pounded in his ears, “with all my sons.”
Roy took his glasses off and rested his head against his hand,
fighting the frustration just about to boil over into anger. “Ben, I cain’t
guarantee you’ll make it two feet from this jail with that boy without somebody
getting’ an itchy finger. I don’t like to have two murders out o’ just one.”
“I’m willing to take that chance.” Ben stood, towering above
Roy’s desk. “And
now I have the law backing me. Let him out, Roy.”
There was no point in fighting it any further. Roy slowly picked up the keys.
“Alright, Ben. You win.”
Joe looked up as they walked in, surprise widening his eyes when he saw the key
in Roy’s hand.
“You get to come in for a visit, Pa?” Joe asked, something between hope and fear
swirling in his stomach. It was hard enough concealing the truth from his father
with the iron barrier between them. He had no doubt of his weakness when that
concerned gaze was coupled by a hand on his shoulder and the support Pa so
obviously wanted to give.
“You’re goin’ free, boy, against my advice.”
Roy fitted the
key into the lock, wincing at the slight squeak as it turned.
Joe blinked, his grip on the bars tightening instinctively. “The charges have
been dropped? What’s happened?”
“Your pa went out and got a nice legal order that says you can go ‘til the
trial. I suggest you stay on that ranch of yours and don’t stray too far from
the house. I ain’t promisin’ anything if you step foot in Virginia City before
that trial.”
The door swung open. Joe, now without the bars to hold onto, rubbed the back of
his neck. “You mean I’m going home?”
Ben gave a half-chuckle, flashing his son a worried look. “Is that so hard to
believe? You’re innocent, you deserve to be free.”
Free. Joe shuddered slightly. He hadn’t been free since well before the robbery,
ever since that fateful day that Allen motioned him aside to talk to him.
“C’mon, son, let’s get your brothers and…” Ben’s reassuring words were cut off
by gunfire.
***********
A fist caught
Adam across the temple, blindsiding him from behind. He stumbled, his vision
going fuzzy. Hands grasped at his shirt as he began to straighten; the eager
babble of the crowd was buzzing in his ears.
A sweeping blow from Hoss struck one man to the ground and scattered the others
several steps backwards. His left hand reached instinctively to steady his
brother while the right remained balled into a menacing fist.
“Now that’s enough of that foolishne–” Hoss’s barked order was cut off as
several men rushed toward him.
The mob rushed forward, tramping around those who slipped in the muddy street.
The darkness and rain only multiplied the odds against the two desperate
brothers. Thunder cracked above them, followed by a brilliant flash of
lightning, illuminating a scene of absolute chaos.
Slowly, fighting viciously for every inch of ground they gave, Adam and Hoss
found themselves well in the midst of the inflamed mob, heading for a tree at
the end of the street – one that had seen more than its share of use as Virginia
City began growing.
Another flash showed the brothers to each other. Adam’s lip was bleeding, the
small stream mixing with the rain pelting his face. There was steel in his eyes,
and his fists were dealing out their fair share of blows. Hoss had a purplish
stain already showing on his jaw but that had not reduced its granite set. Let
the whole town come, they had reached a point of no return. If they were to die
this night, it would not be by hanging.
***********
The wind-driven
rain stung his eyes, eradicating what little sight he would have had in the
darkness. The sounds were frightening enough as Roy ran from the jail toward the
fight, followed closely by Ben and Joe. The babble of voices, jumbled by the
rain, carried one distinct message. Death.
Light spilled from the saloon doors and windows, the only establishments still
doing business in the storm
Roy
stopped short as a woman’s crumpled form materialized almost under his feet.
“Anne!” It was Ben’s ragged voice, his fumbling hands that reached to steady her
as she stood. A thrill of terror coursed through him as he took in the
blood-stained cape she was clutching to her shoulder. “Anne, what’s wrong?”
She was limp in his arms, her lips forming into a soft pout as she peered up at
him. After a tense moment, she murmured, “Adam – Hoss…there were shots…”
She glanced toward the middle of the street with a shudder. Following her gaze,
the three men encountered Lucy’s body, still sprawled where she had fallen,
forgotten in the rampage that had followed her death.
Joe took off toward the end of the street, shouting over his shoulder. “You’d
better come now,
Roy, or there’s gonna be two more murders!” He didn’t wait to hear
Anne’s further explanation.
Ben started to release Anne, but she clung to his arm tenaciously, “I – I don’t
think I can stand.”
Ben glanced at
Roy helplessly, trying to quell the rising panic in his chest.
Roy just shook
his head and turned toward the ominous gathering, doing his best to force aching
joints into a solid run.
“Hold me, Ben.” Anne whispered weakly, her fingers digging into his forearm. “It
was awful….poor little Lucy…”
Shaking with the force of the warring loyalties within him, Ben guided Anne to a
bench. “Just stay there, dear. I’ll come back for you.” With that, he wrenched
free and rushed down the street.
Roy drew his pistol and fired into the air, vaguely surprised that
more guns hadn’t gone off. The mob stumbled to a startled halt, the hubbub
subsiding as
Roy strode toward Hoss and Adam.
“What in tarnation is goin’ on?” he shouted, looking around him at the flushed
and bruised faces. “Cain’t this town have one night of peace?”
“Not with them Cartwrights around!” A voice came from the dim sea of faces.
The commotion began again, people shouting out accusations from all sides. Ben
pushed through the crowd to stand by his sons.
Roy’s pistol barked again, silencing them. “What proof says either of
these boys was the one that killed Lucy?”
“They was up on the roof of the saloon, and when Adam came down, his gun was in
his hand.” One brave man pushed the front and pointed at Adam, who stood panting
beside the sheriff. “That one’s smart, alright, but he didn’t plan it so smooth
this time.”
“I didn’t shoot Lucy – I was aiming at the man who shot her!” Adam protested his
voice hoarse with the exertion.
“Who was it that done the killin’ then, Adam?”
Roy asked
hopefully. He knew only too well where this was headed.
“Nelson, a man we hired on about a month back.” Adam glanced at his father
apologetically as he made the accusation. They hadn’t told Ben of their
findings, and a look at his father’s incredulous face said that it had been the
wrong decision.
“You saw his face then; could positively identify him?” The optimism had picked
up in the sheriff’s eyes.
“No, I didn’t see his face,” Adam admitted, “but it was his voice, and the man I
saw was his build.”
“It was dark, Cartwright, and with the storm – you expect us to believe that?”
“Did you hit him, Adam?”
Roy
queried, praying for an affirmative answer.
Adam slowly shook his head. “He got away.”
“String him up! He’s nothin’ but a filthy murderer!” The cry came from all
sides.
“Alright, all of you!” Ben’s roar caught their attention. “There’ll be no
lynching tonight! It’s only your assumptions against Adam’s word, neither of you
has any real evidence!” He put a hand on Adam’s wet shoulder. “Now just go on
home.”
The crowd murmured, discontent rising to mix with the rain that had begun to
slack off a bit.
Roy looked into Adam’s blackened eyes and slowly held out a hand.
“Your gun, Adam.”
Something flickered behind the exhaustion for a moment, a spark of defiance.
Then he reached into his holster and handed the gun over, butt-end first.
“Let’s go, son.”
“Roy, this is preposterous,” Ben protested, “you know that Adam didn’t
kill Lucy.”
Roy shook his head as he took Adam’s arm. “I know one thing, Ben, and
that’s that there’s been a murder, an accusation made, and I’ve got a suspect to
lock up. And if you want this son of yours to outlive the night, you’ll let me.”
“Listen to him,
Pa. He knows what he’s doing,” Adam said quietly, appealing to Hoss
with a glance.
“Adam’ll be fine overnight. He can keep Joe company in that cell tonight.”
“Joe is out of jail until the trial…” They were moving out of the middle of the
crowd, and Ben looked around worriedly. “Where is Joe? He got here before either
of us.”
“I’m right here,
Pa.” Joe appeared quite suddenly from the shadows of a building. “I
didn’t see the point in advertising a free shot in the middle of that crowd.”
“Good thinking.” Adam nodded approvingly. “No point in making it easy for them.”
He stopped suddenly, turning to his family. “You three go on home. I’ll be fine
with Roy overnight. You’d best get Younger Brother here out of town before
he’s spotted.”
“But…” Ben attempted to protest, but Hoss put a hand on his shoulder.
“Aw, Pa. Adam knows what he’s doin’. Let’s get Joe home before somethin’ else
happens.”
“I have to see to Anne first.” Ben agreed reluctantly, his mouth settling into a
firm line. “You and Joe go get our horses and bring them to the doctor’s house.”
Adam and Roy continued silently down the street, aware with every step of the
still – scattering men behind them.
“I sure am sorry it came to this, Adam, but I’d rather have you where I can keep
a good eye on you….”
Roy
said, voice fading as he realized how familiar the words sounded.
“I understand,
Roy.” Adam mustered a humorless smile. He was tired, battered in more
ways than simply physical. “I don’t mind saying I’ll feel a bit safer with a
locked door between that mob and myself. After all –”
A shot rang out behind them.
Roy
instinctively dropped, jerking a willing Adam to the ground with him. Hoss’
frantic voice carried through the darkness.
“Joe? Boy, are you hurt bad?”
A low moan was the only reply.
Part Thirteen: Firi
It was a warm summer night despite the rain, but a deadly chill shook him. A
moment ago he had been panting from exertion, now he couldn't breath. He had
been just starting to become aware of his many painful bruises. Now he felt
nothing.
Lightning streaked across the night sky in a sudden display of light.
Adam swiftly rolled onto his back away from Roy – the pounding of his heart
blotted out the rumble of thunder. His eyes pierced through the hindering rain
to see the puissant figure of Hoss kneeling in the thickening mud and holding a
still form.
Adam ran - mud sloshed around his boots, splattering onto his already soiled
clothing. He could now see the paleness of Joe’s face. Hoss had a strong hand
pressed down firmly on their younger brother's chest. Rivulets of rain mixed
with blood were pouring over Hoss’ fingers.
Adam dropped to his knees by the figures on the ground, and lifting his eyes, he
met the worried eyes of his middle brother. Without speaking, he placed two
fingers on Joe's neck, searching for a pulse and letting out a groan. The pulse
was much weaker than he had hoped to find.
"Where did the shot come from?" Adam asked, surprising even himself at the cold
fury in his voice.
"A man in that alleyway there." Hoss nodded to the side.
Quickly turning his head, Adam barely made out a figure of a man at the entrance
of the alley beside the mercantile before the man disappeared into the darkness
of the night. As he turned back to Hoss, some part of his mind marked the
arrival of
Roy and the voice of his father down the street.
"Get him to Paul quick before anyone sees him," Adam ordered, reaching out to
help Hoss lift their younger brother. Despite their efforts to be gentle, Joe
moaned as they raised him.
"Sorry, Joe." Looking pained, Hoss carefully adjusted his brother's weight in
his arms and hastily started down the street, mindful that the mob could
reappear at any moment.
Adam turned to face the tired and concerned looking sheriff.
"My gun,
Roy."
The older man winced. "I don't like to remind…"
"Roy." The command would not allow refusal.
Sighing,
Roy held out Adam's gun. This night seemed to have taken all the fight
out of him. "Don't make me regret this, son." The heaviness in
Roy's voice
betrayed the weight of his heart.
Without a word, Adam took the gun and darted towards the alley. Roy watched
after him, but the dark form rapidly vanished in the rain that was falling
heavily again.
It never rains but pours. The saying randomly came to Roy's mind as he
stood in the middle of the road, feeling torn. Was it his duty to follow Adam or
to make sure Hoss got Joe to the doc's unimpeded?
"Joseph!"
Ben moved to Hoss’ side, openly displaying the worry he felt as his hands
clutched at his youngest.
"I've got him,
Pa. You get Miss Harrison to the Doc's." Hoss tried not to sound
brusque, but the concern and need for haste outweighed the need for reassurance.
"Of course," Ben mumbled distractedly as he ran a hand over Joe's soaked hair.
Guilt mingled with the fear that gnawed at his heart.
Roy knew what he needed to do.
"Come on, Ben." Putting a hand on Ben's arm,
Roy pulled him
out of the way of his sons with a steadiness he did not feel. Although Ben
allowed himself to be led, his eyes did not leave Hoss’s hurrying form.
Following his friend's gaze, Roy felt suddenly grateful for the dense rain. Hoss
stood a great chance of making it to the doc's.
"It's my fault," the choked statement burst from Ben. "You were right. If only I
hadn't insisted on…."
"Now, Ben, I ain't gonna hear this. You could spend your whole life on 'if only'
but it won't never help ya none." The light rebuke silenced Ben, but
Roy still saw the anxiety in his friend's eyes. This was a time when
triumph held no appeal to
Roy.
Suddenly Ben froze, stiffening in horror. Startled, Roy looked at his friend,
but Ben shook his head and pointed a trembling finger towards the saloon.
"Anne." Though whispered, the shock in Ben's tone frightened Roy. Snapping his
head around to see what disturbed his friend, a flash of lightning revealed the
bench outside the saloon to be empty.
***********
Adam sped down
the alleyway, hoping he had a chance to catch the villain, and praying that
Joe's wound wasn't as serious as it had seemed. The rain beat against his face,
obscuring his vision, but he ignored it. The fire that burned through him would
carry him through this pursuit.
Cautiously, he approached the edge of the mercantile and peered around it -
nothing. Looking the other way, he barely saw a man turning the corner of the
stables. In the blink of eye, Adam was after him. He didn’t worry about stealth,
knowing the sounds of the storm would cover his approach. What he needed now was
speed.
He reached the stables just as the door swung shut. Adam raced forward, throwing
his shoulder against the closed door. As he forced the entrance open, he heard
someone gasp as the heavy wood rammed into them.
Light from a lantern dimly lit the room, but it was bright enough for Adam to
identify the man who was standing across from him, holding his side.
Gun aimed, Adam slowly stepped into the small storage room, carefully watching
his opponent.
"Nelson."
"Cartwright." Glancing at Adam's gun, Nelson reflexively reached for his own.
"Don't try it." The quiet click of the gun hammer being cocked sounded ominous
in the still room.
Nelson waited a beat before slowly raising his hands in surrender. A sarcastic
grin ghosted across his face. "Now just what can I do for you, boss?"
“You can answer some questions," Adam said evenly, showing no outward emotion.
"Well I can give that a go."
"And then you can come with me and repeat those answers to the sheriff."
Lightning flashed, briefly illuminating the savage glimmer in Nelson's eyes.
"Come again, Cartwright?"
Steeling his face into stone, Adam didn't answer.
Thunder cracked, emphasizing the wrath Adam felt.
Staring back, Nelson grinned wolfishly. Alarm flared through Adam. Nelson was
too confident.
"You Cartwrights are a close lot. Your concern for your kid brother seems to
have mucked up your wits a bit, boss."
Nelson had purposefully waited at the alleyway to make sure Adam saw him before
fleeing. It was a trap. Adam cursed himself for his rashness - now he was alone
with a known killer.
A footstep sounded behind him, and he heard someone moan weakly. Adam began to
turn, but it was too late. Blinding pain shot through his head as he slumped to
the floor.
Part Fourteen: Dbird
The rain came down in slanted sheets across the street, punctuated by the bright
veins of lightning. It had turned into a violent storm. The road was treacherous
in the rain. Ben had already slipped and fallen twice, the last time resulting
in a badly twisted ankle. He had no choice but to slow down. The street was
churned up and rutted with mud, and it was almost impossible to see where he was
going. Briefly, he fretted over Anne, wounded and alone in the storm, but he
shook that off quickly. He was a father first, something he had set aside
recently. His mind settled uneasily on his youngest son.
It wasn’t hard to blame himself. Seventeen year old boys still needed attention,
and Joseph had been making poor decisions for quite a while. Ben had been too
quick to dismiss the rumors about the late nights his son had spent in town.
Adam had warned him, to be sure, but Ben had brushed it off. Young men had
always sowed their wild oats, but if he was being honest with himself, it was
also a matter of poor timing. Anne’s arrival in town had made Ben feel like a
young man again and had made him forget his responsibilities. He shook his head,
ignoring the rain streaming in his eyes. There was nothing sorrier than an old
fool in love, too distracted to see the trouble gathering on his own doorstep.
Ben didn’t believe his boy had anything to do with Tomkins’s death. No judge and
jury across the territory would ever convince him of that. So what was Joseph
guilty of: youthful indiscretion, perhaps, or a lack of judgment? However, he
shared those sins with plenty of other young men. Joe had always pushed the
limits, more than his other sons put together, but he meant well and had a kind
heart. Ben had always suspected that his youngest son’s good intentions would
get him into more trouble than his bad temper.
He started to quicken his pace, gritting his teeth against the pain in his
ankle, but his boot caught again, and he fell. Thoroughly drenched under his oil
slicker and caked with mud, Ben struggled to stand. It was still a distance to
the doctor’s little white house, sandwiched between the emporium and the tobacco
shop. The rain seemed to be slackening, the lightning easing up as well, but it
made the night even darker. He struggled to keep his footing. How would Anne
possibly make it to safety in this storm? When he thought of Anne, other
questions came to mind. He would have to think about all those things later,
when he was sure that Joseph was all right.
Setting his jaw resolutely, Ben picked up his pace. Nothing was going to keep
him from his son. The darkness around him was deep, but that had never been
enough to stop a father.
***********
Hoss was fretting. He was a patient man by nature, but he felt as edgy and
restless as his little brother. He glanced out the window again, desperately
praying that he would see the approaching figure of his father. At the rate
Joe’s condition was deteriorating, he’d be gone before the doctor got back to
tend him.
He gazed miserably at Little Joe, who lay on the cot with his knees drawn up
with pain. The boy had barely moved during his desperate trek across town. Hoss
had practically been running, and it was a miracle he hadn’t fallen along the
way. Mrs. Martin had helped him stop the bleeding, but that bullet had to come
out right away. The good woman had insisted on fetching her husband from the
other side of town. In their preoccupation with Joe, the Cartwrights hadn’t even
heard about the accident at the sawmill. Paul Martin had been laboring all
afternoon and night to save Jeb Wilson’s life after he had lost his hand to the
blade. Hoss had protested that he should be the one to go out into the storm,
but the doctor’s wife had pointed to his gun in its holster.
“Seems to me that you’re needed here,” she said pointedly, and he knew she was
right.
It had seemed the right thing to do, but in the short time that had passed, Hoss
had come to believe that his brother was dying. Time was running out, and Hoss
knew that he could fetch the doctor quicker than anyone. What if something had
happened to Mrs. Martin? There were plenty of people who wanted Joe dead, and
detaining the doctor would be as efficient a lynching as a rope and a tree.
It hardly seemed like his little brother was breathing, but his lips were
moving. Hoss leaned over to try and hear what he was saying, but all he could
hear was the relentless wind and rain outside. It was a miserable night, and
Hoss needed to get that doctor. He had never felt so alone. Where was his pa,
anyway?
Hoss heard the creak of the door at the front of the house, and it wasn’t the
wind this time. He reached for his gun, but before he could draw it, Anne
Harrison’s lovely profile filled the frame. In the lamp light, he could see the
crimson stain at her shoulder, but it didn’t look like she was bleeding anymore.
His pa might be in love, but Hoss didn’t trust the woman. He kept his hand on
his gun.
To his surprise, Anne simply nodded. She didn’t seem surprised at his distrust,
but was crying, and her eyes were swollen and red-rimmed. No longer looking like
a gold-digging schemer, she simply looked like an exhausted young woman who had
known a great deal of pain. However, when she spoke, her voice was surprisingly
calm and steady.
“Let me help you,” Anne said. “Go get the doctor. I’ll stay with him. It’s the
only thing I can offer, after everything I’ve done.”
Hoss appraised her suspiciously. He knew he shouldn’t believe her; Adam
certainly wouldn’t, and Hoss longed for the presence of his oldest brother.
Where was he? Adam knew Joe had been hurt badly, and he should have been back
long ago.
Anne approached him and placed her hand on his shoulder.
“Go on,” she said. “I’ll stay with your brother.”
Joe moaned, and Hoss turned back to him. The boy’s breath was coming in
desperate wheezes, and Hoss knew there was no more time to decide. The bullet
had to come out if Joe was going to live. He couldn’t trust Mrs. Martin to bring
the doctor in time. Besides, his pa would be there any minute, and he would be
able to look after Joe.
He let go of his gun and reached for his slicker. He nodded at the young woman
his father loved. As he headed out the door and back into the rain, Hoss prayed
that he wasn’t making the worst mistake of his life.
**********
Joe was dreaming. He knew it was only a dream, but it really didn’t matter. It
was a warm summer evening, and the light was golden and lovely by the lake. Lucy
was with him. She was holding his hand. Concealed from the world, they were
finally free from all their troubles. They were young, they were together, and
he didn’t know if they were in love.
They hadn’t had enough time to find out.
Joe could feel pain, like a veil, filtering the dream. Lucy had known so much
pain in her short life. He wished he could make it up to her. During his
seventeen years of life, he had known an abundance of love and security, but she
had been given so much less than that. It wasn’t fair, but Joe was old enough to
know that little in life was fair. It was as simple as that.
The pain was pursuing him, demanding his attention. It bayed at him like old
Henry’s hounds, and he shooed it away impatiently. He wanted to stay in the
dream, in the sun, in the moment with Lucy. He wanted that last snatch of time
that life had denied them. So many of their hours together had been spent in the
smoky confines of a saloon. He had never brought her to the lake. There hadn’t
been time, and already the dream was fading.
He pulled her close to him, and the look in her eyes was enough to make him
forget to breathe.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered.
“You made me smile,” Lucy replied. “Don’t be sorry. Now go back to them. Become
a good man, Joe Cartwright.”
He didn’t have time to kiss her. The pain took him back, before he could say
goodbye.
His eyes flew open, and he awoke to the most garish agony he had ever known. He
cried out with it and searched the room, frantically.
“Pa?” he whispered.
His pa wasn’t there, but he suddenly understood that he wasn’t alone. Someone
was in the room with him, and his disordered mind struggled to understand who it
was. He squinted into the dim light, before he saw her. For a moment, he thought
it was Lucy, miraculously risen from the dead, but life wasn’t that fair. Anne
Harrison turned slowly from the window and looked over at him.
And she smiled.
Part Fifteen: Grimesgirl
The pelting rain almost obscured Hoss’ vision. It seemed like the ride to the
other side of town was taking a lifetime. His thoughts were with his little
brother and the fact that Adam had never returned after pursuing the person who
had shot Joe. It wasn't like Adam not to come back and check on Joe. He knew how
badly their youngest brother was wounded. Hoss only hoped that Adam hadn't
gotten himself into trouble as well.
Had he made a mistake in leaving Anne with Joe? He still couldn't get straight
in his mind exactly why she had taken that shot at Adam. Her explanation didn't
make a lot of sense and he knew Adam had his doubts about her.
Hoss peered through the pounding rain. He was sure that was Mrs. Martin's buggy
in front of the house. He pulled Chub to a halt, dismounted, and started up the
path. The door opened, and Mrs. Martin stepped onto the porch.
"Hoss, I was just ready to start back. Paul's been called out to the Peterson
ranch. Seems the baby is coming sooner than expected. Mrs. Peterson had so much
trouble with her last one that Paul felt he had to be there when this baby came.
He was afraid he could lose them both. I arrived here just after he left."
"You mean he doesn't know about Little Joe?" came Hoss’ worried question. He
couldn't believe his ears - the doctor was headed miles out of town. He closed
his eyes in despair, knowing Joe was going to die.
"Hoss, calm down; if you hurry, you can catch up with him. Explain how badly Joe
needs him. I'm sure he'll come back with you. I'll head over to the house and
see if there's anything more I can do."
Hoss nodded, touched his hat and hurried back to Chub. He would head through
town, past the livery and take a shortcut he knew to the Peterson ranch. He just
hoped he could catch up to Paul before it was too late.
**********
Joe tried to
focus on Anne but his vision seemed to be fading in and out. He wondered why she
was smiling. She seemed happy to see him, and he was puzzled why the sight of
the blood did not seem to bother her.
"Anne, have you see Pa?" Joe asked, hardly recognizing his own voice it was so
weak.
"Yes, your father will be along shortly."
Joe let his eyes close, feeling reassured Pa would be along soon. He felt waves
of pain radiate from the wound and gasped sharply as the intensity of it took
his breath away.
Anne watched him for several minutes, before approaching the bed and reaching
out her hand. As she moved to lift a pillow, footsteps sounded outside, and the
door was flung open, startling the younger woman. She whirled to face the door.
"Ben, oh Ben, I'm so glad to see you, darling!"
Ben hurried to the bed and placed his hand on Joe’s forehead. "Where's the
doctor, Anne?”
**********
The two men
stood looking down at the dark figure at their feet.
"Well, now what do we do?" Nelson asked as he shifted from one foot to the other
in nervousness.
"We get rid of him. He's on to us. We can't let our little scheme be foiled
because of one nosy Cartwright," stated Carter, shrugging.
"Get rid of him? You mean murder someone else? No, I won't do it. I killed Lucy
for you and tried to kill that youngest Cartwright for you. I won't do it
again," Nelson shot back in anger. "What if Joe’s already told everyone about
us? What good would killing him do then?"
"Us? I'm not sure he knows about 'us', just you, Nelson," Carter sneered at the
other man. "Besides, with him gone, what proof do they have? The words of a dead
man can't prove a thing."
Nelson shook his head and turned away. How he gotten into this mess? He knew it
was too late to back out, but another death? But, then, they could only hang him
once.
Carter could see the hesitation and tried one last time to convince his partner.
"Look, we get her to get us one big payoff, and then we'll take off. Go to
Mexico.
They can't touch us there."
"Alright, what do you propose we do?"
"Well, what about a little fire? No one’s seen us come in here except him. We
can make it look like an accident. We’ll put him in the loft and, after the
floor collapses, it’ll look like he was caught in the fire while looking for the
shooter."
"A fire? It could burn the whole town," Nelson protested, not wanting to cause
innocents to die.
"In this rain, don't be foolish. The rain will put it out before it can spread.
But it will burn enough that we'll be rid of Cartwright. Now, let's get him into
the loft."
The two men bent and lifted the limp, dark clad body between them. They carried
Adam to the foot of the ladder, and Carter helped Nelson lift the eldest
Cartwright over his shoulder. Nelson pulled himself up the ladder and dumped the
unconscious man in the hay. Carter climbed up behind him, and – striking a match
– threw it into the dry hay near the loft opening. The flames caught quickly,
and smoke began to roll.
"Come on, let's get out of here before we get caught in it," Carter called out,
motioning for Nelson to follow him.
The two men scrambled down the ladder, made their way to the door and peered
out. The horses behind them were getting restless at the smell of smoke and were
starting to mill around in their stalls.
Nelson followed his friend through the door, closing it firmly behind him. In
the barn, the fire was quickly spreading and was creeping closer to the
unconscious man who lay oblivious to the danger.
Part Sixteen: Kaatje
Danny heard the voices and slunk farther back under the hay. He might have
known he wouldn’t be alone for long. It had been sheer luck, finding the stable
door open and no attendant present, just as the rain started. Compared to some
of the places he’d slept recently, the soft hay of the loft was sheer luxury. It
was scratchy, that was true, but so soft under his aching bones. It hadn’t taken
him long to fall asleep.
One of the men’s voices was low and threatening. The other was sneering,
taunting. Danny was more determined than ever not to be heard. There seemed to
be a fight brewing, and the last place Danny Nash wanted to be was in the
middle. Not at his age.
***********
Anne’s eyes
filled with fresh tears as she answered softly, “Hoss went to fetch the doctor.”
Ben blinked as if trying to clear a fog, some of the tension leaving his body.
He nodded and took the pillow from her, carefully easing it under the one on
which Joe was resting. Joe’s eyelids fluttered, and he gave a weak groan.
Ben placed a reassuring hand on his cheek. “It’s alright, son.”
Joe appeared to lose consciousness again, his formerly healthy complexion
sallow. A seventeen year old boy should never look this way. Ben’s throat
tightened as he touched his son’s hair, again feeling remorse that it had come
to this and praying the doctor would arrive soon. Thunder rumbled ominously and
the rain beat against the house with renewed vigor.
He felt a hand on his shoulder and heard Anne sigh. Ben looked at her, taking in
her red rimmed eyes and bloodstained dress, her damp hair in disarray from the
rain and wind. For all that, she seemed to be strong enough now, if a little
pale. Perhaps the reason she had appeared so weak before had been simple shock
over Lucy’s murder. He put an arm around her, accepting her weight as she leaned
against him.
“You should lie down. You’ve lost blood at the least.” Ben advised gently. He
guided her to the edge of the other cot, watching as she settled herself. He
then sat down next to Joe, as carefully as he could, relieving some of the
painful throb in his ankle. A thought struck him. “Anne, why did you leave?”
Her eyelids, which had been closed, fluttered open. “Oh Ben, I didn’t know what
to do. I was—”
“Ben, I’m so glad you’re here.” Winifred Martin stood in the door. “I
just spoke to Hoss.”
“Win, where’s Paul?” Ben couldn’t imagine his friend wouldn’t rush to Joe’s side
if he knew.
“On his way to the Peterson ranch. Hoss is riding out to find him and let him
know about Little Joe.” Her eyes widened as she glanced at Anne. “Miss Harrison,
are you injured?”
“She was shot.” Ben answered for her. “If you could help her, Win….”
“Of course.” Winifred’s tone was brisk. “I’ll set the water to boiling again,
then I’ll be back to help her out of those wet clothes.”
Anne flushed. “I’ll be fine. You needn’t bother helping.”
“You will listen to Mrs. Martin, young lady.” Ben chided her, but absently. His
attention had returned to Joe, watching each breath as it came. He took Joe’s
hand, clinging to the hope that Hoss would catch up to Paul soon. His neglect of
his youngest son over the last few months haunted him. It was true that Adam and
Hoss were used to keeping an eye on their little brother, but he had needed a
father’s watchful eye. Ben sighed as he realized he hadn’t listened to anyone
about Joe. He had been too hardheaded to give weight to Adam’s concerns, and too
stubborn to listen to
Roy.
As his thoughts turned to Roy, he wished him Godspeed.
***********
Ben Cartwright
had to be the most mule-headed man Roy had ever known. Well, unless he
considered Adam. He could be every bit as stubborn as his father, if not worse.
Roy would also have to say Joe was proving to be mighty headstrong,
young as he was. Even Hoss, easygoing as he generally was, had his fair share of
stubbornness. Once the big man was set on something there was no more changing
his mind than there was a chance of picking him up and tossing him. It was in
their blood, pure and simple.
Roy snorted with exasperation as he tried to see though the downpour.
The only time he could really see well was when the lightning flashed. He only
hoped Ben would be able to get himself to Paul Martin’s house, as he’d insisted
he could. The man had taken too many blows in too short a time, and
Roy hadn’t liked
the sound of him when his fiancée disappeared, topping the whole thing off. As
soon as Ben knew Adam had gone after the shooter, nothin’ would do but for Roy
to follow. Not that he minded following, but how was he supposed to find
anything or anyone in this dad blamed flood?
The truth was he’d wanted to follow, even though he had his worries about Ben.
This was his job, after all. Even though Adam could handle himself with the best
of them, there were never any guarantees. A man could be fast and smart but
sometimes that wasn’t near enough to get him through alive.
As he neared the livery, a new flash revealed two men crossing the street. One
of them was that no good Stan Carter. Roy smiled briefly. At least he was gettin’
a bath for once. He squinted, trying to make out who the other character was. He
was a tall man with shaggy dark hair who was about halfway between a shave and a
beard. Roy didn’t know him. He called out to them, thinking they might have seen
Adam pass this way, but the men didn’t turn or slow. He could hear the horses
kicking up a racket inside the stable, probably spooked by the storm. Noting the
door was closed, he suddenly wondered if Jeb Rankin had seen anything. The
stable hand usually kept the door open for air, and it wasn’t unlike him to keep
an eye on things. Could be he’d just closed up.
Roy reached for the door.
Part Seventeen: Nanuk
"Anybody in here?"
Clamping his bandana tightly down over nose and mouth,
Roy tried in
vain to peer into the raging heat screaming at him from the stable, convinced
his ears had betrayed him. Most of the horses had almost run him down when he
had opened the door; their cries still lingered in his mind even though their
stampeding feet must have carried them already far past the town's boundaries.
There had been one, lying trampled and helpless, and Roy, over his husky shouts
for help, had entered the blazing building to put the panicking animal out of
its misery.
The heat was intense. Even several feet away from the loft where the fires
seemed the hottest,
Roy felt the scorching heat dry and crack the skin of his face and
singe the hair on his body. Already he could smell the penetrating odor of
burned flesh, making him choke.
Almost panicking himself,
Roy
turned back to the doors where men and women were queued with buckets of water,
but suddenly a painful shout caused his hair to stand on end, and several men
were frantically pointing behind him, their eyes huge and frightened.
Heart beating in his boots, Roy turned, swallowing hard, afraid of what he might
see.
"Oh my God."
Shadows were moving through the orange inferno, dark shadows, their outlines
blurred by the waves of heat. For a moment Roy couldn't help but stare, taken
aback by the strange sight. In the next, he grabbed a bucket from the man behind
him and rushed forward to douse the two emerging men with water. It was
difficult for him to recognize Danny Nash who looked about ready to collapse,
and even more difficult to make out the dark form on his shoulders, but it took
only seconds to get them both outside, and Roy knew that he had seldom been so
thankful for the floods from above as he was in that moment.
Fifteen minutes later, the fire was still roaring, but the combined efforts of
the rain and the men already promised success. Not that there was much to save
from the sorry remains of what had once been the town's livery stable, but the
inhabitants of the adjoining houses, if not already awakened by the noise, had
been warned and evacuated. Guards had been posted to watch the progress of the
fire, and the bucket chain, now much more organized than just moments ago, left