7
Ben stepped out of the saddle in a groaning whine of leather, tied his horse to a wagon wheel with sweat-slippery reins, and picked up the empty wooden box. He smelled the inside, sniffing to pick up any vagrant scents. He was thinking about candy, cigars, or the fragrance of baked flour in biscuits.
“Not a food box,” he said aloud. “Cash box, maybe. Has that funny smell, like paper money.”
John said nothing, his throat wound tight as if it had been coated with alum. His eyes closed up tight as fists as he fought back tears.
Ben looked at him, realizing John had gone to an island only he knew, some stark place in his heart where grief and sadness, remembrance, perhaps, were his only companions. He set the empty box in the rear of the wagon. Then he looked at the young man, the youth with the mangled throat, a throat that looked as if it had been clawed apart by some taloned beast with long hair or dusty feathers, one out of storybooks or mythical tales first told in ancient castle dungeons on nights so black a man couldn’t see his hand in front of his face.
“All dead?” Ben sniffled, feeling his own throat tighten up as if it had been suddenly encased in a vise made of the coldestiron.
“Yeah.”
“It’s like looking at eternity, ain’t it, John? Like starin’ down into a bottomless well.”
“I don’t know what you mean, Ben.”
“They’ve gone on from this place. God only knows where they are now. But, wherever they be, it’s for the rest of eternity.”
“Yeah. I guess I never looked at it that way.” Even now, the thought was beyond comprehension, like a distance you can’t measure, some endless dark sea.
“Any idea of who they were?”
“Why don’t you start trying to find out. I’ll go through the man’s pockets, you check the boy’s. There has to be somethingin the wagon that will tell us who they are.”
“I reckon,” Ben said.
“Then, we’ll bury them. Cut that mule loose first chance.”
“I’ll do ’er,” Ben said.
John steeled himself to go through the pockets of the dead man on the seat. He didn’t find much. There was a sack of tobaccoand rolling papers, a box of wooden matches, a few coins, all of which he put back. The boy had nothing in his pockets. In the wagon itself, he found a carpetbag belonging to the woman. It had a number of items in it, including a comb, a small mirror, a tin of rouge, but most important, there was a letter that seemed recent, since the paper was still crisp and the ink strong and distinct.
Dear Darlene and Mel,
Be sure and write me when you get settled in Fort Collins. It was sure good to see you two over the winter and young Calvin. He sure has grown. I will take good care of Sis. She ain’t no trouble.
Your loving brother, Jess.
The letter was addressed to Melvin and Darlene Willis c/o General Delivery, Cheyenne, Wyoming. The return address was: Jesse Malone, 142 Locust Street, Fort Laramie, Wyoming.
John folded the letter and put it in his shirt pocket.
The people in the wagon, he reasoned, must be Darlene, Calvin, and Melvin. Jesse must be Darlene’s brother, or a cousin, maybe. When they got to Fort Laramie, he vowed silently to look up the man and tell him what had happened to his kin. Maybe he would know something about the goings-on in Fort Laramie that involved Ollie Hobart.
He heard the mule braying and then a whack, saw it run down to the river and wade across to the road. It turned south, trotted a few yards, then stopped in its tracks.
“Wonder where he’ll go,” Ben said.
“I thought he might turn north and go back to where he came from. Cheyenne.”
“You know he come from Cheyenne, Johnny?”
“That’s where these folks have been staying for a spell. Beforethat they were in Fort Laramie.”
“And how do you know all that?”
John patted the bulge in his shirt pocket.
“I got a letter written to them.”
“Is there a shovel in that wagon?” Ben said.
A few minutes later, John handed Ben a shovel. He found a spade, too, and both set to digging the graves on the softest,least rocky part of the hillside. When they finished, they were drenched with sweat, their shirts black with it, their arms streaked with it, their mouths tasting of salty brine. They wrapped the bodies in blankets, carried them to the singlescooped-out patch of earth that would serve as a grave. They lay the bodies in the ground with reverence and began covering them up. John put Darlene’s carpetbag in the grave with her.
“You going to say a few words, John?” Ben asked when they had finished covering the graves with dirt and rocks.
“Not out loud.”
“Well, we ought to say somethin’.”
“You say it, then.”
Ben took off his hat. So did John.
“Lord,” Ben said, “we give these kind folks back to the earth. Dust unto dust. You take ’em into Heaven with you, you see fittin’. Amen.”
John put his hat back on.
“That was a real fine prayer, Ben.”
“Liked to not have finished it. Got me a lump in my throat.”
“I know what you mean,” John said. “Let’s light out, let our sweat dry out some.”
THE TWO MEN RODE AWAY WITHOUT A BACKWARD GLANCE.
“They couldn’t have had much,” John said, an hour’s ride up the trail.
“Huh?” Ben said. “What’re you talkin’ about?”
“Those people Hobart killed back there.”
“No, I reckon not.”
“He murdered three people. For money. What kind of man does that?”
“A bad man, John.”
“Hobart’s more than bad. He didn’t have to kill them like that. In cold blood.”
“They were witnesses, John. They saw his face. He had to kill ’em, I reckon.”
John shook his head.
Ben could see that the killings had been bothering his friend. John hadn’t said a word in better than an hour and now he was talking a blue streak. He had never talked much about his folks being killed, which had bothered Ben. A man hadn’t ought to keep too much inside his self, he thought. It wasn’t good for a man to carry too much weight on his shoulders. But John never got drunk, never cried in his sleep, and never let on how much grief he was packing in that young mind of his.
“No need to shoot the woman and boy,” John said. “He could have just given them all a warning. Worse, I don’t think Hobart needed what little money they probably had.”
“No, I reckon not. He took us for a pretty good chunk of gold. He ain’t had time to spend it, and he’s probably still got the shares of those you and me put six feet under.”
“That’s what bothers me, I guess. Hobart doesn’t have a conscience. I think maybe he kills just for the fun of it.”
“John, there’s something I been meaning to tell you. Maybe now’s the time.”
John sat up stiff in the saddle and looked at Ben.
“What, Ben?”
“About Ollie Hobart.”
“You been keeping something from me, Ben?”
“Afraid so, John.”
“Why?”
“Just waitin’ for the right time, I reckon.”
John looked at his friend sharply, his eyes narrowing with suspicion. Ben hacked something up from his throat and spit it into the wind.
“And this is the right time, you figure,” John said.
“As good as any. Your pa. He knew Ollie Hobart. Knowed him a long time back.”
“What?”
“I think Dan was doin’ his best to forget Ollie Hobart ’cause when they knowed each other, they was right young and Ollie . . . well, he had a hankerin’ for your ma, Clare. The both of them did, and there was bad blood atwixt ’em.”
“Ollie Hobart was courtin’ my ma?”
“Hell, he aimed to marry her. There was a hell of a row when Clare turned him down, said she was going to marry Dan Savage.”
“I never heard anything about it.”
“No, I reckon not.”
“How come you know about it, Ben?”
“I was tradin’ horse, twixt Missouri and Arkansas. Your pa’s pap traded with me. I come in on it when Hobart and Dan was at it, tooth and nail. Hobart threatened to kill Dan and they had a big fight. Fists and knives. Dan cut Hobart pretty good and laid him up. Him and Clare got married whilst Hobartwas in the infirmary. They had to push his bowels back in his belly and sew him up like a Christmas turkey.”
“I never heard any of this.”
“Well, Dan went and came to work for me and then we got the gold fever. Never saw hair ner hide of Hobart until that day he jumped our claim and you and me saw him and his bunch kill everybody in sight. But Hobart was carryin’ a grudge, all right. It warn’t no accident he come up to our camp.”
“Why in hell didn’t you say something to me when we were up in that mine looking down at all the slaughter?”
“You was carryin’ enough on your shoulders right then. I didn’t see no sense in makin’ things worse.”
“It couldn’t have been any worse.”
“Yep, it could have been a sight worse, Johnny. If you’d have known who Hobart was, you’d have gone down there bare-handed and got yourself kilt. For no reason.”
“But to kill my mother . . .”
“To Hobart that don’t make no never-you-mind. He kilt his own mother. He was wrong from the first squall, that boy. Everybody in town knew it. Everybody was too scared of him to do anything about it. That bastard should have been put in a gunny sack with rocks and throwed in the river with the cats.”
“I wonder if they knew,” John said softly.
“Who knew?”
“The folks. I wonder if they knew it was Hobart who killed them.”
Ben loosed a sighing breath that was almost like a whisperedscream a man might hear in a nightmare. John looked over at Ben, wondering if he had any answer to such an unanswerablequestion.
“I reckon they knew. Your pa, leastwise.”
“He recognized Hobart after such a long time, you mean.”
“I don’t know if he even saw him, but your pa told me once, after he and Clare come up to Missouri and worked my land, that he figured Hobart wouldn’t give up on Clare.”
“What did Pa say?”
“He said somethin’ like, ‘Ollie ain’t one to give up on what he wants real bad. He’s like a snake you think you drove away and then it comes sneakin’ back when you ain’t lookin’.’ ”
“Pa said that?”
“He figured him and Ollie would meet up again some day. Said somethin’ about it being Fate, like Fate was writ down in a man’s book and warn’t nothin’ he could do about it.”
John said nothing for several moments as the two rode side by side up the well-traveled but deserted road.
“I reckon, Ben, that Fate had me in its book, too.”
“What do you mean, Johnny?”
“Well, if Fate is written down in a man’s book, Ollie’s name is in there, and mine, too.”
“You could look at it that way, I reckon.”
“That’s the way I look at it, Ben.”
Ben sucked that spent sigh back in, like it was something he couldn’t get rid of and he held it like a man holds his breath when he knows something bad is going to happen, but he just doesn’t know exactly when.