TWENTY-ONE

“Magpie, you take your brothers to those rocks,” he ordered, conscious of keeping the timbre of his voice as steady as possible. “Take them two dogs with you too an’ tie ’em up to the horses.”

He could feel their eyes riveted to him as he continued to stare into the distance with that long leather-wrapped spyglass. The shimmering, faraway objects danced in the rising waves of heat. Already close enough that he could make out the snaking line of fewer than two dozen canvas-topped wagons, figures on foot plodding on either side of the train, and at least four horsemen riding purposefully out front. Even without the spyglass, a man could see it was Hargrove’s bunch.

“Now, Magpie.”

“Popo—”

“Do as I tell you!” he snapped at her in Crow.

Despite the uncertainty on her face, she held her ground and demanded, “Popo—you give me a gun to use.”

He turned to look at her in disbelief, taking the spyglass from his eye.

“Me too,” Flea supported his sister. “I can shoot a gun good as anyone my size.”

Blinking, his eyes smarting with pride of them, Titus turned back to the wagons and swiped a droplet of sweat from the lid of his good eye, then fixed his gaze on the riders again. He was able to pick out Moses Harris from his slouch in the saddle. The tall one who sat ramrod straight next to Harris had to be Phineas Hargrove himself. The other two horsemen had to be emigrants … because those who were left of Hargrove’s seven were likely busy at the helm of the first two wagons. That’s where he figured Hargrove would continue to keep his teams and his men: right at the front of the column as they worked their way closer and closer to Fort Hall.

Did the man actually believe he would ever catch up to Titus Bass and Shadrach Sweete on this road before the trails split? After the train had broken apart and the California-bound emigrants remained behind with Hargrove, the wagon boss had tarried long enough to give the Bingham-Burwell company some berth before they themselves continued on their way to the British post. Somewhere in those next two days Hargrove had dispatched the four riders to catch up to the Oregon party and settle with the two old trappers. With all the confidence in the world, he would have expected Benjamin and the others back with evidence of success in the murders.

Jehoshaphat! How Titus would have loved to see the look on Hargrove’s face when he came upon those four bodies at Soda Springs!

Shadrach had wanted to drag them all into the middle of that road cut with hundreds of iron-tired wheels … but from his travois, the wounded Scratch didn’t want any part of it.

“Just think how that’s gonna make his insides salt up when he sees them four all laid out neat and purty on the road, side by side by side,” Sweete had proposed.

“No,” he had whispered in pain. “I don’t want Amanda seein’ us do nothin’ of the kind.”

So they had left the four where each of the hired men had fallen in making his attack. A day or two under the late-summer sun, those bodies would have swollen up quite nicely, beginning to blacken with decomposition. And the stench? Why, if the wind had been from the right direction, that big nose in the middle of Harris’s face would have picked up the scent long before they reached the springs. What a happy night that would have made for Phineas Hargrove and the two remaining guns he had brought west to protect all that he held dear in those wagons of his.

Come to think of it, without his drivers, what had Hargrove done with that extra cargo he would have had to leave behind? Would he have thrown what he could in the wagons he could bring along? Had he bullied and cajoled others into packing some of his cargo in their wagons? Or would he have offered good money to a few of the unattached men along in return for driving his wagons on to California? From the looks of things, Hargrove hadn’t been forced to stoop to driving a team himself—still riding out front with the pilot, setting himself apart from the rest.

And just what would the other emigrants have thought when they came upon those bloated corpses? Bass had wondered as he started his family south from Fort Hall, riding for Bridger’s post. Would those who had elected to stay with Hargrove and turn south for California instead of Oregon look at the carnage and finally say among themselves that the murderous feud had come far enough? Had any of them secretly decided that when they reached Fort Hall they would push on in the hopes of catching the Bingham-Burwell party instead of remaining behind with Hargrove’s Californians? Hadn’t any of those farmers and shopkeepers the eggs to stand up to those three bullies and tell Hargrove they wanted no part of him any longer?

Or would they keep their mouths shut as they had up to that point and figure such bloodshed was nothing more than the way of the wilderness, the price one had to pay for passage through a wild and brutal land? The toll taken in having anything at all to do with such mountain ruffians as those two old trappers?

“Ti-tuzz,” his wife said at his side.

Bass pulled the spyglass from his eye and gently nudged its three brass sections together before he tucked it away in his shooting pouch.

Waits-by-the-Water waited patiently for him before she asked, “Do you want my gun with the children’s weapons?”

Quickly appraising the ground, he decided where to put the horses, where to position what firepower he had against the many.

“Magpie and Flea, they will stay in those rocks.” He pointed. The rest turned their heads and looked. “But you, Waits—take Jackrabbit with you into those rocks over there.” Again they all looked in the direction he indicated.

“That will mean our three guns will be pointed at them,” Flea declared.

“Four guns. I’ll be right here,” Titus said, gazing into the distance at the approaching column of dust shimmering with the intense, late-morning sun.

She stepped around in front of him, her sad eyes appealing. “We can get out of their way. Let them pass. There is enough time—”

“Hargrove an’ me,” he said in English, then thought that he better speak in Crow so there was no question of her understanding. “The wagon chief and me, we both have known we were going to reach this moment of our dance together. He never wanted Shadrach or me along with his group, because he knew that one day the two of us would be the whole reason the others finally showed the courage to stand up to him, the courage to break away from his hold over them. So Hargrove blames Shadrach and me. Now our friend and his family have gone to Oregon, so that leaves me to dance with Hargrove … alone.”

“But he will not be alone,” she pleaded. “The fur-catcher, he will be another gun—”

“I don’t think Harris will pull down on me,” Scratch interrupted her with a wag of his head. “That leaves Hargrove and the two who take orders from him.”

“Three of them,” Magpie counted.

Flea added, “And we have three guns already pointed at those three men, Popo.”

“But we don’t have to shoot them!” Waits snapped at her son.

Taking his wife by the shoulders, Titus said, “This is between me and Hargrove. I pray that the rest of you won’t have to shoot. Keep your guns on the others so they do not make trouble for me.”

Her eyes smiled first, then she said, “We are getting too old for this, chilee.”

He held her cheeks and kissed her forehead. “Now help your husband get the horses out of sight.”

By the time they had the animals hidden in a nearby coulee and the extra guns distributed, they could hear the plodding hooves and the squeaking wheels, the yelling drivers and the lowing of the teams. Titus stepped toward the clearing between the rocky walls where his family crouched in hiding. He stopped at the edge of the well-trampled road and waited as the first horsemen came up over a low rise a little more than a hundred yards ahead of him. Scratch knew they had spotted him when he saw the squatters turn to one another and gesture—pointing on up the trail at the solitary figure. The tall rider turned around in the saddle and appeared to shout some warning to the first wagon as a couple of the horsemen abandoned the others, which left Hargrove and Harris alone at the front of the column.

That done, the two riders urged their horses ahead, cautiously studying the ground on either side of the spot where Titus Bass stood alone, bringing his smoothbore down from his elbow—clearly leveling it at the approaching horsemen. He watched Harris’s eyes for several moments as the old mountain man and one-time confederate of William Sublette peered about suspiciously.

Suddenly Harris threw out his arm and snagged hold of Hargrove’s elbow. They reined up together.

“Where’s Shadrach Sweete?” Harris demanded sourly as he rolled his longrifle over the head of his hammer-headed cayuse.

“He ain’t here.”

“He ain’t?”

“I ain’t gonna lie to you, Harris.”

The two of them whispered where they sat atop their saddles, just out of earshot.

Then Hargrove spoke, “Why should we trust what you tell us, old man? I figure sneaky back-shooters like you two would lay an ambush for us like this.”

“I ain’t never been a back-shooter,” Titus declared evenly. “Not like your kind.”

“We found the bodies of my men,” Hargrove explained. “Benjamin was shot in the back.”

“Had to be,” Scratch said.

“Then you admit you’re back-shooting murderers?”

“No. Shadrach killed that’un to pull my hash out’n the fire.”

“I stayed outta this all the way down the line!” Harris suddenly shouted to the rocks. “You hear me, Shadrach Sweete? I never had nothin’ to do with any of this killin’!”

“Tol’t’cha, Harris,” he called out to the old trapper. “Shadrach ain’t here.”

“Where is he?” Hargrove demanded.

“Long on his way to Oregon with the rest of that bunch you an’ Hargrove were going to leave ’thout a pilot.”

“Sweete’s guiding them his own self?” Harris asked in disbelief.

“Him … and a feller what’s been out there twice’t awready.”

Hargrove rocked back in the saddle a bit as the first of the wagons came up behind the two riders and noisily pulled up just within earshot. “That makes things, neat and tidy for Burwell’s folks, doesn’t it, Mr. Bass?”

“I s’pose. You take your outfit off to Californy, an’ them others stay on the road all the way to Oregon.”

The train captain grinned. “Sounds like everything is turning out rosy in the end, doesn’t it?”

“’Cept for one thing, Hargrove.”

“Ah … yes,” he sighed as the third wagon clattered to a stop and its driver turned to holler back at the others to halt.

Already the drivers of those first two wagons had clambered down from their seats, dragging their prairie rifles after them, those short-barreled, percussion-capped weapons being manufactured on the borderlands for the new breed of frontiersman coming west. Titus hoped the three family members he had secreted in the rocks would each remember to choose a different target, on their side of the open ground—and keep their rifle trained on their particular target … no matter what happened to him and Hargrove when the shooting started.

“Listen, Hargrove,” Harris said, his eyes narrowing as they bounced over the rocks once more, “I’ve managed to keep my hair for all these winters already … I ain’t gonna lose it to this son of a bitch what wants a piece of your tail.”

The moment Harris attempted to turn his horse away, Hargrove reached out and snagged the reins. “You’re staying. In for a penny, in for a pound, I always say. If I don’t come out of this—you don’t get paid, Harris. Simple as that.”

“This ain’t got nothin’ to do with me,” Harris complained. “Between you an’ him.”

“Let me explain it to you again,” Hargrove growled, dragging the pilot’s horse closer. “The other men that old bastard has killed, they were expendable. Practically speaking, I could count on a certain number of my employees not reaching our final destination with us. That always meant there would be more of the pie to share, don’t you see?”

Hargrove waved one of the riflemen left, the other to the right, both of them stopping just ahead of the two horsemen so that it would be hard for the trapper to swing his weapon far enough from right to left before someone dropped him.

Hargrove cleared his throat dramatically and continued, “Do you get the import of what I’m telling you, Mr. Harris?”

“You figger me to sit here and shoot that man with the three of you?”

“If you want to get paid when we get to California.”

“Th-that ain’t part of being a pilot,” Harris protested. “I kill’t my share of Injuns, an’ I’ve done a helluva lot I ain’t real proud of in my life … but I ain’t ever out-an’-out shot no man for money.”

Hargrove’s jaw set with a jut as he ruminated on that. “Very well. You’ve cast your lot with spineless cowards, Harris—”

“I ain’t no coward!”

But the captain was already waving his pilot off with a disdainful gesture. “Be gone with you. Get out of the line of fire, you coward.”

“Tol’t you—I ain’t no coward!” Harris was starting to fume.

“Move aside and let the real men finish this once and for all—”

Titus interrupted, “You better listen to him, Hargrove. Moses Harris may be a lot of things, but he ain’t ever been no coward. Dead of winter, he’s walked back to St. Louie from the mountains. Not once’t … but twice’t.”

With a sneer, Hargrove shifted his rifle so that it lay along his right thigh, pointed in the target’s general direction. “More myths of your brave breed? So Harris has performed mighty deeds. That still doesn’t alter the fact that he’s grown spineless in his old age.”

“I ain’t spineless—”

Yet Hargrove paid Harris no mind as he continued, “Which is something it appears you still have, old man.”

“A spine?”

“Some backbone, yes.”

Harris leaned forward, reaching down to tear his reins from Hargrove’s grip. “Take your damn hand off my horse!”

The captain did just that, but brought that very fist up so fast and hard beneath Harris’s chin that the pilot’s head snapped backward, his wide-brimmed hat flying off before he slid from the saddle, dazed, spilling onto the sand.

Hargrove tapped heels into his horse, urging it forward at a walk as he brought up the rifle in his right hand. “Which ball will get you, Mr. Bass?”

“Won’t be yours, Hargrove.”

The man gentled back on the reins and halted, still clutching that short-barreled carriage gun on Scratch. “What makes you so sure it won’t be mine?”

“Have to be one’a these other hired niggers,” Titus said as he pulled the hammers back on the big pistol he gripped in the right hand, on the sawed-off trade gun he kept loaded with drop-shot that was in his left.

“My aim is excellent,” he replied to the trapper.

“Not when you can’t even get off a shot,” Scratch declared. “You’re the first’un I’m gonna shoot.”

“You’ll take your chances on these other two?”

Titus quickly appraised them. “Neither one of ’em look like killers to me, Hargrove. I figger you sent the ones what could kill on ahead to get me. If’n either these two had the stomach to cut a man down, you would’ve sent ’em along with Benjamin. But this’un an’ that’un too … I think they like breathin’ a li’l more than you give ’em credit for.”

That appraisal clearly unsettled Hargrove. As the hired men turned their heads to look at their employer, he ordered, “Don’t listen to his rantings. If he makes a move to use either of those guns, drop him where he stands.”

“Come down to just you an’ me, Hargrove,” Titus said as he flicked a look at Harris starting to stir among the sagebrush.

The pilot wagged his head, groggily rolling onto his hip behind Hargrove, rocking onto his hands and knees shakily.

When he fixed his eyes again on the train captain, Titus found Hargrove had cleared a pistol from his belt, yanking it into sight with his left hand.

Without considering those orders Hargrove had given his two henchmen, Titus brought up his two weapons on instinct, instantly deciding he would take the horseman with the pistol, then use the trade gun loaded with shot to deliver a scattered pattern at the man to his left because he stood a better chance of hitting him with a wide pattern than with a single ball.

He pitched forward onto his knees after firing his first shot with the pistol, with barely enough time to watch the ball slam into Hargrove’s shoulder before he pulled the trigger on the scattergun in his left hand. He felt the hired man’s ball snarl past his ear at the very moment that double load of coarse drop-shot chewed through the gunman’s belly like a nest of angry wasps, flinging him backward, his feet pin-wheeling in the loose sand.

But a gunshot rumbled from the rocks behind the bloodied man, knocking his body forward. He landed with the side of his face down in the dirt.

Immediately afterward a second weapon roared from the boulders, off to Bass’s right this time, the ball furrowing into the ground beside the second gunman’s boot.

“No! No! Don’t shoot me!” the henchman screeched in utter panic as he hurled his rifle loose and raised his arms.

Fury clouded Hargrove’s face as he gazed down at his bleeding wound, angrily nudging his horse forward. “Isn’t this a predicament, old man?” he crowed. “You’ve emptied both of your weapons … but I still have both of mine.”

Scratch hoped Waits could place her shot close enough to Hargrove that it would give her husband at least a heartbeat to dive out of the way, perhaps even make it to that loaded rifle the hired man had just pitched aside before the bully shuffled back in terror, his arms still high.

“I’ll still make it to California, old man,” Hargrove growled, “but your bones’ll rot here in the middle of nowhere.”

The instant Hargrove whipped both of his weapons into play, Bass dove for that loaded rifle in the sand. One of the captain’s bullets kicked up dirt at his heel the moment he smacked onto the ground and his hands scooped up the weapon. He was just beginning to wheel with it, not anywhere near ready to fire, when he winced the instant Hargrove’s second gun boomed—

But the horseman’s shot went completely wild.

Titus watched the man’s back arch suddenly, a reflex that forced his pistol to fire at the sky. A long moment, then Hargrove peered down at his chest, beginning to gurgle, finding that patch of blood beginning to seep around the bubbling black hole at the middle of his brocade vest. Then, as Hargrove slowly turned around in the saddle and Bass rolled onto an elbow so he too could look behind the man’s horse—they both found smoke curling from the yawning muzzle of that big-bore flintlock held by Moses Harris.

“D-don’t shoot me!” the hired man blubbered repeatedly as he crumpled to his knees, sobbing.

After swallowing his heart back down from his throat, Bass hollered in Crow at the rocks, “No more shooting—hold your fire!”

Mules and oxen were braying and bawling from the echoes of that noisy gunfire behind Hargrove as the train captain brought his red hand away from his chest, stared down at the blood on it, then inch by inch keeled out of the saddle and fell onto the sand. Shrieks erupted from the first women to reach the scene with their men. Children surged forward between grown-ups’ legs, held back by their parents as the crowd swelled up behind Harris, pressing in on one another for a view of the carnage.

As Titus got to his hip, then pushed himself to his feet with that rifle in hand, still uncertain if this had been played completely out or not, Harris lowered the weapon he held in his hands and trudged those few steps that brought him to Hargrove’s body with a sad weariness.

When he stopped to peer down at the wagon master, Harris grumbled, “Idjit son of a bitch.”

Scratch came to a halt on the other side of Hargrove as the captain spewed blood, trying to speak as his half-glazed eyes stared up at Harris; then his head rolled slightly so he could peer at Bass. Dropping to his knee, Titus held his ear close to the blood-covered lips.

Harris asked, “What’s he say?”

Titus looked up. “Said he’d see both of us again … in hell.”

The instant Harris raised his rifle in the air as if he intended to smash it down into Hargrove’s face, Bass knocked it aside with his loaded weapon. Harris took a step back, his dark face hard as slate, glaring at Titus with fury-tinged eyes.

“Leave ’im be to die,” Scratch said quietly. Then watched some of the anger disappear from the old trapper’s face. “Likely he’s right.”

“Right about what?” Harris demanded.

“Chances are, we’ll both see ’im again in hell.”

“Damn this son of a bitch,” Harris growled, his tone one more of disappointment than fury now. “Owes me money, an’ a spree in California too. Señoritas an’ some pass brandy. Damn this dead son of a bitch anyway.”

“I’ll lay you can scratch up some money back there in his wagons,” Titus suggested.

A bright light dispelled the last remnants of darkness in the old trapper’s eyes. “By doggies, you’re right!”

The crowd was inching forward as Scratch said, “Why’n’t you go an’ take these here folks right on to Californy like you was set on doin’ anyway. I figger you’ll be set for quite a spree out with all them Mexican señoreetas.”

With a growing grin, Harris looked down at Hargrove’s wide, unmoving eyes. “S’pose I still could take ’em on to California at that—”

“What’re we going to do without Hargrove?”

Looking up at the new voice, Titus found the face, one of those who had been Hargrove’s biggest backers when it came time for the mutiny by the Oregon company.

“You wanna go to Californy, this pilot gonna take you folks there,” he snapped at the man. “Elsewise, you all can rot right here waiting for Hargrove to raise hisself from the dead.”

“What’m I gonna do now?” the last hired man asked, still frozen in place, his arms raised.

Harris eyed him menacingly.

But it was Titus who spoke, “You ever fire a shot at me or my kin?”

“N-no, I didn’t,” he admitted with a frightened wag of his head.

“Ever you do harm to any of these other folks?”

Again he shook his head. “No.”

Scratch turned on those men and women, and the children clutching their mothers’ skirts, wide-eyed. “This man ever raise a hand to any of you?”

Some hung their heads, others continued to stare at the dead bodies, and a few mumbled their answer.

Turning back to the hired man, he said, “Then I s’pose they might let you stay on with ’em all the way to the end of the trail.”

He could hear the weight of that breath escaping the man’s lungs. Jabbing his head toward Harris, Bass told the young man, “Seems like you can throw in with your pilot now, an’ the two of you have yourselves a grand time. Makes no nevermind to me.”

“Wha’chu gonna do yourself now?” Harris asked as Bass handed him the hired man’s rifle.

“Me? We was headin’ back to Bridger’s post,” he declared, spotting the forms stepping out of the rocks. A woman and a young boy. “Eventual’, we need to be back in Crow country by the first deep snow.”

“Who’s we?”

“Them,” and he pointed to Waits-by-the-Water bringing Jackrabbit toward him, the child’s hand in hers, the long flintlock at the end of the other arm.

Harris turned back to him and said, “You wasn’t takin’ no chances, was you?”

“Onliest way ol’ coons like us got to be so old, Moses. We don’t take scary chances.”

“Them too?” Harris asked.

Titus turned and found Magpie and her brother emerging from the boulders.

“They don’t have to be the best shots in the mountains,” Titus explained. “Just good enough to keep ever’body else busy.”

Harris grinned and wagged his head. “I’ll be damned if you don’t take the circle, Titus Bass!”

Gesturing to Flea, Scratch said, “Get the horses. We’re leaving this place.”

Having turned and started away with his wife and youngest son while the two older children headed off to fetch the animals, Titus was surprised when Harris called out to him. “Don’t you want anything off this son of a bitch?”

He stopped, thought a moment, then shook his head.

“Not his scalp?”

“Only hair I ever raised I took off a proper warrior, Harris.”

“Then you don’t want none of his money?” Harris asked in a loud voice.

“Money?” and he snorted a laugh. “Why, coon—that’s the sort of addle-headed stuff you need out to Californy. What in blazes would I do with money in these here mountains?”

“Suit yourself!” Harris cackled with glee.

“For all I care,” Scratch flung his voice back over his shoulder as he moved toward the horses, “you can keep ever’ damn dollar of it. Man like me won’t ever need money again.”


“You don’t s’pose Shadrach gonna stay out there in Oregon for good, do you?” Jim Bridger asked not long after Titus Bass had hit the ground outside the tall stockade timbers and informed Gabe why Sweete wasn’t along for this return to Black’s Fork of the Green.

“You just never know about that boy,” Titus said as he wiped a droplet of sweat from the end of his nose. “But I don’t figger he’s the sort to put down roots in that country. Lad big as a stalk of corn the way he is needs his sun to grow!”

“Gonna fix us up something special for supper,” Jim proposed. “An’ after we fill your paunch with venison, I’ll lather up your tongue with some barleycorn so you can tell me all ’bout your li’l sashay up to Fort Hall.”

It was a merry return. If not a crowded homecoming, then the best they all could make it. This post wasn’t home, but Gabe and his two children were nonetheless the very best of folks. And the way that Waits-by-the-Water and Magpie dove right in, making themselves comfortable around the place, chattering and giggling too, it did a lot to put the trials of the last few weeks behind him. It had been just like holding a gaunt and hungry wolf at bay … until the strong liquor loosened his tongue and the floodgate of memories came washing back over him in a way he hadn’t allowed since that fateful day at Soda Springs.

“D-dead?” Bridger whispered. “That towhead young’un … your grandson?”

His eyes teared up uncontrollably as he peered at Gabe. “You know what it does to a man when he can’t do a thing to help someone he loves?”

Laying his hard-boned hand on Bass’s shoulder there beside the fire as his wife and Magpie talked, Flea chasing Jackrabbit and Felix about in the cool of the late-summer evening, Jim said, “You ’member how I lost my Cora last year, just after Josie was borned … but, still, I don’t have no way of knowin’ how that’s gotta cut you clear to the backbone, what with losin’ a little’un like that.”

From the beginning Titus had promised himself that he would not get down in the cups with the grief he felt crushing in on him like an inescapable weight. He had resisted the urge to prevail upon Esau for a little of Fort Hall’s hooch, either for some wallowing in misery or for a parting celebration. He had resisted this long—but now the fire of that whiskey pouring down his gullet matched the burn he suffered in that hollow spot that had been growing a bit bigger inside him with each new day. Maybeso he needed to roar and wail, to weep and moan, to release the grief after it had been bottled up for so long. At the very least to get it flushed out of his belly before it ate away at him from the inside like a terrible hydrophobia … like the snake’s own poison had eaten away at Lucas Burwell’s will to fight until there was no more strength left holding on to life.

The flames of that merry fire wavered in a blurry dance the longer he talked. And the longer he talked the more he drank. Magpie sat with her arm around Waits-by-the-Water, the two of them listening intently while Titus spilled his grief like a drunk would puke his belly on the ground—stinking and noxious and loathsome … but this was something that made both the drunk and the griever feel all the better for it.

“Shit, I warned ’em, Gabe,” he had long ago started slurring his words, what words he managed to choke out around the huge lump wedged down in his throat. Something that just wouldn’t budge no matter how he kept washing it down with Bridger’s whiskey. “Told them young’uns stay back from them rocks.”

“But, Ti-tuzz,” Waits reminded in her language, “the snake did not get the boy who died near the rocks.”

He squinted at the fire, trying hard to make the swimming images hold still for just a heartbeat. Struggling too as he attempted to get his grasp around what her words meant.

“Sounds to me there ain’t no reason for you to think you could have done a thing different,” Bridger consoled. “The boy didn’t go to the rocks. He just crossed paths with one of them rattlers out huntin’.”

For a long time he watched the flames with his half-lidded, pooling eyes, sensing so much of the poison leaching out of him, the way on a hot summer day back in Boone County moisture would sweat beads on the outside of his mam’s clay pitcher. Like it was being pulled out of him a drop at a time, one heartbeat at a time. Gradually healing himself from the inside out as he wallowed in this despair so long rising to the surface.

“I tried my best to understand it, Gabe,” he admitted. “All the time me an’ Waits sat by that fire, makin’ a poultice for them bites, or boilin’ down some roots for Lucas to drink so’s his dyin’ wouldn’t hurt so goddamn much.”

“Tried to understand what?” Bridger asked.

He raised his eyes, struggling to focus on his friend’s face as the tears spilled down his cheeks. “Understand why it is that these here Injuns we white fellers got for wives know so much more’n we men do.”

“How you figger?”

“I see it’s because we’re white, Gabe,” he confessed, staring at the dogs working over old bones nearby. “Ever’ time I work so hard to get my mind around something I can’t figger out, my wife tells me I can’t unnerstand because I ain’t meant to unnerstand. She says I ain’t s’posed to work so hard to find a answer. She says I’ll find out soon enough why ever’thing works out the way it does, an’ why any of the rest of it don’t matter none at all.”

Bridger glanced at Waits-by-the-Water, then concentrated again on his friend. “Don’t matter none at all?”

“You been around Injuns near as much as I have, Jim,” he whimpered. “You sure as hell gotta awready know!”

“Know what?”

Licking a drop of whiskey that clung to his mustache, Titus spoke low, “Injuns say this here life of ours—what I’m doin’ sittin’ an’ jawin’ with you by this fire—this here life ain’t real at all.”

“Ain’t real?” Bridger scoffed with a wide grin. “Quit your yankin’ on my leg!”

Titus leaned forward, his elbow clumsily sliding off his knee, then quickly regained his composure. “Just what I said. You an’ me here now … this ain’t real.”

Bridger’s eyes narrowed as he turned to Waits-by-the-Water. “You understand what this here drunk is sayin’?”

Her head bobbed.

“Awright—spill it all for me,” Bridger prodded. “Can’t say I’ve ever heard nothing about any of this dreams an’ such.”

“This here’s hard work,” Scratch declared, then licked his lips. “Workin’ my brain like this makes a man even more thirsty than that trail comin’ down from Fort Hall … so maybe I should loosen my head-hobbles with a li’l more of your whiskey.”

“Just as long as you don’t pickle yourself and pass on out afore you tell me what these here Injuns of ours know that we don’t.”

Promptly Titus pressed one greasy finger up to his lips. “Shshshsh!” he hissed in a coarse whisper. “I ain’t figgered out if we’re really s’posed to know or not, Gabe.” Slowly, with his oversized head swimming unevenly, he turned to gaze at his wife. “Gonna tell my friend here ’bout it.”

“Bridger good man,” she said in understandable American. “He knows dreams good too.”

“What the hell is she talking about?” Gabe inquired. “Me knowing dreams good too?”

Scratch took another big swallow, then dragged the back of his hand across his damp mustache. “Your dreams, Gabe. That’s the answer. Injuns I know believe your dreams are your real life … and this here, where we’re talking by this fire? It ain’t real at all.”

With a loud snort, Bridger growled, “Shit, if you ain’t way down in the cups, Scratch. Here you had me believing—”

“Injuns figger their dreams—’specially their medeecin visions—those are their journeys they take back to the real life,” Titus interrupted with an impatient wave of his empty cup. “Them places we see in our dreams … that’s where our spirits come from, where our spirits really belong.”

Wagging his head, Jim confessed, “I don’t think I understand any of this—”

“We ain’t s’posed to!” Titus said with glee. “Don’t you see? That’s the way it is with these here Injuns. They get their minds around what they can understand an’ they don’t let the rest of it fret ’em at all. It’s the way of things out here in these mountains.”

“How’s that?”

Leaning forward, his elbows on his knees, Bass whispered, “Injuns say I just gotta quit worryin’ ’bout ever’thing I don’t understand.”

“Why?”

“Because it’s what I ain’t meant to understand … till ever’thing is showed me an’ the answers is given.”

“When’s that gonna happen?”

Titus explained, “Waits told me it’s when a warrior’s spirit takes off from his body.”

“When he dies?”

Nodding, Scratch said, “I s’pose that’s it, dead center, Gabe. When a warrior’s spirit is free of his body … we’ll get all the answers.”

“Answers for things like what happened to heal Shadrach’s arm?” Jim asked. “Answers for why Lucas was took by a rattler?”

He swallowed hard on that lump in his throat. “Makes this here child feel a lot better just knowin’ he’ll unnerstand all the questions one of these days, Gabe. One of these days … eventual’.”

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