The War Ahead Part II
Revised Edition 2010
Josh and Zeke’s penchant for adventure, passion for love, and a monumental fear for their lives, have caused them to flee the family plantation in coastal South Carolina with no destination in mind, only a direction, to head west to live on the frontier in a land where no one knows who they are. Lacking experience in a wilderness life, and having little knowledge of dealing with and defending themselves from the highly experienced Indian warriors, they willingly leave their eastern civilization in hopes of finding a place so remote, they could finally be alone to allow their relationship to grow. Only the power of their love gives each man the strength, determination, and fortitude to endure all that the wilderness could fling in their faces. Their life and love inspire new friends, as they often use their skills learned in war to put their lives on the line to help total strangers survive as well.
They learn how to hunt wildlife for food, and track the ferocious Kaga Ozuye demon warriors to ensure the survival of their new friend Yuma. With the help of an old ally from their past, and John Bridger—brother of famed mountain man and explorer James Bridger, they battle renegade former confederate soldiers, and attacks by a vicious Sioux tribe. They sought paradise, but soon learn that finding a haven for love is a constant battle they must fight for, and they would do so, because they would let no man, beast, or wild Indian stop them. No matter how tough the fight, their love for each other still remained supremely more important than all that the world could throw at them.
Information on The World Apart – Part I is available at www.ItsFiction.com
The War Ahead
Part II
Revised Edition 2010
By
TJ Johnson
Smashwords Edition Published by TJ Johnson
Copyright © 2008 by TJ Johnson
Revised Edition Copyright 2010
Discover other titles by TJ Johnson at Smashwords.com
The World Ahead – Part II Copyright © 2008 & 2010 by TJ Johnson. All rights reserved.. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, contact Hard Title Publishing at Info@ItsFiction.com
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Library of Congress Control Number:
2008910665
Print Version ISBN 978-0-9764817-6-8
Print Version Published By
TJ Johnson & Hard Title Publishing
This book is available in print at: www.ItsFiction.com
This novel is strictly and entirely a work of fiction. All references to real people, events, establishments, organizations, or locales are purely and solely intended to give the novel a sense of reality and authenticity. All other names, characters, incidents, organizations, or locales are strictly the product of the author's imagination, as are those fictionalized events and incidents that involve real persons and entities. Of the fictional characters, any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead is entirely and purely coincidental.
Books by TJ Johnson
The War Apart - Part I
(A Josh & Zeke Story)
The War Ahead - Part II Revised 2010
(A Josh & Zeke Story)
The Will
(A Brett & Chase Story)
Stranded
(An Austin & Ryan Story)
The Raceboys
(A Jack & Thad Story)
A Writer's Fantasy
(About His Favorite College Basketball Star)
(A Shane & TJ Story)
Gay Grifters
(An Eric & Tyler Story)
The Blackfeet Boys Part I
(A Kiyo & Windtalker Story)
Coming soon:
Crosshairs
(An Eric & Tyler Story)
The War Beyond - Part III
(A Josh & Zeke Story)
Almost Identical
Rock Solid Part III
(An Eric & Tyler Story)
The Blackfeet Boys Part II
(A Kiyo & Windtalker Story)
Web Site and Release Information:
WWW.ItsFiction.com
Dedication
This is booked is dedicated to my longtime friend Rick Wooley who has been there for me time and again. Every time we talk is like we just spoke the day before. His advice is well taken, even when he is right and I am wrong—increasing his value all the more. Good loyal friends like Rick are found only on the top shelf, and are well worth the reach.
Finally, to my fans who ask about my beagles: Huckie and Mickey. They are doing fine, getting older, gaining gray hairs, and always ready to meet a new friend. They love our new home, but not as much as they love their daily walks around the parks where they spend time making new markings and new friends.
Revised Edition Note
Many readers spotted a few errors in the type of this sequel, and I have written the rough draft for Part III of the war series called The War Beyond. This required a few changes to Part II to set up the new adventure. This revision gave my new editor a chance to work on the old story as well as the new additions. I hope you enjoy the story as much as I did in writing this revised edition.
The War Ahead Part II
Revised Edition 2010
ONE
Josh felt uneasy with the situation surrounding him so he hurriedly tied the final load of supplies as the second packhorse shook his head to discourage an annoying, pesky fly. Josh’s twisted emotions flipped back and forth like the old black cook in the plantation’s kitchen, flipping flapjacks from a hot, black iron pan. His brow wrinkled with worry because he felt a bit anxious to get out of Denver, a feeling that made the short hairs on the back of his neck rise like a cat hunched down in preparation for a pounce on a mouse.
He and Zeke had left Josh’s home in Charleston at the end of the War Between The States almost three years ago. Their time together had flown by with daily adventures in hunting and fishing, finishing their cabin, barn, and smokehouse, and trying to grow crops in the rock-filled fertile soil. He often wished he had paid more attention to the plantation’s crops, as they both learned everything about farming the hard way. Except for stops in the towns and cities along their journey to northern Colorado, and occasional trips to a mercantile in Denver for supplies, the couple remained in seclusion, but deliriously happy to take as much joy as possible from their daily escapades together. They savored every moment they could spend with the other—especially after their many years apart during the war. They still believed they needed no one else to make their lives complete, and Zeke, in particular, felt he had not yet caught up on all the days of making love they missed during the war. They could communicate in silence with a look, a wicked wink, a fretful frown, or even a sweet smile.
Josh walked around to his horse to put a few small items he purchased in his saddlebags before tying the leather straps. He placed ammunition in one bag, and loaded the other with a bag of hard candy, a shaving razor, a deck of cards, several books, including one on farming, and several out-of-date newspapers that still read new to him. Just as he was tying the straps, he noted a group of rough looking men riding slowly into the town. He casually moved around to the front of his horse, doing his best to remain hidden. As they rode past, he stood as still as a statue, while remaining between the boardwalk and the hitching rail, turning his face slightly from their view as they continued moving along. He looked towards the store as if looking for someone, while watching the riders in the reflections on the glass of the storefront windows.
He recognized their old, well-worn, dirty, grey uniforms, and spotted the big CS initials on their saddles, but they no longer looked like the honorable Confederate Soldiers they once were. He saw before him a hybrid of beaten soldier and poor cowboy. Each man’s hat looked like the newest thing he owned, or more likely, the latest thing stolen. Josh read about ex-soldiers becoming criminals, and he could almost understand it, knowing many were treated badly on the field of battle, or behind the tall walls of prison camps where former soldiers died daily in large numbers. It did not, however, give them the right to hurt others, he thought. He felt honor in being a soldier, even on the losing side, and these men instantly disturbed him. He wanted nothing to do with the renegade former soldiers, but old scouting habits from the war kicked in, and he counted the dusty riders as well as their weapons.
Becoming soldiers, for many of these men, had been a step up from the poor dirt floor farmhouse where many grew up. After years of free food in the army, it was hard to go back to working for your food. Stealing and pillaging became an easy habit, and killing a man was something they did almost every day during the war, and thought little of it. They had survived many weeklong battles where thousands of men died. They had seen the blood and guts of the worst of war and it changed them. They survived starvation by killing civilians over a chicken or even a single egg, and committed murder without raising their pulse. They no longer dreamed nightmares of the faces of those they murdered. They long ago lost their moral compass, and desperation became a mere direction in which to go. Josh looked cautiously over the neck of his horse, his face still hidden by the shadow of his hat pulled low to the top of his eyes. The gang caused a nervous itch to his scalp, and a damp spot in the middle of his back.
These were men who fought long and hard in battle, and grew used to never paying for food, ammunition, housing, horses, or clothing. In the war when supplies ran out, they ransacked houses, robbing the rich and poor alike, while caring little for their victims. He despised the men, without knowing a single one, but in his heart, he feared one of the dark brooding men might recognize him. His horse neighed at the smell of the group. He quickly rubbed the face of his horse to calm him down and perhaps avert their attention. Josh knew many months had passed since these men experienced a bath. He did not want any trouble, and promised Zeke not to look for any, but he watched them carefully while resting his hand on the pistol strapped to his right leg. Slowly, he removed the leather safety strap that kept the pistol from falling out while riding the steep hills to their hideaway ranch. He prayed he would not have to shoot to defend himself, or protect a citizen, but with a gang like this, it was best to error on the side of sensible caution.
Women and children, dogs and chickens, all scurried out of their way, as if a dark thunderstorm had descended from the mountains. Josh swore he felt a cold chill leave his body as the last of the men turned the street corner out of sight.
“Creepy looking bunch, don’t you think?”
Josh looked around and found the owner of the mercantile standing nearby with a broom in his hand. He, too, watched the men carefully. Ed Leary, his wife Ruth, and their three children moved to Denver after a drought pushed away their dreams of owning a farm in eastern Missouri, but after moving to Denver, they returned to the store business. The latter brought renewed success, especially since the discovery of gold in the Rocky Mountains. Ed remained a good friend of Josh and Zeke’s, offering advice and a quick wit. Their children adored both boys, but especially Josh. Every time he visited, he magically pulled the same silver dollar from each boy’s ear, while producing a yellow flower for the little girl.
Josh smiled just slightly at his friend. “I think they are former soldiers with a big chip on their shoulder,” he replied as he turned to grasp the hand of his friend. His smile grew a bit larger. “Mind you keep you and your family out of their sight. These men can no longer be trusted to be honorable and decent, if you get my meaning.”
Ed shook his hand firmly, while returning the smile. “Thank you. I will take your advice with great care. You and Zeke need to watch your backs as well. The negotiations with the Indians are not going well. Last week, they burned two farms east of here to the ground, with most of the families killed and two children missing. I know white settlers and the government did the poor savages wrong, but their raiding parties and scalping is forcing the army into a fight the Indians can’t possibly win.”
“I’ll see you when I see you,” said Josh as he grabbed the reins of his horse and swung into the saddle.
“Ride safe, and you boys come for dinner when you can,” replied Ed.
“We will and thank you. I’ll bring you a deer roast.”
Josh tipped his hat to Ed, pulled on the twisted rawhide leads of the two packhorses, and began his journey out of town. He had only passed a few stores when he heard a gunshot. Instantly, and without thinking, he drew his pistol, while prodding his horse with his spurs to keep moving. He looked in no particular direction, but rather allowed his peripheral vision to capture any movement. His reaction was the result of his raider work behind the enemy lines during the war, where a moment of hesitation could result in the loss of his life, or the lives of his friends. His brain ruled out all of the town’s normal habits and routines, and zeroed in on one of the rough riders with a bottle of liquor in his left hand and a pistol in his right, as he stumbled down the steps to the saloon. Josh turned his head away as the man shot his pistol once again into the air.
“Just a drunk,” he muttered to himself, and then kicked his horse to hurry out of town. “It’s time for us to go home, old boy. Time to go back to our peaceful and quiet mountains,” he repeated in a whisper. He holstered his pistol, and tied off the horse leads to his saddle horn as they left the streets of Denver.
He galloped his horse and the packhorses for over a mile before relaxing his palm on the handle of his pistol, and felt thankful to be heading back to their mountains. As he crested the ridge of the first mountain, he paused to study the trail to the town, checking for followers attempting to track his trail. He waited ten minutes to be sure, and then moved on after seeing nothing moving in his direction. He looked at the northwestern sky and saw a rain cloud. A few more days of rain, he thought. “Just what I need,” he said to no one. He squeezed his strong inner thighs and the well-trained horse leaped forward. “Hee-yah!” he exclaimed.
On the ridge of a beautiful mountain a few miles east of their cabin, Zeke knelt in the middle of a group of bushes, trying his best to remain silent, still, and hidden. He wished the gnat swirling around his face would go away. He dared not move a single muscle to swat the irksome creature because one little sound, one glimpse of movement, and the doe would surely leap and scamper quickly out of his line of sight. Nervously, his finger twitched as he waited for just the right moment. He pulled the rifle tight to his shoulder, and exhaled as Josh had taught him at the military academy before the war. In the mountains, he learned how to hunt, a skill he had not learned as the son of a Maine fisherman. Finally, the moment came. He pulled the trigger. Boom! The crisp shot caused the birds to fly from the trees, while rabbits and squirrels darted into holes, and his horse neighed loudly.
Quickly he stood up, and watched the deer take but three steps before kneeling over and hitting the ground with a thud. He grinned, knowing it had been a good shot, and the deer would provide fresh meat for their winter stores. He walked back to his horse, put the rifle in the long pouch underneath his right stirrup, and swung into the saddle. Carefully, he maneuvered his way around the briar thicket he had hidden in, and meandered over to the fallen deer. He tied the reins for his horse to a tree limb, and checked to make sure the doe had expired. He threw the deer over the back of his horse, and tied it tightly to prepare for the up and down terrain on his journey home. The horse did not like having the freshly killed deer on his back, but with Zeke’s thirty kills this season, the animal had reluctantly grown accustomed to it.
Zeke glanced up and saw rain clouds moving in. He hated riding his horse in the rain, but knew the rain was good for the earth. He grew up in the far north and could take the cold, but damp and cold felt miserable at best. If he left now, he could be home by dark, he thought, and perhaps beat the rain to the cabin. He turned his horse towards the trail leading over the mountain to the west, back towards their valley, and squeezed the horse with his legs to put her into a trot.
They had found their valley in the mountains at just the perfect time of the year. Fall had just begun, the leaves were golden, and yet the grass still green. The creek and rivers flowed with beautiful clear water, and they found the game plentiful. They had but sixty days to build a place to live before the first of many snows, store up supplies and meat, and create winter clothes to keep their lean bodies warm, and food for their horses. The winter arrived on the predicted “Farmers’ Almanac” schedule, but was far worse than anything Zeke experienced in Maine as a child. The snow rose higher and faster, while the temperature descended rapidly. It did not return to light jacket weather until late April. The months preparing for winter raced by, but after the snow began falling, they were forced to slow down on the chores.
With two winters under their belts, they knew what to expect and how to prepare. They added a barn for the animals after the first winter, and a smokehouse for their venison. They used a cave as cold storage in the summer time, and later found gold there after a lucky cave-in. They became rich from their find, but told no one, and certainly never acted as if they had a lot of money. They loved their new way of life, and plotted carefully on how to preserve their paradise and their time together.
Near the top of the ridge, the ears of his horse suddenly rose, so he pulled her to a stop while trying to hear what she might have heard. “What is it girl?” he whispered.
He turned his head in each direction, and picked up the faraway sound of gunshots. The shots came from the east, but most likely on the plains, or the edge of their land. He did not mind settlers passing through, but he dreaded the day he had to tell a family they must move on when they thought they had found their new farmland. At least once or twice a month, they would ride to the high ridges and scan their land for any sign of settlers, hoping to alert the farmers before they began building a cabin.
He moved his horse to the crest of the mountain, and tied her off. He walked to the edge, and looked down into the valley. He spotted a stream of smoke. He hustled back to his saddlebags, retrieved a pair of binoculars he bought in Saint Louis on their way west, and returned to the ledge. He focused the lens until he had a clear view of the smoke. He followed it down until he could see a wagon on fire, and a party of Indians rifling through the boxes they pulled onto the ground. He moved the field glasses to his left, and immediately felt a pain of sadness. His eyes focused on two white men with arrows in their backs, lying face down in the dirt with their scalps missing. He saw a woman, stripped bare with nasty knife wounds across the pale skin of her back, lying dead near a wagon.
He wished he could do something, but knew he was not only late, but helpless to rewind the clock and prevent the attack by the Indians. His emotions remained mixed when it came to the Indians, as he knew the white men took their lands unfairly, and yet he knew from his history classes every civilization grew through difficult times of progress. His heart went out to the family, perhaps a father and son, and a dear mother now lying on the ground. He hoped they died as quickly as the deer on the back of his horse.
He moved the glasses once again until he spotted the leader of the group of Indians, a fierce warrior with black and white stripes beneath his eyes. The Indian held the bloody scalps in his hand as he shouted and yelped triumphantly to his warriors. Another brave lifted a spear in the air with chunks of white meat on the end. Zeke adjusted the glasses, and then gasped when he realized the spear held the woman’s teats. It was a brutal death by a ferocious gang of murdering Indians. He felt there was no honor in killing poor city folks who only wanted a new start as settlers in the west, with dreams of a happy farming life for their families. Zeke returned to his horse and sadly turned for home. It would be a day he would not forget for a long, long time.
By late afternoon, with only a few hours to go, Zeke couldn’t wait until he arrived at their mountain ranch, and get some hot food in their cabin. He cleared a ridge and followed an old deer trail along the top. The trees had grown over the path providing a natural canopy. Zeke thought the trail beautiful and loved to pass through it on his way east to hunt. Even with the rain beginning to fall, he could see the spectacular colors of the fall leaves. He was tired from the long day after leaving before dawn to begin his hunt, but just as he approached a narrow section of the trail, and began weaving in and around some big rocks, he saw the ears of his horse abruptly point upward again.
He said nothing, but slowly leaned back in the saddle indicating a stop command to his horse. She did stop, and then slowly turned her head around to see if Zeke planned to dismount. Zeke remained absolutely still while carefully listening. He thought he heard the soft exhale of a breath, but was it the breath of a human or animal, he wondered. His right hand fingered his pistol before slowly drawing it.
Suddenly, he heard a scream off to the rear of his left shoulder. Quickly he turned, and caught a glimpse of an Indian flying through the air at him. He brought his pistol around to fire, but only got off a quick wild shot before the Indian knocked him off his horse, and together, they rolled down the steep embankment. The warrior tried to smash his brains in with a big tomahawk as they tumbled over each other. Zeke lost his grip on his pistol when he hit the ground, but gave the Indian a hard kick to the groin at least once before he grabbed the brave’s right hand, which held the tomahawk, and smashed his wrist down on a rock. He flinched at the sound of the brave’s breaking bones, but the maneuver worked, and the tomahawk fell away. The Indian screamed at the pain, but defiantly pulled a knife from his waist with his left hand. He snarled at Zeke like a wolf. It scared Zeke, but he knew he had no time to be scared.
Zeke pulled his knife from his boot just as they landed on a small clearing about twenty feet below the trail. The Indian took a quick swipe, nicking Zeke in the upper left forearm. Zeke would have given anything for his military academy sword, as he could have easily finished the warrior with a quick stab. Desperately, he swung the blade of his eight-inch knife to put the warrior on the defensive, but it did little to deter the Indian. Nevertheless, the warrior made a crucial error in judgment by leaping in the air at Zeke. Once his feet left the ground, his opportunities for adjustment left him with no backup plan.
Zeke sidestepped quickly, as if in a sword fencing fight at the academy, ducked, and came up with his shoulder, catching the sailing Indian in the knees and flipping him in the air. As he came around, Zeke lunged and stabbed him directly in the heart as the man descended. The Indian instantly collapsed on top of Zeke. Zeke scurried to get out from under the Indian, not knowing if the man died or not. He saw no movement, lifted the man’s head, and found his eyes in a permanent gaze.
He did not waste any time, fearing other Indians could be in the area. He needed to get back to his horse, and get the heck out of there. He looked up the hill and spotted his pistol just ten feet above him. In an attempt to hide the body, he rolled the Indian over the edge of the mountain, but did not watch him fall, nor did he wait for the inevitable bone crunching impact when the limp body hit the big boulders below.
He hustled to his gun. Just as he reached for his weapon, an arrow flew through the air, slightly grazing his hand. Zip! Cleverly, he did not look at who shot the arrow, but continued his determination to reach his pistol. He snatched it up, and rolled to his right just as a second arrow flew through the air where he crouched. He brought his pistol up and fired just as the second warrior let go of another arrow. The arrow pierced Zeke’s left shoulder, going all the way through with the arrowhead sticking out on the backside. The powerful punch knocked him to the ground, but this time he held on to his gun.
He took aim for a second shot, but saw the bow fall from the hands of the warrior, and then slowly, his limp, lifeless body fell downwards towards Zeke. The body rolled and stopped at Zeke’s feet. He pulled the man over, and noted the stripes on his face. They were similar to the ones he had seen with the binoculars on the Indians attacking the wagon. He wondered what tribe they belonged to. His bullet had hit the man in his right eye, killing him instantly. Zeke knew it was a lucky shot. With his good right arm, he once again dragged and rolled the warrior over the side of the mountain. Normally, he would have kept their weapons to add to their stockpile in the cabin, but now wounded, he kicked their weapons over the cliff.
He waited briefly for another attack, but none came. Carefully, he made his way back up to the ridge with his pistol cocked and held in front of him ready to fire. Each step over the briars and rocks made his face grimace at the pain in his left shoulder, but the adrenaline raced through his veins, the result of his fear and his close brush with death, and forced him to keep climbing. When he reached the ridge, he searched around the area looking for other Indians. He stopped long enough to break off the arrow as it went into his shoulder, but he could not reach the arrowhead on the backside to pull it and the rest of the broken shaft out. Touching the shaft brought tears to his eyes as the pain shot through his body, almost causing him to blackout.
He gave up trying to push or pull it out, feeling he needed to get out of the area before someone missed the dead Indians. He also feared they heard his gunshot, and if so, more of their warriors were rushing to the ridge. He studied the footprints and realized they had been trailing him. He also saw drops of blood and followed them back to his horse. They must have seen or heard him shoot the deer, and easily followed his trail by the blood dripping from the wound to the deer.
He bent down and studied the footprints carefully. Only two pairs of moccasins, but he felt sure there must be more Indians nearby.
He broke off the limbs of several spruce trees and wiped the trail clean, including the area where they fought. He felt it would be bad enough if they captured him, but worse if they knew he had killed two of their tribe. He led his horse down the trail, then went back and wiped the new trail clean, and continued doing so for about two hundred yards. Painfully, he climbed into the saddle and nudged his horse forward. When he reached a creek, he turned away from the cabin by walking his horse up the stream, trying to avoid leaving any trail for the Indians to follow.
It was then he almost passed out from the loss of blood from the wound. He forced water from his canteen down his throat, hoping his body would make additional blood. He placed a rolled up rag over the wound in the front to slow the blood loss, but he couldn’t do anything about the exit wound. The blood dried around the shaft protruding from his back, slowing the blood loss. He left the creek and made his way to the cabin. Several agonizing hours later, he slid off his horse, and led her into the barn, closed the door, and staggered as he struggled to make his way to the cabin. He opened the door hoping Josh had returned from Denver, but the cabin remained empty. He latched the door, laid his rifle on the table, and made his way to the stove. He moved a pot of water close to the fire so it could begin heating up, tossed some recently split firewood into the coals, and began pulling his jacket off.
The pain nearly made him faint, but he sighed, took a breath, and tried again. It then dawned on him he could not get the jacket off because the arrow had pierced it on the front and back. He looked around the cabin for a tool to pull the arrow out. He found nothing. He grabbed a mirror and held it high over his head so he could see the arrow. The stone point was bigger than he thought it might be, and it stuck out of his back about two inches.
He moved to the center of the room and turned slowly, looking for a solution, when an idea came to him. He returned to the door, pulled up the latch, and slowly opened it just a little. He moved his back to the door, and carefully centered the arrowhead in the slight crack of the frame and the door. He pushed into the door with his back squeezing the arrowhead. Bolts of pain shot up his back to his brain. He felt he had only one shot at getting the arrow out. Once he had the door closed, he pushed back his hips tightly until he could close the latch on the edge of the handmade door, tweaking it just a bit.
He took a deep breath and tried to fall forward. The arrow held for a second, suspending him briefly before his body abruptly fell forward, leaving the arrowhead in the door. The pain overwhelmed him. Zeke hit the floor face first, mercifully knocking him unconscious.
Josh had pushed his horses hard, making the six-hour trip in four hours. He would stop and rest the horses, give them some feed, and then move on. When he reached the ridge just south of the cabin, he let out a whistle. He expected to hear Zeke’s whistle in reply, but heard nothing. It puzzled him, but he kept going assuming Zeke was out on a hunt.
When he reached the cabin, he felt something was wrong. It was just too quiet, though it was close to midnight. He pulled his coat back and away from his pistol, just in case he needed to draw it quickly. He opened the barn and led the horses in. He found Zeke’s horse with the deer still on its back. It was an odd sight, as Zeke would never have left his horse saddled with game still tied on top. His heartbeat picked up speed.
Hurriedly, he untied his horses and closed the door. He drew his pistol and crept towards the cabin. When he reached the door, he stepped on something. He looked left and right, and then slowly bent down and picked up the pointed end of a broken arrow covered in blood. He pushed in on the door, but discovered it latched.
“Zeke? It’s Josh, let me in,” he said.
He heard nothing and tried again. He thought for a second and then retrieved his knife from his boot, and swiftly slipped it between the boards and pulled upwards. The door was tight, but on the second try, it came open. He pushed in a few inches, but the door stopped. He slid in through the small sliver of an opening, and discovered Zeke on his face on the floor with a dark blood stain on the back of his jacket, and a jagged torn hole in the upper shoulder.
“Zeke? What happened? Are you okay?” asked Josh as he quickly knelt down.
Zeke remained silent and cold. Josh latched the door, and then lifted Zeke and carried him to the bed. He gathered the pot with the warm water, and their medicine box, before returning to the bed. He began cleaning the arrow wound front and back. He managed to get Zeke out of his clothes, bathed the dried blood from his skin, stitched up the wound, and got him under the covers.
Then he began praying. He had no idea how much blood Zeke had lost, or how long he had been lying there, but it scared him. He sat at the edge of the bed all night, getting up just long enough to put another log or two on the fire, and make some coffee. Now and then, he would place his hand on Zeke’s heart to feel the beat. Each time, he sighed slightly with a sweet smile of relief that it was indeed beating strong.
He kept his rifle propped against the bed, and wondered how far from home Zeke had run into Indians. This was the first attack on either one of them, though they both knew it was always a possibility. They had seen Indians on many hikes through the mountains, but felt the Indians had never seen them, as they always remained carefully hidden from view.
The occasional earthquake-like tremors, large geysers, and several small ones in the valley felt like a godsend to Josh and Zeke. The sudden exploding streams of steaming hot water terrified all the tribes. Zeke told him the tremors happened because deep beneath their land must be a dormant volcano. The hot molten earth heated spring water, causing it to boil until finally, it became too big for the cavity and spewed out the top like water out of a teakettle. There were numerous hot springs in the area as well, and the boys built the cabin just a few steps from a hot bubbling stream, creating an outdoor hot tub for them to bathe.
Several of the springs were too hot to get in for bathing, and constantly boiled like a pot of water on the fire. Many Indians believed the area the result of evil spirits, and did their best to stay away. Sometimes, the hunters would take a weeklong journey around the valley just to avoid it. For these reasons, he suspected Zeke had gone over the far ridge in the east to find game, but the sound of his rifle might have brought the Indians to him. He hoped they didn’t follow his trail home.
While the valley and its bad spirits discouraged the Indians, it remained perfect for Zeke and Josh. There was plenty of wood to build a cabin, smokehouse, barn, and keep their fires going. The gold rush ended almost two years before their arrival, so many of the white men who came in the early wagon trains had long since moved farther west. They found evidence of their digging for gold, including some deep shafts into the side of the mountains as well as broken wagon wheels and tools. Denver just recently became the capital of the official United States Territory and thus, the town continued to grow. They could find all the supplies they needed at the mercantile while primarily living off the land for meat and vegetables.
Josh soothingly wiped the sweat drops from Zeke’s forehead, and replaced it with a soft cool cloth. He spooned a few drops of water down his throat. He knew Zeke must be suffering from a fever. His face was as white as snow, and his lips looked as if they were chapped. He leaned down and kissed his head tenderly. “Come on Zeke,” he whispered. “You can beat this fever. You’re going to get well. You have to.”
Josh tried not to cry, but a single tear slipped from the corner of his eye to his cheek. He wiped it away, put on his jacket, grabbed his rifle, and went out the door to attend to the animals. He got the saddles off the riding horses, and the pack cradles off the packhorses. He removed all the bridles, fed and watered the horses, and hauled the supplies to the cabin. He dragged the deer Zeke shot outside to a nearby tree, tied a rope around its rear legs, and threw the other end of the rope over a high limb. He grunted and pulled until the deer hung a few feet off the ground to make dressing it much easier.
He started back to the barn to fetch his butchering knives when he caught a glimpse of the sun reflecting off something shiny across the valley to the east, on top of the ridge. He froze where he was and tried to spot the reflection once more. He feared it was the Indians that attacked Zeke, but he stared for several minutes and could not find it again. He quickly moved to the barn and retrieved Zeke’s binoculars from his saddlebag hanging over the stall rail. He also grabbed his knives and returned to the deer. He started preparing the meat by removing the skin, and then faked a slight break in his work by moving around the other side of the tree. Quickly, he brought the binoculars to his face, and studied the surrounding mountains while hidden in the low limbs and leaves of the trees. Carefully, he moved panoramically from right to left, but found no sign of any movement anywhere. Relieved, he returned to his work.
He thought back to the first time he had seen a deer skinned and the meat removed. He was about seven and his dad had just returned from a hunt with one of his older slaves. He had two deer strapped across their packhorse. His father washed up outside the cookhouse before coming in and sitting down to begin a late lunch. He told his family about the hunt. Young Josh was fascinated at his dad’s adventure, and wandered out of the cookhouse and down to the barn where two slaves pulled the deer into the air just as he had done.
The plantation owners killed deer so often they were wasteful of the hide, but here in the Rocky Mountains, almost everything might be useful. He pulled the hide off in one large piece and hung it over a limb to dry. He went back to the barn for salt and a clean hide, and laid them on the ground near the deer. He began carving up the meat, salting it, and then taking it to the smokehouse. He left his knives and rifle at the tree while making the short walk back and forth.
In the smokehouse, he snatched a section of a broken antler from a pile in the corner, and used it to hang the meat on one of the many cross poles near the ceiling where the smoke hung like a cloud. Just as he placed a big chunk on the rail, he heard a loud growl. Carefully, he stuck his head out the door, and looked at the cabin, but saw nothing. He crept out the door and moved to the corner of the smokehouse. At the tree was a small brown bear cub eating the spoils of the deer.
Relieved, he decided to try to scare the cub off, but just as he was about to leave his hidden spot, he spotted the much larger mother as she waddled into the clearing. She was at least four hundred pounds and brown in color. He thought she might be a grizzly, but so far, they had only spotted black bears in the nearby forest. She pushed through the bushes easily and joined her cub in feasting on the remains of the deer.
Josh scanned the area and could see his rifle leaning against the tree. He had not put his pistols on, leaving him with only his boot knife against an extremely large bear, who would most likely attack him in order to protect her cub. Thankfully, he had already cut away the best meat and put it in the smokehouse. He carefully relocked the smokehouse door, but knew if the bear got a scent of the meat, she could easily knock the door down. He hoped the smoke from the slow burning fire inside would warn the bear away.
He went into the barn, took the binoculars off his neck, and retrieved a big iron triangle he had purchased in Denver. He thought it might make it easier for them to signal each other. Josh taught Zeke how to whistle various types of tones, and even how to imitate various animals, including a turkey, an owl, and a hawk. In spite of the situation, he couldn’t help but grin while recalling when his boyfriend from Maine said he was going to teach Josh how to whistle for fish. He was pretty sure Zeke was kidding him.
He moved back to the corner of the smokehouse, and cautiously leaned around to check on the bears. They were making quick work of the deer. Momma bear tore off a leg as easily as Josh could swat a gnat. He decided to wait a little longer, hoping if she was full of meat, that she might be willing to leave.
Almost a half hour later, the bears seemed finished with their meal. He held the triangle in one hand and the clang tool in the other. He took a few steps out from the corner of the barn, and began slamming the clang tool down on the iron bar as hard as he could. It rang louder than he thought it might, making his ears ring. He kept walking towards the bears while continuing to ring the triangle. They immediately turned around in the direction of the noise and spotted Josh.
Terrified, the little cub took off for the woods, but momma bear was not scared as easily. She quickly stood up on her hind legs, and Josh gulped when he realized she was over six feet tall. She flailed her forearms in a warning at him. Her claws were huge, and easily capable of ripping through Josh’s flesh like a knife through wet newspaper. She snarled a warning to him, and the effect froze Josh in his tracks, but he kept on clanging the triangle.
The noise must have irritated her, as she dropped her big paws to the ground, gave him one last large growl, a raspy snort, a swing of her right paw, and farted as she turned into the woods. Josh started moving forward again until he reached the deer. He lowered the remains of the deer and dragged the carcass into the woods. He knew various small animals would pick it clean in a day or two. He grabbed the hide, his knives, and his rifle, and went back to the barn, relieved the bears had moved on.
He had made a mistake today, but he vowed he would not leave himself unarmed again. He knew if the bears had been the Indians who attacked and wounded Zeke, he would have most likely died, and they would have killed Zeke as well. He resolved to forever protect himself so he might also look after Zeke.
TWO
Zeke opened his exhausted eyes before dawn on the third day. Without moving his head, he let his eyes roam around the room. The only light in the cabin came from a low fire across the cabin. He looked to his left, and found Josh sound asleep in a most uncomfortable position in a homemade chair by the bed. Zeke smiled slightly while realizing Josh must have arrived and put him in bed. His mouth was dry, making it difficult for him to swallow, so he tried to lift his arm to wake Josh.
Josh had been dreaming about a fictional battle with the Indians earlier that evening, but as often happens, his mind moved to his past, and he found himself in the middle of trying to blow up the Yankee iron foundry in Pennsylvania. He saw his friend Skeeter die from a shot to the head while Josh tried to pull him over the wall. He hated his war dreams, and did his best to recall a better memory of a happier time, but his mind replayed what it wanted in spite of his wishes.
When Zeke touched him, Josh jolted awake as if suddenly bitten by rattlesnake, and quickly drew his pistol.
“Whoa,” said Zeke alarmed at the gun pointed at him. “It’s me!”
Josh blinked his eyes a time or two, and then half laughed as he put the pistol away, “How are you? I thought you were a grizzly!”
“I am thirsty. Can I have some water?”
“Of course, hang on.” Josh filled a mug of water, and brought it to him. “Are you hungry?”
“I’m way beyond that. I’m starved. How long have I been out?”
“I think three days. What happened? How did you get shot with an arrow?”
Zeke took another long sip of water before replying. “I’m lucky, huh? I had been waiting in the briar thicket on the backside of Edger Mountain for several hours when suddenly a deer came into view. I sighted her carefully, waiting for just the right moment, and then dropped her with one shot. I put the doe on my horse and started home. As I rode slowly along the ridge, I thought I heard something take a breath. It was my fault. I should have immediately drawn my pistol and dropped off my horse, but I hesitated. A split second later, a huge Indian leaped across a big boulder, and knocked me off my horse, and together, we tumbled down the hill. He had a tomahawk, and though falling over each other down the hill, he kept trying to bash my head in with it.”
Josh interrupted him, “That head of yours would have broken the tomahawk and scared him to death.”
“Shut up, I’m telling you the story,” shot back Zeke. He took another long draw of water and swallowed hard.
Josh smiled knowing Zeke was going to be all right as he still had his fight in him. “Okay, okay, go ahead.”
“As I was saying, I broke his wrist over a rock while knocking the tomahawk away. He pulled a knife with his left hand so I pulled mine. We fought with knives and I killed him. I started back up the hill after my pistol, and an arrow suddenly grazed my hand. I snatched my pistol, spun, and shot. I killed the Indian just as he released a second arrow that caught me in the shoulder.”
“Let me see if I have this straight. You killed not one, but two Indians?” asked Josh, while shaking his head in disbelief.
“I killed a deer, too. What did you do today or the other day?”
Josh laughed and thought a minute, “I chased a big bear and her cub away with a triangle.”
Zeke gave him a confused puzzled look, “You did what? How could you do that? We don’t even own a triangle.”
Josh walked quickly to the kitchen table and lifted the black wrought iron triangle. “I had just bought it from Ed, so we would have a means of signaling each other. I did not know I would have to shoo the bear away with it.”
“Why didn’t you just shoot it with your rifle?”
Josh dropped his eyes and his face turned red, “Because I took the deer from your horse and began skinning it at the tree, I left my rifle against the tree when I took some of the meat to the smokehouse.”
Zeke grinned. “And how many times have you told me not to go anywhere without my gun?”
“Yeah, I know. I take it you used the door to pull the arrow through? That was clever.”
“Clever maybe, but it hurt like hell. I could not come up with any other options. What’s for supper?”
Josh laughed. “You mean breakfast. It’s almost daylight. I’ll get you a plate. I’m glad you’re awake. I missed talking to you.”
“I can’t say the same,” teased Zeke. “I was unconscious.” He paused a second for effect then added, “But you did look cute in my dreams.”
While Zeke ate, Josh told him about the gang of rough riders in town. He warned him to avoid them no matter what he had to do. Zeke told him about the attack on the wagon train, and the killing of the three people. He told Josh he also saw scalps tied to the waist of one of the Indians that charged him.
“The black and white strips on their faces were the same as on the faces of the two Indians who attacked me. I have to tell you they scared me stupid. They snarled at me like a wild animal. I had no choice but to kill them. They never gave me a chance to say we’re friendly.”
“You and I both know our ancestors began doing the Indians wrong from the moment we set foot on their soil. While in town, Ed gave me several Denver newspapers, and a stack of newspapers from Saint Louis. They went back several years, and I read most of them while waiting for you to come around. I learned the gold rush was over in 1861, several years ago.”
Zeke laughed. “Then how did we find gold?”
“Because we did not know the rush was over. I think we should continue to keep our find a secret, as those thousands of miners would come rushing right back to dig up our land. I doubt we can trust anyone with our secret. One slip of the tongue and our mountain paradise would become a nightmare.”
“Do you think we should continue buying up land around here?” asked Zeke.
“Yes, but we’ll have to continue to go slow to avoid suspicion. Anyhow, as I was saying, what I learned from the newspapers was during the war, they sent most of the army troops back east to fight. This left the plains of the western Kansas and Missouri, and eastern Colorado unprotected. The Ute in the Rockies, and the Cheyenne and Arapahoe from the plains, seized upon the lack of troops, and began attacking and burning out the settlers. All of this land used to be their hunting grounds, and the army took it without giving them a single dollar.
“I don’t think the army left the brightest leaders behind because Colonel John M. Chivington decided to retaliate for these raids on the settlers. Oddly, this idiot used to be a clergyman. Like many folks, he used religion in ways that suited him, and not necessarily the teachings from the Bible.
“Governor John Evans wanted to open the plains as development land for more white settlers. He wanted to increase the population so Colorado could become a state.”
Zeke added, “I guess being governor of a territory is not as much fun as governor of a state, huh?”
“You’re probably right, at least when it comes to an ego. Evans increased the size of the Third Cavalry to run the Indians off their own land. Black Kettle was a chief of six hundred Cheyenne and Arapahos. He sought peace with the whites, and although they followed the buffalo for centuries along the Arkansas River, he moved his village to Fort Lyon to surrender, and made camp at Sand Creek.”
“What happened?” asked Zeke intrigued and still hungry. “Can I have another biscuit?”
Josh smiled and got one from the stove. “I thought you hated my biscuits.”
“Well, normally I do, but I am so hungry, right now these hard things taste wonderful. I might eat your boot next.”
Josh laughed. “Well, anyhow, when Colonel Chivington arrived with the Third Cavalry of seven hundred men, the garrison at Fort Lyon explained Black Kettle had already surrendered. Disappointed, he replied no matter, and made his plans for attack on them anyhow.”
“Didn’t anyone try to stop him?” asked Zeke.
“I guess deep down, everyone was so afraid of the Indians they wanted the tribes pushed out of this area for good. Black Kettle was so proud of his peace agreement that he placed the American flag and a white flag of surrender on poles outside his tipi. Chivington and his troops, many of them drunk, arrived early in the morning on November 29. They hauled four howitzers with them. Chivington did not want any prisoners—only victory. With cannons firing, they charged the village.
“The terrified village of mostly women and children began running and scattering in all directions. The soldiers shot and killed almost everyone, but that was not good enough. They ripped open women’s wombs, smashed the heads of children, stabbed old women with swords, and gunned down anything moving including animals. It was a bloody, gory slaughter.”
“Did they arrest him?” asked Zeke.
“Not right away. At first he was considered a hero, and spoke on the stage of theaters in the area holding up a lanyard of over hundred scalps including the pubic flesh of women.”
“That’s disgusting!”
“Yep, but later Congress forced him to resign. In the inquiry, one of the soldiers said the reason they killed children was because they suspected they were spreading lice.
“Needless to say, the news of this massacre spread like a firestorm from village to village, and tribe to tribe. His shameful disgusting atrocities ignited a firestorm among the tribes. All of the Indians are on the war path, and you and I are sitting right in the middle of it.”
“Jesus,” said Zeke. “What do we do? Should we move?”
Josh dropped his head for a moment collecting his words, “While you were asleep I had some time to think about this. I doubt there is anywhere we could go where they would welcome two men who love each other. I also doubt we could find gold twice, as we were incredibly lucky to find it the first time. That money secures our independence forever. We also love this land. It suits us. We especially love the beautiful mountains in the spring and the huge snowfalls in the winter. We hunt and fish all we want, and the game is plentiful. We have everything we need here.”
“But what do we do about the Indians?”
Josh sighed, “Well, for one, they are afraid to come here. This is the land of the devil. They call the tremors and bubbling water evil spirits. They do not even hunt here. You were on the other side of the mountain when you shot that deer, and they must feel safe there. I say we stay, but we have to be more careful, and we must look for a way to make friends with the Indians.”