As much as he tried to keep his muscles relaxed, Scratch felt them tense as Hatcher set the brass-tipped end of that short ramrod into the hole on the front of his leg. He didn’t like the idea of what he knew was about to happen, watching Hatcher take his knife from its sheath, grip the blade, and prepare to swing the weapon’s handle at the round ball. He figured Hatcher was right about this, if nothing else: it was gonna hurt.

The last thing Bass remembered was hearing the antler knife handle whack hollow against the hickory ball … then sensed his stomach rise, twisting itself into a fiery knot that hurled against his tonsils before he lost all sensation, the searing red flames of pain mercifully dissipating in a cool blue rush of blessed unconsciousness.

Slipping down, down—scolding himself for ever having thought the pain was going to be unbearable, that it was going to be so bad he’d wet himself there in front of his friends … because right where he was at that moment, Scratch didn’t feel a goddamned thing.

It wasn’t until the following morning that he learned how the others had hoisted him up on the back of a horse behind the muscular Matthew Kinkead, then tied the two of them together before setting off in the dark, riding south and east at a good clip toward the foothills lying tangled at the base of the western slope of the Rockies.

The sun had felt good that morning, despite the fever he was running. Its touch was warm and reassuring there on the back of his neck as he awoke slowly, bouncing gently against Kinkead’s broad shoulders, gradually sensing the rub of the thick hemp rope wound across his ribs and back, slowly realizing what they had done because he didn’t have the strength to cling to the back of a horse by himself, much less hang on to consciousness during their perilous starlit ride.

“Seen any sign of ’em?” he whispered in a hoarse croak that sunup, his words mumbled against Matthew’s back.

“Nothin’,” Kinkead replied wearily.

That one word was spoken loud enough to alert the others that Bass had come to.

Hatcher eased his horse up on the off-hand side, the direction Bass faced with his cheek rubbing Matthew’s shoulder blade. “Mornin’ to ye, ol’ coon!”

“Wh-where we …” Then realized his mouth was terribly dry.

“Where we headed?” Jack finished. “To Bayou Salade, Scratch. Right where we been heading since we pulled away from Sweet Lake ronnyvoo.”

“Mornin’, glory!” Caleb came up on Jack’s off side, smiling hugely as he leaned forward so Bass could see him. “How’s he doin’, Jack?”

“Don’t look to be bleedin’ no more,” Hatcher said. “’Bout all I know is the nigger’s awake and thirsty as the burning pits of hell itself. Let’s see if’n we can find us a cool drink for him up ahead at that line of green, yonder.”

“Likely a crik there,” Wood said, urging his horse into a lope so he could take the lead.

“This time of year,” Kinkead declared, “I hope it ain’t a crik what’s dried up already.”

“Nawww,” Jack said, his eyes smiling at Bass’s pasty face, “there’s bound to be water for this here arrow catcher. Even if we have to scratch for it.”

What there was had been a trickle. Still, enough for the men to water the animals downstream after they untied Bass and eased him down into a patch of shade among the trees where the buzz and drone of summer’s insects accompanied the rustle of the leaves brushed by an intermittent breeze. They brought him the cool water a cup at a time. No matter that it was a little gritty, what with flowing so close over the sandy bottom of the creekbed—it tasted better than he could remember water tasting on his tongue in a long time. They bathed his face and neck, washed off some of the dried blood around the crusty strip of cloth binding up his wounds, and some of the men dozed as the sun rose.

After a couple hours of fitful sleep, Scratch awoke to hear Hatcher rustling the men into motion. They had been off the trail long enough, he told them. They’d get a chance to sleep more that night if they put a few more miles, a few more hours, behind them.

Back onto the horse went Kinkead. Up they hoisted Scratch again, two of them, a third cradling the leg as gently as he could, raising him to his rocking chair behind the saddle, where they retied him to Matthew; then all went to their horses and drove the pack animals away from that narrow little stream.

Not until sundown did Hatcher select a secure place for a cold camp. No fire that night—but not one of them grumbled. They were either too tired to complain, or they damn well understood the stupidity of lighting a beacon that might well call down a reinforced Bannock raiding party on them again. That night Bass grew cold not long after moonrise.

“We’re climbing a bit,” Solomon Fish explained as he knelt and laid another blanket over Titus. “Natural for you to get yourself a chill.”

They kept on climbing the next morning, and for every day across the next two weeks as they tramped through the long hours of sunlight, winding into the high country. From time to time one of the group would point out a recognized landmark to the others. By the fourth day after the scrap with the Bannock, Scratch was staying awake longer as he rocked against Kinkead’s back. And by the end of that first week, he was finally able to move about on the leg, finding he could stuff his left foot into a stirrup and hoist himself onto the back of his horse without the muscles in that leg crumpling, collapsing, spilling him onto the ground.

This matter of getting himself forked astride a horse was something a mountain trapper quickly learned was an affair of life or death. To ride was not a luxury, not some mere convenience. Having an animal and the ability to ride meant survival. To be without a horse, or to find that one could not stay in the saddle, might well be a death sentence.

So again, from somewhere deep inside this determined man, came the strength and dogged resolve to mend himself. Mule-headed stubbornness even more than pride drove Titus to test the leg, to swallow down the pain and push beyond what he had known before as his limits of endurance. At each night’s camp Bass found himself almost too weary to eat as the fire was kindled and meat set to broil at the end of long green sticks driven into the earth around the fire. The ride, that work it took pushing up into the high country, picking a trail along the mountainsides, up and down, then up and down again—it all took its toll day after day. At night he slept so soundly, he rarely rolled over, slept until someone nudged him with a toe, announcing it was time to water the stock, pack, and move out again.

“How far now to this Salade of your’n?” he asked Hatcher of a morning when they were both throwing bundles onto the sawbucks strapped onto the backs of their pack animals.

“Ain’t far now.”

“Take a guess for me.”

“Don’t know for sure,” Jack replied, his eyes back to being merry sparkles of green light. “Can’t say. Soon, though.”

By that time they had climbed east into the heart of the southern Rockies, following the tortuous path of a winding river ever higher as the late summer days continued to shorten by a matter of heartbeats every evening, the air cooling more quickly at twilight, the streams and freshets colder than they had been since spring, fed by those snowfields suspended just overhead above timberline where the marmots squeaked and the golden eagles drifted upon the warm updrafts, searching for another meal.

Up, up as the hooves of their animals crushed the dried, golden grasses having cured beneath the late- summer sun, on across the slopes as they picked their way through stands of rustling aspen, past the wide, bristling boughs of blue spruce, mile after shadow-striped mile of lodgepole forests. Finally near timberline, they turned almost due south, climbing from the headwaters of that westbound river, crossing over to the slopes where a new river system was given birth.

“This here where the Arkansas has its start,” Jack explained late of an afternoon as they topped out on the brow beneath a jagged series of hoary granite peaks scratching at the clouds on both left and right.

Here they let the horses have a blow.

“The Arkansas what flows into the Mississap way down south?”

“The same, friend.”

Bass wagged his head, unable to comprehend it. “Why—I’ll be go to hell and et for the devil’s own tater, Jack.”

“Ye been on the Arkansas, I take it?”

“Never. Just by it, once,” Bass explained. “Never did I figger that water come all the way from these here

Вы читаете Crack in the Sky
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату