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The Way West.
A B Guthrie Jr.
1949.
Chapter One.
THE DAY dawned clear, but it had rained the night before, the sudden squally rain of middle March. Taking a look out the kitchen door, seeing the path lead down to the muddy barnyard and the tracks of his shoepacks splashed in it, Lije Evans was just as well satisfied that things were wet. It gave him an excuse not to work, even if he could be mending harness or fixing tools. Not that he minded work; it was just that he didn't feel like working today.
"Likely I'll go to town, Rebecca," he said, closing the door.
"To talk about Oregon," she said, not quite as if she blamed him.
"Why, now," he answered, smiling at her while he lounged over to a stool, "I hadn't give a thought to what I'll talk about. I'll talk about whatever comes up." He knew she saw through him, and he didn't care. She always had seen through him.
"I don't know why everyone's gone crazy all of a sudden," she said while she wiped the last of the dishes and hung the towel on its peg. "Everyone talking about Oregon, and it so far away you can't think where."
"Not everybody. Not as many as will be."
"It'll blow over. You wait and see." She got the broom out of the corner. "I declare, that dog does track things up."
Evans looked down at Rock, who had let himself fall in the middle of the floor after leaving the marks of his big pads on the worn wood. "Rock's a good dog."
At the mention of his name, the dog lifted his head and got up slow and came over and put his chin in Evans' lap. He was getting old, Evans told himself, seeing the muzzle graying and his eyes beginning to shine dim with years. Rock was half hound and half no-one-knew-what, but he was a handsome dog, white and blue mixed, and a good one, too. "Reckon it's too much to ask him to wipe his feet before he comes in," Evans said.
Rebecca grunted to that while she swept.
"You can't go, boy," Evans said while he stroked Rock's head. "You chew up them town dogs too much. You'll get me in trouble one of these days, that's what you'll do."
"I ain't sure but what I'd say no. Of course you ain't goin', though. It's just talk."
"How's that, Becky?"
"No to Oregon."
"Now, Becky," he said, "don't be makin' up your mind independent. What if I should take it into my head to light out with the rest?"
She grunted again, and Evans knew it was because the thought of their splitting up was so outlandish. Another man, now, might not think she was much, heavy like she was and extra full-breasted, but she suited him, maybe as much for the way her mind worked as for anything else, maybe because she knew him up and down and inside out and still thought he was all right. A man got so he didn't see what other eyes saw; he got so that what he saw on the outside was what he knew lay underneath.
"Reckon Brownie wants to trail along with me?" he asked. "You heard him say he was goin' fishin'. He's diggin' worms now."
"Good thing to do."
"There's a heap of you in him," she said, looking at him. "You used to like fishin' and such."
"And I hate work."
"I didn't say that, Lije. It ain't so."
Evans had to smile inside. Every time he made little of himself, she said it wasn't so. "Oregon," he said, letting his thoughts drift, "it would be a good thing to a man, knowin' he had helped settle the country and so joined it to America." In his mind he went back over his words; they didn't tell what it was he felt.
Becky didn't answer.
"The huntin' and fishin' ought to be good in Oregon. Brownie would like that. A man wouldn't mess with rabbits and c.o.o.ns and possum there. Brownie wants to go."
"Last time you talked, it was the soil was so good."
"Soil, too. Everything."
"How you know?"
"It's what they say."
"d.i.c.k Summers don't think Oregon's so much, not for farmin'."
"d.i.c.k don't look on it that way, is all. He thinks about Injuns and furs and such. Farmin' don't come natural to him."
"He does all right."
"It still don't come natural. You can keep a varmint in a cage, but it don't come natural to him. Not that d.i.c.k's like a varmint."
"You ought to call round on him, Lije. Mattie looks awful poorly."
"Maybe I ought to."
She stepped over toward him. "Lije, we got Brownie to think of and all. Wouldn't do to act sudden about Oregon."
"No. But it wouldn't be so sudden."
"Well?" She strung the word out as she put the broom away.
Evans turned as the door opened and saw Brownie coming in and asked, "Want to go to town?"
The boy answered, "Don't guess so, Pa. It's a fishin' day today."
"It don't matter," Evans answered, still stroking the dog. ''Just thought maybe you was wore out with yourself." He let his eyes travel over Brownie. "I swear, boy, if ever you get meat on them bones, you'll be a sure-G.o.d man." Brownie was, Evans thought, close to a man already, long-boned and hard-muscled, with young whiskers on his face when he let them grow. A good hoy, he was, a shy and backward boy, just coming on to the time when things were hardest, when a man wanted women worse than ever in his life and didn't know how to hold himself in or let himself go, being awkward and afraid. "I hope you catch fish. I got a hunger for fish after all the salt pork and beans I've et." Evans got up. "I'll be goin'."
Rebecca came to the door as he let himself out. "Remember, Lije."
He nodded.
"You ain't as young as you were."
"n.o.body is. But I ain't so old, neither. Thirty-five. A man's prime at thirty-five. Stay back, Rock."
She didn't say anything but closed the door slowly.
He went to the barn and saddled a mule. It was six miles to Independence. He would get there this side of midmorning if he moved right along, and some later if he let the mule laze. He let him laze.
He didn't guess he would join up for Oregon, for all that he would be proud to have a hand in it, to build up Uncle Sam and stop the British. Missouri was a good-enough country. A man could live, even if not fat, if he had a mind to work. He could live and fight fever and trade at the store and hope maybe someday to buy himself a n.i.g.g.e.r and so have more time for doing what he wanted to do. It wasn't that he wanted a pa.s.sel of n.i.g.g.e.rs and a big house and fancy horses, like some had in the cotton country in the south of the state. Maybe he didn't want even one n.i.g.g.e.r. He was a slave man himself, but still, come right down to the quick of it, he didn't know as one man had a right to own another, black or white. It was just that he wanted something more out of life than he had found.
It was likely a foolish business, this going to Oregon, but it was good to think about, like thinking about getting out of old ways and free of old places. Like his pa had said once, telling about coming down the Ohio in a flatboat, there wasn't any place as pretty as the one that lay ahead.
It was a time to think of moving, a time when the fields and trees, for all their raw and naked look, showed they knew spring was coming. The blood flowed quick in the body, and ideas came to a man. Once when his pa's house burned, catching fire in the stick-and-mud chimney, he had felt a little the same way, as if all the things he had been doing as a boy didn't need to be done any more, and he could strike out fresh and build his life as he wanted it. People sure would think he was crazy, knowing what was in his head.
The day would be warm, he thought, as the trail led out of a hunch of trees into a piece of prairie. He could feel the sun where his pants lay flat against his thigh. A woodchuck ambled in the gra.s.s and looked at him, and Evans figured he could shoot his eye out if he had his rifle with him. Mostly, now, he left the rifle at home, for it was heavy and he figured the country safe enough even if some others didn't.
The mule clomped along in the mud. A dull critter, a mule, not knowing the seasons or taking note of redbirds and thrashers fixing for nesting, or hardly knowing whether it was fair or stormy. Or maybe a mule thought about more than a man would guess and went along slow and sad under the load of ideas.
The town showed up by and by, the first cabins squatting on the wet ground, their round or squared logs dark with the night's rain, dogs sniffing at corners and running out to bark, a couple of tents shining white in the sun and three men sitting on a log near by, their rifles close to hand, probably talking about Oregon while they waited for the start. The stores were busy, with customers stepping in and out and blacks unloading goods that teams had hauled from the landing. Three Mexicans with broad peaked hats walked in front of the Noland House, looking like robbers, as the hired hands of the Santa Fe traders usually did.
Two men were standing in front of Hitchc.o.c.k's store, talking ernest. One was Tadlock, the Illinois man who had come to Independence early to talk Oregon and didn't want to join any company already being formed but to set up his own. Tadlock was full of business all the time, or anyway he had been full of business, just as he was now, at the one time Evans had seen him before.
The other man was spindly-looking and had a crop of whiskers that seemed to have molted some. He just kept bobbing his lead to Tadlock, as if to say yes to everything.
Evans said, "How-de-do, Mr. Tadlock."
Tadlock turned and squinted to remember and answered, "Good morning, Evans."
Evans pulled the mule over to a post and got off, feeling a little stiff in the knees, and tied up. He walked over to the two men.
"This is Henry McBee," Tadlock said. "Lije Evans." They shook hands.
"McBee's going to Oregon," Tadlock went on. "How is it with you now? Made up your mind?"
"I wouldn't say I had and I wouldn't say I hadn't. My mind kind of makes itself up if I give it some rope."
Tadlock didn't think that was funny. "Better push it along. There'll be things to do."
"Where you from, McBee?" Evans asked.
"Southern Ohio. Cincinnati, you might say."
"He's a man who knows his mind," Tadlock put in.
"Yes, sir," the man said. "All of a sudden, I sold out and put my woman and young'uns on a boat and hauled my own tail aboard, and here we come, hurrah for Oregon. Things ain't so good in Ohio nohow."
Evans nodded. "Nor here, neither. Let's have a drink."
"'Y G.o.d it's a strong thought," McBee said, and looked at Tadlock and kind of drew in, for Tadlock was shaking his head.
Tadlock said, "I'm not a drinking man." He seemed to think twice and added as if he hardly meant it, "You two go on." He started to move off. "Got a couple of other men I want you to meet. I'll bring them around."
Evans and McBee went into the store. Hitchc.o.c.k had his hands on the counter, waiting for trade. His red-veined, popped eyes swam to them. You could tell Hitchc.o.c.k was a good drammer from the looks of him.
There was the smell of leather in the place, and cheese, and clothes just out of a box, and whisky that had spilled on the counter. The smells mixed with the stink of a pile of furs that lay in the back.
Evans said, "You d.a.m.ned old robber, how about a drink?"
"First sensible thing I heard you say since G.o.d knows when." Hitchc.o.c.k drew two gla.s.ses, and thought it over and drew one for himself.
"Yes, sir," McBee said, scuffing his beard with his knuckles before he drank, "I said to myself, 'Oregon, now, there's a spot for a man.' " His Adam's apple bobbed to the whisky. "No sense in workin' your guts out -and for nothin'."
Hitchc.o.c.k leaned on the counter. "It's like the hydrophoby. You get bit and you're gone. Or it's like a dog with two bones. Can't handle but one but won't let another dog have the other. Let the British have Oregon. We got bone enough."
"You don't hold with movin' to Oregon?" McBee asked.
"Not as long as he's got a counter to lean on and whisky to drink," Evans answered.
Hitchc.o.c.k let his big eyes slide to Evans. "What's wrong with Missouri? Same kind of people here, and more hog meat to eat, and you can sleep dainty in a sure-enough bed."
McBee said, "I guess you don't understand. Fill 'em up, will you?" When it came time to pay, he fumbled in his breeches and finally turned to Evans and said, "I'm d.a.m.ned if I ain't left my money at the wagon."
Evans paid. "You ain't the pioneer kind, Hitch. Let 'em settle, "And you come after, with your bar'ls and calico and ideas of gettin' rich. Storekeepin' ain't what you'd call venturesome."
"A h.e.l.l of a lot you know about it, Lije. A store man's got to he quick on the trigger." He straightened his big bulk, as if to show he was ready for whatever. "And where'd you be without a store?"
" 'Y G.o.d, out of debt," McBee put in.
Hitchc.o.c.k stared at him. "I reckon you know," he said, "that no wagon train's takin' a debt-skipper."
"I was just makin' fun."
"Take away the stores," Evans said, "and a man could lay by some money."
"I get rich, I do," Hitchc.o.c.k answered him, "tradin' for runty eggs and bad mushrat and whatever ain't good enough for you to keep. Man come in the other day and wanted to trade a G.o.ddam rock. Said it was a madstone and never known to fail and when I said why didn't he keep it then, he said he figured he was too lively to get bit and it was slow-movin' men like me needed pertection."
"And did you trade?" Evans asked.
Hitchc.o.c.k nodded. "I always trade, if a man's reasonable. Igive 'im some wooden nutmegs that a d.a.m.n Yankee pa.s.sed on me oncet, 'fore I was old enough to have my eyes open. I traded him all right, and the rock was so hard and slick it wouldn't pick up honey, let alone pizen, and then I threw the rock away and figured I got the best of the deal."
"How so?"
"Tradin' nothin' for nothin', I got shet of the nutmegs. It always hurt my pride, lookin' at 'em."
Evans heard the door squeaking open and turned around and saw Tadlock coming in, and with him two other men, one looking to be not much more than a boy.
Hitchc.o.c.k's slow gaze went to Tadlock. "I know it ain't whisky you're wantin'," he said, as if a man that didn't drink was queer beyond knowing, maybe remembering when everybody drank and even a preacher would take a swig or two so as to be able to talk some extra fire into h.e.l.l.
"Right," said Tadlock. "Evans, shake hands with Curtis Mack. And Charles Fairman. And this is Henry McBee."
They shook hands all around. Charles Fairman was the young-looking man. He had a good face, with dark eyes and a high forehead and a seriousness about him that meant he had seen more years or trouble than a man might think at first.