Go West~Chapter 51

Chapter 51 The Cave

Go West

by DiVoran Lites

Chapter Fifty-One

 

Ellie

When Ellie and Lia were finally allowed to get off the horses, they found themselves inside a large cave on the edge of a cliff. Furstus and Lastus unpacked the horses and made a fire.

“You can kill that one if you want to,” said Lastus, “but this one is my little darling’ and you ain’t touching her. I saw her first a long time ago when she was making a picture at the pond and she hurt herself and fainted and… He leaned over and kissed Lia on the cheek. She tried to spit at him, but he dodged it. “You know durn well I want a woman of my own, and I’m picking this one.”

“Oh, shut up you low-down ugly old skunk.” Furstus shook his head. “Now you women, if either of you can cook, do not tell Ma. She’d take it hard if she thought we didn’t like her cooking and brought someone else to take over.”

“Neither of us can really cook,” said Ellie quickly.

Lastus pulled something from his pocket and bit off a chunk filling his cheek with it. He held what looked like a hard, brown cake up to Lia. “Have a chaw, sweetie?” he said, offering to share. Lia shuddered and shook her head.

“Don’t you like this kind of tabaccy? It’s Ma’s favorite” said Lastus. “She might like you better, sir, if you weren’t so hairy,” Ellie said, coming up with a plan to get his bowie knife away.

“Might you, Miss?” He looked at Lia who sat on the stone floor rubbing her wrists.”

“I might,” she said, cutting her eyes at Ellie and then quickly back at Lastus.

“Good, I’ll give you a haircut and a shave.” Ellie said.

“You don’t look like you got anything to cut with,” the young man said.

Ellie recalled Aldon wanting to hang a gun belt on her and wished she had accepted it. She had no idea whether she could actually shoot somebody, but she thought if they made a move to hurt her or Lia, she’d be willing to give it a try.

“I can cut your hair with that knife.” She indicated the knife in a scabbard attached to his belt. “If it’s sharp enough, I can shave you too.” Just in time, Ellie had recalled Granddad’s mention of the pride most men took in the sharpness of their various knives.

“Ya got a deal,” said Lastus. He pulled out the knife and began to rub the blade on a small whetstone from his pocket. “I always keeps my knives as sharp as my brain in case one a them bears gets mad when we’re trying to kill it.”

Lia fanned her face with her hand and Ellie knew it was a way of saying, what a lot of bologna.

“All right, hand it over.” Ellie ordered.” He slapped the knife handle into her palm. “Sit on that rock. I’ll shave you first.”

When he was clean-shaven she picked up a strand of greasy hair, sliced it off and threw them in the fire. She kept cutting until the tangle of curls had been tamed into a short, military cut.

When she finished, she angled the broad blade into the last rays of the dying sun so he could see a reflection of his appearance. He turned his head this way and that and ran his hand over his cheek. Having been shorn, he looked almost harmless—and much younger than Ellie had imagined.

“Is that me?” he said, his voice full of awe. “Why I’m a right pretty sight, ain’t I?”

“How many years have you?” Lia asked, her voice subdued.

“I don’t rightly know. How old are you, Miss Lady?”

Trenta, old enough to be your mama,” Lia snapped.

“Oh, no, Ma’s a real old lady. You’re beautiful and I want you to come live with us. I’ll treat you good, I promise, and I won’t let Ma hit you and I won’t let Furstus be mean. I do all the clothes-washing and I’ve got a pair of real good sad-irons. I know how to use them, too.”

“I can’t, Lastus, I am married all ready and my husband and I are going to have a baby.”

“I had no idea, that’s wonderful!” Ellie interrupted. “Oh, I hope you’re all right.”

“Yes, I am sana, how you say, full of good health. And the bambino, is so tiny he would not be hurt by such a day.” Lia looked smug and rather proud of herself.

 

Go West~Chapter 50

 

Chapter 50

Go West

by DiVoran Lites

 Chapter Fifty 

Aldon

After what seemed like a long day, Aldon and Sheriff Oates arrived at the tumble-down cabin of Mrs. Stump Slater.

‘Hello the cabin,” Aldon shouted as the two men got down off their horses. Immediately the cabin door opened. A small, bent woman hobbled from the house, lifted an ancient rifle and shot at the Sheriff’s right foot. She only missed by an inch or so. Aldon put his hands in the air, but had to lower the right one to the Sheriff’s shoulder to keep him from picking the woman up and shaking her like a dog shakes a rat. Aldon got a small thrill from the fact that someone besides him had a bad temper, but he had to quickly attend to the sparrow-like woman in the brown, homespun dress.

“What you want?” she asked motioning for them to lower their hands.

“We’re looking for your sons, ma’am,” said Aldon.

“How do you know my sons?” Mrs. Slater asked.

“The law wants them for questioning.” said Oates.

“Them no-good stupid-heads ain’t here,” she said.

“Can you tell us where they are?” The sheriff had his hand on his sidearm, and Aldon knew it was in case the woman lost her temper and decided to shoot them after all.

““The last I saw ‘em they was riding downhill talking about bringing home some brides,” said Mrs. Slater.

“Who would those brides be, do you suppose?” Aldon sensed a letting down in the old woman as if she had carried the boys about as far as she wanted to.

Where did they go?” Oates asked yet again.

“Lastus done took a fancy to a dark-headed hussy, that’s all I know.” The woman’s mouth hung slack and she shook her head. “They don’t tell me nothing. All they do is eat, hunt, and fight.”

“I know where they are!” Aldon said with sudden inspiration. He got on Chief. Oates, as he always had, followed Aldon’s lead. “It’s not far.”

“Do you know what hussy she was talking about?” The sheriff’s horse set down its hooves carefully as they existed through the weedy pasture in front of the house.

“I do.” Aldon said. remembering a Sunday when the family had come back from church and Lia told about hurting her ankle and a stranger carrying her home. “If they took her, they’ll be anxious to give her back by now, she isn’t the easiest person in the world to be around.”

“Used to having her own way, is she?” Oates stopping talking then as Aldon urged Chief through the trees ahead of him.

After half an hour they came to a steep trail winding upward and Aldon knew Oates would remember the area where they’d ridden together with Paul and Bill when they were boys. “Hold up here.” Aldon said going around a bend and getting off his horse. “We’ve got to plan our maneuvers.”

“We ain’t had nothing to eat all day,” Oates complained.

“I’ve got the canned beans we bought at the store in Clifton before we left town.” Aldon reached his left hand back and patted the saddle bag.

“I ain’t eating no more canned beans if I have to starve.” Oates’s stomach rumbled as if it didn’t agree with his statement.

“Keep quiet. Let’s figure this thing out.” said Aldon.

“You’re not sweet on your boss’s wife are you?” Oates asked with raised eyebrows.

“Good Grief! Whatever ever gave you that lame-brained idea?”

“You’re in such an all-fired hurry, I thought you had a personal stake in the outcome of this here enterprise.”

“Maybe I do, but it’s not the boss’s wife. I can tell you that for certain sure. Signora Solano hardly ever goes anywhere without her sidekick, Ellie, and if Ellie’s there we have a better chance of collecting those women safely. Ellie’s got horse-sense.”

“That’s a relief. It wouldn’t do for you to be sweet on a girl with nothing horsy about her at all.” He grinned, but kept his distance. “I always knew once you fell in love that would be all she wrote.” Ignoring him, Aldon gave a loud, two note, bob white whistle that sounded like the real thing.

In a moment an answering call came winging over the hill.

“There now,” said Aldon, “I taught her that, isn’t she something?”

“Yeah, except this ain’t mating season.”

“We’ll sneak up and get them away from those Slater boys.” Aldon was the one grinning now.

 

DiVoran’s Promise Posters, Paintings from Go West as well as other art can be purchased as note cards  and framable art

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Go West~Chapter 49

Chapter 49

Go West Chapter 

by DiVoran Lites

Chapter forty nine

 

Ellie

Leaving the horses at the bottom of the trail, Ellie and Lia hurried toward the waterfall. When they turned the corner, they were surprised to see two figures standing at the edge of the pond with their backs to them. The tall one wore a ratty looking stove-pipe hat with greasy black hair flowing over his shoulders. The other man, short and round was talking. The minute the men sensed Ellie’s and Lia’s presence they swung around. “Well, looky here,” said the short one. His voice was high-pitched and gleeful, with a touch of innocence in it. “Here they is. Can you believe our luck? Grab them before they get away.”

By the time Ellie and Lia realized the men meant to seize them, it was too late to escape. Both tried to fight them off, but Ellie ended up held fast by her wrist.

“Give me that one, too,” the tall man grabbed Lia away from the other man and held a wrist in each hand.

“Let go of me.” Lia struggled but couldn’t pull loose.

“Ha ha.” The tall man said. “Quite the feisty one, ain’t you? That should make Ma happy. She can beat up on somebody besides us.”

Remembering granddad’s folksy saying, you can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar, Ellie counseled herself to relax and tap into the power of God that she had been experiencing lately. “May I inquire, sir, what you are going to do with us?” she said in a cool voice.

“This here bean-pole is my brother Furstus, and I’m Lastus.” The hairy man, who resembled a bear, smoothed his beard, grinned a wide grin, and made a bow. “He was the first born and I was the last born. That’s why Ma called us Furstus and Lastus. Do you get it? What we’re doing here is setting us up some brides. Mama needs help scraping deerskins, washing clothes, and cleaning the fireplace. She don’t want no help with cooking, but she is looking for some grandchildren and she expects me and Furstus to supply ‘em.”

“Get down there where we left them horses,” Furstus dragged both women stumbling along behind him as if he were a horse pulling a cart. He didn’t pause even when Lia almost fell. Ellie steadied her and made a shushing sound to quiet her. She figured that the less noise they made, the least annoyed their captors would be.

Summer reared once when she saw and smelled the interlopers. Ellie expected her to bolt, but when her hooves came down she stood quivering. “Hold on, girl, it’s okay,” Ellie said softly. Summer recognized her voice and stayed long enough for Ellie to mount. The mare held steady while Furstus tied Ellie’s wrists to the saddle-horn. Knowing men could sometimes be rough and rowdy, Ribbons stood still while Lastus tied Lia’s hands behind her and her feet together and threw her over Ribbon’s saddle. Ellie was startled into objecting. “Don’t do that to her. You’ll hurt her.” The heavy-set man frowned but the other one laughed.

As they rode uphill, Ellie recognized the terrain from former trips into the mountains. The caves she had seen from the shelf road could be approached in a round-about way and soon the women found themselves off the horses and sitting on the cold stone floor of a cavern.

“Take these ropes off immediately!” Lia demanded, her voice growing stronger as she began to speak Italian and release her ire.

“Let’s kill them and get it over with,” Furstus eyed the knife and licked his lips. He then gave a high-pitched laugh that seemed calibrated to terrify anyone within a five mile radius.

 

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Go West~Chapter 48

Chapter 47 On the Train

Go West

by DiVoran Lites

Chapter Forty Eight

Aldon

“When he heard that his old friend, Aldon, hadn’t eaten since supper the night before, the sheriff, Phil Oates, said, “Let’s get you some breakfast. I won’t ask you up to the apartment. Lily is feeding the kids, and company gets them too excited. Besides, today is wash day. Anyhow, she’d like to see you, but let’s give her a raincheck.” After they were seated in the hotel restaurant, and the waitress had taken their order, Aldon told his friend the reason for his visit.

“You could have caught them boys easy yourself, but I’m glad you came all the way down here for me,” Sheriff Oates replied.

“I want everything legal.” said Aldon.

“We’ll arrest them, all right, but there’s no hurry. They’ll never leave the mountain, they don’t know anything else.” Sheriff Oates took his star from the breast pocket of his vest, breathed on it, and polished it with the linen napkin from the table. He pinned the sliver-plated symbol on his vest. “There’s a shiny target for the bad guys,” he said patting it.

“So let’s get going.” Aldon mopped the last of the egg yolk off his plate with a piece of toast and stuffed it into his mouth.

“Yeah. I’ll take my horse, Sagebrush. He’s used to me, and we make a pretty good team.”

When the train arrived they loaded Sagebrush in the stock car and then walked through to a passenger car for the journey. Once the train left, Aldon made his way to the caboose and stepped out into the open air of the caboose balcony. He tried not to think about Ellie, but it was no use. He went back inside and threw himself down in the seat opposite Oates.

“What’s got into you, ole buddy?” Aldon’s friend asked.

“Ah, nothing’.” Aldon gritted his teeth and jammed his fist into his other hand as if into a baseball glove. He started to tell Oates what was bothering him, but at the last second, he changed his mind. “Those boys have no business stealing our cattle.”

“That’s what outlaws are for. You wouldn’t want me out of a job, would you?” Oates grinned, Aldon didn’t. “Maybe we’ll get these ones. A couple weeks ago, the butcher at the grocery store sent his boy for me. Some rustlers had brought a couple of beeves down the alley to the back of the store and asked to get them cut up. I hurried over there with the kid, but the thieves had left the carcasses and lit out of there. I had to confiscate it ‘cause I didn’t want them coming back for it. It’s in the town freezer till I find out who it belongs to. Maybe it’s yours. We’ll find out. Sounds like this would be a good time to catch them and put them away until the circuit judge comes here.”

“How did you and Lily meet, anyhow?” Aldon asked. As they went through the gorge sheer cliffs loomed a thousand feet overhead, casting gloom down the track.

“What do you want to know that for.” Oates asked. When Aldon sat and stared without answering, Oates said, “You know we been married since I came back from the Great War?”

“That was me standing next to you at the wedding,” Aldon said in a sarcastic tone.

“What are you being so gol-durned cantankerous about?” Oates said. What’s a-matter with you, you ain’t yourself today.”

“Get on with telling me about your wife,” Aldon growled.”

“Okay, but settle down, man. I didn’t do anything to you… Lily worked at the hotel, and so I went to eating my meals there every day. It cost me, but it was worth it…tasted better than my own cooking too. We’d talk and I’d leave her a good tip. She was a looker. We got along fine and we both wanted the same kind of life, so we decided to get married. And that’s that. Why are you asking?”

“Did you love her? “ Aldon asked. “Was she one of them flapper girls?” Nervous, he scratched a mosquito bite through his shirt.

“She was just a ranch girl come to town to make her fortune. One of the Johnsons, you know that family that had the mostly white appaloosa?”

“I met a flapper from Chicago,” Aldon broke in. “She was pretty and smart and I thought we liked each other.”

“Then what happened?” asked Oates. “Quit scratchin’ and get to talking before you rub a whole in your shirt.”

DiVoran’s Promise Posters, Paintings from Go West as well as other art can be purchased as note cards  and framable art

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