Summer of the Star (eBook)
100 Seiten
Blackstone Publishing (Verlag)
978-1-5047-2578-1 (ISBN)
Recalling his early life as a young cowboy, sixty-two-year-old Madison Carter remembers his first love: her name was Estrella O'Sullivan, and he met her the summer he turned sixteen back in 1873.
The summer of 1873 marked Madison's last drive up what is now called the Chisholm Trail. It was the first time he tasted oysters and the only time he pinned on a badge. It was the summer of longhorns, miserable heat, friendship and betrayal, and murder. In the end it was the summer the whole world came crumbling down on the United States, and Madison's world crashed too.
The summer of 1873 was the year Madison watched a bunch of men die. One of them was a man he killed, an encounter one never forgets.
Johnny D. Boggs has worked cattle, been bucked off horses, shot rapids in a canoe, hiked across mountains and deserts, traipsed around ghost towns, and spent hours poring over microfilm in library archives-all in the name of finding a good story. He has won eight Spur Awards, making him the all-time leader in Western Writers of America's history.
Recalling his early life as a young cowboy, sixty-two-year-old Madison Carter remembers his first love: her name was Estrella O'Sullivan, and he met her the summer he turned sixteen back in 1873.The summer of 1873 marked Madison's last drive up what is now called the Chisholm Trail. It was the first time he tasted oysters and the only time he pinned on a badge. It was the summer of longhorns, miserable heat, friendship and betrayal, and murder. In the end it was the summer the whole world came crumbling down on the United States, and Madison's world crashed too.The summer of 1873 was the year Madison watched a bunch of men die. One of them was a man he killed, an encounter one never forgets.
C H A P T E R
1
Funny thing is we never planned on taking our herd of two thousand beeves to Ellsworth that year. Major Luke Canton, our trail boss, had us bound for Great Bend, which is where we drove Mr. June Justus’s herd the year before. My first trail drive had been in 1870, when Major Canton had hired me to ride drag all the way from Atascosa County, Texas, to Abilene, Kansas. As I was only a button, Mama didn’t want me to go. She’d heard enough stories about Abilene that compared it to Sodom, but she trusted the major, who had served with Papa in Hood’s First Texas Brigade during the late unpleasantness. With her being a widow—Papa had died of fever somewhere in Virginia—and us needing all the money we could get to fight off Reconstruction tax hounds and carpetbaggers, well, $30 a month and a bonus at trail’s end went a far piece in them days to putting food on the table and clothes on the back of a widow and five young ’uns, of which I was the oldest.
So I rode drag, swallowing more dust than I drank coffee, for three long months till we got Mr. Justus’s herd to Abilene, and I brought back a right smart of money, which is why Mama let me ride with Major Canton to Abilene again in ’71, and I came back with even more money because the cattle brought a higher price. The next year, we drove eighteen hundred head to Great Bend, Kansas. That year, I hadn’t saved as much as I had pocketed in Abilene because I was older, more restless, and after months in the saddle, baking in the sun, I was more interested in trailing along with the older drovers and sampling refreshments of the liquid and horizontal variety, though the major wouldn’t let me do none of the latter and little of the former. Said I wasn’t of age yet. In 1873, I figured I’d bring home even less money, since I would turn sixteen somewhere in the Indian Territory and be old enough for all sorts of raucousness, but I promised myself not to come home dead broke like most drovers would. Besides, Great Bend wasn’t as woolly as Abilene, though it did have enough saloons to slake the thirsts of hundreds of drovers.
The reason we went farther west in ’72 and ’73 was because the righteous-minded citizens of Abilene had decided they wanted nothing to do with Texas trail herds, or rather Texas trail drovers, after 1871. Other Kansas towns, however, seemed downright inviting, so we picked Great Bend. Mr. Justus, who rode up the trail with us each time but never strayed too far from the chuck wagon or the major, figured he had gotten a fair offer at Great Bend, so in April of 1873, Major Canton hired me again—the major had the say-so on the hirings, though it was Mr. Justus’s money—and we pushed beeves north.
I never had romantic notions about trail driving because I had grown up on a ranch, although Papa’s half section looked like a speck of dust compared to all the land June Justus claimed. Pushing beeves was tiresome work, eighteen hours a day in the saddle, getting rained on, or having dust blown into your eyes—sometimes at the same time. We seldom saw wild Indians, never fired a gun at one, but all of us boys carried six-shooters, even the major’s son Tommy, who was my age on this, his first drive up the trail. ’Course, Major Canton usually made Tommy keep that old Spiller and Burr in his saddlebags, but I carried a brass-framed Griswold and Gunnison .36, the one Papa had carried so valiantly when he rode off with the major to fight against Yankee tyranny. Major Canton had brung it back to me, after Lee’s surrender. Said I was the man of the house. Not that I ever had need of that old thumb-buster.
I’d bet this Schoolmate and a year’s supply of tobacco that most of the boys riding for the major could not hit the side of a chuck wagon at five paces with a six-shooter, the exceptions being the major, of course, Larry McNab, and André Le Fevre.
Larry McNab was another reason Mama let me go see the elephant all those years. Looking back on it, I think Larry fancied my mother—after Papa’s death, I mean—and maybe she took a shine to him, but nothing ever came of it, probably because Larry was a cowboy with nothing to offer a widow and her brood of young ’uns.
Back when I was nary more than a button, Larry McNab had the reputation of being the best horseman in South Texas. He was more than a bronc’ buster, though he rode the rough off of many a cowboy’s string long before we Texians started driving herds to Kansas. Larry knew things about horses that most riders figured only a horse could savvy. Often enough he could gentle a mustang before he ever grabbed a fistful of mane and threw his leg over the saddle. Still, he had taken his share of falls, suffered more broken bones than I’d care to count. Knots dotted his left forearm from where the bones hadn’t healed properly. I would guess that he wasn’t even fifty years old in 1873, but he was as stove-up then as I am now at sixty-two. He couldn’t ride widow-makers anymore, but he could handle a team and a shovel. That’s why the major always hired him as our cook.
Couldn’t cook worth a farthing, I tell you, but his coffee you could swallow if you were thirsty enough, and his bacon wasn’t too burnt. Back in those days, you didn’t have to be the chef at the Driskill Hotel to dish up grub for a dozen or so cowboys. All that was important was that you could drive a chuck wagon, make some food that wouldn’t poison anybody, and handle a shovel without complaint. For the $50 a month he earned, Larry McNab never once complained. And as rawhide as he looked, and the way we had heard he could handle both long gun and short, nobody riding for Mr. Justus ever took exception, except for some friendly joshing, with his grub. Anyhow, Larry liked me—maybe on account of my mama— and treated me fair. He gave me pointers after supper during those first years on the trail, never forgot my birthday no matter where we were, and made sure I was on a good swimming horse whenever we came to a swollen river. I liked him, enormous.
Can’t say the same for André Le Fevre.
The drive of ’73 marked the first time he had hired on with us, so no one knew him at all, yet long before we crossed the Red River out of Texas, we all decided on putting some distance between him and ourselves. He was a man-killer, had that look anyhow, a loner who did his job well enough to ride flank or swing, sometimes even point, but who turned mean when in his cups and sometimes even meaner when he wasn’t. Tommy Canton told me that Le Fevre beat up a soiled dove when we stopped at Fort Worth and came close to killing some cardsharp he claimed was cheating him, at Saint Jo. Lean, leathery, his pale face pitted from the pox, Le Fevre had sky blue eyes that looked dead. He carried a silver-plated Smith & Wesson No. 2 revolver in .32 caliber that he was always cleaning. Come a lightning storm, sane cowhands would toss revolvers, spurs, even pocketknives into the chuck wagon, but not André Le Fevre. Criminy, he even slept with that gun.
Well, now that I’ve mentioned lightning and Larry McNab’s knowledge of working a spade, I might as well tell you what happened, as it had a bearing on the rest of that summer . . . the rest of our lives. Cattle get trail broke after a while. We pushed them hard the first few days once we left Mr. Justus’s ranch. Wore the beeves out, and us, too, but pretty soon the cattle got the notion what we wanted from them, and they didn’t cause us too much trouble. I’m not saying this made our job easier, as we always had to be on guard, and the days never got shorter, but up until we got past the Bluff in Kansas, just over the Indian Territory border, it had been a rather peaceable drive, if you don’t count André Le Fevre’s alleged ructions in towns.
That’s when a gully-washer and lightning exhibition sent all two thousand of Mr. Justus’s beeves running like mustangs and scattering like cottonwood fur during a cyclone. Thunderstorm hit us sudden-like. We had bathed in the Bluff that afternoon, and I was sleeping in my long johns when the rain started pelting me. Rained so hard the drops felt like ice-cold buckshot, and before I could pull on my duck trousers and boots, sharp lightning struck nearby, thunder pealed like cannon fire, and I heard the rumbling, felt the ground shaking, and knew what was happening.
“Stam-pede!” shouted Byron Guy, who was riding night herd with Marcelo Begoña.
Thought for certain the herd was heading straight for camp, so I kicked free of my pants and ran for the horse string. I imagine it looked downright comical to God, if He was watching us that eve, because most of us jumped into the saddles wearing nothing but threadbare undergarments and soaked hats. We kicked our mounts and went chasing the frightened beeves, which weren’t running for camp after all, but in the opposite direction, driven by the wind and rain while lightning popped all around.
I’d never been in a stampede like this one. A herd bolted on us once on the way to Abilene that first time, but that was down in Texas, and I warrant they didn’t run for more than a mile at the most. The major said they had been feeling frisky was all, and once we got them settled down, he pushed that herd so hard they never felt frisky and inclined to run again. Fact was, none of us cowboys felt frisky till we reached Abilene. This time those longhorns weren’t frisky, but terrified. So was I.
Eventually they ran themselves out, and we got them circling, milling about till they wouldn’t run again. By then the thunderhead had moved westward, so we all drifted back to camp, all except Davy Booker and Fenton...
| Erscheint lt. Verlag | 1.5.2016 |
|---|---|
| Sprache | englisch |
| Themenwelt | Literatur ► Historische Romane |
| Literatur ► Krimi / Thriller / Horror | |
| Literatur ► Romane / Erzählungen | |
| ISBN-10 | 1-5047-2578-6 / 1504725786 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1-5047-2578-1 / 9781504725781 |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
| Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
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