The Sons of Grady Rourke

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The Sons of Grady Rourke Page 11

by Douglas Savage


  Rev. Dr. Ealy read the Protestant graveside service while the Irishmen of the House looked on from under their wide brims. Mary Ealy’s strong voice led the citizens of Lincoln in a hymn of mourning for the foreigner in their midst who did not know enough not to draw on a duly constituted posse. Jesse Evans and the Boys sang behind her like a dirty-faced heavenly chorus.

  And above it all rang the clear tenor voice of Billy Bonney who loved to sing at church on Sunday mornings in the hard town of Lincoln, once known as La Placita del Rio Bonito.

  While the mainly Catholic and Irish House prayed across from the mainly Protestant Tunstall-McSween store, the two brothers Rourke looked at each other over the open hole in the rocky sod. Each man waited for the other to blink and look away. Neither did. Sean wondered why his brother’s eyes were so full of anguish. Each had been in the enemy’s camp for little more than one month—hardly time to form bonds worthy of much grieving. When Patrick’s gaze drifted down toward Melissa’s eyes the color of the bright, mountain sky, only then did Patrick blink and look down at the clods of frozen mud soon to fall upon John Tunstall.

  The voices raised on the banks of the Rio Bonito carried into the white hills above the hamlet. It echoed through the barren rocks and around smooth hills until snow-heavy trees smothered it into just another gentle breath of pine scented wind.

  “MAYBE A WEDDING? Can’t be church, can it?”

  “I didn’t think it was Sunday. Must be we lost count.”

  “Must be,” the large black man nodded. “Sure it’s Lincoln?”

  “Sure only of that much,” the thin white man smiled. “It’s the day of the week I ain’t swearing to.”

  Both men chuckled and spurred their horses through the little hills close to town. Their long, wool coats were blue. Blue trousers with a gold stripe on the outside of each leg were pushed down into knee-high cavalry boots. Each rider rode easily in his deep-seated McClellan saddle.

  “Main road should be ’round them trees,” the white man pointed. The older, black man followed silently between the hills.

  The lead rider looked young with gray eyes, rosy cheeks and a red try-hard beard. His whiskers were thin and unconvincing. His narrow shoulders made him look like a boy ahead of the massive man close behind. The older man’s face was clean-shaven except for a gray mustache. The road opened before them after an hour.

  “There. Only another two miles west, Cyrus.”

  “Good eye.”

  “Could do it blind from here,” the young man said cheerfully.

  In the thin air, the two riders did not hear hoofbeats behind them until the lone horseman was nearly beside them. All three men reined in their mounts and squinted at each other beneath the high sun.

  When Patrick Rourke exhaled at the two men in blue, his face was obscured by a veil of steam. His pale eyes were wide.

  “Liam.”

  “Patrick? What’s that on your face?” The pink-faced boy smiled warmly.

  “A damn better beard than you sprouted, little brother.”

  Liam Rourke stroked his chin with his gloved hand. His cavalry gauntlet reached to the elbow of his govemment-issue greatcoat. Then he reached over to grab his brother’s open hand.

  Patrick looked across to the black man who appeared to be twenty years older than the youngest Rourke.

  “This here is Cyrus Buchanan. He and I rode together on the trail of Chief Joseph. He’s my friend.”

  Patrick’s tired eyes nodded civilly toward the black man. The brother leaned over his horse’s ears and extended a gloved hand. “Patrick Rourke, Sergeant Buchanan.”

  Cyrus took the hand into his yellow gauntlet.

  “Patrick.”

  The middle brother eyed the blue uniforms, greatcoats, and military saddles.

  “You mustered out yet?”

  “Six weeks ago,” Liam said, blowing steam toward Patrick. “They give us the clothes and tack ’cause it being hard winter still on the Canadian border. Got our civvies in the saddlebags. No use wearing out the knees in our own pants across seven hundred miles of open country.”

  “Guess not,” Patrick said.

  “Did Sean get the lawyer’s letter and come home yet?” Liam sounded anxious to count heads.

  “In town. We rode in together six or seven weeks ago.” Patrick shrugged toward the east where the narrow road disappeared into a crease between gentle hills.

  “And you?”

  “Moved into Pa’s.”

  Without asking about the soldiers’ plans, Patrick smiled at his brother and reined his damp horse toward the west. As if answering the unspoken invitation, the men in blue fell into position on either side of Patrick. Riding silently while the sun dipped toward the southwest, Patrick occasionally glanced sideways just to assure himself that his long lost brother was really at his side and not a mean snow mirage.

  BONITA RAMOS HAD never seen the new deputy up close. She pretended not to notice his disfigured cheek. But Sean could feel the warmth of her gaze on the purple side of his face. He had wondered how the dark-faced woman in her middle thirties could regard herself as Melissa’s friend when they could never have shared a single conversation. Sean reminded himself that he was again at the mute woman’s table for his evening meal in her tiny home and that she had never uttered a word toward him either.

  “Reverend Ealy planted the Englishman real pretty,” Bonita said with little trace of Spanish in her accent. Her Anglo mother had seen to that before her Mexican father sent the white woman away twenty years ago.

  “It was done proper,” Sean said through the beans in his mouth.

  “Why did Mr. Tunstall try to shoot Mr. Evans?” Abigail asked. Before Sean could swallow his food, he saw Melissa touch the little girl’s hand and gesture toward her plate. “I just wondered, Mama.”

  Melissa tapped the plate again and Abigail looked disappointed as she studied the mule stew.

  “Guess he didn’t know no better,” Sean volunteered. Pretending it was the beans that made him choke on his words, he reached quickly for his coffee cup.

  “But he lived here almost long enough to be American,” Abigail argued softly. “He seemed like a nice man—for someone what didn’t do business with Mr. Dolan.”

  Sean shoveled some beans and chewed very slowly.

  There was no more chatter until Bonita excused herself and walked out into the chilly night. Sean lingered behind. Abigail hugged him and climbed the ladder to the loft.

  Melissa sat near the stove, beside Sean who took a pipe from his pocket. He struck a match on the side of the stove and blew smoke rings toward the ceiling. The silent woman watched his face. She sat on his left so he looked like any other man with a full beard ending beneath his gray eyes.

  The woman watched him smoke peacefully. She could see that a hearty dinner, Bonita’s lively talk, and a quiet pipe did not lighten the weight which he seemed to carry on his furrowed brow. When Abigail blew out the single lantern in the loft, only the red light flickering inside the stove’s open door illuminated the couple’s faces. An oil lamp on the dinner table was damped low and sputtered yellow.

  Sean smoked for half an hour without words. Then he tapped his pipe on the side of the stove and looked hard into Melissa’s beautiful eyes.

  “Morton killed Tunstall in cold blood. Then Jesse killed him again. Just like that.”

  The part-time deputy sighed deeply, stood up, and touched Melissa’s face before she had time to rise. His rough hand lay for an instant on her cheek with a touch as gentle as her mother’s.

  Stunned by the grief in the tall man’s face, Melissa stayed seated until Sean reached for his hat and trail coat that hung from a peg beside the door. When Sean touched the heavy door, the woman stood, picked up the lamp, and walked slowly toward his side. She looked up into the good side of his face. Sean noticed for three weeks that she had a way of focusing only on the undamaged side as if the purple cheek were not there at all. She came close until he could feel her w
arm breath on his beard.

  With Abigail sleeping in the loft, Melissa Bryant laid her hand upon Sean’s, still gripping the cross-bar securing the door. She pulled his hand down to his side and lifted the lamp’s glass toward her mouth. Melissa blew the lamp out. Then she reached up and removed Sean’s hat.

  * * *

  AFTER FIVE EXHAUSTING days since Tunstall’s murder, Patrick struggled to keep his eyes open. Liam and Cyrus continued to talk cheerlully as they passed a jug of sour mash whiskey between them. A fire roared in the hearth at one end of the large room of Grady Rourke’s house.

  At two in the morning, Patrick was fading fast. He turned to Liam.

  “You’re welcome to Pa’s bed,” Patrick said when he could sit up no longer, even without a drop of whiskey. “It’ll feel good after sleeping on the ground for a month. Cyrus, you can bunk out here and I’ll take the loft so you boys can talk all night if you want.”

  “I don’t want to be no trouble, Patrick. I can sleep in the barn.” The big man with sergeants’ stripes on his sleeve looked at the two white brothers.

  “My brother’s friends stay in the house,” Patrick said firmly enough to end the discussion.

  “Thank you.”

  “Ain’t nothing.”

  Patrick stood up with all of the energy he had left. He stumbled on the wooden ladder halfway up. The two retired soldiers heard snoring quickly reverberating from the ceiling beams. They never heard Patrick’s boots bounce onto the floor.

  “Is the house the way you remembered it?” Cyrus spoke over the mouth of a clay jug.

  “Smaller, I suppose. But I ain’t seen it in five years.” He reached for the jug and took a swig without wiping the lip first.

  “What do you make of your older brother riding with the men what killed that Englishman?”

  “I don’t know what to make of it. I ain’t seen Sean since he went west in ’68. I couldn’t have been more than ten or eleven when he left. I don’t know if I would recognize him if he walked through that door.” Liam nodded toward the closed door beside the curtain full of night chill at the broken window. “But Patrick says it’s so. He was part of that posse even if he didn’t shoot him himself.”

  Cyrus shook his head and reached for the jug.

  “It would seem, Private Rourke, that we rode into a hornets’ nest.” The middle-aged soldier was starting to slur his words. He squinted at Liam through the whiskey fog.

  “We been through worse,” the youngest Rourke said grimly.

  Cyrus had the jug half way to his mouth. He stopped short and lowered the jug into his lap. His broad face frowned as memories erupted inside his whiskey-muddled mind. He looked up toward the billowed curtain where the night wind howled over John Chisum’s cattle. Cyrus Buchanan listened as if the wailing outside sounded familiar.

  “Yes,” the older man said softly. “We seen worse.”

  SATURDAY THE 23RD, Alexander McSween awoke early and stood on the windswept porch at South Spring River Ranch when John Chisum rode up from inspecting his fence lines. The cattleman had been in the saddle since well before daylight.

  “You’re up early, Alex.”

  The lawyer watched Chisum dismount with the spry step of a cowhand half his age. Only his square face creased like an old cowboy’s.

  “I am. But John won’t be. Can’t stop thinking about him.”

  Chisum wrapped his reins around one of the vertical timbers holding up the porch roof. He removed his hat and wiped a handkerchief around the inside crown. Though the morning air was crisp, Chisum had broken a sweat during two hours of trotting.

  “Yes, Alex. The report the men brought from town sure don’t sit easy: young John drawing on a dozen armed ruffians like Jesse Evans and his kind. Don’t make sense.”

  “They murdered him. You know that.” The lawyer spoke with anger. Tunstall was a business partner, but McSween had grown to like him in the sixteen months since their first meeting in Santa Fe at the Herlow Hotel. The lawyer never got rich off the Englishman after convincing him to settle in Lincoln County. Tunstall paid him for his counsel by crediting him with shares of the general store ownership. The shares were to equal half of the business by May—by which time Tunstall will have been three months in the ground. McSween had always smiled when Tunstall would launch into one of his soliloquies about America where a man was limited only by the size of his dreams.

  “Yes,” the rancher nodded sadly. Tunstall was Chisum’s partner in the town’s only bank. “I’m sure they ambushed him. John was a businessman, not a shooter. That story about three empty cartridges in his handiron don’t wash with me. At least it don’t sound like the House men know you’re down here.”

  McSween stepped into the morning sunshine. He turned his face toward the red sky and closed his eyes. He let the new sun warm his pale skin. Chisum waited for the lawyer to collect his thoughts.

  “I’m going to Lincoln tomorrow.” McSween lowered his gaze to Chisum who stood a head taller beside him. “Dolan won’t kill me. At least not on the main street and not on a Sunday. That isn’t his style. Bushwhacking suits him better.”

  “Brady will lock you up as sure as you’re standing here.”

  “I don’t think so. He’s got the horses for security. I’m going to Lincoln. I want to see how many men will rally to our side of the street if there’s trouble. Will you ride in with me?”

  “Not yet.” The cattleman spoke quickly as if he had already mulled it over. “I’ll send some of my boys with you.”

  McSween turned and held the door open for his host.

  BY THE TIME Patrick awoke, it was Saturday afternoon. He could not remember sleeping so late or being so tired. His feet hurt from sleeping over twelve hours with his soggy boots on.

  Liam and Cyrus were not in the house. Patrick found them outside where they were covered with sweat and grime. The gaping breaches in the fence around the house were closed by new posts and rails. Cyrus saw Patrick first.

  “Good morning,” the big man shouted as he walked up from the barn. “Did you catch up on your sleep?”

  “Yes, thanks.” Patrick held his hand up to shield his eyes from the sun. “Looks like you and Liam have been busy.”

  The sergeant still wore his field uniform with the sleeves rolled up. Sweat dripped into his friendly eyes.

  “This ain’t no one-man operation,” the soldier said cheerfully. “We fixed the fence and Liam is down working on the barn where the wind stoved in the siding.”

  “I’m grateful.” Patrick waited for Cyrus to come closer.

  “The boy wants to ride into town to find your brother.” Sergeant Buchanan appeared to expect an answer.

  “He should see Mr. Shield, the other lawyer. He has Pa’s will.”

  “I’ll tell him. Will you ride in with him?”

  Patrick saw Liam coming up behind Cyrus. “Afternoon, Patrick,” the youngest brother waved. He wore his ragged civilian clothing.

  “Liam. Thanks for the fence.”

  “Sure. Let them cows get their own house.”

  Patrick nodded.

  “I’m going into town to find Sean.”

  “Cyrus mentioned that. You need to look up Mr. Shield in Tunstall’s store. Sheriff Brady’s men are keeping it closed, but the lawyer lives in the back.”

  “I’ll do that. Will you be coming, too?”

  Patrick studied the youngest surviving Rourke.

  “No. I ain’t been home for a week.”

  “I’ll ride in with you,” Cyrus offered.

  “Good. I’d like the company.”

  “Sean’s at the Wortley Hotel this side of town, on the left.”

  “All right. I’ll just clean up first.”

  Patrick looked toward the west, then back toward his brother.

  “You ain’t got more than four hours of daylight left. You could wait till tomorrow.”

  “No. I ain’t much for Sundays. Them cityfolks will be going to church and all. I’ll go today.”
<
br />   “Whatever,” Patrick sighed. “But it’ll be quieter there tomorrow. The House men probably don’t shoot folks on Sunday.”

  Chapter Nine

  ALL OF LINCOLN COUNTY’S SADDLE HORSES SEEMED TO BE tied up at either the Wortley or Ike Stockton’s saloon further down the street. The ranch hands on Chisum’s huge spread and men from smaller ranches throughout the Pecos Valley were paid on Friday. By the time Liam and Sergeant Buchanan rode into town late Saturday afternoon, February 23rd, half of the cowboys were already broke again and the other half were well on their way. Easy women who usually lived in sutlers’ wagons near Fort Stanton began arriving in Lincoln on Thursdays to service the hungry men on Saturdays.

  The two riders tied up to the hotel. Cyrus wore his blue cavalry blouse and Liam wore the ragged uniform of a cow-puncher. The sergeant hesitated outside in the bright chill. He looked into Liam’s face with its boyish beard.

  “What is it?” Liam was anxious to enter.

  “The hotel’s probably just for white folks.”

  “In Lincoln? There’s more Mexicans in this town than Anglos.” Liam smiled cheerfully. “It’s more likely they won’t let me in.”

  Cyrus shook his head, not very convinced. He outranked Liam by two stripes in the Army, but he deliberately fell in behind the white man as they approached the doorway.

 

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