The following material is an extract from NOT JUST ANY MAN, A Novel of Old New Mexico, Copyright © 2018 Loretta Miles Tollefson. Published by Palo Flechado Press, Santa Fe, NM
A Note about Spanish Terms: This novel is set in northern New Mexico and reflects as much as possible the local dialect at that time. Even today, Northern New Mexico Spanish is a unique combination of late 1500s Spanish, indigenous words from the First Peoples of the region and of Mexico, and terms that filtered in with the French and American trappers and traders. I’ve tried to represent the resulting mixture as faithfully as possible. My primary source of information was Rubén Cobos’ excellent work, A Dictionary of New Mexico and Southern Colorado Spanish (University of New Mexico Press, 2003). Any errors in spelling, usage, or definition are solely my responsibility.
CHAPTER 20
But there are other things besides Jones to think about. After the fight, Michel Robidoux leads Ewing Young to the other side of the village, where he and his men had bedded down beside the Papago warriors. The trappers’ animals, guns, and ammunition have disappeared, but their bodies are still there. Even the most experienced men gag at the sight. Naked corpses are strewn across the campsite. Arms and bashed-in heads have been severed from torsos. Torn holes gape in stinking bellies and chests, although it’s not certain whether knives or beaks did the work. Ravens and vultures wheel overhead.
The trappers turn immediately to the task of burial. Once the top crust of sand and rock is clawed away and the damp soil underneath is exposed, the ten holes are easy enough to dig. Creating the stone cairns that will protect the dead from being dug up again is another matter.
But they definitely need protection. The birds of prey ride the sky in endless circles as the men lever rock out of the sides of the arroyo, haul it to the burial site, pile it into place, then scour the death site once again to make sure there’s nothing left for the birds or any other scavenger. In the process, Michel Robidoux stumbles on a cache of beaver traps, most of them mangled beyond repair. He picks through them and grimly collects the twelve that appear to be most mendable.
It’s a two-day task that leaves no time for anything else, so it’s easy enough for Gregorio to avoid any interaction with Jones. But once the trappers are back on the Salt and have returned with relief to the business of trapping, Jones picks up his program of harassment.
There’s a new edge to his attention, now. His eyes follow Gregorio around the camp. And he seems to be spending more time there than the other men. His trap lines are set in remarkably short order and he’s back with his morning haul well before any of the other men.
Under the constant surveillance, Gregorio’s work appears to slip. The sugar he’s left on the rock slab that serves as a table tumbles to the ground for no reason, the beaver skins he’s stretched fall from their tree branches in the night, the food he serves the men is sprinkled with grit or is too salty to eat.
Jones points out every error. Gregorio keeps his eyes down and goes about his business without comment, without apologizing for the mistakes he hasn’t made. At first, Ignacio tries to intervene, to point out Jones’ proximity when the sugar falls or to monitor the cooking pot so Jones can’t get near it. The trapper simply begins playing tricks on Ignacio, too.
Gerald watches it all helplessly, well aware that any intervention on his part will only make the situation worse. What he doesn’t understand is why Ewing Young doesn’t step in. Can’t he see what Jones is up to? But Young seems oblivious to what’s going on.
But then, Young has other things to worry about. He’s pulled the trappers off the Gila River and turned them northeast, up the Black. The narrow river canyon is thick with beaver. The big rodents have created a series of dams and the water seeps for miles between the dry hills at the base of the rugged cliffs on either side of the stream. The men have to wade through knee high marsh and fight through dense thickets of scraping willow, but the take in pelts is worth the discomfort. They trap steadily onward.
The hills on either side are dry rock spotted with patches of dusty juniper. Their bleakness makes the valley, with the long-stemmed grasses, bushy willow, and wild rosebushes that crowd the edges of the beaver ponds, even more inviting. Beyond the smaller stuff, where the ground is more elevated, is a narrow strip of juniper, cedar, and occasional ponderosa, the ground underneath crowded with undergrowth. Even in February, with no leaves showing yet, the brush makes for hard going unless a man stays at the base of the dry hills or is lucky enough to stumble onto a dim animal track.
Eighty miles up, the river forks. Young divides the men into two groups, one to each branch, separating Jones and Gregorio in the process. Jones, Pattie, Smith, and Maurice LeDuc move with Young’s party up the fork that heads due north. Gregorio, Ignacio, and Gerald join Robidoux, Sublette, and George Yount in the party that moves up the northeast branch.
Not having Jones around makes life more pleasant, although there’s little time for anything but the drudgery of trapping, butchering, and stretching skins day in and day out. The scenery changes as they move upstream, and the air cools as the elevation rises. Gerald is surprised at the relief he feels at the temperature change. Then he realizes it’s not really the heat he objects to. It’s the fact that it’s this hot in February. It just doesn’t feel natural.
But as they move upstream, it begins to feel more like the way February had felt in the Sangre de Cristos. The streams are frozen solid and the beaver are deep in sluggish winter sleep. There’s little point in breaking through the ice to set traps they aren’t likely to investigate.
Gerald’s team turns downstream, moving rapidly now. They reach the rendezvous point at the river fork half a day ahead of Young’s party. Jones seems quiet enough when he rides into camp behind Young, but his eyes narrow when he sees Gregorio. It’s clear the man’s attitude hasn’t changed.
The group trapping the west fork has gathered about a third more pelts than Gerald’s party. Ewing Young shrugs. “You just never can tell,” he says.
“Mollie’s got other things t’ do,” Enoch Jones smirks. He crouches beside the fire and pokes at it with a stick. “Ain’t figured out yet not to use green firewood, either.” He grins maliciously at Gregorio, who’s on the other side of the fire, stirring the stew for the evening meal. “’Fraid t’ go inta the woods to collect dry fuel, little boy?”
Just then, Ignacio enters the clearing, his arms full of broken aspen branches. He drops them onto the ground beside Jones, then begins cracking the smaller pieces over his knees and tossing them into the flames. Sparks shoot up and Jones jerks back. “Watch what yer doin’!” he growls.
Thomas Smith laughs. “Too bright fer ya, Jones?” he asks. He turns to Gerald. “How far’d that fork go, anyways? Does it really head as far as the San Francisco?”
“Nigger mollie lover!” Jones spits. He glares at Smith, stands, and stalks into the woods. Gerald focuses on Smith. As he begins describing the terrain near the head of the Black’s northeast fork, Smith, LeDuc, and Young all lean forward attentively.
~ ~ ~ ~
The trappers move down river the next day, back toward the Gila. Since they’re travelling through an area they’ve already trapped, there are no pelts to process, and little to do once they’ve made camp. Young has slowed the pace and they make camp before nightfall each day, giving the men time and daylight to mend traps and take a breather.
And to clean up a little. On the third afternoon from the fork, Gerald slips through the brush to bathe in a side stream. He’s returning along a narrow deer trail, half-bent to avoid the crowding willow branches, when he hears a guttural man’s voice in the small clearing just ahead.
He slips closer and peers through the bushes. It’s Jones, growling deep in his throat as he shoves Gregorio Garcia, chest first, his arms twisted behind his back, into the rough bark of a wind-battered ponderosa. As Gerald watches, Jones grabs Gregorio’s hair and grinds his face into the thick bark.
Then Jones releases the boy’s head. He grips Gregorio’s arms with his right hand and fumbles at his crotch with his left. “I’ll show you how it’s done, Miz Mollie boy!” he growls. His cock springs free of his clothes, and he grabs Gregorio’s cotton trousers, and gives them a yank. The back seam gives way with a ripping sound and exposes the boy’s bare buttocks. “I’ll teach you t’ be a man!”
Gerald moves then, and the sound of dry sticks breaking underfoot catches Jones’ attention. As the big man’s head swivels, Gregorio twists free. His right hand sweeps to his waist. Gerald glances at him in surprise, and Jones’ head swings back to the tree.
There’s a ten-inch long knife blade in Gregorio’s fist. It glitters in the sunlight as his knees bend slightly, balancing his weight. Jones’ eyes narrow as Gregorio’s arm swings up and out.
The knife slashes into Jones’ right shoulder, but he doesn’t flinch. “Little bastard!” he grunts. “I’ll teach ya a lesson you won’t forget!” He grabs Gregorio’s wrist with his right hand and twists the knife from Gregorio’s grasp as he reaches for his own blade.
Gregorio shrinks against the ponderosa, his eyes wide with fear and Gerald steps free of the bushes at the edge of the clearing. He pulls his maple-handled knife from his belt as he moves across it.
Jones, focused on Gregorio, seems to have forgotten anyone else exists. He chuckles as his bone-handled knife moves to Gregorio’s throat, then lifts a small piece of the boy’s cotton shirt with the blade’s tip. Jones grins maliciously. “I think I’ll just start here and work my way down,” he says. “Give ya somethin’ to think about before I get to where I’m goin’.” He glances down at himself, still uncovered and bone-hard. “We got time.”
“Time to reconsider,” Gerald says to Jones’ back.
Jones glances around in surprise. “Oh. Ya wanta share?” he asks with a lascivious grin.
“Let him go.”
Jones releases Gregorio’s shirt. “You wanta play too?” He snorts as he adjusts his trousers to cover his crotch. “I can take on both of ya and whup ya solid!”
Gerald glances at Gregorio. The boy pulls at his clothes, trying to straighten them. “You all right?” he asks.
As Gregorio nods, Jones lunges. Gerald’s head snaps toward him and his hand lifts, his big steel blade steady. They edge around each other, watching for an opening, as Gregorio clutches at his clothes.
For a big man, Jones is surprisingly agile. But Gerald, slimmer and younger, is still quicker on his feet. They dance around each other for an endless ten minutes, sizing each other up. Jones’ eyes become mere slits as he realizes the man facing him isn’t going to be cowed.
Suddenly, the big man darts in, slashing past Gerald’s blade, but Gerald slips sideways and away. As Jones turns to follow, Gerald makes his move, reaching in to slice Jones’ left wrist and force him to release the bone-handled knife.
Jones staggers back and drops his weapon. He steps sideways, but the grass has become compressed and slick from the men’s maneuvering and his feet slip out from under him. As he drops to the ground, he leans forward and grabs the dropped knife with his right hand.
“Just let it go,” Gerald pants, stepping back. “Leave him alone and we’ll call it quits.”
“You ain’t bested me yet, ya molly-lovin’ nigger bastard,” Jones snarls. He presses his left hand against his side, trying to staunch the blood from his wrist. “I ain’t through with you.”
“Enough blood’s been shed,” Gerald says. He glances toward Gregorio, who still stands frozen by the big ponderosa. “Go on,” he tells him.
Jones scowls. “He ain’t goin’ nowhere and neither are you.” He staggers to his feet. “I ain’t through with either of ya!” He lunges on the last word and his blade slices Gerald’s right forearm as Gerald dances away.
Then they close again, but Jones is awkward now, wielding the bone-handled knife right-handed. Even his feet seem to behave differently.
But Gerald is also weakening. He reverses his grip on the maple handle, holding it waist level, the steel blade broadside against Jones’ weapon. As Jones moves forward to take advantage of this adjustment, his feet slip again on the crushed grass. His weapon drops to the ground as he lurches chest-first toward Gerald and his upraised knife.
As Jones tilts toward him, Gerald jerks his knife up and away from the man’s belly. The steel slices upward and twists sideways. As Jones sinks onto the mashed-down grass, Gerald’s blade sinks sickeningly between the ribs into this big man’s right side.
They’re both on their knees now. Gerald, still clutching the maple-handled knife, has been carried forward and down by the force of Jones’ fall. He catches himself and leans backward, releasing his grip on the knife.
“Nigger bastard!” Jones growls. He wrenches himself up and back on his heels, glares into Gerald’s face, then grabs the hilt of the knife with his bloody left hand. He grits his teeth and yanks the blade free. Blood gushes from the wound, but he barely glances at it. He tosses Gerald’s knife toward him contemptuously. “That the best you can do?”
Gerald opens his mouth, but Jones clearly isn’t looking for an answer. Instead, he scrabbles in the grass for his knife and staggers to his feet. He points the big blade at Gerald, then Gregorio. It wavers slightly and he tightens his grip and presses his right hand against his bleeding chest. His eyes are icy-blue slits of fury.
“I ain’t done with you yet,” he growls. “You follow me an’ yer a dead man, ya mollie bastards.” Then he turns wildly away and crashes through the brush toward the riverbank, moving upstream.
Gregorio stares at Gerald. “He is—.” He takes a deep breath and puts a hand on the ponderosa’s thick bark, steadying himself. “You killed—”
“That may be,” Gerald agrees. He pushes himself to his feet. “It’s hard to say just how badly he’s hurt.” He looks toward the trail that Jones has left in the undergrowth and suppresses the sudden bile in his throat.
He feels drained, all the tension gone out of him. He tries to stiffen his resolve. Will Jones return? If he does, his anger toward the boy will be ten-fold. Curiously, Gerald feels no anxiety for himself. He stands, breathing in the knowledge that he’s knifed a man, perhaps killed him, feeling again the sensation of the knife sliding almost softly between Jones’ ribs. He feels curiously detached. It’s quite a different sensation from shooting at fleeing Indians. He looks down. There’s blood on his knife and his hands.
“You’re hurt,” Gregorio says.
Gerald lifts his right arm and looks at the cut in surprise. He’d forgotten it was there. Now that he’s remembered it, he can feel the pain stinging along its length. He wipes at it with his left hand. “It’s only a scratch,” he says. “Smith’ll fix me up nicely.” He glances down at the boy’s torn cotton trousers. “Can you twist those together enough to keep them up until we get back to camp? We need to tell the Captain what’s happened.”
Gregorio pulls at his trousers, trying to make himself presentable, and looks at Gerald anxiously. “But not everything,” he says.
Gerald turns away, toward the path to camp. “I don’t think we need to go into particulars,” Gerald agrees.
And he’s right. In fact, he’s a little startled at the lack of surprise when he announces that Jones has fled upriver with a wound in his chest. They all seem to have a pretty good idea of what’s occurred in the woods. Smith silently bandages Gerald’s arm and Young doles out a small dose of whisky.
Gerald explains three times that Jones may be fatally wounded before Ewing Young details a group to search for him. Smith, LeDuc, and Pattie head reluctantly into the brush while the others wait out the next three days, desultorily repairing traps and other gear, and speaking of anything but the events in the clearing.
When the three men return, they report that they followed Jones up and then across the river, across the dry hills, and through a break in the canyon walls. Then the tracks disappeared. Although there’s little cover in the rock-and-sand terrain above the canyon, they didn’t spot Jones or see any sign of a body.
“Probably holed up somewhere to die,” Thomas Smith says with a shrug. He nods at Gerald. “Serves the bastard right.”
Ewing Young frowns. Regardless of the man’s character, Young is still responsible for him and it irks him to not know for certain what’s happened to him.
“That’s some knife arm you got there,” James Pattie says to Gerald. He shakes his head and glances at Gregorio. “It must of felt good to finally shut that man’s mouth.”
“We’re gonna hafta give him more opportunities with the Injuns,” Smith jokes.
Gerald smiles thinly and looks away. He’s cleaned his knife blade a good half-dozen times, but it and his hands still feel unclean. He wonders what his father would think about the use he’s put the knife to.
He studies his fellow trappers. Only Young seems concerned that they haven’t located Jones or know what’s happened to him. Is this the way of these men? Are their trapping partners as expendable as the natives? Their attitude sheds a new light on their lack of interest in his own status. Is it possible that they don’t care about the color of his skin simply because they don’t care about him? He stirs uneasily.
“Griz’ll get him,” George Yount suggests.
“Too tough t’ eat,” Thomas Smith snorts.
Gerald grins in spite of himself. Too poisonous to eat, is more like it. And yet—. He shakes his head. Jones is an insatiable bastard, but he’s still a human being. It doesn’t seem right to leave him or his dead body alone in the wilderness. And Gerald’s hands still shake slightly when he remembers the way the man’s chest gave under his knife blade, the gush of hot blood. His stomach twists and he flattens his hands against the piece of cottonwood log he’s sitting on, pressing them down on the soft gray wood. He gazes into the fire.
Inexplicably, his thoughts turn to Suzanna Peabody. What would she think about the trappers’ indifference to Jones’ fate? And how will she feel when she learns Gerald has killed him? Will she think his actions were justified? Not that she’ll ever know the worst of what Jones did, the reason for the fight in the first place. Not from Gerald’s lips.
And Gregorio won’t tell her. Even these hard-boiled trappers are unlikely to speak of such things in the Peabody’s parlor. She’s safe from the worst of it. She’ll only know about the man’s attempt to force a kiss from herself. And that certainly won’t justify a knife fight. Or a death.
Gerald shrinks away from the thought of those black eyes directed angrily at him and resolutely turns his mind to the hunting of beaver. They’ll be back on the Gila soon, and moving down it toward the Sonora’s Red River, what the Mexicans calls the Colorado. That’s where Ewing Young believes they’ll do most of what he calls their ‘real business’—trapping the furry banknotes that will recoup the expedition’s expenses and make some money besides.
Young seems to have put Jones’s almost-certain death behind him. Gerald wishes he could do so that easily. Maybe trapping will help. It’s an exhausting business, but he was relieved to get back to work after the Papago fight, and it’ll be a relief to get back to work yet again. This time, Jones and his crudities won’t be shadowing the campfire. Though the big dirty-blond man shadows Gerald’s dreams now in a way he never did before the altercation in the clearing.
Yet, if Jones is truly dead, he won’t be in Taos again, shadowing Suzanna Peabody’s footsteps. The thought produces a guilty lightness in Gerald’s chest. He shakes his head. It’s a strange mix of emotions. A sense of relief beside a deep guilt at feeling relieved. And guilt that he stabbed the man. Surely there was another way to deal with Jones’ animosity toward Gregorio and himself. Though Gerald can’t think what he could have done differently.
Gregorio himself has grown quiet and avoids Gerald’s eyes when he distributes the food at mealtimes. Is he also suffering from guilt? Or shame that he wasn’t able to handle Jones on his own? Gerald shakes his head and lifts himself off the old cottonwood log. They’ll be moving out tomorrow, and he needs to reorganize his possibles sack.
Copyright © 2018 Loretta Miles Tollefson
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