The Blows of Sound
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And silence, like a poultice, comes to heal the blows of sound.
~ Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., from the poem "The Music-Grinders" (1836)
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ONE
It was one of those early spring days. It could have been colder than frogs leg, but it wasn't. The late afternoon sun streamed in the window, pushing past the red checked curtains to brush Old Charley's form where he sat with his chair tipped back and his booted feet anchored on the edge of the well-worn table before him. The brim of his ancient felt hat was pulled down to shield his watery blue eyes from the light. It dipped ever so slightly with each indrawn breath and returned to its previous position as it was expelled, as if waving howdy to the pretty day.
Or maybe to the Cartwright boys outside.
He'd heard the pair roll in and had a thought to help them unload their wagon. But it was just a thought. He was an old man and his strength was about gone. Why, his hands trembled when he carried his supper dish to the table. His weren't the hands of a man who had any business totin' nitro!
No, that was a young man's game.
Through the open window he could hear the two brothers talkin'. They sounded right happy and content. Ben Cartwright was a good man and he'd done a good job raisin' those three sons of his alone. It was a shame about that last woman of his. She'd been right nice - and pretty as a little red heifer in a flowerbed. That youngest boy of Ben's, he'd had a hard time of it, getting' past his mama dyin' before his eyes. That boy'd been ringy, riled, on the prod, on the peck, had his bristles up, and been painted for war when he was a young'un. Lately, though, it seemed he'd growed up. The last time Ben'd come up with the boys, the two of them had chewed the fat while Hoss and Little Joe emptied the wagon and loaded the supplies into his shack and Ben had said so it was so.
Charley let out a sigh as he shifted his purchase on his chair and found a more comfortable one. That last run had been just before winter. About a week afore the Cartwrights showed, he'd been shy of brains and gone and got himself laid up. It weren't never smart to argue with an ass - human or animal. His had kicked him in the shin and near broke it. He didn't know until the Ben and the boys left, that they'd done brought him twice what he'd ordered and boarded up most of the chinks in the shack while's they was there so the snow couldn't get in.
They was good people.
Charley chuckled. So good he'd decided he'd just add another star to their crown by lettin' them be his good Samaritans today too.
"Hey, Charley! You asleep?" a jolly voice called out.
He wasn't, of course, but a man had to keep up appearances.
The old man waited half a minute and then shouted back, as grouchy as he could, "I am! Now you hush up, boy! A man needs his beauty rest!"
"How old are you, Charley?" Hoss Cartwright asked as the door opened and he stepped in. "Seventy? Seein' as how you look, I don't think you got enough years left - if you know what I'm sayin'?"
"Are you implyin' I'm pretty far on the shy side of beautiful?" Charley groused as he put his boots on the floor and stood up.
"I ain't implyin' nothin'."
The old man walked up to Hoss and slapped him on the back. "It sure is good to see you, boy," he laughed as he pushed the door to. "You been behavin'?"
The big man looked hurt. "Why, Charley, you know me. I always behave."
"How about that baby brother of yours? He give up throwin' fits yet?"
"Joseph? Don't you know? He's all growed up now." Hoss winked. "That means he only throws a fit once or twice a year and they's little ones."
"What'd you have to promise Little Joe to get him to do all the work?"
Hoss laughed. "Nothin'. Joseph's in a right big hurry. He volunteered."
"I ain't a bettin' man, but I know that brother of yours. I'd put money on there bein' a gal waitin' somewhere for him."
"You'd win the bet," the big man chuckled. "And cause he's in such a gol-darned hurry, Joe told me to come in and wake you up so's you could help too!"
"I got me the palsy," the old man replied, holding up his hands and making sure they shook.
Hoss whistled. "I got me the palsy too, from carryin' them boxes of nitro."
Charley glanced out the window. Little Joe was headed toward the wagon for another load. "I tell you, boy, dealin' with nitro is bad as standin' bare-assed in a nest of rattlers."
Hoss stared at him and then those bright blue eyes of his crinkled and he laughed 'til he cried. "I can see now why you ain't a workin' man, Charley. You're a poet!"
"Don't I know it," he replied with a grin.
Hoss used the back of his hand to wipe his eyes and then looked around the room. "Say, Charley, where's that old yellow cat of yours?"
"Nosey? He's around here somewhere." The old man paused. "Though, come to think of it, it ain't like him to miss out on the action." He pulled at the whiskers on his chin. "You mean you ain't seen him?"
"No." Hoss reached into his pocket and produced two strips of jerky. "I brung him these."
Charley shook his head. A man'd jump like a speckled frog from a dry lake lookin' at Hoss Cartwright. The boy'd stood up before he was weaned and was big and strong enough to derail a freight train. But them as knew him knew that was just on the outside. Inside Ben's middle boy was serene as a prayer meeting and soft-hearted as a parson's wife. The only thing he knew that could drive Hoss to a killin' rage was a threat to his family.
'Specially to that young'un outside.
Hoss turned and headed toward the door. "Come on, old man, let's go find that old cat so's I can feed him." Just as he put his hand to the latch, the big man turned back. "You know what? I bet Nosey's in the shack helpin' Joe unload the - "
ooooooooooooooooooo
Hoss gasped as the floor rolled beneath his feet. He didn't have time to draw a breath before Ol' Charley's ramshackle cabin shook like it had been thrust into the middle of a nor'easter come howlin' down out of the mountains. The walls groaned. Cups jumped off of shelves. A jam jar slipped from the edge of table and shattered as the red-checked curtains keepin' guard at the windows blew in.
It was as if someone had drawn a deep breath - held it - and then let it out in a shout.
Terror gripped Hoss as he heard that shout. He knew it. He'd heard it in the mines after the fuse had been lit and the men told to run. It bounced from tree to tree in the timber camps as a log jam was cleared. He'd even heard it on the Ponderosa as the precarious liquid they'd carried into Charley's shack was used to remove an old tree stump, or to clear away a slide of rock. He could see himself standing a hundred feet away, with his little brother by his side, marveling at the power of that shout - at the power of an explosion, the sound of which could only be likened to the voice of God.
Was this the voice of God come to call his little brother home?
"No!" the big man breathed.
No.
Joe wasn't in that shack.
Joe would be standin' outside the shack. He'd have his hat in his hand and be scratchin' his head and starin' at what was left of it. Most likely that pesky old cat of Charley's done went in there and knocked a bottle of nitro off the shelf and blowed it up. Poor old Nosey. He hated to think he'd blowed up with it.
Hoss swallowed hard over his fear.
Better Nosey than Joe.
The big man closed his eyes and whispered a quick prayer. Then he opened the door and stepped outside.
There was nothing. Nothing left of the shack.
And no sign of his baby brother.
Hoss drew in a breath of disbelief and shouted as well.
"Joe!"
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TWO
"Hoss, where did you leave your brother?"
Fifteen-year-old Hoss Cartwright started guiltily as he turned away from the counter and toward the entry to the mercantile. In the doorway, silhouetted against the waning sun, was the figure of a powerful man. He had his hands anchored on his hips and a scowl on his face.
"Well?"
Hoss winced. "Sorry, Pa. I came to the mercantile to get some taffy for Little Joe and me."
"Oh? Is that what you're doing?" His father's gaze went past him to the counter behind which his classmate, pretty Betty Lou Macey, was trying her best to blend in with the bolts of fabric lining the store wall.
"Yes, sir."
"And just how long have you been here?"
The teen's eyes flicked to the clock Mr. Macey kept on his desk. The wince deepened. "About a half-hour I suppose."
"You suppose?" Pa took a step into the shop. "And where, precisely, is this bag of candy that it took you a half hour to buy?"
Hoss looked at his empty hands. "I…well…." He let out a sigh. "I ain't tellin' you the truth, Pa. I wanted to see Betty Lou and so I - "
"And so you left a nine-year-old boy alone on the streets of Virginia City? Didn't I tell you not to leave your brother alone?!"
His pa's voice got louder and deeper with every question.
"Pa. I didn't! Honest. Little Joe and me stopped at the livery - just like you said we was s'posed to - to pay the bill, and I left him with old Jake. I knew Joe'd be safe there and he'd stay put 'cause he loves horses. You know how Jake always lets baby brother feed them and brush them down and - "
His pa was holdin' his hand up. Hoss closed his mouth.
He had to admit, he had been runnin' it a bit.
"All right," Pa sighed. "We will discuss this later after we get…." His father stopped short and turned toward the door. Everyone in the mercantile did the same.
A wail had gone up outside loud as a banshee howlin' over a grave.
"What in the world?" Pa asked as he stepped outside.
Somethin' sure was wrong. Hoss could see it plain as the nose on his face. Men and women were shoutin' and runnin' in both directions up and down the street. Some of them looked frightened, others confused - and still others, like Sheriff Olin who had ignored Pa's shout as he ran by, determined. When he followed his pa onto the porch Betty Lou came with him. She followed real close and stopped right beside him, lookin' for all the world like she needed an arm around her. Trouble was, he was too scared to do it. As the big teen stood there, tryin' to muster up the courage, Deputy Roy Coffee hustled by.
Pa stepped into the street and caught him by the arm.
"Roy, what's happened? Why is everyone running?"
"You need to let me go, Ben!" the deputy replied. "A couple of mean hombres stole a pair of horses from the livery. They shot Jake, took what they wanted, and left the stable afire! I gotta go now! Robert's countin' on me!"
Pa was shakin' his head. "The livery? Roy, the…livery can't be on fire."
"It sure enough can! Now, you let me go like I said…." Deputy Roy stopped tryin' to pull away and pinned his pa with his pale blue eyes. "Ben, what's wrong?"
"I…." Hoss stepped forward. It felt like his stomach was in his toes. "Deputy Coffee, I…left Little Joe at the stable with Jake not an half-hour ago."
The lawman exchanged a look with his father. As Pa released his grip, Roy said, "You both better come with me."
It took a couple of minutes to get to the livery. It wasn't all that far, but they had to make their way through the crowd that had gathered and was blockin' the street. By the time they reached it, there wasn't much left. Just black beams and smoke risin' into the sky. The whole way there his pa didn't look at him or say nothin' to him and Hoss knew why.
If Little Joe was….in there…it was his fault.
A hand landed on his shoulder. "Hoss," his pa said, "I want you to stay here."
"But Pa!"
"Young man, you've already disobeyed me once today and look what's come of it!" Pa's tone was sharp. "You will stay here! That's an order!"
The tears flowed as he nodded his head. "Yes, sir. But, you'll let me know as soon as - "
"I'll let you know!"
Pa turned on his heel and followed Deputy Roy over to where Sheriff Olin was standing. It was only then he realized why his pa'd forbidden him to follow.
There was a badly burnt body layin' on the ground just outside the livery.
Terror nearly kilt him.
Then, he realized it was too big to be Little Joe. It had to be….Jake.
But if it was Jake and he was dead, then Joe had to be….
Hoss felt a tug on his sleeve. As he shrugged it off, a small frightened voice asked, "Hoss, what's going on? Where's Jake?"
For a heartbeat or two, the big teen thought he was dreamin'. He would have pinched himself if he'd had time but, before he could, the skinny form of his nine-year-old brother shot past him, headed for the burnin' building and the body layin' outside of it.
He tackled Little Joe before the boy could take ten steps.
"Hoss! Jake! What's happened to Jake?" Joe shouted as he twisted in his grip, seeking to escape. "I gotta see Jake!"
It was all he could do to speak. Gratitude choked him.
"Little Joe…boy…where…you been?"
His baby brother's face was streaked with tears. "Missus Jake came by, Hoss. She took me to get some pie. She…"
"Where is she now?"
"She's at…the milliners. I told her I could walk back…by myself." Little Joe turned his face toward the stable again and Hoss did too - just in time to see their father emerge from the ruins.
Just in time to see their father see them.
As the older man ran toward them, Hoss pulled his little brother close and whispered in his ear, "I promise you, Joe. I ain't ever gonna leave you alone again! Not ever!"
oooooooooooooooooooo
"It ain't no use, boy! Ain't no man could of lived through that."
It took Hoss a moment to come back to the present and realize Charley was speakin', and another one to feel the old man's tremblin' hand on his arm. They were standin' just outside of Charley's house, starin' in disbelief at what was left of the line shack - watchin' as the weathered boards burst into flame and smoke and ash rose into the air. What had once been a building was now a ruined pile of debris, man-high in some places.
Somewhere underneath all that debris was his little brother.
The big man fought for words for a second, and then decided there were none to be had. Shakin' off Charley's grip, Hoss ran toward the devastation calling his brother's name.
"Joe! Little Joe! Boy, can you hear me? Answer me, Joe!"
The crackle of fire was his only reply.
Staggered, Hoss halted at the edge of the wreckage; his watering eyes searching the sea of debris for a sign of life.
He didn't find any.
In fact, there was no sign of his brother at all. For a second, hope overpowered the fear in his heart. Maybe Joe had been close but not in the shack. Maybe he'd been thrown free. Maybe he was layin' somewhere, hid in the smoke.
Maybe -
"There! Hoss, look there! Somethin's movin'!"
The big man drew a breath and held it as he turned to look at Charley, and then followed the old man's palsied finger to where it pointed. Somethin' was movin'. Somethin' yellow…and red.
It was Nosey.
The injured cat clawed its way out of the rubble. Nosey opened his mouth but no sound came out. Then he lurched forward and dropped to the ground.
Hoss was there to catch him. He gathered the battered creature in his arms and pulled it close, careful not to cause it any more pain. It was obvious Nosey had been somewhere nearby when the nitro went off - close, but not in the shack. His fur was singed and his body pretty badly broken. But he was alive.
Alive.
"Nosey, old boy," Hoss breathed into the animal's ear, "where's Little Joe? Can you tell me?"
Surprisingly, the cat responded to his voice. Nosey opened his eyes and mewed. The sound was pitiful and it cut through the big man as fear for his little brother grew. Then, to his amazement, the wounded critter worked its way free and headed back into the wreckage.
Fear froze Hoss to the spot. He remained kneeling on the ground as the cat gingerly picked it way through the charred and burning boards until it came to a pile pressed up against an upturned wheelbarrow. The barrow was covered with debris. About two-thirds of its wooden handles was stickin' out and they was broken.
Nosey turned and looked right at him.
"She's found him!" Charley cried.
It was more than he could hope.
Hoss rose to his feet, but stumbled back to the ground as his knees went to jelly. He drew in a breath of the smoke-filled air, coughed, and then tried again. With his legs wobblin' like a newborn colt's, the big man plunged into the wreckage, thrusting still burning boards out of his way with his bare hands - tossing them aside as if they were feathers and weighed nothing. Nails bit into his hands. Jagged metal sliced his pants' legs open and bit into the skin beneath. He didn't care. It didn't matter. Nothing mattered but reaching his brother.
"Alive, God," Hoss breathed. "Let Joe be alive!"
Nosey was waiting, standing guard or so it seemed. The cat gave him one last look as he came abreast the up-ended wheelbarrow and then turned tail and left as if his duty was done.
Little Joe was in that barrow.
At least, the top half of him was. His bottom half was buried in smoking debris. Joe's hands were thrown up over his head but whatever he'd been tryin' to do, it hadn't worked. A trail of blood wide as a man's hand ran down the right side of his brother's face. The collar of Joe's tan shirt was soaked through and the blood was movin' on down to his chest. The picture frightened the big man so much it took him a full minute to realize that God had heard his prayer.
Little Joe was bleedin' - bleedin' bad.
Little Joe was alive!
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THREE
"Come on, Little Joe, open up wide."
Six-year-old Joseph Francis Cartwright clamped his mouth shut and rolled to the side, taking his covers with him. "Don't wanna! Go away!" he cried as he drew them up and over his head.
"Now, come on, Joe. You know you gotta take your medicine!" His big middle brother let out a sigh. "Little Joe, you're mighty sick."
"…not sick," he rasped. "I'm…sleepy. Go away…an' let me sleep!"
Hoss' voice was muffled, but he could hear him well enough. "Now you know I can't do that, Little Joe. You got a monster in you breathin' fire. Doctor Paul said you gotta take this medicine every six hours or it's gonna burn you up for sure!"
"Just took it."
"No, you didn't. You been sleepin' for hours. I…had a hard time wakin' you up." Hoss paused. "Do it for me, Little Joe? Okay?"
Seconds later, the little boy's curly head crowned above the coverlet. Joe's green eyes, watery and rimmed with red, darted about the room.
"Don't see…no monster."
"You can't see him, Joe. He's inside you, makin' you sick." His brother scowled. "Look, here. Now I ain't never lied to you, have I? Little Joe, you're the best friend I got. I cain't…lose you."
Joe frowned. Big people didn't make much sense. "Where are you gonna 'lose' me to? Huh, Hoss?" he snapped. "Tell me where!"
There was another pause.
"Some place you cain't never come back from."
The little boy thought a moment. There was only one place he knew like that.
"Is it where Mama went?" he aked.
For a second, Joe thought his brother was going to be sick just like him. Hoss swallowed hard and went kind of green. When he spoke, his voice wasn't…well…his voice.
"Yeah, Little Joe, where Mama went."
His Papa told him where his Mama went - to Heaven to be with Jesus. The preacher said they was supposed to want to be with Jesus, but it didn't look to him like Hoss was very happy about it.
"I want to see Mama."
"Joe, I know. I…want to see her too. But not yet. One day, but not yet."
Papa told him other things, like there wasn't any sickness in Heaven. If he went there, he wouldn't feel like he did now - like a horse had fallen on him the way it had on his mama. It was hard to breathe. His chest felt like it had a big old weight on top of it. And he was hot.
So hot.
Hoss shifted from the chair beside the bed onto the bed itself. The mattress dipped as he did on account of he was big, and for a moment the little boy thought he was adrift in a raft, floating out to sea. There was a cool breeze blowing over the water. It riffled through his curls and brushed his cheeks just like his mama's fingers used to do.
"Now," Joe murmured as he drifted off. "I want to…see Mama…now."
His brother's hand cupped the back of his head. Hoss shook him to wake him up.
"Joseph Francis Cartwright, you look at me right now! You ain't goin' nowhere! You're gonna take this medicine and you're gonna get well. I ain't lettin' you do nothin' else, you hear me! That's an order!"
Hoss was yelling at him. It scared him, but not enough to make him take that thick ol' medicine that made him choke and feel like he wanted to die.
"I don't want to!" he cried. "Let go! You're hurting me!"
"I'm sorry, Little Joe," Hoss said as he released him. "It's just, well, boy, you're scarin' me! I…love you so much. Won't you take it for ol' Hoss 'cause he loves you?"
Joe sniffed. He passed a finger under his nose to wipe away the snot. It hurt. His skin hurt.
Everything hurt.
"It's yucky," he said.
"I know it, Joe, but I'm gonna feel yucky if you don't take it."
''Cause you love me?"
His brother nodded. "Cause I love you."
oooooooooooooooooooo
"I love…Joe. Don't…go dyin'…me!"
Joe's eyes opened slowly. He wasn't six years old anymore, but he was dying just the same. His lips parted to tell his brother he'd do everything he could not to die, but nothing came out of them. He tried to move his hand, to catch hold of his brother's with it, but it wouldn't respond to his brain's command either. Hoss was cupping his head in his beefy hand, just like he'd done all those years ago. His thick fingers were brushing his cheek.
It hurt.
Just like before, everything hurt.
Fire ran a ring around them and ash and smoke billowed in the air. Joe wanted to cough, but he didn't have the strength. He'd just have to let his lungs burn along with whatever else was on fire, he supposed. Anyhow, they wouldn't burn for long.
He was dying, after all.
"Joe! Little Joe, look at me. Don't you go fallin' asleep, boy!"
Because I might never wake up.
Right?
"Charley's gone for the doc, Joe. You gotta hang on 'til he gets here. He'll…fix you right up."
There was something in Hoss' voice. Joe's head was muddled. It took him a moment to figure it out.
Hoss was lying.
"No…"
"Joe? Did you say somethin'?" His brother's feathery hair brushed his cheek as he leaned in. "Say it again, Joe."
Someone groaned. A deep, pain-filled sound. Blinding pain pounded through him; localized in his head. Joe fought to wet his lips. To speak.
"…dying…."
Hoss' grip tightened. "You ain't gonna die, Joe! I ain't gonna let you!"
He'd have laughed if he could. Big brother thought he was in charge. Unlike him. He'd known from the day that horse threw his mama and landed on top of her that no one was in charge but God.
It took every bit of willpower he had, but Joe forced his eyes to move and focus on his brother's face. Hoss looked wild. His thinning hair was flying, driven by the wind of the fires raging around them. His brother's cheeks were crimson as apples. So was his white shirt.
It was covered in blood.
Joe closed his eyes and leaned back. Pa was gonna kill them both for ruining their clothes.
Of course, he chuckled silently, Pa couldn't kill him if he was already dead.
"Gonna…get to see…mama," he breathed.
"Mama don't need you, Little Joe. She's got Jesus. I…need you. I cain't live…." Hoss swallowed. "You ain't allowed to go before me, little brother."
His face hurt, but he smiled.
"Yes…sir…."
There was a moment's silence and then his brother said, "Joe, I been afraid to move you, but that fire's getting' awful close. I gotta get you out of here. You think you can stand me movin' you?"
Since his eyes had obeyed, Joe tried ordering his left arm to move. It refused, so instead he lifted his right hand an inch or two so he could touch his brother's sleeve.
"Do…what you…have to do."
Hoss' hand covered his. He squeezed his fingers. "I'll be right gentle, Joseph."
Joe never knew if he was or not. He lost consciousness the second his brother slipped his arms beneath his knees and shoulders and lifted him up. When he came to, he was on the ground near Charley's cabin. Hoss had left him lying there. He said he needed to find some linen to make bandages. As he waited, Joe drifted in and out of awareness. Sometimes when he woke he was six years old and back in his sickbed. Other times he was four, and his mama was still alive. She kept calling to him like he was lost.
Because he was lost and he wasn't sure he would ever find his way back.
"Joseph! Boy, you need to stay awake. You took a powerful hit to your head."
His eyes were less obedient this time. Only one opened.
"Is that…why it hurts..so bad?"
The big man snorted. "Genius. That's what you are, little brother. A genius."
A second later a cool cloth blessed his forehead.
"Feels…good…."
"I'm gonna start bandagin' some of your wounds, Joe. It's…gonna hurt. You got that head wound and, well, your left arm, it sure is a mess."
Joe looked at his brother. Hoss had grown fuzzy and seemed to be fading away into darkness, but he could still see him.
" You're a…mess."
Hoss chuckled. "That I am, Joseph. That I am. Now you just lay there quiet. You need to conserve your strength."
Joe nodded as best he could and then closed his eyes. He lay there for some time, gritting his teeth as Hoss did what he had to do. He supposed he must have gone out again, because when he opened his eyes, it was night.
He couldn't see a thing.
"Hoss?"
"Yeah?"
"What happened?"
There was a moment of silence. "Don't you remember, Joe?"
He thought about it. "I was…carrying nitro into the shack. Darn cat…was on the shelf."
"Nosey knocked the nitro off?"
"Saw it falling…stupid…dove for it. Should have…run."
"Joe, I found you behind a wheelbarrow. I think it…saved your life. Do you remember how you got there?"
He was growing weary. The world spun even when his eye were closed. "Saw it…dove. Curled…up behind it."
"Joe! You gotta stay awake!"
The wounded man sighed.
He had never been very good at taking orders.
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FOUR
"Mistah Cartwright need sit down and have breakfast or he get skinny skinny like old mule."
Hop Sing's chiding roused Ben from where his thoughts had taken him. He rose from his burgundy leather chair and stretched. "I'm not really very hungry today, old friend."
"Mistah Ben not hungry because he let birds nest in hair," his Asian housekeeper said as he came to his side. "You lucky you have more than Mistah Hoss!"
Ben chuckled. "Point taken."
"You worried about number two and three sons."
It was a statement not a question, and there was no point in denying it. Hop Sing knew him too well. "Yes, I'm worried. They should have been home last night." The look his friend gave him prompted the rancher to raise a hand and finish with, "I know. A hundred things from a broken wagon wheel to Charley talking them into staying overnight could have happened."
"But you not think so."
"I don't know…." Ben ran a hand over the back of his neck. "I just have this feeling. I'm unsettled."
"Like stomach?"
He smiled. "Yes, like my stomach."
"Maybe Mistah Ben can drink coffee and eat toast?"
He knew his friend's worth was found, in part, in taking care of him and his sons. Hop Sing was as adrift as a man in a boat without a paddle when no one wanted to eat.
"I think I can do that."
His housekeeper beamed. "I go fix toast and coffee. Be back soon." Hop Sing started to move away and then turned back to wag a finger. "And you no worry! Boys take care of selves!"
Ben stood there, watching, as his friend disappeared around the corner, and then returned to his chair. It was funny. He'd been awakened around three in the morning by a night terror he couldn't recall. The unease had remained with him as he dressed and came downstairs, and for some reason had brought to mind an episode that had happened some twenty years before when his boys had been boys. Hoss had been fifteen and Little Joe - and he was little then - had been nine.
It was a day when he thought he'd lost him.
He'd gone to the settlement to conduct some business and had taken his two youngest with him, leaving a twenty-one-year old Adam behind to run the ranch. There was a new mercantile in town and he enjoyed the wonder in their eyes as they browsed and looked at all the things it contained - Joseph at the toys and candy and Hoss, at Becky Lou, the store owner's daughter. Hoss was a shy boy and had shown little interest in girls.
Blonde-haired, blue-eyed Becky Lou Macey had changed that!
Upon their arrival they went to the mercantile. After that, he had several meetings to attend and so he set the boys to some simple tasks to keep them out of trouble. One of them was to visit the livery. They did what they were told, but what he didn't know was that Hoss had left his little brother behind with the stable owner and returned to the mercantile to have a little 'private' time with Becky Lou. He'd finished his business early and was on his way to the rendezvous point he had established when he ran into a former foreman. The man told him he had seen Hoss go into the mercantile about twenty minutes earlier - without his little brother.
Joseph was a beautiful, loving, and happy child for the most part. His mother's death had scarred him in ways he was sure he had not yet discovered, but most of the time his youngest was a joyous ball of energy. Unfortunately, he was also willful, stubborn, and more sure of himself than any nine-year-old had a right to be. Like a wild stallion, once tamed he would be a good - no, a great man.
But he was turning his old pa's hair gray at an alarming rate.
He had specifically told Hoss not to leave Little Joe alone while they were in the settlement. There were too many strangers wandering its streets and too many opportunities for trouble. Joseph was a curious child. He didn't mean to put himself in harm's way, but he often did. He was a good boy, but he was also good at mental gymnastics. Joseph could think himself around an order and end up doing exactly the opposite of what he had been told, all the while thinking he was doing just what he'd been asked!
That was why he needed Hoss at his side.
And that was why he'd been furious when he stepped into the mercantile and saw Hoss leaning against the counter talking to Becky Lou with no Joseph in sight.
Hoss had no excuse, of course, other than being young. Once his middle son told him that Joseph was safe at the stable with Jake, his anger abated - a bit. He had come to the point of having to force himself to remain angry when a clamor arose outside and he stepped out to find that his world might have been - in one unexpected moment - changed forever.
Joseph was at the livery and the livery was on fire.
Ben had little memory of the journey to the stable. After speaking to Roy, it was all a blur. He recalled speaking sternly to Hoss and ordering him to stay back. He'd just seen Jake's body on the ground and, while he had been grateful it wasn't Joseph, the livery owner had burned to death and his youngest had been with him.
It was with a heavy heart that he stepped into the remains of the stable to begin the search.
He was only able to go so far. The heat radiating off of the charred boards and timbers was too much to bear. He made it about halfway into the front room before he was forced to turn back. All the while all he could think of was his beautiful, brilliant son lying buried somewhere under all of that charred timber, dead or dying and in agonizing pain.
The last was what terrified him. Joseph, broken, burned, calling out for him and he couldn't hear - couldn't find him.
There had been moments of great joy in his life - the moment when he met each of his three wives, their marriage days; the birth of his sons. Each paled in comparison to that moment when he stepped out of the ruin of the livery and saw Joseph struggling in Hoss' arms. He ran to the pair and scooped his youngest up. Crushing him to his heart, he carried the weeping boy toward their waiting horses.
It had been a glorious moment - and a mistake.
Near morning there came a knock on his door. Opening it, he found a vagabond version of his eldest son standing in the hall. Adam 's black hair was tousled and his night clothes disheveled.
"What is it, son?"
"Sorry to wake you, Pa," he said with yawn. "I thought you'd want to know."
"Know what?"
"Someone's crying."
Ben recalled reaching for his robe. "I'll go check on Joseph."
Adam pursed his lips and nodded. "You can do that, Pa, but I think you need the next door down."
He'd been halfway out the room, but stopped. Naturally he'd assumed his youngest had been traumatized by the day's events and was experiencing a nightmare.
"What do you mean?"
"It's Hoss. Not Joe."
Lord, what a fool he'd been! He'd been so grateful - so relieved - that Joseph was alive that he had forgotten his middle son completely. Hoss had trailed behind them. He'd mounted his horse and ridden home without speaking a word. The boy had been silent at supper and gone to bed early.
"Pa."
He looked at his eldest. "Yes, son?"
"I think Hoss is…feeling guilty. I tried to talk to him, but he wouldn't listen."
"Guilty? For what?"
"For leaving Little Joe alone."
Less than half a minute later Ben was at his middle son's door, rapping gently, and calling his name.
"Hoss. It's Pa. Can I come in?"
The muffled crying ended in a startled sniff. "Pa?"
"Yes, son. It's me. I'd like to talk about what happened today, if it's all right with you."
It was another thirty seconds before the door opened. Inger had warned him when she was carrying their son that he was going to be a big baby and grow into a giant of man. Though her brother was of an average height, she told him that most of the men in her family rivaled the Nordic giants of old. Hoss was nearly as tall as him and nearly everyone took him to be a man. But he was a boy.
A gentle, caring, sensitive, heartsick boy.
"I'm all right, Pa," he replied as he sniffed again. "I just had a bad dream."
"Care to tell me about it?"
Hoss ducked his head. "I don't know as I should."
He'd sensed at the time that the window of opportunity was small. If he let it close, Hoss would swallow his pain and it would burn in his belly until it ate away at his joy.
Reaching out, he placed a hand on his son's shoulder. "Was it about Little Joe?"
He felt his son shudder. Hoss nodded and the tears flowed again.
Taking him by the arm, Ben led his son over to the bed and sat on the rumpled covers beside him. He didn't say anything, but waited for the boy to speak. It took a few minutes.
"I…I was at the mercantile talking to Becky Lou. I turned around and you was standin' in the doorway. You was holding Little Joe. He was…." Hoss sucked in air. "He was all burned up, Pa. Little Joe was dead and it was all my fault!" His son's voice rose as he went on. "I could of killed him, Pa! Joe would've been dead because of me!"
"Hoss. Hoss! Listen to me." His son was nearly hysterical. "You remember what I told you? God works all things together for the good of those who love Him. God knew Little Joe was in that livery and He got him out. We have very little power when it comes to life and death."
"But Pa! If'n I hadn't gone to see Becky Lou, I would have been there with Little Joe. I would of picked him up and he wouldn't have been nowheres near the stable when those bad men set it on fire!"
"That's true. You were disobedient, and you know now what can happen when you challenge my authority."
Hoss let out a sigh. "I sure do, Pa. I ain't never gonna do that again!"
Ben hid his smile. "Well, we'll see about that. For now, you can take the blame for what you are guilty of - disobeying my orders. But, son, you have to let the rest of it go. Even if - if - your actions put your brother in danger, there is One greater than you who saw fit to make certain Joseph was taken out of that danger." He patted his son's arm. "Never dismiss the Father's love."
Hoss was looking at his hands. "I guess you're right, Pa."
"Guess? You don't know?"
That made him smile. "I sure could never dismiss this father's love," the boy replied, giving his hand a squeeze.
"Hoss? Is something wrong?" a small voice asked.
They'd both looked. Joseph was standing in the hallway, his night shirt twisted about his skinny frame and his thick brown curls dangling before his eyes.
"What are you doing up, young man?" Ben demanded - gently.
"You two were makin' so much noise you woke me up," Little Joe replied as he rubbed his eyes.
Hoss was on his feet and across the room before he could find his own.
"I'm sorry, Punkin. I had a bad dream. Pa was just talkin' me through it like he does you."
"You had a nightmare?" Joe seemed astonished. He was the one who usually brought them all out of their beds with a start. "I'm sorry, Hoss. They ain't fun. You want me to stay and sleep in your bed with you so's I can wake you up if you have another one?"
Normally he didn't encourage his boys sleeping in the same bed - because they seldom slept. But tonight…
"I think that's a wonderful idea, Joseph. How about you Hoss?"
"Come on, Hoss!" Little Joe said as he grabbed his brother's hand and pulled him toward the rumpled bedding. "You can snuggle up against me. I won't let them monsters get hold of you!"
As he watched the pair of them climb into the bed, Ben smiled. Any monsters Hoss might face would vanish in a puff of smoke when they saw how close the two brothers were. Little Joe's arms and his trust and acceptance were just what Hoss needed to let go of his fears.
And for him to do the same.
oooooooooooooooooooo
"Mistah Ben. Food ready. You come eat now."
The rancher started out of his reverie. He turned and saw that Hop Sing was standing by the table holding a tray that contained a steaming pot of coffee and a plate with toast and a soft-boiled egg. Even though he still didn't feel like eating, he'd do his best to choke it down, just to make his old friend happy.
As he headed toward the dining room, Ben heard a wagon roll into the yard. "There they are!" he said with relief.
"You be sure to regret not eating now. Mistah Hoss home, you maybe not get anything."
"I'll gladly sacrifice breakfast just to have the two of them home safe and sound," he replied. Two giant steps took Ben to the door. He opened it and stepped outside expecting to find his sons seated beside each other in the wagon.
The moment he saw Old Charley in the driver's seat, he knew something was terribly wrong.
Hoss was in the back. The big man stood up as soon as the wagon stopped and jumped to the ground. Ben started to greet him, but fell silent when he saw his son's face.
It was the same as that day - the one when they thought Little Joe had died in the fire.
"Pa, I…." The big man paused. "Pa, Little Joe, he's…."
"He's what?" Ben looked at the wagon bed, but he could see nothing. The early morning light cast thick shadows. Fear made his tone harsh. "Hoss, tell me. What's happened?!"
Tears welled in the big man's eyes.
"I'm sorry, Pa. I left Joe alone, and I think I might of got him killed."
