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Authors: Terry C. Johnston

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BOOK: Cry of the Hawk
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The thirty-year-old Artus tried to feed his daddy some broth he’d made, more hot water than anything. But the old man was plumb gone, and everything Artus poured into the slack mouth just seeped back out from the old man’s lips, onto the pillow and sheets and that patchwork comforter.

Lord, how cold his daddy’s skin was.

For seventeen days, Artus stayed there beside his daddy’s bed, day and night. Then rose at last to dig a grave beside his mama’s and finally laid the old man to rest. A new cross standing beside hers.

All those years of war, with every step along every mile of icy or dusty or muddy or summer-blistered road he had marched, across every field of waist-high grass he had charged, muzzle loader out and bayonet gleaming in the sun, Artus Moser had promised himself he was fighting for his daddy and mama and the rights of folks back home in Missouri and for that little farm that would one day be his when at last the war ended and he could return home to help his family on that place that was his and he was its.

Artus had dropped the spade at the foot of the fresh earth he had packed over the body. Dusted his hands, and turned away. Not sure if he wanted this place now. Of a time he might decide different. But there were two ghosts here already, and he didn’t want his soul to be a third, captive, made prisoner and left on this ground, a’mouldering.

So deep in his need for human contact was he that when Artus saw the firelight below through the broken windows, he bumped into a tree in dumbfounded surprise, splitting his forehead. The warmth surprised him as well, as he dabbed his fingers in the swelling, moist flesh.

No matter the pain, he had to find out who was in the Hook cabin, firelight flickering through the two yawning, paneless windows. Inching up from the side of the barn like he’d learned to hunt fox and coon and squirrel and hare, Artus saw that over the door, somebody had hung a blanket or some such. Blocking the light and the wind and hiding who was inside.

Slowly, his breath clutched in his throat, Artus sidled toward the cabin, wishing he still had that old gun he had cradled and loaded and carried and dragged through years of fighting and starving and sleeping and crying and feeling homesick beyond relief. If it was any of the freebooters he’d heard tell of raiding up and down the countryside, their kind would have horses stalled in the barn or picketed outside by the cabin.

No horses here.

“You there! Turn around—slow!”

Artus felt his heart leap to his throat. His hands shot into the air. Always had been a good one taking orders.

Hoping whoever it was would see his arms up, if not the telltale color of his tattered butternut gray uniform.

The figure moved out of the darkness, inching toward the dim light spilling out one of the windows. Then the man stopped, a black silhouette framed by the firelit window. Holding a rifle.

Moser swallowed hard. “Didn’t mean no harm—”

“Artus?”

That confused him of a moment. The stranger knew his name. Then the man inched from the window, coming his way from the corner of the cabin, into the yard. Drawing closer.

“Yeah? Artus Moser.”

“It’s me, by damned, Artus!” shrieked the stranger as he dropped the rifle in the icy mud and dashed forward, arms outstretched.

“Good God in heaven above—it’s cousin Jonah!”

15

Late January, 1866

T
HE TWO OF
them spent that night talking, remembering. The empty hulk of the Hook cabin was for a time filled with glorious warmth between the two. With dawn come creeping gray out of the east, they lay down on that old tick, back to back to share their warmth, and slept through much of the next day.

In the golden dusk that night Jonah and Artus hunted together, bringing back to the cabin a small doe they fed on, jerking the rest of the meat before the fire.

As the sun rose the following morning, Hook and Moser set off on foot, intending to walk in one direction, then another, until they found a neighbor who could give them both some answers.

Or would.

At the Hosking place, north out of the valley on the way to Cassville, the pair was met by three rifles as they approached the house.

“It’s Jonah Hook, Mr. Hosking!” he called out across the yard splashed with January sunshine. Steam rose from the ice-slicked ruts running from all directions toward the barn, where old man Hosking and his two hands held guns on the newcomers.

“You remember us, don’t you? I’m Artus. My daddy was Amos Moser.”

“I know who you are, Artus. Your daddy grieved real hard after your mama passed on suddenly.”

“You know anything about my family?” Jonah asked, anxiously. “You remember we have the place just down the road from Artus—”

“I know who the living hell you are, Hook!” the man snapped. “Heard about you from some fellas got out of Rock Island.” The old man turned partway to address his hired men. “Boys, just look at that Yankee blue he’s wearing for his homecoming suit!”

The hired men laughed as the ground warmed around them, steam lifting from the moist, rich earth.

“He was out west fighting Injuns for the army—just to get out of prison,” Artus tried to explain.

“I been set free from a hellhole of a Yankee prison—Rock Island. Only joined the army to get out and fight Injuns.”

“There it is!” Hosking roared. “The truth comes from his own damned mouth.”

“Never did once raise my gun at a white man in a Confederate uniform,” Jonah said.

Hosking decided to amble a bit closer, his tall boots splashing across the muddy yard. “Way I figure it—that uniform of yours makes you a turncoat, Hook—folks took you in their hearts when you and your’n come to this valley. So why don’t you be a good boy and get on out of here before we have to fill your Yankee-loving carcass full of buckshot and leave it set for my hogs to grit on?”

“Lot of men died in that prison, Mr. Hosking. I didn’t want to be one of ’em.”

“Good men, I’ll bet they were—’cause they stuck it out. Now, kindest thing I can do for you and your loyal cousin there is to tell you to scat. It’s for him I didn’t open up on you first sight I got of that goddamned uniform.”

“It ain’t fair—what you’re doing,” Hook snarled, taking a step forward before Moser snagged his arm.

“Keep your gun down, Jonah!”

The rifles held by the hired men came up level, then Hosking waved his hand.

“Hold on a minute,” he ordered the pair. “I don’t want no blood on this ground. Been enough already. Lost my oldest boy at Pea Ridge, not far from here.”

“I was there, Mr. Hosking.”

The old man took another step closer, appraising Hook. “You was at Pea Ridge too?”

“I rode on from there with Sterling Price and didn’t give up till I was took prisoner at Corinth in Mississip.”

Hosking appeared to struggle within himself. He spat a stream of brown into the icy-scum puddle at his feet. “Lost both my boys in that war—killed by men wearing the same uniform you got on. I don’t much take to Yankee blue on a man. Nothing’s changed. Like I said, you and Moser best run on now.”

“I can’t go, Mr. Hosking.”

He wagged his head. “I’m telling you—get off my place, bastard traitor!”

“I ain’t no traitor!”

Moser stopped Hook as his cousin lunged for the older, bulkier man. Jerking Jonah around, holding tight to his wool coat, murmuring low to Hook about how foolish it would be with two other guns and them all Yankee-hating and shut-eared anyway. Hook kept twisting, making Moser dance as Jonah kept his eyes on Hosking.

“Let’s just go, Jonah. There’s others’ll help us.”

“I doubt that, Artus,” declared the old man. “You go dragging along that traitor in that Yankee suit with you—I don’t figure a soul in these parts is going to help you none.”

Hook relaxed, his heart still like thunder in his ears. Artus stayed close, but eventually freed his grip on Jonah’s coat.

“Just tell me,” he rasped, weary, afraid, angry. “Tell me what happened to my family.”

Hosking wagged his head. He glanced at the other two, who likewise shrugged. “Don’t know. From the talk going round, it’s been some time since anyone seen life out to your place. Don’t have an idea where your family went.”

“They didn’t go nowhere.” Hook balled his fists again, so filled with despair he would hit anyone just to feel the crunch of his knuckles against their cheek and jaw and nose. “They was took.”

Hosking regarded him a moment, stepping closer as he brought his rifle up. “How you so sure they was took, boy?”

Jonah watched the wariness of the man, moving his hands from the holster where rested the .44-caliber army pistol he had been allowed to keep with him when the army bade him farewell back at Leavenworth, Kansas.

“I’m sure. Just know from the looks of the place.”

“It will give a man the willies just going there, Mr. Hosking,” said one of the hired men with a jerky nod of his shaggy head.

“It will, eh?” Hosking replied.

“Things left there my Gritta would’a took, had she been of a mind to leave on her own. Up to the loft, the children left things belonged to them. Special things a child don’t leave behind if they’re moving out for good.”

“And down at the springhouse,” Moser said as he jumped in, “we found milk and butter gone sour and dried in the churns—left like someone was never intending to leave such victuals behind.”

Hosking licked his lips, his eyes flicking the hillsides on either side of them.

“I did hear of ’em coming through here some time back.”

“Who?” Jonah asked, taking a step forward that caused the old man to snap the rifle up.

“Keep your ground, traitor!”

“I—ain’t—no—traitor,” he growled each word as menacingly as he could. “Tell me who come through here?”

“They was like a army,” the hired hand volunteered.

“Shuddup!” Hosking shouted at his man, his eyes flicking into the hills again.

The old man’s furtive look now meant something to Hook. He recognized it for what it was. “You’re afraid they’ll come back—whoever it was. Ain’t you, Hosking?”

“We got no way of knowing, Hook. Now—for your own sake and your cousin’s hide—just turn around and get!”

“I ain’t leaving till I got me some answers.”

He wagged the muzzle menacingly. “You’re gonna get—and you ain’t never coming back.”

“C’mon, Jonah,” Artus pleaded, pulling, yanking. “We go on and find someplace else … somebody else what can tell us.”

Over Moser’s shoulder, Hook called to the hired man who had let too much slip from his tongue. “What army was they? Reb, or Yankee? How many, goddammit! Where was they headed?”

Hosking raised the muzzle of his rifle and fired it into the air, shocking both unwelcome visitors.

“C’mon, Jonah! Now!”

“You best listen to your cousin, boy,” Hosking’s voice followed them doggedly down the lane. “Get your ass outta here—and forget you ever had that family of your’n. Just g’won and count ’em gone ’cause your people is good as dead!”

Sometimes Jonah Hook could downright scare a man.

Even his own cousin.

Artus Moser shook his head over the smoky fire where they were roasting five squirrels. Thinking maybe he really didn’t remember all that much about Jonah, like he thought he did. What with the way he had acted down at Hosking’s place yesterday, it had given Artus the willies.

Like what Hook had done out west fighting Injuns or maybe even something that Moser couldn’t begin to figure out—something had gone and made Jonah different from the man who left this valley with General Price back in sixty-two. Jonah sat on the far side of their little fire cleaning and recleaning those guns of his.

“Yankees let you keep your pistol?”

Hook looked up, squinting through the smoke as a gust of breeze snuffled it toward him. “You carried yours home, didn’t you, Artus?” He pointed his cleaning rod at Moser’s hip.

“Yeah,” Artus answered, still uneasy and unable to know why. “But that don’t explain the rifle. Yankees don’t give away rifles, Jonah. Been meaning to ask—”

“No, the goddamned Yankees didn’t go and give me this rifle. I brung it here all the way from Virginia,” he replied quietly, shutting his cousin off.

“Lord, how come them raiders didn’t—”

“Gritta kept it hid for me. Under the stones of the hearth. I put in a special place there for hiding things when I built the fireplace.”

“Thank God you got your hands on it, Jonah.”

“Thank me for putting that hiding place there.” He wagged his head, dragging the cleaning rod and oil-soaked rag up and down the full length of the barrel. “Maybe if she’d had the rifle out to use—wouldn’t she and the kids be gone to who knows where now.”

“Then again, Jonah—Gritta might be dead.”

Artus watched that jerk Jonah’s head up, a hateful, glaring look smeared across his thin, wolfish face. About to leap across the fire at Moser, if not say something stinging. But in a moment he went back to wiping the oilcloth around the percussion nipple and hammer on the rifle’s action.

“I thought of that myself,” Hook finally admitted. “She used this gun when those riders come through, chances are her bones be laying down in my yard where I come across what was left of old Seth.”

“Least you got family to find. They ain’t dead like mine.”

“I know they ain’t dead. In my gut—I know all four of ’em is still alive. Somewhere. For sake of us both right now, you remember your daddy and mama was my family too, Artus. I grieve ’em bad as you.”

“Didn’t mean no offense, Jonah. Just that—if it weren’t for you—don’t know what kin I’d have.”

“We’re riding the same horse, cousin. We both got to shuffle back to the Shenandoah down under Big Cobbler Mountain if we’re to look up any kinfolk of ours now. That”—Jonah nodded into the growing darkness of the hardwood forest thick around them—“or out yonder.”

“Lord, how I’d like to believe strong as you that we’ll find Gritta and the young’uns.”

He looked hard at Artus across the smoke made a sickly orange color as it rose from the coals. “I gotta count on finding ’em. Every last one of ’em. I’ll keep looking till I do. If I didn’t believe I could do it—I’d curl up and die inside and couldn’t go on.”

BOOK: Cry of the Hawk
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