Chapter Twenty-Five
It was all over but the mess.
Marcus Johnson left the Caliente by nightfall. Isabel threw leftover tortillas to the pigs, then joined the padre, Terecita, and Sabrina, as they departed for Fort Ewell. Fitz and the genie turned in early. Jaime packed his fiddle and bow, and he and the other bandits, led by Hoot Todd, went on their way, possibly to figure out how to expand the legend of the leader.
Tomorrow, Jon Marc and his vaqueros would ride out to trail the Caliente horses to their new owner. Fitz asked Catfish to stay behind. Jon Marc didn't find that peculiar, the strawboss having been part of the family for years.
Family.
What did it mean, now that Marcus Johnson had sworn on his Bible?
Jon Marc mulled it, while he helped Beth and Pippin gather the spoils of celebration. His mind still hadn't settled at bedtime. Beth then kept him too busy to think about family.
He awoke at the crack of dawn. Again, he found himself too occupied to study on family, save for the idea of starting one.
Rather worn out, he at last dragged himself from bed. Already his wife had taken care of her toilette, had had her hair fixed, and was dressed.
“Woman, how can you not be tired?” he demanded to know, marshaling enough energy to grab her by the waist and to sip her earlobe.
She wiggled against him. “Tired? I could climb a mountain, fight a tiger, swim a raging stream!”
He got the feeling she meant to climb his mountain, wrestle his tiger, and swim his stream. He groaned. This was what he got for wanting a tornado in the bedroom.
Yet he grinned. Pep began to speed through his parts as Beth started rubbing his rear. Yes, he was one lucky fellow.
“How'bout I ride into your valley?” he asked and guided her toward the bed. “And carry you to the stars?”
“Put your stallion where your brag is, sir.”
He did.
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Later that morning, mounted vaqueros gathered in front of the Caliente stable, ready to ride for Salado Creek and give horses to bandits. Jon Marc led León from his stall and outdoors, then slipped a boot toe in the stirrup.
Fitz shouted, “Gran'son.”
He set his foot aground.
Pippin was wheeling the invalid chair from the house. Fitz had both canes across his blanket-draped lap. A blanket, despite the warmth of this summer day.
Jon Marc eyed León, wanting to hit the trail. His gaze advanced to his vaqueros, who needed to deliver horses. “You know where to find Todd, at your old place,” he said to Luis. “I'll catch up later.”
Luis de la Garza nodded, then pointed a finger southwest. The vaqueros rode out, dust in their wake.
It was time for Jon Marc to settle the matter of family. Tying Leon's reins to the hitching post outside the stable, Jon Marc ambled up to old man and youth.
He studied his grandfather. He couldn't remember Fitz being young or having his health. But he hadn't noticed how truly old and wizened the eldest O'Brien had become, until now.
“Why don't you let Aunt Beth to box up some of that leftover pie?” Jon Marc asked his nephew. “Take it to town. I'll bet Sabrina would enjoy another go at lemon pie.”
“You really think so, Uncle Jon Marc? That'd be great. I really like 'Brina. I'm gonna marry her when we get grown.” Pippin got a pensive look. “How am I gonna get to town? Great-granddaddy, can I borrow your coach?”
“There's a paint pony in the stable.” Jon Marc tried not to think about how fast the Caliente horse-herd was depleting. “He's yours.”
“Wow! That's great. Thanks! See, Great-granddaddy, he's not nearly as stingy with himself as you said he was.”
Pippin, despite four years of seasoning, had not lost his tendency to say the inappropriate. Jon Marc laughed, nonetheless. “Go on, boy. Before I take back my offer.”
He had never seen feet move that fast.
Then Fitz spoke. “Push me around these grounds. I want t' be seeing what all ye've got here. If ye wouldna mind.”
Wordlessly, Jon Marc took charge of the handgrips.
As he wheeled past the ruins of the Wilson home, Fitz spoke. “That reminds me of me heart. Burnt. Burned it meself, I did. A fool 'twas I, tossing ye outta the house. Ye hafta understand why, Jonny. By rights, the factor house should've gone t' the eldest of me grandsons. If not Connor, then Burke. 'Twasn't you I resented, Jonny. 'Twas yer upstart idea, and yer youth.”
Resentment couldn't just fall away. Jon Marc gritted his teeth, then looked at the charred ruins. “Been meaning to have this lot cleared. It's an eyesore.”
He gave the invalid chair a heavier shove, heading away from burnt reminders. Nothing more got said until he and Fitz reached the top of Harmony Hill.
Jon Marc stooped down to rock back on his heels. Rather than speak, he scanned the valley. He saw cattle and brush, the river and its branches. A mockingbird pushed its young from the nest of an oak tree, into a sky as wide as the heavens.
This Texan saw home.
Fitz rested one elbow on a chair arm and shelved his upper lip with a gnarled forefinger. It was coming, that bid for Fitz & Son, Jon Marc was certain of it.
But it didn't.
“Ye've done well for yerself,” Fitz said in a voice that his grandson knew to be honest. “When I first got an eyeful of yer ranch, 'twas unsettling. Texas, especially this part, is a hard place. Worried me, Jonny, it did. Too hard a life did I see for ye. But ye'll make a go of it. Ye have, and ye will.” Knowing old eyes tipped up to his grandson. “ 'Tis ambition that fires ye, like yer brother Burke. Ye had t' work harder for yers, though. Just as 'twas for an immigrant from Belfast. Me two grandsons come by ambition naturally.”
Jon Marc couldn't help smirking. Leave it to Fitz to try to take credit for whatever the O'Brien brothers accomplished. Wasn't that natural, too?
Whatever the case, Jon Marc found himself flattered by his grandfather's remarks. It was high praise coming from Fitz, the first O'Brien to launch into a cold world and make his place without help from anyone.
“Do ye think ye might be interested in turning yer ambitions t' the family cause?” Fitz asked to burst Jon Marc's mellow feeling.
“I might have known you hadn't given up.”
“O'Briens doona give up.”
“You'll have to quit this cause up, Fitz. It's lost.”
The elder O'Brien studied the younger. Several moments went by before Fitz implored, “Tell me what ye think of this place, Jonny.”
He had to make his grandfather understand why he must stay here. Never before had he wished more for the exacting, for the most poetic words to come to him.
“With tears I came to an unsettled place, where civil hands had ne'er to toil . . .” He wasn't a poet. All he could do was speak from the heart. “This is where I've planted roots. It's where I've known solace. And trouble. And great happiness, now that I have a wife to share it with.
“Someday I'll teach our sons and daughters to ride and rope on the land before us. And someday we may discover they have no use for it. But that's their choice to make. All we can do is love them, accept them, even if they seem not to want our love. If they fly away, like the birds in winter, Beth and I must let them go. In hopes they'll return in springtime.”
A tear made a rivulet through the gullies of Fitz's face.
Jon Marc levered to his feet. “We have water for our thirsts, all our thirsts, and we have food for our souls as well as our bodies. God is here. When He calls us home, we'll rest on this very hill. It's a fine place to live. And die. And rest in peace.”
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Nothing more got said about Fitz & Son, Factors that morning. Nothing more got said at all. Jon Marc simply walked behind his grandfather's invalid chair and returned to the home he'd made with Beth.
Jon Marc left his grandfather with Eugene, then ambled over to León and climbed into the saddle, for the trip to Salado Creek. In his heart he knew Fitz would cease coercing him about that factor house.
He sensed rightly.
That afternoon, on his return, he found Fitz packed for the trip to Memphis. The coach horses were hitched, Pippin's gift pony tied to its rear. A basket of food had been prepared by Beth for the first leg of their journey, and Pippin and Eugene awaited their chore of lifting Fitz into the plush interior.
Catfish Abbott, a knapsack attached to his saddlebags, stood off to the side, holding the reins to his mount. It was obvious to see. He would be leaving alongside the coach.
Instinct told Jon Marc that it had been planned like this from the start. It made sense now, why the Louisiana planter had wanted a job in the wilds of Texas. He'd been sent here to spy for Fitz. Jon Marc chuckled inwardly. His grandfather had never let him fly on his own. But that was just his way.
Jon Marc clipped a salute of good-bye to his strawboss.
Taking his wife's hand, he walked up to Fitz, who said, “We'll be leaving now, Jonny.”
Strange. Now that the longed-for moment had arrived, Jon Marc hated to see his grandfather go. He recalled Fitz opening his arms, and not flinching from the pain of rheumatism when Jon Marc had jumped into them, that long-ago day, when the world caved in from two deaths.
Fitz may not have believed Jon Marc had ties of the blood, but he took him in, same as Connor and Burke, and gave home, heart, and love. Even sent a spy to watch out for him.
He'd even swallowed bile to face Marcus Johnson.
Jon Marc thought to extend his hand, but a force within him changed that. Leaving his devoted wife's side, he reached down to hug the old man, who still didn't complain about having his aching bones crushed by an embrace. “I love you, Granddad.”
“I love ye, too, Jonny.”
Neither grandson nor grandfather had a propensity for the mawkish, and neither wished to change. Fitz wiggled the kinks from his shoulders. Jon Marc stood to shove fingers behind his gun belt and stare off into the distance.
The younger O'Brien first felt the need to speak. “When you see my brothers, and the aunties, tell them our door is always open. It is to you, too.”
“I'll be doing that, Jonny.” Fitz smiled. “Yea, I willna be coming back. But me door is open t' ye and yers. Bring the babies t' see Great-granddaddy. I will be saving the strength t' hold them.”
“That sounds like a fine idea . . . Granddad.”
Beth let out a sigh, moving closer to Jon Marc. With a grin as wide as the Texas sky, she smiled up at her husband.
But Fitz hadn't finished speaking. “Jonny ... I canna leave without telling ye the truth. Was a trick I was meaning t' play on ye. By dangling Abbott as bait. Meant t' lure ye, meant for ye think I would be giving the factor house t' him.”
Everyone, Jon Marc sensed, expected an explosion of wrath. Catfish mounted up, fast, as if to make a swift getaway. Eugene retreated, until he backed into a coach wheel. Beth squeezed her husband's hand. She had a mighty grip.
Pippin, on the other hand, stepped forward. His dark cowlick catching a ray of sunlight, as well as his freckles, he boosted his twelve-year-old jaw and stood down his great-grandfather. “What are you gonna do about Fitz & Son?”
“Sell it, lad.”
“No, you ain't. I want it. My dad has other sons to help him with his steamship company. He don't need me. I need you, Great-granddaddy. And you need me. I'm strong and I'm smart, and I can learn about cotton and how to sell it.” Pippin wiggled his own set of O'Brien shoulders, albeit adopted. “You needn't worry 'bout love messing things up, Great-granddaddy. Me and 'Brina, we're already in love. She likes the idea of living in MemphisâI already asked her. We gonna start a whole new dynasty.”
Jon Marc cut his eyes to Beth, who did what she could not to laugh at the naivete of youth. Her husband, on the other hand, wondered how their lives would have turned out, had Beth Buchanan come into his life at Pippin's age.
“Great-granddaddy? What do you think?”
“Ye're too young, lad.” Fitz tilted his head toward Jon Marc, who cast him a warning glower. A smile pulled up old lips. Fitz raised a finger, like he'd just had a brilliant idea. “But now that ye have me thinking, Pippin, I do believe there is a place for ye at Fitz & Son. As an apprentice, if yer parents doona object.”
Beth left her husband to kneel in front of Fitz. “Work on that, sir. You can talk them into it, or my name isn't Beth O'Brien.”
Fitz laughed.
So did Jon Marc, the latter shaking his head in amazement. “Too bad she can't go back with you, Granddad. If she can talk Hoot Todd out of a feud, Burke and Susan wouldn't stand a chance. Don't get any ideas of leaving, wife! You're right where you belong.”
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Four months later, Padre Miguel finished exerting his authority in the matter of Bethany's conversion to the faith, as was his privilege as a frontier priest. Not that he wouldn't have bent the rules, no matter his authority.
He served first Communion, in private.
It was All Saints Day, the first of November.
The wafer tasted bland on her tongue, as did the wine, yet the blessed sacrament gave her a fulfillment that she'd never known, outside her husband's arms. At last God would hear her prayers.
But He had in so many ways, ways too numerous to count.
Bethany had everything that she'd ever dreamed of, save for God's blessing over her marriage . . . or a child to hold in her arms.
“Amen,” intoned the priest.