Yellowstone Memories (24 page)

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Authors: Jennifer Rogers Spinola

BOOK: Yellowstone Memories
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Justin squeezed her hand back. “He’ll make it, ma’am. He’ll be fine. You’ll see. We’ll get him to the doc first thing in the morning, if this snow lets up.”

Justin tried to size up their limitations: four freezing folks drinking melted snow and two injuries so far. Wet wood and blowing snow. A couple of crackers, some tinned butter and cheese, and a canteen of water.
Dear Lord
. He rubbed his face with his hand, groaning inwardly. Even the stiff, uncomfortable army cots and rubbery stewed tomatoes back at the camp seemed like heaven compared to this.

Mr. Parker lay against his wife’s shoulder, a bloody cloth wrapped around his head. But his eyes fluttered open, and a faint smile curved his lips. “Oh thank God,” he moaned, rocking slightly back and forth. “Thank God you’re here. Frankie, oh Frankie—he brought help! I knew you would.”

He reached out a waxy white arm to grip Frankie’s hand, and Justin saw Frankie dip his head slightly as if in shame, eyelashes fluttering. “Don’t thank me, sir,” he mumbled. “I ain’t done a thing to be proud of.”

Before Frankie could lay clean his cowardice, Justin quickly knelt beside Mr. Parker. “He came as soon as he could, sir. I’m so sorry for your injury. I hate that you had to wait so long for help.” Justin ripped open the backpack and pulled out a wool army blanket, pressing it around his shoulders.

“Yeah, and of all the rotten folks to find,” Frankie joked sheepishly, sounding like he’d bawl any minute if he didn’t lighten things up.

Justin punched Frankie lightly in the arm and reached for another blanket, crawling over to Lia’s spot and draping it over her shoulders. She let go of Cynthia for a second, teeth chattering, her eyes dark in the dim half glow of the flashlight. Her hair hung wild and disheveled, wind-whipped curls hanging down in her face.

“You okay? Can I see that ankle?” Justin reached for Frankie’s flashlight, not sure what he should do. Try to brace it, maybe, with some twigs and a bandanna, splintlike?

Without meaning to, he stroked Lia’s hair out of her cold cheeks so he could see her face and how dilated her pupils were—if she could still speak or if the injury had sent her into shock.

And without warning Lia suddenly reached out her arms, wrapping them around his neck in a clumsy embrace. “You came,” she whispered, her lips shivering so much that Justin could hardly make out her words.

He was struck speechless for a moment, frozen in place. Not sure whether to move or speak, or even breathe. He’d killed her father, for goodness’ sake. What kind of scum would that make him here, now, to deserve or accept even an ounce of her affection?

“Of course I came,” he finally said, holding her there for a warm second and then helping her back to Cynthia’s side. Tucking the blanket around her neck as she closed her eyes.

“You must be Justin,” said Cynthia through shivers, the contours of her pretty face pale in the faint halo of light. “Lia said you might come.”

“She did?” He glanced over at Lia with a start, but she didn’t seem to hear. “But I didn’t …” He narrowed his eyes. “How’d you know who I am? We ain’t met yet.”

Cynthia shrugged. “Lia said you’d come for us and that you’d do anything to help.” She tucked the blanket tighter around her shoulders. “So I guessed it must be you. She said you grew up together, and she always thought you had a wonderfully good heart.”

Justin’s eyes bulged. “She … she told you that?”

“And she said her father loved you.”

He smoothed the edge of Lia’s blanket in silence, the sudden lump in his throat choking out the words. Finally he tipped his head sideways. “She okay, Cynthia? She … uh … well, she don’t look so good.”

Cynthia huddled deeper under the blanket, tears glimmering in her dark eyes. “I don’t know,” she whispered. “She’s awfully cold, and a couple of hours ago she started to talk nonsense. Something about her dad, and you, and … I don’t know. It didn’t make any sense to me.” She pressed her pale lips together. “Do you think she’s got hypothermia? We’ve been trying to keep warm, but it’s freezing out here.”

“Hey Frankie, pass me that canteen, will ya?” Justin poured a little water in the tin cup, his fingers shaking in an unexpected mess of nerves, then held it up to Lia’s mouth to drink. Picturing her at the table with the jar of strawberry jam, her lashes dark and her manners humble and demure.

“C’mon, Lia. Drink a little water.”

Lia sipped, water running down her chin as she shifted forward stiffly, drawing up her good leg. “I’ll be fine. I just need to say good-bye first, and then we can go.”

Huh? Justin narrowed his eyes and bent closer to hear. “What’d you say? We ain’t goin’ nowhere, at least not until this snow lets up.”

She was delirious. She had to be.

“I knew you’d come,” Lia murmured, turning her face toward Justin. A crack on her lips showing a faint red line of blood. Her eyelids closed, and the blanket slipped off one shoulder.

Justin knelt just close enough to draw the blanket back up under her chin, tucking her fine curls of messy hair out of the way. Brushing out some dried pine needles that had clung there, little bits of bleached red-brown among nearly black.

She needed lip balm for sure—Vaseline, or oil even—to keep her lips from cracking even more. He opened his backpack and flipped the top off the dented can of butter then smoothed his finger on the dull yellow surface. Running his moistened finger across Lia’s cracked lower lip.

And as his breath stirred her hair, ever so gently, he leaned forward and touched his lips briefly and soundlessly to her forehead.

If Lia noticed, she never said a word. But Justin felt as if his heart would soar right through the pines, exploding into little flakes of white brilliance, raining down across the snow-swept slopes of the Wind River Range.

“We’ve gotta get a fire goin’ before they all freeze to death,” Justin said to Frankie under his breath, digging through his pack for the drab olive army-issue fire starter. It was made of rough cloth with a piece of flint, a steel striker, and a pile of fine, blond tinder that looked like horsehair. All cinched together with a leather cord.

“What are we gonna use for firewood? Everything out here’s wet and frozen.” Frankie was shivering again. And no wonder—the temperature must’ve fallen another twenty degrees. Their breath misted, and Justin could barely feel his fingers.

If he wasn’t careful, he might shiver and drop the spark, wasting good tinder and ruining their shot at starting a fire.

“We’ll look for dry wood, both of us, up next to the trunks and outta the snow,” said Justin, wiping his damp hair out of his eyes with his sleeve. “You got your knife on ya?”

“Got it.” Frankie patted his pocket. “Pine resin burns real well, too, and dead needles, if we can find some dry.”

“Well, then, look for ‘em. We’ll shave the outer wood off the branches if we have to, to find somethin’ dry, and make a big enough pile to last us all night. If that fire goes out, we’ll have a doozy of a time startin’ it again.” He poked his head through the pine boughs, careful not to dislodge the snow.

Frankie sniffled back a runny nose. “The snow ain’t that deep. We can dig down to the ground and start the fire right there in that open patch.” He pointed toward a small pocket of open ground close to the campsite.

Justin bit his lip, twisting his head sideways to look up and make sure there was good clearance. They couldn’t have smoke doubling back into their dry alcove, forcing them to move to a wetter, colder spot. “Looks good to me, I reckon. Not that I can be picky. And we need a lotta wood, hear? Not just a stick or two. Plus enough twigs to start a bundle—and it might take us awhile to gather in this mess. I don’t got another coat or blanket. We’re just gonna hafta keel over of hypothermia gettin’ it, or we’ll all six freeze.” He grimaced up at the blustery sky. “And we probably ain’t gonna sleep. You with me?”

Frankie met his eyes for a second, their characteristic goofy look turning suddenly sober. “I’m with ya. Here. I’ll hold the light.”

“Don’t drop it.” Justin raised his eyebrows in a warning look. “C’mon now, and let’s get ‘em warmed up.”

Frankie’s eyes looked glassy as he wrapped the bandanna around the steaming cup handle, squatting by the sputtering fire. “Reckon we’re all gonna make it, Fairbanks? Mr. Parker’s hurt awful bad.”

“We’re gonna make it.” Justin spoke with more courage than he felt, reaching out to take the cup. “We gotta. I ain’t losin’ another father like I did last time.”

“Like your pop?” Frankie looked up in sympathy.

“No.” Justin spoke so quietly that a gust of wind and crackle of flame nearly covered his words. He turned his eyes down into the steaming cup. “Like Lia’s father.”

“You mean …?” Frankie cocked his head in confusion, scrunching up his nose.

Justin jerked his hand away as the hot metal handle burned through the bandanna. Its searing sting reminding him of crunching metal and squealing tires. The acrid scent of burning rubber.

He sucked on a burned thumb for a second, wishing Frankie would just shut up so he wouldn’t have to spill the truth. But Frankie’s mouth just hung there in a bewildered grimace.

“I killed her father, Frankie.” Justin spoke in a near whisper. “It was an accident. I told ya you don’t know nothin’ about me. And you sure don’t wanna be like me neither.”

Justin got up and carried the steaming cup to Mr. Parker’s side, leaving Frankie sitting at the fire, his head gawking over his shoulder. Snow falling between them in fine white bits, like a freshly billowed curtain.

Coyotes
. Justin jerked his head up in a predawn gray, hearing the distant howls. Musical and ghostlike, eerie, seeping through the trees in mournful wails, yips, and barks. Falling and rising again, mingling together in shimmering chords.

Coyotes normally didn’t bother anybody, but they, too, were unpredictable as wolves. They hid up in the peaks, driven back into lonely places by the ring of the hammer and blast of the shotgun.

Justin snapped himself upright, rubbing his face with a dirty hand. He must’ve dozed off against the knobby pine trunk, his fire-prodding stick limp in his hand. The flames had nearly disappeared, but the wood still smoked.

He forced his heavy eyelids open and crawled forward, tossing a branch into the fire and stirring the embers—poppy-orange under black coals, opening like a beautiful flower. He puffed on the ashes, shielding them from the wind and coaxing the glowing bits brighter and brighter. Feeding them twigs.

Lia slept against Cynthia’s side, burrowed in the blankets, and even Mr. Parker began to rally a bit after cups of warm water. He’d propped himself up on an elbow and even asked about his camera, wondering if he’d smashed it to oblivion on the rocks.

Justin scooted back from the fire as smoke spread in choking puffs, listening to the coyote songs echo through the snowy pines. Wondering if the snow had let up enough for them to try and make it down the mountain.

He stood there between two spruce trees, shivering, arms crossed and hands pressed under his armpits to keep warm. His fingers, nose, and ears had survived the cold fine, but he still couldn’t feel his toes—even after he’d peeled off Frankie’s thin shoes and tried to warm his feet by the fire. An odd yellow-white color mottled his toes, never warming and never flushing rosy pink, which made his stomach lurch with fear.

Losing a couple of toes was nothing compared to losing a father like Reverend Summers. But if Justin could help it, he’d like to keep his toes just the same.

And during the cold-black hours of the night, it seemed that Justin had lost something else as well: the tendrils of trust he’d built with Frankie.

Frankie obeyed him wordlessly, helped build up the fire, and—to his credit—even stayed awake and on the patrol against wolves, bears, and wildcats that might be attracted by the smell of food or blood. Brandishing a hefty limb in both hands.

But he stood a cool distance away, head turned away and arms huddled. Twice Justin caught Frankie looking down at his own boots, laced there on Frankie’s feet, and then up at Justin’s face with a crushed look he couldn’t decipher. But when his gaze met Justin’s, it had skittered away like a nervous squirrel.

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