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  WILDERNESS #59:

  ONLY THE STRONG

  David Thompson

  LEISURE BOOKS NEW YORK CITY

  Dedicated to Judy, Joshua, and Shane.

  Contents

  Cover Page

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  The Wilderness series

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  They were seven rattlers on horse back.

  They came out of the east, and the dawn, wending along the belt of green that fringed the Platte River. In the lead rode a hawk-faced man in buckskins, a fine Kentucky rifle in the crook of his arm. His eyes were as hard as flint. He missed nothing, this man. Not the deer that bounded off at their approach, not the buzzard that circled high in the sky, not the lowly sparrows that flitted and chirped in the undergrowth.

  The man was a hunter by nature. As a boy he’d hunted everything that breathed. Rabbits, coons, squirrels, deer, boars, bear—all fell to his swift trigger finger. Now, as a man, he hunted a different kind of game. His quarry didn’t have four legs; his quarry had two. He was a hunter of men. But only a certain type of men. Men—and women—with black skin.

  He hunted runaway slaves.

  Wesley was his name. That was all he went by. He always wore buckskins. He always had his rifle with him and a knife on his hip. Born and bred in the backwoods, he was a product of the forest.

  Wesley was good at what he did. Never, in the eight years he had been a slave hunter, had a slave escaped him. Until recently he worked for a man called Catfish. But now Catfish was dead and Wesley had struck off on his own, as much for the money the slaves would bring as for revenge; the slaves he was after were to blame for Catfish’s death.

  Behind Wesley came six others, the last leading pack horses. Some wore homespun and some wore store-bought clothes. They all bristled with weapons. Each was an armory and needed to be, given where they were and where they were headed.

  It was the middle of the morning when Wesley came to a clearing and drew rein. In the center were the charred remains of a campfire. Dismounting, Wesley sank onto a knee and ran his fingers through the blackened bits of wood and ash. “We’re a week behind, maybe less.”

  “Damn!” declared a man-mountain whose bushy tangle of a beard covered his entire chest. “I was hopin’ we’d have gained by now.”

  “Patience, Trumbo,” Wesley said to his friend and partner. “We must be patient.”

  A third man, the youngest, a bundle of nerves in a floppy black hat, gray shirt and brown pants, swore. “Patience, hell. I figured on catching them by now. At the rate we’re going, we’ll be lucky to do it before they reach the Rockies.”

  “Here or there, it’s all the same,” Wesley said. “You need to work on your patience, too, Cranston.”

  Cranston frowned. The day was hot and the heat did not help his temper. “The last thing I need is someone telling me what I need.”

  Wesley stood and turned, and when he stopped turning his Kentucky rifle was pointed at the younger man’s head. “I’m tired of your carping.”

  “Now listen—”

  “No. You listen. Learn to curb that tongue of yours, or you can head on back.”

  Cranston blinked and gestured. “By my lonesome? Are you addlepated? We’re hundreds of miles from the Mississippi, in the middle of the prairie, for God’s sake.”

  “Kit Carson could make it back. Daniel Boone could make it. I could make it.”

  “You were born in the woods. You’re at home in these wilds.” Cranston gazed with distaste about them. “Trees and grass, grass and trees, that’s all we’ve seen for days. Give me a city or town.”

  The next rider, short of stature and broad with muscle, grunted in agreement. “You have your talents, Wesley, and we have ours. It’s why you hired us.”

  “I hired you and your friends, Olan, because you kill for money. But don’t make the mistake of thinking Trumbo or I won’t do our own killing when there’s some to be done.”

  “You hired us for our lack of scruples? I’m shocked.” Olan grinned as he said it.

  Wesley allowed himself a rare smile. “I asked around. They say you will kill anyone, anytime, with no qualms. Best of all, they say that when you take a job, you see it through.”

  “We’ve never disappointed anyone yet.”

  The last man, the one leading their pack horses, was at least twenty years older than the rest. He wore greasy buckskins. He had overheard, and he called out, “What about me, slave hunter? Trumbo, there, is your pard. Olan and Cranston and Bromley and Kleist blow out wicks. But why did you hire me?”

  “You, Harrod?” Wesley stepped to his mount. “I hired you because you have something the rest don’t.”

  “What would that be?”

  “Experience. You know the prairie and the mountains.”

  “That I do,” Harrod agreed with a bob of his salt-and-pepper chin. “I got the itch back when beaver plews fetched good money.”

  Wesley went to respond, but just then the brush rustled and out stepped several Indians. Instantly, he trained his Kentucky on them. Everyone else, with the exception of Harrod, jerked their rifles to their shoulders.

  “Don’t shoot!” the old frontiersman yelled. “They’re harmless. They’re only Otoes.”

  There were two men and a woman. The men wore leggings but no shirts. Their black hair was cropped short at the front and on the sides, but they had long braids at the back. All had high cheekbones and low foreheads. The men were armed with bows but had not notched arrows to the strings.

  The woman stayed back, her face shyly averted. A doeskin dress fell to below her knees.

  “They’re friendly, you say?” Wesley asked.

  “None friendlier, unless it’s the Shoshones,” Harrod answered. “They farm some, they hunt some, they leave whites be.”

  Olan was admiring the woman. “It’s been weeks since I had me a female.”

  “They’re friendly, I say,” Harrod repeated.

  “I can be right friendly, too.”

  One of the warriors went up to Wesley and smiled. His hands flowed in expressive movements.

  “That there is sign language,” Harrod said. “Nearly all the tribes use it to talk.”

  “What is he saying?”

  “His name is High-backed Wolf. He greets his white brothers and asks if we have coffee to spare.”

  “White brother, am I?” Wesley said, and raising his Kentucky, he shot High-backed Wolf in the face.

  For a few seconds the other two Otoes were frozen with shock. Then the other warrior snatched at his quiver, but he had just started to draw an arrow out when several rifles thundered at once and he was jolted backward by the impact of multiple slugs.

  The woman put the back of her hand to her mouth, her eyes wide with terror, and wheeled to flee. She only managed a couple of steps before Olan brought his horse up next to her and brought the stock of his rifle crashing down.

  “God in heaven!” Harrod exclaimed. “What the hell did you do that for? I told you they were friendly.”

  Wesley stared at the blood oozing from the hole below High-backed Wolf’s right eye. “Get this straight, old man. I’m not anyone’s brother un
less they’re white.” Leaning his Kentucky against his leg, Wesley uncapped his powder horn. “I can’t abide the lower races.”

  “Lower?”

  “The red race. The black race. The yellow race. You name it.” Wesley poured powder into his palm. “Why do you think I do what I do?”

  “I figured it was for the money. Or maybe you were one of those who likes the thrill of the hunt.”

  “There’s that. But the main reason I became a slave hunter is because I can’t stand blacks. I can’t stand how they look. I can’t stand how they talk. I can’t stand their stink. If it were up to me, I’d wipe out every damn darkie.”

  Olan chuckled. “A man after my own heart.”

  “I didn’t know,” Harrod said.

  “Now you do. From here on out, every redskin we come across I’ll kill, unless there are too many of them.”

  “I see. And these slaves we’re after? The Worth family? Do you plan to kill them, too?”

  “Be sensible. The bounty is for dead or alive, but it’s a lot more for alive. That’s how I’ll take them back so long as they don’t give me cause to curl up their toes.”

  “I see,” Harrod said again. He nodded at the woman, who had groaned and was stirring. “What about her?”

  “She’s Olan’s to do with as he pleases.”

  Olan licked his thin lips. “Now this is the kind of job I like. Kleist, fetch some water from the river so we can bring her around. Cranston, Bromley, climb down and hold her arms and legs. She’s apt to claw and kick.”

  Harrod gigged his horse toward the other side of the clearing.

  “Where do you think you’re going?” Wesley wanted to know.

  “I’d rather not watch.”

  Olan scowled. “What is this, old man? Don’t tell me you’re some kind of Injun lover?”

  “I don’t give any more of a hoot about red skin than I do about white,” Harrod said. “But I do give a hoot about females. I can’t stand to see them abused. It’s the one thing I’ll not abide.”

  “Well, I’ll be,” Olan said.

  Cranston laughed and shook his head. “It takes all kinds, doesn’t it?” He trained his rifle on the frontiersman’s back. “I ought to blow you to hell, you old goat.”

  “We need him,” Wesley said.

  “But you heard,” Cranston objected. “He’s got a soft spot. Me, I lost my grandpa and an uncle to red vermin, and I’d as soon shoot anyone who sides with them.”

  Wesley raised his Kentucky. “I don’t make a habit of repeating myself, boy. Harrod is not to be touched. I have a special use for him.”

  Cranston hesitated, and then saw that Trumbo had pointed his rifle at him, too. Shrugging, he said, “What ever you say, Mister. You’re paying us. But I should think you’d agree with me, hating Injuns and blacks like you do.”

  “There’s a time and a place, boy. We have to know when to keep our hate in and when to let it out.” Wesley nodded at Harrod. “You can go on ahead if you want but don’t go far.”

  The frontiersman jabbed his heels into his horse. He rode several hundred yards and drew rein on a grassy bank overlooking a pool. Climbing down, he sat with his legs dangling over the side and stared at the water.

  After a few moments hooves thudded, and Harrod pushed to his feet. He didn’t hide his surprise. “I reckoned you would stay and take part.”

  “Not me,” Wesley said, alighting with agile grace. “Her kind don’t appeal to me.”

  “Your partner, Trumbo?”

  “He’s not as particular.”

  Harrod gnawed his lower lip until he couldn’t hold in what he wanted to say. “Mind if I ask you a question?”

  “Only if you don’t mind if I don’t answer.”

  “Fair enough.” Harrod sat back down. “These blacks we’re after, the Worth family.”

  “What about them.”

  “You told me they’re runaway slaves, but you never told me why they ran away. Is it that they want to be free? I’ve heard that a good many Negroes try to reach Northern states like Pennsylvania and New York.”

  “You heard true,” Wesley confirmed.

  “Then why are these Worths heading west? Why try and reach the Rockies when it makes more sense for them to do the same as other runaway slaves?”

  Wesley puffed a speck of dust from his rifle. “They’re not running for their freedom. They’re running for their lives.”

  “Care to explain?”

  Squatting, Wesley balanced his rifle across his knees and regarded the flowing water. “These Worths did the worst thing slaves can do: They killed their master.”

  “Does that happen often?”

  “Hardly ever. They worked on a plantation run by Frederick Sullivan and his two sons, Brent and Justin. Brent took a shine to Randa Worth and her pa went and murdered him.”

  “I see.”

  “You say that a lot,” Wesley said.

  Harrod gnawed on his lower lip some more. “Mind if I ask you another question?”

  “Damned if you ain’t the most curious son of a bitch I ever ran across. What now?”

  “You made mention of some people who are helping the Worths. Who are they? And what do we do when we catch them?”

  “The Worths are being helped by a mountain man and his squaw. It was them who killed the man I worked for, a gent known as Catfish, the best slave hunter there ever was. They’ll pay for that. They’ll pay in blood. But first I intend for them to suffer. I want to hear them beg for their lives before I snuff out their wicks.”

  “I see.”

  “You only think you do.”

  “This mountain man and his wife—do you happen to know their names?”

  “Nate and Winona King.”

  Chapter Two

  The girl was young and black and full of life. She had on a store-bought dress, the first store-bought dress she ever owned. If it were up to her she would keep it locked in a trunk and put it on only for special occasions. But her mother insisted she wear it to show the man and woman who bought it for her that she truly liked it, and the girl always did as her mother wanted her to do.

  Randa Worth would wear it, but she refused to let it get dirty. Every smudge, every smear, every particle of dirt, she washed off. At night she shook the dress out, neatly folded it, and slept with it under her blanket, where it would be safe.

  On this particular evening, Randa had been sipping tea when she spilled some on the dress. She promptly put the tin cup down and hurried to the river. The Platte River, they told her it was called.

  Sinking to her knees, Randa dipped her hands in the water and splashed some on the spots the tea had made. Not that she thought the tea would leave stains; she wasn’t taking any chances with the prettiest dress she’d ever owned, though.

  Randa’s reflection stared back at her from the surface of the Platte. She hadn’t changed much in the weeks they had been on the trail. To look at her, a person would never suspect the changes she was going through.

  Her mother said every girl her age went through them, but Randa wasn’t sure she liked them. She certainly didn’t want her bosom to become as big as her mother’s, yet there was no denying that where she had once had walnuts, she now had apples.

  “Why couldn’t I stay as I was?” Randa asked her reflection, and bent to dip her hand in again.

  Suddenly the brush rustled and crackled, and the next instant a monster lumbered into sight. Or so it seemed to Randa. She had never seen a buffalo this close before. A bull buffalo, over five feet tall at the shoulder, with curved horns that made Randa think of twin sickles. She shuddered at the thought of them ripping into her body, and she cupped her wet hand to her mouth to holler to the others for help.

  But Randa didn’t yell. She had changed her mind. So far the buffalo was ignoring her. Maybe it didn’t realize she was there. A yell might provoke it to charge.

  Randa couldn’t get over how big it was. She had seen cows and oxen and hogs back on the plantation, but they
were puny compared to this beast. Or maybe it was her imagination. Maybe it only looked so enormous because it was so close. Maybe it really wasn’t as scary as she thought it was.

  Then the great behemoth of the plains swiveled its giant head and stared at her, and Randa felt goose bumps ripple down her spine. It really was scary, and when its nostrils flared and it snorted, Randa did what her instincts compelled her to do: She rose, whirled, and ran.

  And Randa could run. Ever since she was knee high to her mother, she’d been extremely swift of foot. She proved it by winning many of the races the slaves held. She’d always wanted to enter the races the whites put on, but it wasn’t allowed. Slaves were not allowed to mix socially with their masters.

  Randa flew, her bare feet smacking the earth so lightly and rapidly that she barely touched the ground.

  But as fast as she was, the buffalo was faster.

  She heard it crashing through the vegetation after her, and she glanced back to discover, to her horror, that its size did not mean it was slow. To the contrary, its massive muscles propelled it after her as if it were a hairy cannonball shot from a cannon.

  “Oh God!” Randa blurted, and applied all the speed her sinews could muster. The cottonwoods and other trees were a blur. She was running blindly, desperately, and it occurred to her that wasn’t the thing to do. She should run for help. She should make for the clearing where she had left her ma and pa and brother, and the Kings. Nate King, in particular, would know what to do. The mountain man knew everything there was to know about the prairie and the animals that called the prairie their home.

  The buffalo narrowed the space between them. Every breath was a wheeze as loud as a blacksmith’s bellows. The thud of its heavy hooves was like the beat of drums.

  Randa glanced back again and gasped. It was so close! Its black horns bobbed with every bound, and she imagined them hooking her and rending her poor body limb from limb. “Please, no,” she said.

  Randa faced front. Too late, she saw the bush. She didn’t know what kind it was, only that it was a tangle of small vinelike limbs, and when she slammed into them, they wrapped around her legs. Before she could stop or veer to the side, her feet were swept out from under her and she crashed down on her shoulder. Instantly, Randa went to push up and keep running, but a gigantic silhouette loomed above her, and she turned to stone.