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Synopsis
Rosalee Spurlock challenges the dangers of the Colorado mountains with her courage, her rifle and her heart. Then one starless night, Logan Horn comes to her cabin door, handsome and powerful, his eyes blazing with desire from the first moment they meet. Rosalee has finally found a man to walk beside her, not behind her.
Release date: April 12, 2001
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Print pages: 384
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Restless Wind
Dorothy Garlock
“Logan . . . I love you.
You know that, don’t you?”
He let his hard-held breath escape. “Yes,” he whispered.
“I know you’re afraid to love me. But I’m not afraid.”
“Oh, God, Rosalee, I’m not afraid for myself, but for you!”
“Don’t be afraid for me. I’m a grown woman. I know what I want. I want you, Logan. I’m shameless for saying so, but I want to be with you, stay with you.”
“I’d marry you in a minute if I thought there was any chance it might not ruin you . . . any thread of hope we’d be able to live in peace. In the end it would destroy you!” His voice shook as a flood of despair knocked at his heart.
“I’m not convinced of that. I’ve waited for you all my life. If you love me, even half as much as I love you, you’ll not turn me away. I’m asking you to take me in all the ways a man takes the woman he loves,” she whispered . . .
“Five stars! Dorothy Garlock is to historical romantic fiction what Elizabeth Barrett Browning is to the love sonnet!”
—Affaire de Coeur on Restless Wind
Books by Dorothy Garlock
Almost Eden
Annie Lash
Dream River
Forever Victoria
A Gentle Giving
Glorious Dawn
Homeplace
Lonesome River
Love and Cherish
Larkspur
Midnight Blue
Nightrose
Restless Wind
Ribbon in the Sky
River of Tomorrow
The Searching Hearts
Sins of Summer
Sweetwater
Tenderness
The Listening Sky
This Loving Land
Wayward Wind
Wild Sweet Wilderness
Wind of Promise
With Hope
Yesteryear
Published by
WARNER BOOKS
For my sisters,
Mary Bruza,
because she faces what
comes and never looks back
and
Betty O’Haver,
for all that she is, and
for all she means to me
The town of Junction City is a fictitious name for Loveland, Colorado, a beautiful city just east of the Rocky Mountains, as I imagined it would be had it existed at the time of this story.
All the persons in this book are fictitious with the exception of historical figures such as Colonel J.M. Chivington, a former Methodist minister. As commander of the Military District of Colorado he was responsible for the deaths of five hundred Indians, mostly women, children and old people in a deed known as the Sand Creek Massacre. However, the people in my story could have lived in the Colorado Territory in the late 1860’s where the Indians, a people considered less than human by some of the whites, and who were dispensable because they were an obstruction in a stream of insatiable dreamers, lost their world, and are no more!
Dorothy Garlock
The sound of rain dripping on the dirt floor woke Rosalee from a sound sleep. The roof had sprung a leak! She sat up on the edge of the bed and slipped her feet into her shoes. It was so dark she could not see the lamp or the matches, and groped around, hands outstretched. She found the match and drew the head along under the table top, held the flame to the wick, and turned it low before replacing the glass chimney. When she finally located the leak, she set a bucket under the drip.
A low moaning wind swept around the corners and under the cabin eaves. The drops of rain fell slowly and heavily, beating against the tin roof and splattering against the window. The night was so black she could see nothing but her own reflection in the small pane of glass. Not even a flash of lightning broke the darkness.
She wrapped her arms around herself as a chill crept over her skin. How gloomy and still this stone cabin was! She looked at the yellowstone chimney and fireplace and was tempted to build a fire. The clock on the mantel told her it was several hours until dawn, yet she was reluctant to blow out the lamp and return to the double bunk where her younger sister slept. She glanced at the ladder leading to the loft where her brother had his bed.
“Poor Ben. Only fourteen and so much responsibility.”
Ben had come in after dark tired and wet. All he had to show for his day’s work was a tough, wild steer he had rousted out of the brush. Tomorrow she would help him mark it with their Rolling S brand and add it to their small herd. With any luck they would gather enough unbranded stock to buy supplies for another year—if they could get them to the rail head.
Drip, drip, drip. Rosalee eyed the bucket, grateful the leak was not in the roof above where Ben slept. She was wide awake now. She held up her gown and went across the hard-packed earthen floor to listen at the hide covered door leading to the lean-to. Her father was snoring peaceably. She glanced down at Charlie, the big, brown, mongrel dog that lay with his rear against the outside door, his heavy jowls on his paws and his eyes on her.
The cabin was built of native stone taken from the bluffs behind the house. It consisted of one large room and a lean-to that served as her father’s room. It had a peaked roof, with a loft at one end of it. There was a large fireplace, a square table, a double bunk attached to the wall, two chairs and two benches. Shelves along the walls above the sheet-iron cookstove held the cookware, and pegs for the clothing lined the opposite wall. Three years on a dirt floor! How her mother would have hated it! They had always been poor, but until now they’d had a house with a wooden floor.
Rosalee flung the long, thick braid of light brown, sun-streaked hair back over her shoulder. There would be no money this year to buy planks for flooring. Every dollar would be needed for food and for shells to hunt meat for the table and, if necessary, to protect this little spot they called home.
Her father had been a dreamer, a drifter. A thousand acres of preempted government land and this cabin were all he had to show for a lifetime of work. He had worked hard—when he worked. He was a man skilled at both the carpenter’s and mason’s trade, but he never stayed in one place long enough to build anything permanent for himself. Now he was as dependent on Rosalee and Ben as was their ten-year-old sister, Odell.
Rosalee stood beside the table and thought about when they had first come to the Colorado Territory three years ago. The land had lain empty, lonely and still. The last town had been twenty miles behind them. In all that distance they had not seen another ranch or a line shack or a fence . . . not even a horse or a cow. She had not been able to suppress her disappointment.
“What did you expect for four hundred dollars?” her father had said testily when they rounded a point and saw the cabin tucked close under the shoulder of a hill.
Rosalee’s heart had shriveled within her. Before her was the solitary building, squat and bare, without a shed or pole corral. Only the tall trees kept it company in all this vast space.
“It’s ours—bought and paid for,” Grant Spurlock had said proudly.
Drab and barren, it was a roof over their heads. Rosalee knew how he felt. It had been two years since they had lived in anything other than a wagon, two years since they had buried her mother back in Missouri. She had been just sixteen and Ben eleven when they came to this place. Despite being constantly alert for marauding Indians seeking revenge for the Sand Creek Massacre, they had built a pole corral and a log shed for their stock, spaded up a kitchen garden and dug an irrigation ditch from the spring. Ben had milked the cow, chopped wood, and cared for the horses. They had branded their twelve head of cattle and turned them loose on last year’s growth of long bleached grass.
Grant Spurlock had seen his new home through blurred vision, and a few months later he was totally blind. In the middle of the night when she opened her eyes to total darkness, Rosalee realized how helpless and terrified her father must have been when he first lost his sight. He had adjusted far better than she had expected he would. He spent his days carving animals and birds from blocks of wood. Rosalee thought it a miracle that the talent for creating such beautiful things never presented itself until he lost his sight. In the evenings he taught sums to Odell and Ben, and dredged his memory for bits and pieces of knowledge to pass along to his children.
Rosalee suddenly became aware that Charlie was on his feet and was standing stiff-legged and alert, his nose pressed to the door and his head tilted in a listening position. It was deadly quiet. She couldn’t hear anything except the rain on the tin roof and the drip of water as it splattered in the bucket. A low, rumbling growl escaped from Charlie’s throat.
“What is it, boy?” Rosalee whispered. “Has one of those mangy steers wandered into my garden?”
The hair on the back of Charlie’s neck stood up and he growled threateningly. His paws dug at the door sill.
“What is it, Rosalee? What’s wrong?” Ben called from the top of the ladder.
“Charlie thinks something’s out there.”
“If Charlie thinks somethin’s out there, somethin’ is!” Ben scrambled down from the loft. “Soon as I get hold of the rifle, douse the lamp.”
Rosalee grabbed her dress and pulled it over her head before she blew out the lamp. Without the light the room was pitch dark. She blinked several times and felt her way past the table and along the wall to the window. Charlie was digging urgently at the door, whining his frustration at not being able to get out.
“There must be an animal out there or Charlie wouldn’t act like this. Maybe it’s a bear.”
“It’s more’n likely a two-legged bear. One of them Clayhill riders wanderin’ around, drunk as a skunk.” Ben edged up beside his sister to peer out the window. “We been gettin’ a lot of company lately,” he added with a hint of disgust in his voice.
Rosalee strained her ears, but still couldn’t hear anything.
“Hello the house.” The voice reached them over the racket Charlie was making.
“Sshh . . . Charlie,” Ben commanded. “I told you it was one of them no-goods.”
“Hello the house.”
“Who are you and what’a you want?” Ben called, and Rosalee wished his voice didn’t sound so boyish.
“A traveler with a sick woman. I saw your light.”
“A traveler with a sick woman, my hind foot!” Ben snorted. “It’s one of them drunk no-goods wantin’ to get in outta the rain.”
Rosalee tried to make out a shadow in the darkness, but the night was too black. “Tell him to come up to the window and show himself,” she whispered. Then, “Make Charlie be still, I can’t hear.”
“I’ll bet a biscuit he’s got a dog out there or Charlie wouldn’t be so crazy to get out.”
“What’s goin’ on out there, Rosalee? What’s all the racket about?” Grant called from the lean-to.
“A stranger, Pa. Says he’s a traveler with a sick woman.”
“Ha! Likely story. Keep the door barred.”
“Hello the house. I mean you no harm. I’ll hand my gun in if you open the door.” The man’s voice broke on a raspy cough.
“What if he really does have a sick woman, Ben? We’ve got to find out.” Rosalee tried to see into the darkness outside the window, but to no avail. “Tell him to come up to the door. I’ll light the lamp and you hold the rifle ready. But first tell him as soon as we open the door Charlie’ll be all over him like a dirty shirt.”
“We’ve got a mean dog,” Ben called.
“Tie him up. My dog will kill him if he attacks.”
“Make your dog stay back. Come up to the door. I’ve got a rifle on you. Light the lamp, Rosalee, and put that rope on Charlie.”
“You know I can’t hold that dog.”
“Then hold the rifle and I’ll hold him.”
Rosalee waited for a minute so her eyes could adjust to the light, moved over and took the gun from her brother’s hands.
“We’re gonna open the door,” Ben called. “Hand your gun in.”
They heard a whine outside the door and a voice giving a command. Then a rap sounded on the door.
Charlie lunged and growled. “Be still, Charlie.” Ben yanked on the rope holding the dog and slowly lifted the heavy bar from the door.
Rosalee waited in an agony of suspense. What if there was more than one man out there? They could push their way into the cabin and there would be no way she or Ben could stop them. Ben pulled the door open wide enough for the light to reach out to the man who stood there. He was holding his six-shooter by the barrel, butt forward. Ben reached out, took it, and swung the door open wider.
The man’s huge, wet frame filled the doorway. He wore a buckskin shirt with the tail outside and belted about the waist. Fringed leather pants and knee-high moccasins encased his legs. His flat-crowned hat sat straight on his head and water dripped from its brim. Thick, black hair hung to his shoulders and his deep-set eyes were licorice black. A full mustache, shaped in a wide downward curve around his mouth reached almost to his jaw. High, prominent cheekbones and skin the color of copper proclaimed his Indian blood.
“I’d be obliged if you’d allow me to bring my mother in out of the rain.” He waited, his gaze going from Ben to Rosalee.
Rosalee read the Indian breeding. It registered in the slightest widening of her blue-green eyes. “Your mother?”
“She’s on a travois. I’m trying to get her to a doctor.”
“It’s twenty miles to town and there’s no doctor there that I know of. Bring her in. Ben, do something about that dog.” Rosalee put the rifle on the pegs. Ben backed into a corner, holding Charlie’s rope in one hand and the man’s six-gun in the other.
The man disappeared from the doorway and they heard him giving sharp commands; then he was back with a blanket-wrapped bundle in his arms. As he stepped into the room, the water ran in rivulets onto the dirt floor from the bundle he carried and from his own clothes.
Rosalee had shaken Odell awake, and now she moved hastily out of bed and crossed over to sit wide-eyed and scared on the bench beside the table. The man stood hesitantly until Rosalee came to him and peeled the wet blankets away from the still form in his arms. She nodded for him to lay the woman on the bunk.
“What’s goin’ on?” Grant came in from the lean-to. He had pulled on his britches, but his feet were bare.
“The woman is sick, Pa. It’s all right. You can go back to bed.”
“All right? Why’d you let them in for? She could have the cholera!”
Rosalee’s eyes flew to the man’s face. He shook his head and somehow she believed him.
“It isn’t the cholera, Pa.”
The man dwarfed her. He stood silently, seemingly unaware that the water that dripped from his clothes was forming a mud puddle around his feet. His eyes questioned her—or were they daring her to voice her surprise that the woman he was asking her to care for was an Indian? He turned his head and coughed. It came from deep in his chest.
“I’ll take care of her. You’d better get out of those wet clothes or you’ll be sick, too.”
“Thank you, ma’am. Is it all right if I put my horses in that corral I saw out back?”
“Horses?”
“A mare and a foal. I’ll tie my stallion out under that big cedar and the dog will watch him.” He coughed again.
“Do you want Ben to do it?”
“No, ma’am. The dog wouldn’t let him close to the horses.”
“There’s a lantern beside the door.”
“Thank you, ma’am, but I don’t need it.”
He went out the door and Ben, dragging Charlie on the rope, came over to peer down at the woman on the bunk.
“She’s an Indian!” he hissed.
“Sshh . . . don’t tell Pa. You know how unreasonable he can get.”
“But . . . Rosalee . . .”
“She’s a human and she’s sick!” Rosalee whispered. “Shut up about it and tie up that dog. Ben,” she said over her shoulder, “build a fire. Odell, don’t just sit there! Put your dress on over your nightgown.”
Rosalee turned her attention back to the woman. Somehow the man had managed to keep her dry. She was so thin she scarcely made an indentation in the cornhusk mattress. Her cheeks were wrinkled, flushed and sunken. Her eyelids fluttered and her breath came rapidly. She moved her hands restlessly. Only a few strands of her once dark hair showed among the gray. She looked old, very old. Rosalee pulled off her moccasins. Her feet and legs were hot.
“She’s burning up with fever. Odell, put some water in the washpan and bring me a cloth.” Rosalee opened the cloth shirt the woman was wearing, but closed it when she saw it was the only garment she wore. The long, butternut dyed skirt was dry, so she wrapped it around her legs and covered her with a blanket.
She was bathing the woman’s face with a damp cloth when a rap sounded on the door before it was pushed open. The man stood beside the door, his saddlebags over his arm. Rosalee glanced at him.
“If you have anything dry to put on you can change in the loft.”
“How is she?”
“She’s burning up with fever. How long has she been sick?”
“About a week. I brought her down from Wind River Canyon.”
“A week? Has she eaten anything?”
“Not for a couple of days. I’d be obliged if—”
“Odell, get up and heat some milk,” Rosalee said sharply. “And put some sugar and a biscuit in it.”
“Who are ya, man?” Grant demanded. He had found his way to his chair beside the fireplace.
The stranger eyed him and Rosalee waited. Grant made no effort to turn his face toward the man and she saw the dark eyes flick from her to her father and back to Ben, who still held the six-gun.
“Name’s Logan Horn. The woman’s my mother.” He threw the words out like a gauntlet. His face showed no emotion at all, but his eyes bored into Rosalee’s.
“Grant Spurlock, late of Independence, Missouri. Ever been there?”
“Once or twice.” He tried to suppress a cough. “I’m making a mud puddle, ma’am.”
“It’ll dry as soon as the fire gets going. Go on up to the loft and throw down your wet clothes. If you don’t have anything dry to put on, wrap yourself in a blanket.”
“I’ve got dry clothes.” He took off his hat and hung it on a peg beside the door, sat down on the bench, and pulled off his wet moccasins.
Rosalee sat on the edge of the bunk and bathed the woman’s face. She was very sick and pitifully thin. Her breath came in gasps. Rosalee’s heart contracted at the sight of her ravaged face. Odell brought the cup of milk and Rosalee tried to spoon some of it into the woman’s dry, parched lips, but it ran down the side of her chin. Finally, Rosalee had to give up. The only other thing she could do was squeeze water from a cloth into the woman’s mouth. It was a slow process.
When Logan Horn came down from the loft he was wearing duck trousers, a cloth shirt, and low-cut leather moccasins. He spread his wet clothes on a bench beside the fire and came to hunker down beside the bunk.
“She’ll die,” he said softly. He gazed intently at his mother’s still face.
“Oh, no! Maybe . . . not,” Rosalee said, but knew he spoke the truth.
“She’ll die,” he said again and the back of his fingers stroked the hair at her temple. “She was only waiting for me to come and I came too late.”
“If we can break the fever . . .” Rosalee’s voice trailed off.
“No.”
“We can’t just give up and let her die!”
“She wants to die. It’s her time. I shouldn’t have taken her from her people.”
“Then why did you? The trip and the rain . . .”
“I was angry. They had cast her out because all the men in her family were dead and she had no one to bring meat to her lodge.”
“I’ve heard that they do that. It’s mean and cruel.”
“It’s their way of surviving. She understood.” He turned his face away and coughed.
“You’re sick, too. Pa’s got a dab of whiskey.”
She spoke to the back of his head, then continued to look at him when he turned his face once again to look down at the woman on the bed. She noted the smooth broad expanse of forehead; the black-lashed, hooded eyes beneath strongly arched brows; the straight nose, wide mouth; the thick, faintly waving hair that framed a wholly arresting face that demanded attention, but gave away nothing at all.
Logan was aware the girl was studying him. She had been kind; kinder than he had expected a white family to be after being roused in the middle of the night. Yet she made him self-conscious, and he shifted his feet and turned his body at an angle away from her.
“I’m so sorry there’s nothing I can do for her.” She wanted to cry for the big man and his pathetically thin mother.
He turned back as if surprised by her words. His eyes were two mirrors of misery. “You have given her a place to die. She would not have asked even that of you.”
Tears sprang to Rosalee’s eyes and he turned his gaze away from them. As she moved from the bunk and carried the washpan back to the shelf, she whispered to her father that the woman was dying and then urged Odell up the ladder to sleep in Ben’s bed. Charlie had settled down beside the door and Ben had placed the six-gun on the mantel beside the clock. She suggested to Grant that he go back to bed, and after awhile he did. Ben sat in Grant’s chair and was soon asleep.
Rosalee moved quietly. She added more wood to the cookstove and ladled water into the black iron teakettle. When it boiled, she opened the can with their precious supply of tea, put two pinches in the crockery pitcher, filled it with boiling water, and sat a wooden plate on top of it so it would steep.
Logan Horn was sitting on the edge of the bunk. He held one of his mother’s thin hands in his. He was angry at himself. He had waited too long to come back for her. While he was fighting to free the slaves, his mother’s people had been massacred at Sand Creek. She had fled north with her relatives to the Yellowstone. It had taken him two years to find her.
Morning Sun, his mother, was once the beautiful daughter of Running Wind, a Cheyenne chief. A white man had married her in an Indian ceremony; it had been his means to get her into his bed, to use her during his short stay with her people. When he was ready to leave, he divorced her. He “threw her away” at a tribal ceremony called the Omaha Dance. Playing the irate husband, he danced alone with a stick in his hand. He struck a mighty blow on a drum with the stick, threw it into the air, and shouted, “There goes my wife.” Morning Sun had felt much shame at being discarded in such a manner.
Someday soon, Logan vowed silently, he would look into the eyes of the man who hadn’t wanted him, the man who was ashamed he had slept with a squaw and gotten her with child, and he would kill him.
“Mr. Horn.” Rosalee stood beside him with the mug of whiskey-laced tea in her hand.
Logan’s mind jerked back to the present. There was a burning ache in his throat that had nothing to do with the raw, raspiness that had plagued him for days. It was as if he was traveling down a dark narrow path through a region of devastation. Mister Horn. This slip of a girl was the first person to give him that respect since he came into the Colorado Territory. Singly, few had dared to call him “dirty half-breed” or “red ass.” They were braver in numbers, and he had endured their insults in stony-eyed silence, steeling himself against the animosity in the eyes turned on him.
He knew now he would not remain passive in the face of insult ever again. Unless he planted his feet and asserted his rights, he would be trampled into the ground by the “civilized” people who had massacred hundreds of helpless women, children, and old people at Sand Creek.
He took the mug from Rosalee’s hand. “Thank you.”
She pulled the bench up beside the bunk and sat down. Somehow she felt her presence was welcome. The man sipped the tea in silence.
“What is her name?” Rosalee whispered.
“Morning Sun. She was once the most beautiful girl in her village. My grandfather, Running Wind, said he had been offered many horses for her.”
“But she chose your father?”
“Yes.”
The word was softly spoken, but Rosalee felt it was bitter in his mouth. She sat silently and waited for him to finish the tea.
“I remembered her with smooth skin, laughing eyes, and dark hair that hung to her knees. She was beautiful and sparkling. I didn’t recognize her when I found her. I went to the village and asked for the mother of Deer Horn, daughter of Running Wind, sister of Tall Horn, after who I was named. She had been without a lodge for months, eating the food that was thrown to the dogs. She fell to her knees weeping. I vowed she would be warm and have all she could eat for the rest of her life. I’ve taken care of her for only two short months. It is little enough to do for one who gave me life.”
Rosalee looked up to see the sparkle of tears on his thick lashes. She looked away quickly and blinked back the moisture from her own. The woman on the bed moved restlessly, her eyelids fluttered and opened. She saw only the man who sat on the edge of the bed. He leaned forward.
“My mother . . .”
“You are still with me, my son?”
“For the rest of our days, Mother.”
“It is good to be with you while I wait for the night wind to carry my spirit along the Hanging Road to the abode off Heammawihio, the Wise One Above.” Her eyes were bright and watchful. “There is a thing I would say to you.” She lifted her hand, trying to reach his face. He took it in his and carried it to his cheek. “My son,” she said weakly. “My son, greatest of them all. I can hear you weeping. There are too many tears, too much hatred, too many ashes behind you.”
“What do you mean?” he asked in a hushed voice.
Morning Sun’s eyes were strangely bright. “The death song rises from every rock, every blade of grass and drop of water in all this vast land. Our land was once the place of warm sunlight and endless song. Now it is a land of tears. The Indian and the Wasicun have wounded it. Do not run away. Stay and heal it. Touch the joy of life, my son.”
“I intend to stay, my mother. Is this not the place where you gave me life?”
“My son. My beloved son. I hear you. I know the path you walk is not easy. I would see you walk with a sense of beauty and a compassion for life. The Wasicun and I gave you life. Do not despise the one who is your father. He cannot help being what he is anymore than you can help being what you are.”
“Don’t ask that of me, my mother. For I have vowed that someday I will kill him.”
A half smile curled her lips. “No, my son. Killing is the refuge of cowards and my son is not a coward. Show your father that you are the better man and he will die a thousand times.”
“I will think on this, my mother.”
“I see your heart, my son, and seeing it has warmed my own. When the time comes you will do what is right.”
A film glazed her eyes, but there was fearlessness in her face. She knew she was dying, but the knowledge of it held no terror for her. She had walked too long beside the Spirit People to fear joining them. She was confident she would live forever among her long-lost loved ones.
Logan knew his mother was slipping away from him to walk in the darkness forever without him. He saw her lips open, but no sound came from them. In the silence she went on talking soundlessly. One of her hands groped for his and fastened on his wrist. A tremor passed through her body, then her life ebbed away.
Rosalee had moved away from the bed when Morning Sun began to talk. She stood, now, with her back to the bunk, her hands on her cheeks. There are no easy deaths, she thought, and her mind flashed back to her mother’s death while giving birth to her sixth child. Death was cruel, agonizing, gut-crushing. She turned back to Logan Horn. He sat on the bunk, his mother’s hand in his, his eyes riveted to her face. Had the woman closed her eyes in death, or had her son closed them? Rosalee moved to stand beside him and placed her hand on his shoulder. He looked up. Her eyes were a mirror of tears.
“I wish there was something we could have done.”
He nodded. “You did more than I expected a Wasicun to do. It was dry and warm here, and she could see my face. I thank you.”
“I’ll take care of her, if you like.”
“I’d be obliged. I have her ceremonial dress.” He tucked his mother’s hand beneath the blanket and stood up. The tin roof rumbled as the restless wind passed over it. Logan lifted his head and raised his eyes to the ceiling. “Good-bye, my mother,” he whispered.
Logan Horn sat at the table and drank the hot tea while Rosalee washed and dressed his mother’s body. Soon after the woman had breathed her last, he had gone outside and stayed for a long while. When he returned he carried a package wrapped in an oiled slicker. It contained a beaded dress of soft leather that had once been white but now was yellowed with age. He laid it on the end of the bunk beside worn, white moccasins and a feather necklace and turned away.
By the time dawn streaked the sky the wind had carried the rain clouds away. Everything looked fresh and clean, but the ground was soggy underfoot.
Logan brought the mare from the corral and attached the travois. After commanding the dog to sit at the mare’s head, he returned to the cabin for his mother’s blanket-wrapped body. Ben and Rosalee followed him into the yard.
“I’d be glad to come along, Mr. Horn.” Ben stood awkwardly on first one foot and then the other and spoke in hushed tones, acknowledging the presence of death.
“Thank you for the offer, but this is somet
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